Wallace War-Heels: Difference between revisions

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File:Mark Twain Interviews Wallace War-Heels.jpg|link=Mark Twain Interviews Wallace War-Heels|''[[Mark Twain Interviews Wallace War-Heels]]'' is published; the public responds with praise and outrage in equal measure.
File:Mark Twain Interviews Wallace War-Heels.jpg|link=Mark Twain Interviews Wallace War-Heels|''[[Mark Twain Interviews Wallace War-Heels]]'' is published; War-Heels will later declare that Twain "was reasonably accurate in his representation of myself and my words."
File:Niente da Fare Antonio Rotta.jpg|link=Scarpomancy (nonfiction)|Baby's grandfather's boots probably not worth divining, says kindly old [[Scarpomancy (nonfiction)|Scarpomancer-Cobbler]].
File:Niente da Fare Antonio Rotta.jpg|link=Scarpomancy (nonfiction)|Baby's grandfather's boots probably not worth divining, says kindly old [[Scarpomancy (nonfiction)|Scarpomancer-Cobbler]].
File:Dick_Turpin_of_Mars.jpg|Highwayman Dick Turpin of Mars works alone, declines offer to join the War-Heels gang.
File:Dick_Turpin_of_Mars.jpg|Highwayman Dick Turpin of Mars works alone, declines offer to join the War-Heels gang.

Latest revision as of 19:44, 20 March 2017

Wallace War-Heels, leaping across the prairie.

Wallace War-Heels, the "Pirate of the Prairies", is a Bandit King and Pirate of the Prairies.

He owns a pair of boot-heels which, properly attached to boots, give the wearer superhuman powers of leadership and combat.

Wallace is widely regarded as an honorable soldier whose word is his bond. He prefers to avoid bloodshed, never killing for sport, nor taking pleasure in death. As a leader of soldiers he tolerates no abuse of women and children.

He has a long-standing mutual grudge with Hopalong Perfidy over a deal gone bad long ago.

In the News

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference