[personal profile] pearl_smithers
When grey dawn reached the western edge of Nauvoo it breathed light upon a flurry of activity. Horses braced themselves against the tug of men who had become their owners but the night before, and now reeked of tobacco and liquor. Crates and barrels, were stacked and lashed upon the bed of wagons while children climbed over them, shouting to each other as their parents struggled to stretch the limp, bleached canvas over wooden bows, that would be their only roof for the next few months.



Amidst the confusion, Pearl, holding the hands of the two youngest Vandenberg children, Rachel, all of four with her round brown eyes and tousled hair, and seven year old Zeke, followed Mrs Vandenberg, carrying the baby, as she threaded her way through the crowd, consisting mainly of large Mormon families and hard eyed trappers, till she reached the small string of wagons that waited to the side of the main camp.

There, they found Mr Vandenberg and ten year old Jeremiah loading sacks of cornmeal, while Bjorn Lundgren checked the oxen’s harness. He waved cheerfully when he spotted them. She had only met Mr Lundgren and his wife Ina the day before, a newlywed couple from Sweden. Farmers, they seemed pleasant, but between them spoke only just enough English to get by.

At least she consoled herself, the Zalinskys, of Polish stock from New York, were quite conversant, though the husband, a blacksmith, had a thick accent, while his wife spent most of her time fretting over her baby and walking round the wagon to double check everything was lashed, hammered and tied firmly in place.

“Good morning!” Mr Brady shouted, his tone that of a man sitting on his porch, reclining after a hearty meal, while bathed in golden rays, rather than occupied in securing a large cooking pot to the side of the wagon, fingers, numb and stiff in the dim chill of early dawn. Pearl paused to give Rachel and Zeke a boost into the Vandenberg’s neighboring wagon, then darted forward to help him.

“There!” Pearl’s slender fingers had an easier time weaving the coarse rope through the iron handles. She stepped back to study her work. Suddenly the wagon lurched forward, causing them both to start, there was a shout at the front, followed by a string of profanities and the snorting of oxen as the wagon bolted forward. She recognized the man trailing in the wake of dust as one of the animal handlers someone who they had found loitering outside a saloon, and engaged on the spot for what she and Mrs Vandenberg agreed was far too high a fee.

“Kathleen!” Mr Brady ran forward and seized his wife’s arm. Mrs Brady appeared shaken, but little the worse save for a fine coating of dust. The front of skirts appeared rather odd, and it took Pearl a moment to realize that some cloth had been ripped away by the wagon wheel. She suppressed a shudder as she remembered stories she had heard back in town of how many died beneath the wheels, limbs or head crushed beyond recognition. She had dismissed such stories as the stuff to turn a traveler’s stomach. But suddenly it seemed like only one of the smaller dangers that lurked along the trail ahead, like sharp toothed creatures in the underbrush.


Yet somehow, she thought as she swung into the saddle and idly knotted one hand in Iris’ mane, she could hardly wait to set off.
papagena: (OT: Henrietta bonnet wind)
[personal profile] papagena
The shop bell rang as more emigrants poured into the general mercantile. All types were filling the cramped store, from a dust-covered elderly couple bickering about the price of a pound of sugar; to a man dressed in a dove grey suit thoughtfully selecting preserves at the counter. There was little space to even move, Henrietta found, as she and her brother stood in the corner beside some farming hoes and rakes, just as straight and tall to fit in. 

"There he is..." Charles groused, as one of the emigrants steered towards them. With his lanky stride, black clothing and hat, and lingering smirk, John Smith fairly oozed foreign -- a trait Henrietta did not appreciate. She grew more mystified daily as Charles placed some of the journey's responsibility on him. How could her brother even trust a man who looked like the snake who'd just eaten the rat?

"Where have you been?" Charles continued. "We've placed our order already, and once the wagon arrives they'll load it up. But we've been waiting on news from you if that will even happen."

"My friend, I have procured the finest opportunity for you in this fair city." Smith dangled a long fingered hand in the air to add some flair to his already dramatic tone. "Four reliable and well bred oxen for you, free of charge."

Before Charles could leap out of his boots with joy, Henrietta cut in.  "And just how did you do that?"

"Skeptical as always. An admirable trait, to question everything." Smith smiled at her. He had never made her uncomfortable;  in fact, his mannerisms were generally gentlemanly. They sparred with their wits alone more often than not. "The owner was made to know it was his duty to help a man of the cloth in his mission."

"To be brief, you deceived him by telling him it was God who needed the oxen?" Henrietta raised her eyebrows and looked at her brother. Charles rolled his eyes. 

"Of course! It's true, isn't it?" Smith asked naively. "Of course, his fear of fire and brimstone helped with the procurement ..."

"We've got to go pay them properly." Charles began towards the door, dragging Smith along with him. "And you're going to help me find them. Stay here for the time being, Etta."

Henrietta sighed and folded her arms. Another one of Smith's ideas; how many more would they be subject to on the trail? She would have traded him away in a heartbeat if it meant she could have more space for more of her books on the wagon, but being so heavy, they'd been the first to go. They couldn't walk, talk, or handle oxen, as her brother often said. 

She milled through the crowd, examining the other items dotting the shelves of the store, when she bumped into someone...
papagena: (OT: Henrietta glance up)
[personal profile] papagena
"'Their own home is in the town on the road. Their parents, and brothers, and sisters, will be glad to see them again; and so will the little girl and boy to see them. The... the..."

Henrietta watched her pupil, Louis, a little scamp with a swath of dark hair from the room downstairs, stare hard at the next word in the story. His tongue slid over his lower lip in frustration.

"S-stage...." Louis muttered. "Stage-coach... The stage-coach which only brings d-dust to you and me, as it rolls along, brings joyful faces --"

There was a clatter from the entryway and Louis stopped. Henrietta held his place with a finger, glancing up, as her brother Charles strode into the room. He flashed a wide smile while whisking off his hat, looking briefly at Louis before fixing onto Henrietta.  Something in his eyes begged to speak. 

"Mr. Clarke!" Louis burst out before Charles got a word in. 

"Hello there, young mister. Did Miss Henrietta teach you just as well as I do?" He ruffled the boy's hair and grinned over his head.

"Louis did a wonderful job today," Henrietta said as she gathered the boy's schoolwork from their table and gently closed the book. "On account of my tutoring, I'm sure."

"Say hello to your mother." Charles led Louis to the front door of their tiny apartment and shut the door behind him. Henrietta stood, watching from the doorway of the Clarke's sitting room. 

"How was your meeting?" Henrietta asked after Charles turned around. His cheerful veneer had melted somewhat, revealing a few more lines on his face that she had not noticed before.

"The plans are apparently set in stone. This confirms it." Charles reached into his coat and produced a paper, which he handed to Henrietta. Her eyes scanned the flowery language. 

"To Oregon?" she repeated the words on the paper, throat dry. "Indians? Charles--"

"I've already been in contact with a man about the journey... a Mr. Boyd from Nauvoo. I saw his name in the newspaper and thought it would be wise to write him for more information, in the event I was re-assigned."

He stood at the window, watching the muddy city street below. Rain had been pattering at the glass much of the day, and while Henrietta enjoyed the change that predicted a showery spring to follow the snowy winter, now she felt that it matched her mood appropriately. Grey and gloomy. Henrietta sighed, pushing the paper away on the table. 

"Etta, you don't have to accompany me," Charles said, turning suddenly to face her with a pained expression, as though everything around him were about to disappear. "I'm bound to be foolish and make a lot of mistakes. I don't know anything other than city people... and they want me to minister to the Indians?" He sucked in a breath. "Have you heard of the massacre of the Whitmans?"

Henrietta held her tongue for a minute as she gazed about the room. They had large bookshelves filled with every genre imaginable, fine pieces of furniture passed down to them from their deceased parents, a comfortable warmth emanating from the fireplace. The rain was kept outside where it belonged. Everything was just so - it had taken them two or three years to finally settle and become comfortable in their apartment. Having come from a fine large home when their parents were alive, it was a struggle. 

"You can't... refuse?" Henrietta hesitantly asked, predicting his answer.

"I signed the paper. Even though they knew I've only worked with immigrants mostly, they were so persuasive -- most of the cost of transport is paid by the mission board -- and who am I to refuse if it's from the Lord?" Charles didn't sound entirely convinced though. "As I said, just because I'm leaving doesn't mean you must accompany me --"

"Charles, what else would I do? I am nearly 26 years old, without any prospects of a suitor - " the words tumbled easily from her lips; she'd grown used to saying them, which saddened her. But something about the prospect of a journey instead of a suitor was making her heart beat a little faster. "I take in very little money by being a seamstress. Besides, who would mend your clothes on the way there?" 

He just quirked an eyebrow at her. 

"It wouldn't do to have you do this by yourself." 

"I had hoped I wouldn't be. I'm thinking of asking John to come along."

"John!" Henrietta couldn't help but snort out a laugh. "John Smith! He'd sooner disappear with your oxen than help you over a mountain. Even more reason why I should come along. He's shiftless, shady..."

"And joining us for supper tonight." Charles loosened his neck tie, eyes aside.

"Oh. Shall I ask for a room up for him too? Will he start paying rent?" Henrietta replied, rolling her eyes. The man had weaseled his way into their life enough, taken advantage of Charles' hospitality, as far as she was concerned. Ministering to the poor is how Charles would call it, and he even one time said that his association with Mr. Smith had given him access to other groups of people - but in Henrietta's sight, Charles was amused by this Mr. Smith and his tales of Romania or England or wherever he originated from, and all his strange customs and habits. "The man is a stubborn atheist." 

"First of all, you know he hardly eats anything - "

"- An insult to Mrs. Shriver." Henrietta said, referring to their landlady who cooked suppers for her tenants.

"And," Charles plowed ahead, "If he's an atheist, he ought to receive a warm supper every now and then, for I imagine little else warms his soul."

"Well, I can't argue with that." Henrietta took another glance about the room, as though fixing it, the way it was, in her mind one final time. "I'll let Mrs. Shriver know. And... when will we leave?"

"Next week."

Cast List

Oct. 29th, 2012 05:48 pm
papagena: (OT: Shady with hangover)
[personal profile] papagena
 
 
 
Albert Boyd, Trail Guide
Lost it all in the 1849 gold rush, now leads wagons out west
 
Curtis Boyd
Brother of Albert, heading west for the first time. Saddlemaker by trade.

Tabitha Boyd
Wife of Curtis 
 

_________________________
 
 

Vandenberg Family
Phillip and Emma with children - ages baby, 4, 7, 9, 10
 
 
Pearl Smithers




_________________________


Henrietta Clarke
Seamstress and spinster accompanying her brother on the trail





Charles Clarke
Inner city Presbyterian missionary turned westward pioneer




John “Shady” Smith
Romani snake oil salesman




_________________________


- Walton Family -
Edward Walton IV



 Lenora Beaulah Walton, née Harrington


 

_________________________


Brady Family
Kathleen and Matthias Brady - children ages 6, 9


_________________________


Thomas Horne, Abraham Pelley, Walter Malone
Three aspiring young gentlemen of finance, out to make their fortune, and determined to let nothing stand in their way.


Thomas Horne

Abraham Pelley


Walter Malone


_________________________


Bjorn and Ina Lundgren
Newlywed Swedish immigrant couple who speak little English.


Bjorn


Ina
 
 
_________________________

Elijah Blount
Crotchety 65 year old veteran of War of 1812 and numerous other Indian wars, determined to join family in Oregon

Solomon Blount
Nephew and caretaker of Elijah; lawyer by trade.

Priscilla Blount
Wife of Solomon
 
Hiram Dooley (45), Luke Swanson (33), Jimmy Ward (28)
Seasoned trappers, scouts, and explorers who help along the trail.
 
_________________________


 Zalinsky Family

Jan, a skilled carpenter, and Zofia and their baby boy Michal, immigrated to America from Poland a few years ago, met and married in New York, and decided to head out west after the birth of their son.

 
_________________________

Pruitt Family

George Pruitt
Semi-illiterate blacksmith barely scraping by to make a living for his family.
Dreams of the day his son becomes a cattle baron

Children - son Lane, daughter Elmina
 (Bitty), and daughter Eliza



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Voyage of the Prairie Schooners

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