© 2000 by Judith Pella and Tracie Peterson
Published by Bethany House Publishers
11400 Hampshire Avenue South
Bloomington, Minnesota 55438
www.bethanyhouse.com
Bethany House Publishers is a division of
Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan.
www.bakerpublishinggroup.com
Ebook edition created 2012
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
ISBN 978-1-4412-7003-0
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
Cover by John Hamilton Design
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
The Transcontinental Railroad
Part One: May-June 1868
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Part Two: July 1868
9
10
11
12
13
14
Part Three: August-October 1868
15
16
17
18
19
20
Part Four: November 1868-January 1869
21
22
23
24
25
26
Part Five: February-May 1869
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
About the Authors
Other Books by the Authors
Back Ad
Back Cover
1
SACRAMENTO
Jordana Baldwin stared at the letter in her hand. The posted date alone left her feeling rather despondent. Three years had passed since she’d come west to California, and in those three years she had nearly perished from boredom. Now, as if rising like a ghostly specter from the pages of her mother’s newsy letter, Jordana’s former life seemed to be slowly slipping away.
Her baby sister was in love, their mother wrote. The young man in question was the youngest son of a prominent stockbroker there in New York, and while Amelia was nearly fifteen years old, Jordana felt it impossible to consider that time had moved so quickly.
Feeling the need to be about something else, Jordana quickly scanned the rest of the letter, with a promise to herself to read it more carefully later. The family appeared to be doing well and fine. She marveled that her mother loved New York City enough to remain there. The Civil War had driven the family north from their Baltimore home, but now that the conflict was over and the states were once again united, Jordana had assumed James and Carolina Baldwin would take their remaining family and return home. But not only had her mother loved New York, her father found he had a real flair for the business deals born and bred in this rapidly growing city. Her mother had once written that while they had traveled abroad and seen a great deal of the world, there appeared no more exciting a town than New York City.
It seemed strange that Jordana couldn’t remember it with such enthusiasm. Had it really been only six years since she herself was enrolled in the Deighton School for Young Women, suffering the boredom of the city her mother now called the most exciting in the world?
“Perhaps I just don’t fit in anywhere,” Jordana muttered and folded the letter. Maybe she would feel more like reading it later. She went to her dresser and pulled out the top drawer. There she absentmindedly placed the letter, then glanced up to catch her reflection in the mirror.
At twenty-two, Jordana had grown into a handsome woman. She knew this to be the case because she was told it quite often. As for herself, she felt her face was a little too thin, her cheekbones a little too high, and her eyes a little too unusual. Surrounded by dark, sooty lashes, her brown eyes reflected tiny amber specks that were instantly noticeable. The glints of gold had always been there, but it seemed as she’d grown older, they were somehow more pronounced. Charlie Crocker, a good friend of the family and the man in charge of moving forward the actual building of the Central Pacific Railroad, said that it looked as if her eyes had been sprinkled with the same coveted gold dust that robbed his railroad of a proper labor force. Even now the memory made Jordana smile. Not so much for the compliment Charlie had given her, but for the memory of Charlie himself. He was a fun-loving but hardworking soul, who was completely devoted to his family and the railroad. And somewhere along the way, he had also devoted himself to Jordana’s extended family.
“Charlie would think me a ninny for brooding,” Jordana told herself in hopes of bolstering her spirits. “No one is keeping me here.”
And perhaps that was what bothered her the most. Nothing was keeping her in Sacramento. Nothing but routine, and that certainly wasn’t enough to merit continuing in the feelings she had grown weary of courting.
“I need a change,” she told her reflection. “And I need one soon.”
She thought of the three, almost four, years since she’d left the Nebraska plains to come west with her brother Brenton. They came to be with their sister Victoria and her husband, Kiernan O’Connor, and they came to bring Kiernan’s sister Caitlan. Now Caitlan and Brenton were married, quite happily, and Brenton busied himself with the photography business he loved. Sometimes Jordana helped him, but for the most part, Caitlan assisted Brenton, and she seemed for all purposes to love photography as much as her husband did. That left Jordana to help Victoria around the house and with the laundry service her sister had helped to start some years ago. Now that money was no longer a real worry for Victoria and Kiernan, however, Kiernan had insisted Victoria give the laboring tasks of washerwoman over to hirelings. At first Victoria had protested and the words had grown quite heated and angry between the two. But then, after a time, Victoria had suddenly changed. It seemed she realized her husband’s suggestion would afford her a way to help some of the less fortunate in their community. One thing led to another, and soon Victoria found herself in charge of a force of twenty workers whose laundry services were being used by people all over the Sacramento community. They had even moved the facility to a storefront downtown.
But in spite of all of this, Jordana knew a growing restlessness inside her that would not be quenched. She had written copious, lengthy letters home—letters describing her exploits upon the plains and the wonder at seeing the territories beyond the Mississippi. She had shared these thoughts primarily with her mother, because she knew Carolina had always longed to explore the world and learn all that could be learned. But she also shared these thoughts because she was afraid of losing them in a wash of indifference and monotony.
Surprisingly, Jordana found this creative outlet led her to something infinitely more satisfying. Her father had shared one of her long letters with a friend who just happened to be an editor at the New York Tribune. The man instantly latched on to the missive, pleading for the right to reprint it in his newspaper. He ranted and raved about the popularity of such stories, how the public was hungry for adventure and knowledge of the West. And so the column of J. Baldwin was born, and Jordana found herself writing a regular series of stories about the American frontier. Unfortunately, her memories were fading, and more and more she relied on stories from
her good friend Captain Rich O’Brian, a cavalry officer now stationed in Nebraska.
Thinking of Rich brought a second smile. He had been so good to continue their correspondence. Jordana eagerly awaited each of his letters, always relishing his tales of army life, needing to feel herself drawn into what she could not otherwise participate in.
“This is ridiculous,” she whispered, the smile fading. “Nothing is keeping me here. I don’t have to stay.” She frowned, wondering why she had said the words aloud. Was she trying to convince herself that they were true?
“Jordana? Are you in there?” her sister Victoria called.
Jordana sighed and opened the bedroom door with a deliberate slowness that was uncharacteristic. “I’m here.”
“You didn’t come down for breakfast,” Victoria spoke, her dark-eyed gaze quickly taking in Jordana’s petite frame. “You aren’t sick, are you?”
“In a sense I think I am,” Jordana admitted. “I’m sick of living in one spot. I’m sick of life passing me by with nothing ever happening to me, and I’m sick of myself.”
Victoria smiled. “Sounds to me like you need a change of pace.”
Jordana nodded. “I was thinking much the same thing. I hope you understand that it has nothing to do with you or Kiernan. You’ve both been so good to let me live with you these last few years. It seems silly to talk of being bored with my life when Kiernan has been gracious enough to take me out on the Central Pacific’s line so I could write about it. It’s even more senseless when I think of all the places I’ve gone with Brenton and Caitlan as they’ve photographed various developments in the railroad and the communities that have sprung up as a result.” She moved across the room and plopped down on her bed, pale pink muslin swirling around her feet as her skirt ballooned out softly.
“I’m twenty-two years old,” she said rather mournfully.
Victoria came to sit beside her. “I’ve known for some time that you would leave us. I’ve even mentioned it to Brenton in order to prepare him for such a plan.”
Jordana looked at her older sister in surprise. “You did? But how could you know? You’re so content to live here, to keep house and busy yourself in working with the laundry and the Chinese. How could you understand so well what I’m feeling when we’re nothing alike?”
Victoria reached out and took hold of Jordana’s hand. “We may not be alike, but you are the very image of our mother. I remember quite well her love of travel and the restlessness that seemed to haunt her when she stayed in one place too long. Why, as much as she loves the house she now lives in, she wrote me not long ago of her desire to journey south and spend time in Baltimore and Washington.”
“It’s the wanderlust we inherited from our grandfather Joseph,” Jordana answered, then added, “At least, that’s what Mother calls it.”
Victoria nodded. “I only ask that you think through carefully what you will do. Have a plan and let people know something of it. Be accountable to someone for the sake of safety, if nothing else. I know you long to venture out into the wilds of the frontier, but it might be wise to assemble a force of traveling companions to accompany you.”
“But that’s part of the problem,” Jordana protested. “I don’t want to be tied down to a group of people, especially strangers, who will tell me once again what convention says I must and must not do. I want the freedom to move about on my own. I have my own money now that I’ve passed twenty-one, and Father and Mother are both quite understanding of my needs. They don’t always approve of my plans, but they recognize the need.” She paused and studied Victoria. Her sister was a great beauty with ebony hair and eyes that seemed nearly as dark. She was the kind of woman that men, and even women, noticed, but beyond her physical beauty there was a generosity of spirit and a tenderness of heart that put Jordana quite at ease.
“You understand that need too,” Jordana continued. “I can see it in your expression and in the fact that you would work to prepare our brother, who no doubt will be the voice of opposition.”
“I think he and Kiernan will both worry and fret about the idea of your going off on your own. That’s why I suggested a traveling companion. Someone who could act as a sort of protector.” Victoria paused, growing thoughtful. “What about someone like that captain you write to all the time? You said he had plans to get out of the army. In fact, if I remember correctly, he should already be mustered out.”
“You think it would be more acceptable for me, as a single woman, to travel through the wilderness with Rich O’Brian rather than alone? Won’t people talk about the inappropriateness of that?”
Victoria laughed. “Won’t they talk anyway? I do not question your virtue or your motives, Jordana. I know you well enough to know that you would not have bothered to correspond for so many years with this man had he not shown clear signs of being a proper gentleman. Still, if it really bothers you, maybe you could find a lady or two who would also like to accompany you. Maybe you could hire a maid as a traveling companion.”
“You know how poorly I get along with other women. I’m always too outspoken or too outrageous in my thinking. I mention my thoughts on matters of politics and find myself scorned for worrying my pretty head over such matters. Remember the scene at the Hopkins’ house when we were all so formally assembled? All I said was that gerrymandering was only going to lead us into another civil war, and you would have thought I’d suggested we all run naked in the streets.”
Victoria giggled. “No one had any idea what the word meant, much less want to hear that there was any possibility of further war. Most of the women out here find it rather comforting to be removed from the rest of the United States. And while the idea of the transcontinental railroad reaching completion suggests profit for every state in the union, some would just as soon see the separation continue.”
“They’re all simpletons!” Jordana declared.
Victoria shook her head and gave Jordana’s hand a squeeze. “It doesn’t make them simpletons to be content in their lives, any more than it makes you wanton and crazed to desire the right to wander at will across the territories. Don’t condemn what another sees as perfection, just because it doesn’t fit your ideals. You want that respect from them, so be the first to give it when considering their position.”
With a sigh, Jordana knew her sister was right. She had a short temper when it came to realizing her goals were disregarded by so many. “I’m just mean-spirited.”
“No, you’re not,” Victoria reassured. “You’re young and you have a heart for adventure. You have financial backing, which not many can boast, and you are intelligent and skilled at learning new things. You are the perfect candidate for the life you desire. I’m just asking you to keep in touch—to help those of us who are not quite so brave to keep from fretting about your well-being.”
“Not quite so brave?” Jordana said with a hint of amusement. “You came to this place when it could hardly boast one woman to every hundred men. You traipsed about from mining camp to mining camp, faithfully remaining at your husband’s side even when it cost you your health. Please don’t imply to me that you are not just as brave, for I will not believe it.”
Victoria released her sister’s hand and stood. With a knowing glance, she replied, “Our bravery is perhaps one of those things best judged by others. In honesty, I did what I had to do, not because I was brave, but rather because I was committed to the man I loved.”
“Well, perhaps the motives were different, but the accomplishment was the same nevertheless,” Jordana said. She smiled at her sister and stood to hug her. “I will consider all that you’ve said. Maybe I’ll even write to Rich and see what he thinks, although I’m sure he would probably think it a nuisance to follow me about. He surely has his own goals and aspirations.”
“Perhaps,” Victoria answered, “but maybe they could somehow be molded to include your plans. At least for a short time.”
Jordana considered the matter and realized that of all the people she kne
w, the idea of having Rich for company was one that actually seemed appealing. Rich knew where to draw the line and how to keep to his place of being nothing more than a friend to Jordana. He didn’t write to her with flowery words of love and adoration; instead he told her about his horse named Faithful and of the men he commanded. He wrote her line after line about Indian attacks and other conflicts. Maybe Victoria was right. Maybe Rich could somehow be persuaded to consider coming under her hire. People would talk, but then again, they would no matter what path she chose. God knew her heart—surely that would be enough to concern herself with.
“Thank you for understanding,” Jordana said softly to her sister. “It seems I’ve underestimated your wisdom.”
Victoria moved to the door, then glanced over her shoulder. “God has great things planned for you, Jordana. I just know it.”
With that she opened the door and quietly disappeared down the hall. Jordana stared after her for a moment, then muttered, “Well, if He does, I sure wish He’d clue me in on the plan.”
2
“Caitlan!” Brenton called out to his wife. “Come quick, I have news!”
It wasn’t often that Caitlan’s husband entered the house bellowing her name. Brenton Baldwin was normally a quiet, sedate man. In a world where men most generally seemed to be given over to yips and yells, no matter the occasion, Brenton maintained himself in a rather reserved manner. This hadn’t been the only thing to attract Caitlan to her husband, but it was one of the reasons she found him unique. Most of the men she had known growing up had been hulking, brawny Irishmen with easily ignited tempers and opinions on every subject. She had despaired of ever finding a soul mate, a man who could really reach inside to see the quickly kindled passion of her heart. But then she had come to America, and Brenton and his sister Jordana had met her at the dock, and instantly she had known, here was a man to love.
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