XI. Rattlesnake Hill

     Each morning they’d rise and concoct a breakfast over a small fire and knock apart their camp in rituals and roles common to the 1800s and in the evening when the sun westered repeat the process in reverse order, footsore, sunweathered and famished, marking on a tattered map the course of their day’s … More XI. Rattlesnake Hill

XII. Into autumn

      Travelers on the Santa Fe, Oregon, California and other historic trails rarely harbored delusions about the precariousness of their migratory existence. So many things could go wrong that would either strand them (broken axles, shattered wheels, overturned wagons, lame horses or mules) maim them or kill them (cholera, infection, snakebite, gunshots, fractured … More XII. Into autumn

XIII. A second life

       Sadie’s new high-collared coat came in handy as night fell. “It was so cold it was like sleeping outdoors,” she wrote the following morning, hands barely thawed above a bed of glowing coals and smoke stinging her eyes. A crystalline stratum of hoarfrost whitened the ground and every other thing living or … More XIII. A second life

XVII. Fort Scott

     They rose in the gloaming, at first a faint whine barely audible above the snickering horses, the clatter of pans and the quiet conversations around a crackling fire, followed by an ominous mounting drone that spoke of numbers beyond counting or imagining, numbers sufficient to eclipse the stars. They massed in the gathering … More XVII. Fort Scott

XIX. Misery

     In the night the lights of a smelter glowed like a fallen comet throbbing and pulsing beyond the crenated ranks of silhouetted trees. Looking from the wagon Sadie saw inky shadows stretching from the woods and their own tripartite assembly, the pallid bowed canvases so graceful above their blocky undercarriages, the horses with … More XIX. Misery