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The Gun Slinger

Post-war they came to live on a remote farm, Cefn Blaenau, in Rhydcymerau, in north Carmarthenshire, and, by an accident of fate, I became CW Thurlow Craig’s literary agent in my first job after leaving university. 

That the Wild West moved south to South America at the turn of the last century all will know who saw the film Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Mad on guns and horses, a young lad from Dyffryn Meifod, near Oswestry, Charles Craig, later to become the celebrated author and Sunday Express Up Country columnist, CW Thurlow Craig, had one burning ambition – to ride the range as a cowboy, or as they are known from Venezuela to Argentina, a gaucho. 

And so it came about that, following Naval College and war service as a midshipman out of Scapa Flow he found himself on a train steaming from Buenos Aires into the wild west of Argentina. His naval experience towards the end of the Great War had included action in the North Sea on the battleship HMS Téméraire, as part of the Battle Squadron of the Grand Fleet.  

The arid pampas of Argentina were a far cry from the steely-grey Arctic waters where in 1919 he had witnessed further action in support of the White Russian cause. Action was what he thrived on, and his years in Argentina, Paraguay and Brazil would provide him plenty. Or so you would have thought, but, having been persuaded to become a writer after fourteen years on the open range, he sought further ‘adventure’ by joining in the Paulista, one of Brazil’s many revolutions. Unfortunately on the losing side. 

Travel and adventure books about South America were very much in vogue in the nineteen thirties. Trader Horn’s best-selling autobiography became an MGM film of that name, Peter Fleming (brother of 007 Ian, and a much better writer) scored notable success with his Brazilian Adventure and Julian Duiguid’s Green Hell featured the very swamp marsh country near where Craig had lived ‘the wild life’.

 

In time, he became foreman then manager of foreign-owned cattle stations with herds of anything up to 80,000 head, roaming over a million unfenced acres, destined as tinned corned-beef. In charge also of wild bunches of knife-wielding, gun-toting desperadoes, Carlos Craig (as he always liked to be called), a superb horseman and crack shot, quickly learned to look out for himself. His subsequent first-hand account of these years, Black Jack’s Spurs, is a much-neglected classic.

After two years in the Spanish Civil War he returned home to Wales and began on a series of nine novels which, despite his gift for story telling and natural ear for dialogue, are alas pulp fiction. His last and best novel, Bitter is the Harvest, rose without trace – though today it would walk the Booker! 

As war loomed again Carlos was called up and, given his combative self-reliance and fluency in languages, he was enlisted in Naval Intelligence. While working incognito in Belgium, he met and subsequently married a beautiful French undercover agent of the Dieuxième Bureau, Anne-Marie Crevecour, always known as Mitzi. A recipient of the Croix de Guerre, and a smashing cook, she was everything a woman should be. 

Post-war they came to live on a remote farm, Cefn Blaenau, in Rhydcymerau, in north Carmarthenshire, and, by an accident of fate, I became CW Thurlow Craig’s literary agent in my first job after leaving university. 

The story of an encounter between us following a semi-business meeting at The Ram, that lovely, but now sadly defunct inn at Cwm Ann, near Lampeter has entered local folklore. 

Carlos and I often discussed folklore, and how stories, like Chinese whispers, change colour and even characters. In Black Jack he recalls a passive sort of ambush in Paraguay whereby some traders in a Model’T’ intercept him, allegedly to negotiate for a bunch of horses. Ever the Edwardian officer and gentleman, he offers them a sup of his flask, only to have the blaggards drain it, throw it, and verbally abuse him. 

Attempting what’s now called ‘a runner’, they failed to take account of the deadly marksmanship behind his Frontier .44” Colt revolver. Pursuant on their guffawing departure, their rear tyres were accurately punctured before he demurely rode by, the Ford ditched. 

Thirty years later, this incident reappeared involving teenagers seeing Carlos riding home on Patience, his piebald cob, from the monthly horse fair at Llanybyther, monocled and Stetson lowered against the rain.  

It was tacitly known that Thurlow Craig was always covertly armed - from his MI5 days. So, apparently, was Mitzi. He was an expert shot, a ballistics specialist as well as a licensed gun trader, his armoury of muzzle-loading and other weapons was fascinating to me. And I was to experience his marksmanship at very close-quarters. 

My witnesses to this tale are all alive. And our host on that night, Walter, married to a cousin of mine, still farms up on Ffald y Brennin.  

After the pub, we were invited for coffee, to his farmhouse on the hill. We were ushered in to the ‘front room’, smelling of new carpet. 

I stood by the new-tiled fireplace. 

There was a slack moment while Carlos and I challenged one another about something beyond recall, but out of the tussle and bustle I got hold of his sleeve–sheathed, long throwing knife, and we faced one another. 

His Spanish eyes and Gipsy blood suddenly blazed, and, faster than eyes could follow, a double bang spat from the drawn shoulder-holstered Colt, missing both of my hips by .44”. In the ensuing smoke I heard someone whimper, unhurt. Not me.

Carlos was a dam fine shot. 

They tell me that the new-tiled fireplace remained bullet-pocked for a good while. And I’ve heard the story many times re-cycled, involving such as Free Wales Army Commandant Caio Evans, among others. But that’s the true story.  

Our lovely Mitzi was mysteriously murdered on a visit to Belgium in 1970. At her funeral, just as we were lowering her coffin, Carlos jumped down into the grave where there was a harvest mouse he was bound to rescue.  

They both loved God’s creatures with a passion. 

-o0o-

Published in part in The Carmarthen Journal

 

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