So … working on the next installment of the Kettering Family chronicles – this time around the narrator/main character is Rafe; the little boy who along with his younger sister, was rescued from the starvation trail at the end of The Hills of Gold. Rafe and his sister Rose are the orphaned children of a hapless young English couple, who got into more difficulties on the overland trail than they were able to handle … and anyway, Rafe has been traumatized by the hardships and deaths of his parents, and Rose almost too young to remember much of anything. Rafe deliberately puts all those earlier memories aside; it was all confusing, horrible and miserable. He wants to forget and works very hard at putting all that awfulness in the far-distant past. Quite early on, the two of them fully embrace being part of the Kettering family and an American identity, in Gold Rush-era California … but there are lingering threads, connecting them to their original parents and to their families in England, which will come up as the series develops.
My overall story arc is intended to see the various Kettering children as tweens and teens, experiencing all sorts of interesting adventures and encounters with famous, soon to be famous, or just interesting people of the period – which potentially makes a cast of thousands. This was the wild west – and in the precious metal rushes to California, Nevada, Colorado and other locations – it was really, really wild. The scope for dramatic plots is practically without limit. I plan tentatively to carry the overall story arc up to completion of the continental railway.
Rafe’s part of the overall narrative initially was to be on the spot during the episode of the San Francisco Committee of Vigilance of 1856, at which time he will be twelve going on thirteen. As it has developed, Pa Kettering has some business interests in San Francisco – as an early settler in California, he purchased land early on … and found that business interests were more to his liking than farming. Anyway, I was thinking on what else might serve as a direct source of adventure for Rafe, and I harkened back to some of the material I had read about how the San Francisco waterfront was a scary-dangerous and lawless place.
There was a reason that it was called “The Barbary Coast” – and one of those reasons was the fact that during those years, it was common for sailors to jump ship and go looking for gold, to the point where many ships could be left seriously under-crewed – even abandoned in the harbor. There were a number of enterprising criminals operating waterfront saloons and other places of … umm … recreation, who specialized in drugging unwary young man and packing them off to a ship headed for the far east. Upon waking up, they’d find themselves far out at sea, usually penniless and without friends, and forced into crewing the ship. (This is the derivation of the term ‘shanghai’, meaning to forcibly redirect an unwilling person in another direction from the one they intended) … so I thought – let the thirteen-year old Rafe be mistakenly captured by one of these operators looking to fill a head-count for a ship captain, put on board a ship heading for Shanghai in the middle of the night … only for the ship-master to realize too late that he has been cheated, and has inadvertently assisted in the kidnapped the son of a prominent merchant landowner. So Rafe winds up in Shanghai, China – and meets a British missionary there who turns out to be a relative …
Yes, this will be a fun adventure. Back to the books, and the contemporary memoirs of 19th century California…
Love in all the wrong places – Caro Robertson was a professional researcher, employee and occasional on-air reporter for a national public radio outlet; the perfect job, the perfect condo, the perfect fiancée. She had the college education, the job, the social position, the perfect life … and then in one fell swoop, everything went sour. Wrong. Disastrously wrong. In the space of a single week, she lost her beloved pet, the perfect fiancée and then her job. What was left for her, but to return to Alder Grove, the little town in Texas where she lived as a child and try to rebuild that life and a new career?
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