Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
agree. Kavanaugh has an affinity for Indians and
little use for his own kind.
James said Kavanaugh has agreed to go with us
to Oregon. He said John MacLeod was surprised
and pleased. He said—Kavanaugh knows this
country like the back of his own hand.
All the ladies are Impressed with him. They
think he is Very Handsome and Mysterious. The
men ply him with constant questions. I wonder
sometimes if James and the others are not having
second thoughts about this madness of going west.
It is raining again today and making mess of our
camp. Last night, the wind blew rain right into
the wagon. It is too wet for a cookfire. I wish I
was at home at Aunt Martha’s with my children
cuddled into that big brass bed.
I asked James what we would do if the children
get sick. He says we got Doc Murphy. What if the
wagon breaks down? He says we have spare parts
and the wheels are made of osage orangewood.
What about Indians? He says Kavanaugh knows
what to do about Indians. James says I worry too
much, and I say he doesn’t worry enough.
We ate cold beans and hard biscuits tonight.
I kept thinking about Betsy’s fine cooking and
that warm kitchen. I wonder if I will ever know
those Comforts again. By the time we get to
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Crops. We will all starve by springtime.
I wonder if any of us will be alive in a year.
$85.00
Cotton duck covers . . . . . . . . . . .
100.00
4 teams of oxen . . . . . . . . . . . . .
200.00
harnesses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
25.00
6 barrels of flour . . . . . . . . . . . . .
25.00
600 pounds bacon . . . . . . . . . . . .
30.00
50 pounds chipped beef . . . . . . . . .
8.00
50 pounds lard . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.50
100 pounds dried fruit . . . . . . . . . .
6.00
50 pounds salt and pepper. . . . . . . .
3.00
100 pounds coffee . . . . . . . . . . . .
9.00
200 pounds beans . . . . . . . . . . . .
8.00
75 pounds rice . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.75
10 pounds of saleratus . . . . . . . . . .
1.00
5 pounds mustard . . . . . . . . . . . .
1.00
150 pounds sugar . . . . . . . . . . . .
7.00
powder, lead, shot . . . . . . . . . . . .
20.00
30 pounds tenting . . . . . . . . . . . .
5.00
matches. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1.00
50 pounds candles . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.30
3 pounds castile soap . . . . . . . . . .
2.00
100 feet heavy rope . . . . . . . . . . .
4.00
45 pounds bedding. . . . . . . . . . . .
22.50
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $572.05
Savings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
854.22
-572.05
282.17
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Share for captain/scout
MacLeod and Kavanaugh . . . . . . . .
-44.00
Savings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
282.17
-44.00
238.17
Members
John MacLeod
Wagon Company to Oregon
Territory
Scout—Mister Kavanaugh
James and Mary Kathryn Farr
—Illinois/ farmer
children: Joshua, Henry, Beth, Matt, and
Deborah
Virgil Boon
—Pennsylvania/ cooper
Judge Skinner and wife Mary—
Carolina/ lawyer
Reese Murphy
—New York/ doctor
sister: Susan
Cal Chaffey
—Maine/ farmer
Mary and Marcus Sweeney
—Ohio/ blacksmith
Mittie Catlow
—Illinois/ farmer
son: Calhoun
Franklin and Paralee Sinnott
—Missouri/ merchant
children: Frank and Patricia
Werner Hoffman
—New York/ farmer
son: Herbert
KaiserVandervert
—Massachusetts/ tailor
Ernest and Winifred Holtz
—New York/ wheelwright
children: Ernst, Louisa, Alicia, Gottlieb
Melzena and Arbozena Pratt
—Alabama/
seamstresses
nigra servant: Homer
Wells and Nellie Doane
—Missouri/ baker
children: Robert, Harlan, LeRoy
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Paul Colvigne
—Delaware/ teacher
Binger Siddons
—Indiana/ farmer
Oren and Aphie McKenzie
—Virginia/ farmer
Dunham and Celia Banks
—Connecticut/ shoemaker
children: baby Hortense
A. J. Wrigh
t—Tennessee/ harnessmaker
Wyatt Collins
—Vermont/ farmer
Cage Bake
r—Kentucky/ farmer
Ruckel Buckeye
—Ohio/ hunter
Artemesia and Athena Hendershott
—Georgia/
drayage
brother: Apollo
Stern Janssen
—Sweden/ sailor
Matthew Odell
—Illinois/ gunsmith
Less Moore
—South Carolina/ gambler
Payment rendered in advance to John
MacLeod—$800.00
Payment rendered in advance to
Bogan Kavanaugh—300.00
The sun has finally come out. We were busy all
day repacking to John MacLeod’s instructions.
Our flour is now stored in canvas sacks instead of
barrels, 100 pounds per sack. Our bacon supply
is repacked in boxes, 100 pounds each. We surrounded the bacon with bran. JM says this will
prevent the fat from melting and keep the bacon
from spoiling.
I am too tired to write more.
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It is raining again. We have moved to higher
ground. Everyone is Wet and Cold and Agitated.
JM says we will not move out until the grass is
four inches high. Right now, our stock is feeding
on what grass there is which is not much.
No one is happy, not even James who had this
fool idea of going to Oregon.
I long for home. I cannot think about Aunt
Martha, Betsy and Clovis without crying.
James bought a milk cow for $20. Beth will have
charge of it. Joshua will help herd the stock the
company has bought from the common fund.
We have been on the trail three days. We left
Courthouse Square at sunup May 12. There are
twenty-eight wagons in our company and
fifty-eight souls counted among them. We crossed
the Missouri border and left the United States of
America. The only law and order we got now is
what we have agreed to among ourselves. We
have traveled over muddy roads past a great big
blue mound and then crossed Bull Creek. Heading due west, we saw a sign saying The Road to
Oregon. We had a hard crossing at the
Vermillion. A. J. Wright lost a wheel coming
down the steep bank.
Crossing creeks is always trouble. Near the
mission the Shawnee Indians helped me while
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smooth crossing though my heart was in my
throat the whole way.
Franklin Sinnott has two wagons, one for family and supplies and another loaded with goods he
intends to sell in Oregon. He is driving it himself
and leaving his wife Paralee to drive the other.
She is scared of driving and with good reason.
She is not much good at it and Very Fragile.
When we were at the Wakarusa, she pulled out of
line and waited. Franklin yelled at her something
fierce, but she would not get back behind and follow him across. She would not budge. He had to
come back and drive the wagon across himself.
He was so mad, he made her get off and walk.
Little Patricia screamed for her mama all the way
across the river. Paralee came across in a bull
boat with a Shawnee.
We crossed the Kansas and have followed the
Little Blue for three days. James is letting Joshua
drive the wagon. I am thankful. It is easier on a
body to walk.
Someone pushing a wheelbarrow followed us
all day yesterday and today. MacLeod said it was
probably a Mormon and went out to see. I can
see the glow of a campfire in the distance.
Artemesia and Athena Hendershott have asked
Kavanaugh to share their supper. They are very
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nice ladies. Perhaps he will take a liking to one.
Apollo would be delighted to see one of his sisters
wed.
John MacLeod just returned and told James it
is a woman out there. He told her she is a fool and
should go back, but she said it is a free country
and she can go where she pleases.
It is beyond my thinking why any woman
would choose to go to Oregon let alone work so
hard to get there.
I wonder who she is and why she is so Determined to leave Civilization behind.
James said the woman following us is French and
from New Orleans and I am to have no discourse
with her. I asked him why and he would not tell
me. I said I would talk to whom I please and he
said I would not. I asked how he come to know so
much about her and he said Kavanaugh told him.
I told him it was his rotation on guard duty and
he should go. Ruckel Buckeye and Apollo
Hendershott are also on duty tonight. Kavanaugh
told us from the start the Indians have a fondness
for stock and the men must keep their Eyes
Open. James was mad enough when he left the
fire that he will have no trouble staying awake.
We have reached Alcove Springs. There were
so many wagons, we felt we were right back in
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better forage for the animals. I spent the afternoon washing clothes.
I can hear fiddles playing on the night air.
James wants to dance. He has not said so, but
I can tell because his foot is tapping. He keeps
looking at me and waiting for me to say something.
I would like to say something, but he would not
like to hear it.
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14
T H E I N T E R C O M O N S I E R R A ’ S D E S K B U Z Z E D . S H E
pressed the button. “Yes, Arlene?”
“You have a call on line two.”
“Thank you.” Sierra pressed the button, thinking it was the
counselor she’d been trying to reach. “Sierra Madrid speaking.”
“It’s Alex.”
Her heart leaped, and then crashed when he got straight to the
point. “The house is yours. My attorney says I’m making a mistake, but I want you to have it. I’ve already had the deed changed
over into your name. Same for your BMW. You’ll get the papers
certified mail in a day or two.”
His voice was so cold, her fingers felt icy around the telephone
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