Book ONe of the Widow Walk saga

widow

walk

Gar LaSalle

widow

walk

Widow Walk is a work of historical fiction. Apart from some well-known actual people, events, and locales that are part of this narrative, all names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents are either a product of this author’s imagination or are, in all cases — are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to current events, locales, or to living persons is entirely coincidental.

ISBN: 978-0-9978436-5-1

Published by Solipsis Publishing Seattle, WA

SolipsisPublishing.com

Copyright 2017, Solipsis Publishing

Editor: John DeDakis

Design: Maps and Widow Walk Medallion — Randy Mott (MottGraphics.com)

Cover Design: Neil Gonzalez (Greenleaf Book Group - (GreenleafBookgroup.com)

Interior Design: Alex Head (TheDraftLab.com)

Social Media and Marketing: Scott James

Web design: Archana Murthy and Scott James

Audio Book Production: Mike McAuliffe, Tom McGurk, Wendy Wills (Bad Animals.com); Narrator: John Aylward

Table of

Contents

Dedication

Dramatis Personae

Map One – The Homestead, Whidbey, Port Gamble, Port Townsend, Bellingham, Olympia

Map Two – A Land in Contention, Vancouver Island and Puget Sound

Map Three – The Haunt of the Northerners,Puget Sound, Vancouver Island and Northern

British Columbia

Prologue - Emmy

Chapter One - Emmy

Chapter Two - Isaac

Chapter Three - Emmy

Chapter Four - Anah

Chapter Five - Pickett and Ingalls

Chapter Six - Anah

Chapter Seven - Isaac

Chapter Eight - Emmy

Chapter Nine - Pickett

Chapter Ten - Emmy and Pickett

Chapter Eleven - Isaac

Chapter Twelve - Anah

Chapter Thirteen - Isaac

Chapter Fourteen - Anah

Chapter Fifteen - Isaac and Anah

Chapter Sixteen - Emmy

Chapter Seventeen - Jacob

Chapter Eighteen - Emmy

Chapter Nineteen - Emmy

Chapter Twenty - Joseph Edwards

Chapter Twenty-one - Emmy

Chapter Twenty-two - Jacob

Chapter Twenty-three - Sarah

Chapter Twenty-four - Emmy and Pickett

Chapter Twenty-five - Emmy

Chapter Twenty-six - MaNuitu ’sta

Chapter Twenty-seven - Napen ‘tjo

Chapter Twenty-eight - Anah

Chapter Twenty-nine - Anah and Jacob

Chapter Thirty - Emmy

Chapter Thirty-one - Marano Levi

Chapter Thirty-two - Emmy, Sarah and Ursa

Chapter Thirty-three - Sarah

Chapter Thirty-four - Marté, Cull and Emmy

Chapter Thirty-five - Anah and Jacob

Chapter Thirty-six - Pickett

Chapter Thirty-seven - Ksi Amawal

Chapter Thirty-eight - Jojo, Anah and Ksi Amawaal

Chapter Thirty-nine - Jojo

Chapter Forty - Emmy and Anah

Chapter Forty-one - Sarah

Chapter Forty-two - Pickett and Emmy

Chapter Forty-three - Emmy

Epilogue - Isaac, Anah

Author’s notes

Acknowledgments

Book Discussion Guide

About the Author

To the Epiphany Bringers

Dramatis Personae

On Whidbey Island (in Puget Sound,

U.S. Territory):

Emmy O’Malley Evers - Wife of Isaac Evers

Colonel Isaac Neff Evers - Prominent Pacific Northwest Settler and regional judge and tax collector

Sarah Evers - 10 year-old daughter of Emmy and stepdaughter of Isaac

Jacob Evers - 6 year-old son of Emmy and Isaac

Winfield and Corrine Evers - Isaac’s younger brother and sister

Ben and Missy Crockett - Neighbors

Tom and Rebah Iserson, Major Roberta and Thomasina Anderson - Visiting guests

Dr. Joseph Edwards - Prominent Whidbey Island physician

Sam - Salish native guide and employee of Isaac

Jim Thomas and Princess Susan - Salish natives,

Whidbey locals

In North Puget Sound, (U.S. Territory):

Captain George Edward Pickett - U.S. Army commander stationed in Bellingham

Lt. Colonel Rufus Ingalls - Quartermaster General of Oregon Territory, close friend of Pickett

In North Puget Sound, (U.S. Territory):

Anah Nawitka Haloshem (a.k.a. “Black Wind”) - Haida tyee of Raven Clan (Queen Charlotte Islands)

Little Raven - Anah’s father, aging Raven clan leader

Klixuitan - Shaman of Raven Clan

Vladimir Varienko - Captain of the Pietrevos,

a Russian cargo ship

René Marté - French-Indian (Metís) Trader and smuggler

Eban Cull - Marté’s companion smuggler

Antoine Bill - a Metís guide and interpreter employed by the Hudson’s Bay Company

MaNuitu’Sta (a.k.a. “Patient River”) - Bella Coola Nuxalk clan tyee, father of Pickett’s second wife

Na’Pen’Jo (a.k.a. “Jojo”) - MaNuitu’sta’s son,

Emmy Evers’ guide

Morning Mist - Pickett’s deceased second wife, daughter of Ma’Nuita’Sta

Marano Levi - Wandering unordained priest

Ksi Amawal - Tsimshian tribe grand tyee

Map One:The Homestead

Map Two: A Land in Contention

Map Three: The Haunt of

the Northerners

Prologue

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Emmy

When she and her husband staked their claim on this alluvial plain, they did not know it had been haunted for thousands of years, first by long-gone bottom feeders who had dwelled in the vast lake that had been scraped out by retreating, massive, growling sheets of glacier ice, and then later, when the water finally receded, also by the beasts and aborigines who had looked upon the deep rich soil as their own.

Emmy Evers found a small gray arrowhead in the first week she walked the square mile that was now theirs, hers and her husband Isaac’s, the rights to their stead conveyed on a thin piece of paper by other new settlers, ones with government-given titles. Her young children, less reverent of the land than she, would later uncover several more ancient hunting tools as they played and worked the farm. And each time she again fingered that first, sharp treasure-find, the arrowhead pried away from a clod of moist black soil, she wondered where the makers had gone…the ones who had first chipped tools like this out of flint…and why they had left the richness of this land.

And each time she felt the prick of its sharp edges, she wondered whether they really ever had left, for in the few years she owned her fertile prairie mile, she learned that spirits lingered. She sensed they walked her plowed fields on certain nights, the patterns of their visitations incomprehensible to her and other mere humans.

Seven years into her stay there, her family gave of its own, in a way she had long dreaded and forever mourned. The Northerners had visited. They were emissaries of the Dead.

Chapter One

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Emmy

He is away again. I fear the Northerners are about. I am concerned for him and for us.

— Emmy Evers’ Diary, October 1st, 1857

Dawn, almost. So Emmy pushed herself up and out of bed. She wouldn’t pamper herself, nursing a cold. Too much to do every day now.

Her husband, Isaac, had departed in the darkness without saying goodbye. They had talked enough the evening before, she supposed. But she was alone again now with her children and her work. Alone again.

She pushed herself away from that thought, too.

Her

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