| For the third novel in the Desert Dwellers
trilogy I needed a plot that would simultaneously bring to a head
smoldering conflicts between members of the Levie-Goldson clan and
background tumult in territorial Arizona. I wove it from
an historic family murder and kidnapping adjudicated under bizarre
circumstances in 1886-1887. The wild cast of Arizonans --individuals
and officeholders, some humane, others savagely self-seeking --
are culled from historical and public records. Hit by a tragic event
-- the kidnapping of her 14-year-old sister, Ida, by a hired hand
she recommended -- Frieda and her family in Dos Cacahuates and in
San Francisco reveal their true feelings in their deeds and misdeeds.
Determined, yet worn, Frieda vows to emancipate Ida, who has become
foul-mouthed, pregnant and under control of her captor. Along the
way, Ida isnÍt the only one to be freed. The outcome of this partly
true, mostly imagined tale surprised me. Yet it shouldn't have.
It's a little-known variation of the inexhaustible immigrant to
American (in this case, westerner) story. And a timely one, fraught
with exciting possibilities as emerging ethnic and women's histories
fuel fresh stories of how we were, are, and what we can become.
Excerpt One from On
Her Way Home
Dove- to charcoal-gray under overcast skies,
the landscape looked as empty and forbidding as it had when she
first arrived. She watched a patch of blue cut through the dark
clouds and a bright yellow-green light streak across the melancholy
plain. ThatÍs how it was on the desert. From season to season, day
to day, hour to hour, the colors, the temperature, the mood changed,
often with startling speed. Bennie had tried to teach her to do
as he did, go with it. And she had , through heat spells, sandstorms,
flash floods, abundance, want, all kinds of people, then few people
as it grew harder to squeeze a living out of their would-be town.
But IdaÍs abduction was different. She couldnÍt accept it. SheÍd
caused it. She had to undo it.
The faint beat of horse hoofs drew FriedaÍs eyes
back to the cut-off. A four-horse stagecoach, clouds of dust rising
around it, appeared from behind a stand of saguaraos. It was speeding
toward Dos Cacahuates. The stagecoach wasnÍt due until the next
day.
Several minutes later, Frieda raced back up the
hill to Angelina, who was in the rear yard bent over a galvanized
iron rinse tub.
"He found her! He found Ida in Mexico!"
she shouted, her face hot with excitement, her hand over her pounding
heart. "TheyÍre in Nogales waiting for me. Nardo Sanchez rushed
over with the news."
"Is sheƒ" Angelina hesitated, then
ventured, "ƒall right?"
"Nardo didnÍt see her. They arrived four
nights go on the Sonora Railway„Ida, Pearson, a Mexican deputy,
and the sheriff. IÍm going back with Nardo."
"IÍll come too, Angelina said, eyeing the
twin wasthtubs nearby on a grate above a smoldering fire.
"I need you to stay with the children."
"WeÍll take them. BeckyÍs napping, the boys
are up there."
Frieda followed AngelinaÍs extended finger to
where her sons stood on the bluff. Silhouetted against the clouded
sky, they looked so small and defenseless, she had to turn away.
"I have to go alone," she said.
Angelina scrutinized her like a physician assessing
the stamina and judgement of a still frail patient. "Doøa Fridita,
you canÍt go alone."
"I donÍt know how long IÍll be."
"WeÍll go and be back before Don Bennie."
"I promised my father IÍd bring Ida home
as soon as the sheriff found her."
Her helper shook her head disapprovingly, two
fingers pressed to her lips. Frieda understood: Angelina believed
her father was cruel, grief-crazed, or plain crazed, and would mistreat
her as he had when he was in Dos Cacahuates.
"I have to do whatever he wants," Frieda
added.
"As your Bible says."
"And my heart. I made a pledge. Es me
manda."
"Una manda." That Angelina understood.
"To repay God for returning Ida."
"And make amends for the anguish IÍve caused
my little sister and my parents."
"Wait for Don Bennie; heÍll go with you."
"He canÍt. My father will not allow him
in the boardinghouse."
"Don Bennie will accompany you, see that
youÍre properly received, then leave," Angelina persisted.
"ItÍs not only my father. Bennie and the
sheriff parted bitter enemies.
"How long will you be gone?"
"I donÍt know."
Excerpt Two from On
Her Way Home
Chapter
Five
Skip The
Side Trips
She
was dozing in a chair in front of her worktable when Bennie, bundled
up in a sheepskin jacket, Stetson in hand, knocked at the office
door. Polite as a poor traveler seeking permission to camp on her
land, he asked to talk to her. A blanket draped over her shoulders,
Frieda listened to his request, then invited him in. He addressed
her in a fiat monotone as unlike Bennie's buoyant voice as his dun
eyes were unlike those glistening brown sponges that used to sop
her up. Unable to meet his uneasy gaze, she stared past him at the
frost-tinted window behind his left shoulder.
"I
know it's late. You really should get a little more rest, Frieda,
you 're worn out and-"
"What
did you want to talk to me about?"
"Don
Ysidro G6mez-he has that big ranch outside Ciudad Obregon-was in
today to stock up on tools, hardware, ammunition. G6mez stopped
buying at Goldson Brothers when the Sonora Railway reached Nogales.
Anyway, he heard we've been having muchos problemas and went
out of his way to throw some business our way this year."
Frieda
was pleased to see Bennie revel in the return of one of his big
customers, but that was not what he'd come to ten her. Or was it?
"Soo
Fat fixed us a real nice lunch down at the First Lady and we talked
about old times on the border, our families and all. Matilda, his
youngest girl, is already eleven, going on twelve." His expression
saddening, he added, "Don Ysidro asked me to convey his sympathy
to you in this time of sorrow."
"Tell
him I appreciate his concern."
Like
animals enmeshed in the same trap, they exchanged a long, silent,
emotion-ladened gaze. Bennie went on.
"Don
Ysidro bought up a quarter of my stock, and wanted to buy more.
I went into Ida's room the other day to get a little table, and
noticed her clothes hanging in the cupboard, all clean and pressed.
All those frilly little hand-me-downs from your sister Sylvia's
friends. I thought Don Ysidro might want them for his Matilda so
I took him in and showed them to him. He got real excited, offered
me fifty dollars for the lot. I figured you could use the money,
and Ida would have out-grown them-"
"No!"
Frieda stood up, her limbs jerking with agitation.
"Be
reasonable. I've told you a hundred times and I'll tell you again,
things happen in the Arizona Territory. Real pioneers pull themselves
together and carry on. I have a dozen times. Sooner or later, I've
been hoping you would too." Mistaking her flabbergasted silence
for attention, he went on, "Ida was a joy, but she's gone,
and like as not, for good."
Frieda's
mouth dropped open and a hoarse, animal-like scream burst forth.
She picked up a dented blue-and-white enamel wash basin on the table
beside her, spun around, and flung it at Bennie. The metal opened
a wound at the corner of his right eye and blood gushed down the
side of his face. "Get out of here and don't come back."
He touched
the wound, looked at the wet, red fluid on his fingers then at her.
"Out,"
she screamed again, reaching for the pitcher. It caught him on his
back as he was opening the door.
She
could hear him pacing in the hall, wrestling with his rage. "You're
out of your mind," Bennie shouted. Lowering his voice to a
furious whisper, he went on, "I am not going to allow my children
to grow up trembling with fear each time their mother comes into
the room. You say you're going to keep the search up until he finds
Ida. Odds are he won't find her. You had better come to terms with
that. Do you understand me?"
No,
she didn't. They were like members of warring tribes separated by
a chasm, shouting at each other in foreign tongues.
"I'm
not going to put up with this forever, Frieda," he warned,
thumping his fist against the wood. "I want a wife at my table,
in my bed, on my arm, ion my life-not a stranger hiding out in a
back room, like a madwoman in one of those English novels you read.
I'm warning you, Frieda, I can't take much more.
That
she did understand. She didn't think she could take much more either.
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