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The Callahans: The Complete Series

Page 21

by Gordon Ryan


  “What!” she exclaimed.

  “It’s only for a short time, Katrina. It’s just that the land purchase is complicated, and I have many dealings with Señor Cardenas to complete. I will need to stay with them in their hacienda for some weeks, and it would be better if they did not know that I was married. I’ve arranged for you to stay with the Olsens until I can arrange for our house to be built.”

  “Harold, I don’t want to stay with the Olsens. I want to be with you.”

  “I understand, dear,” he said, taking her face in his hands. “Just be patient for a while, Katrina. I have our best interests at heart. Remember, if you’d not learned of the true nature of that Callahan lout, you might now be married to a murderer.”

  Katrina remained silent, though hearing such a blatant evidence of Harold’s duplicity made her almost physically ill. He knew Thomas was not guilty of murder, and to hear him lie so callously was chilling.

  When the ship entered the harbor at Mazatlán, and Miguel Antonio came out to meet Harold, Katrina was introduced as Harold’s sister. Miguel insisted that, as a family member, she accompany them to the hacienda, but Harold deferred, stating that she was needed to assist with the young Olsen children until the colony was able to construct permanent housing. Katrina’s departure with the others left Harold little doubt that she was unhappy. His promise that he would see her in a few days did little to placate her anger or her resentment. But looking forward to his reunion with Teresa, Harold had little patience with Katrina’s petulance and was frankly relieved to be away from her for a few days. He gave instructions to three of the men in the company, whom he had hired, to begin building a house for Katrina, and then, giving her a kiss on the forehead, left with Miguel.

  Chapter 16

  The Mormon colonists arrived in early November and were greeted with many acts of generosity and hospitality by the Mexicans living in and around Mazatlán. Merchants, anxious to fill the orders for lumber, grain, and sundry supplies necessary to outfit a new community, were more than eager to welcome the newcomers, even though the colonists were not Catholic.

  Harold was once again warmly greeted by Don Sebastian, but it was his welcome from Teresa that impressed Harold, assuring him of her affection for him and the degree to which she had missed him since his departure nearly eight weeks earlier. They had been married only four weeks when he had returned to Salt Lake City, and Teresa’s request to accompany him had been difficult to deny, but eventually, with the support of Don Sebastian, Harold had convinced her to remain in Mazatlán and arrange for their future life together. How well she had accomplished that task was to quickly become a thorn in Harold’s side.

  As they retired to their bed on Harold’s first night back in Mazatlán, Teresa had snuggled close to him and confided in him her joy that she had conceived and was bearing their first child. The news hit Harold like a thunderbolt, and he was relieved it was dark in the bedchamber, so that he did not have to explain the look of panic that came over his face. Lying there in the dark, he was able to make a reasonable expression of happiness at the news, but in reality, it was a complication he wasn’t certain how to deal with. He was now the uneasy custodian of two wives, both pregnant, and each unaware of the other.

  The next morning, as he woke, Harold found Teresa up and already dressed in riding gear. She came and sat on the side of the bed, and with her hand, tenderly brushed back the tousled hair that she had come to recognize as Harold’s morning trademark.

  “I have a surprise for you this morning,” she said.

  “Just being with you each day is a surprise,” Harold replied.

  “Ah, then this will be extra special. I’ve laid out your riding clothes, and Manuel is preparing our horses.”

  “Where are we going?” he asked, rising, giving her a soft kiss, and heading for the bathroom.

  Teresa followed, helping him to lather his face and watching in the mirror as he began stropping his razor on the leather. “I told you, it’s a surprise,” she teased.

  “As you wish.” He placed his hands on her shoulders and turned her toward the door. “I’ll meet you downstairs for breakfast,” he said, trying to have his morning bathroom ritual in private.

  “The lord of the castle’s wish, is my command,” she laughed. “Twenty minutes, then breakfast and off into the countryside,” she said as she left the room.

  Cantering over the hilly terrain, Harold watched with pride as Teresa maintained her position ahead of his mount, riding as well as any man Harold knew, leading the way toward the surprise she had continued to tease him about through breakfast. His love for this woman had quickly become all consuming and he wondered how she would react when it came time to explain the marriage practices he and his father believed in. He did love Katrina, he thought to himself, but Teresa brought another dimension of excitement to his life and would be able to provide the social status in the community, which his father had determined to retain as the family left three generations of history behind in Utah. Marriage into the Cardenas line assured a continuation of that respect.

  After about a thirty-minute ride, Teresa reined in her horse, looking back as Harold joined her on a small knoll that overlooked a lush, grass-filled valley. Below them, a small stream ran west toward the ocean, which was now in magnificent view from the position at which Teresa had chosen to stop. A large frame and stucco building was under construction off to their right, slightly higher up the knoll, and workmen were busily moving around the site. In front of Harold and Teresa, perhaps three miles farther on, but blocked from their view by the low, rolling hills, was the town site for Harold’s new community, where the residents were also busy, building their new homes. The boundary of the land that Magnus Stromberg had purchased from Don Sebastian was just over the rise, marked by a small copse of Mesquite trees.

  “You do give a body a workout when riding,” Harold exclaimed, catching his breath.

  “I love to ride. Father took me riding before I could sit a saddle. My equestrian instructor in Spain told me I should have entered competition, were I not returning to Mexico,” she proudly exclaimed. Discovering this side of Teresa had initially startled Harold, for during their brief courtship, she had displayed no sense of accomplishment or outward pride, other than that engendered by her breeding. But soon after their marriage, it was as if Teresa wanted her new husband to know of her abilities and accomplishments, so that he might enjoy a greater sense of her worth.

  “Is someone building here?” he asked.

  “My father,” she said, smiling.

  “What will it be, another country home?”

  “Yes.”

  Harold was puzzled and rose in his stirrups to look back over his horse in the direction they had come. “But the hacienda is only about five miles away. Why would he need another home so near our colony?” he asked, retaking his seat and looking at Teresa.

  “For his daughter,” she replied.

  “His daughter?” Harold repeated, not fully comprehending.

  “It is our home, Harold. The start of our hacienda,” she explained, reaching across the space between their horses to lay her hand on his arm. “It is father’s wedding present to us. In addition to the eighteen thousand acres your father purchased, Father has given us another fifteen hundred acres and eight hundred head of Longhorn cattle to start our herd.”

  Harold sat speechless in his saddle for several moments, watching the workmen scurrying about the building, now taking shape in his mind as a residence. “I had thought that we would live in your father’s home for a while,” he murmured.

  “Father thought it best we have our own home, and that perhaps your father would stay with us, when he arrives, at least until he builds his own home. The homes your people are building are quite small. Only beginning homes actually. And when Miguel told me about your sister, I thought she should also move in with us, until her husband arrives and they can complete their home.

  “Oh, Harold, it is magnificent,�
�� she beamed. “We will have our own home for our child to be born in. Let me show you what Father has done,” she exclaimed, spurring her horse and leaving Harold alone on the crest of the knoll. He watched as she rode up the slope, dismounted in front of the house, and handed her reins to one of the workmen. Looking back once at Harold and waving excitedly, she entered the house.

  From his vantage point, he could tell the home was exceptionally well situated to view the ocean and surrounding valley, yet close enough to the new Mormon community to enable Harold to be accessible to his people. Teresa had reasoned, that as the patron of his fledgling group, Harold should immediately command the respect due such a position by the establishment of a stately residence, located somewhat apart from the others.

  Were it not for the presence of Katrina, Harold would have immediately agreed. As it was, the noose was closing around Harold’s throat more quickly than he had planned, and the time was rapidly approaching when he would have to face the dilemma of how to introduce his wives to each other.

  On a morning when Harold and Miguel rode into Mazatlán to order additional building materials for New Hope, the name the colonists had begun calling their settlement, Teresa set out with a buggy in the opposite direction for the colony. Harold had been silent on the subject of his sister coming to live in their new home, but had suggested that perhaps her assistance was still needed by the Olsens. Teresa rode past the house construction, spending a few minutes to observe changes since her last visit. Within three weeks, the foreman had said, the main part of the house would be livable and they would be able to move in. Certainly well before Christmas, he had promised.

  Twice since Harold’s return, Teresa had viewed the budding colony from a distance, but had not gone into the town, content to remain on horseback with Harold on the hillside overlooking New Hope. Twice Harold had gone alone to visit his sister, but had remained overnight only once, although he had held daytime meetings with the settlers of the colony on a more frequent basis.

  Riding slowly into the area and guiding her horse and buggy around depressions in the rough road, Teresa was greeted with smiles and waves from those working on the new homes. One heavy-set woman preparing food for the workers, paused to wipe her hands on her apron, shading her eyes from the glare of the sun, and inviting Teresa to “light down and sit a spell.”

  “Thank you. It is becoming hot this morning,” Teresa said as she wrapped the reins around the brake handle and stepped down from the buggy.

  “Well, we’ve been at it since before sunup, but it’s nearly time for lunch for the crew, bless their hearts. How does a nice cup of lemonade sound?” she asked.

  “Wonderful. You’ve made a lot of progress,” Teresa commented, looking around the yard. “Do you think you’ll be in your house before Christmas?”

  “That’s the plan, ’cept it’ll only be a one-room cabin. That is ’til my husband gets ’em all built. Then he’ll start on making each one a bit larger, as time and money permit.”

  “I see,” Teresa said, perplexed. “How many cabins is your husband building? Is he helping another family?”

  “We’re all helping each other,” the lady said, beginning to exercise caution. “Did you come to see someone in particular?”

  “Yes,” Teresa said, brightening. “I’d hoped to find Katrina Stromberg, Harold’s sister.”

  “Harold’s sister?” the lady asked, also confused. “Oh, yes, his sister,” the lady repeated, covering her confusion. “Well, she’d be down to the large barn where all the children are. She’s kind of looking after the kids.”

  “Excellent,” Teresa responded, finishing her drink. “Well, I’d best be off. Thank you for the refreshment. It’s just what I needed.”

  “Glad to help. Come again when you can.”

  “Thank you,” Teresa replied, climbing back into the buggy. Slapping the reins softly, she nudged the horse along, picking her way through the budding community toward the large barn that had already been built and which was in use as a storage facility for building materials. She stopped outside, climbed down again, and hobbled the horse before entering the building.

  Several men were removing lumber, and at the far end of the structure, Teresa could see about a dozen children arranged in a semicircle, seated around a young woman. Teresa approached quietly, without disturbing the lesson and listened as the young woman read to the small gathering of youngsters.

  Katrina looked up, and noticing Teresa, offered a smile. After a few minutes, she came to the end of the story and closed the book.

  “Now,” she said, standing, “who’s ready for some fresh air and sunshine?”

  All the hands went up together and Katrina laughed at the children. “Jenny, will you take charge please, and see that the younger children are allowed to have a turn on the swings?”

  “Yes, Sister Stromberg,” Jenny replied, starting outside.

  Katrina walked over to where Teresa stood, both women smiling as the children quickly ran outside, leaving the barn empty except for the two of them.

  “Good morning,” Katrina said.

  “Yes. And good morning to you. I’m Teresa, and you must be Katrina Stromberg, Harold’s sister.”

  Katrina bristled slightly at the use of the term “sister” in reference to her relationship to Harold. “Yes, I am. Can I show you something or be of some help?”

  “Well, I was hoping that you might have time to come for a short ride with me this morning. There’s something I’d like to show you.”

  “Oh?” Katrina queried.

  “It’s not far, really. Just about a twenty-minute ride. Will the children be all right?”

  Katrina looked toward the large barn door where the children had exited. “Sister Olsen will be back shortly. Eight of the twelve are hers,” Katrina laughed. “I guess they’ll be all right.” Katrina looked carefully at Teresa, admiring her Latin features, olive skin, and black hair, not certain what the Spanish woman had to do with her. She seemed friendly enough, but who was she?

  “I’m not sure I know who you are. Did you say Teresa was your name?”

  Teresa laughed out loud. “That Harold. It’s just like a man, isn’t it? I’m Teresa Cardenas Stromberg. Harold’s wife.”

  Teresa watched as Katrina’s face dissolved from an inquisitive smile to a look of unbelief, her eyes growing wide, then rolling back slightly in her head as she collapsed on the floor.

  Quickly, Teresa moved to a water pail near where the children had been sitting, and removing a kerchief from her sleeve, dipped it in the water and returned to gently wipe Katrina’s brow. As Katrina opened her eyes, she found herself lying on the sawdust covered floor, her head in Teresa’s lap, and the dark stranger continuing to mop her forehead with the damp cloth.

  “I’m terribly sorry,” Teresa said. “I must have startled you.”

  Katrina didn’t speak, attempting to gain some sense of this event and the woman who had introduced herself as Harold’s wife. Sitting up slowly, Katrina placed her hand to her head, pushing back the strands of hair that had fallen over her eyes. “Please excuse me,” she offered. “The heat perhaps. I’m not used to the temperatures.”

  Teresa laughed. “You’ll have to get used to it. It’s November now. Wait until next July and August.”

  Katrina smiled weakly, and tried to stand. “I guess the heat,” she paused, “the baby and all, was just too much.”

  “Baby?” Teresa brightened. “Are you with child?”

  “Uh, yes, I am.”

  “How wonderful. So am I. Does Harold know of your child yet? Is your husband with the colony or perhaps coming later?”

  “Well, I’m not sure if, uh . . .”

  “Oh, I have forgotten my manners,” Teresa said. “Too many questions. Let’s just go for a short ride and see if we can’t get some breeze flowing over you. That will help your circulation.”

  “Yes, perhaps it will,” Katrina responded.

  As they climbed into the buggy, Katr
ina sat quietly as Teresa urged the horse to retrace the path she had taken into town, directing him toward the far hillside and the short ride toward the new home under construction.

  By the time the buggy reached the edge of town, it had all become too clear to Katrina—the other families who were with the group, some with multiple wives from before the Manifesto, Harold’s excommunication, his request that she introduce herself as his sister—all of it suddenly made sense. But the realization brought with it a wave of nausea. Raising her hand to Teresa, signaling her to stop the buggy, Katrina leaned over the side of the wagon and retched. Several moments passed while Teresa worked to still the horse and Katrina took deep breaths, trying to regain both her dignity and her faculties, determined not to let this woman receive any further advantage through her own childish behavior.

  “Are you all right, Katrina?” Teresa asked.

  “Yes, thank you. I’ll be fine. Let’s press on.”

  “Good. You’ll be excited, I hope. I want to show you the house Harold and I are building for our home. We’ll want you to come live with us, of course, until your own home is finished and your husband is . . .”

  “I’m not married,” Katrina said flatly, allowing herself for a moment to actually believe the statement.

  They rode along quietly for a few moments. The only sounds were those of the horse wheezing slightly and its hooves thudding in the soft dirt of the road, as it picked its way up the rising hillside, beyond which lay the new Stromberg house, now nearing completion.

  “Well, then,” Teresa finally said, “we’ll just have to see that you are well taken care of during your pregnancy.” She reached over and took Katrina’s hand as they drove. “I would like to be your friend, Katrina. Will you allow me to help? With my baby coming too, we’ll go through this together.”

 

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