"The life at sea is a grand and hard. Harder than anything we've faced here on land." Pearson was going off on one of his sailor tangents again. Every time he did you couldn't help thinking of an old man desperate to relive his glory years. "The fear in your gut wondering if you'll have enough to last you till next port is beyond imagining." You've heard this story before, more than once actually. Next, he's going to bring up eating seal meat. "The waters up north are absolutely teaming with seals." Yep, here we go. "Their meat is real' greasy you know, has a certain flavor to it. Like a mix of duck and veal." As he reminisced on his voyages you were stuck cutting and peeling vegetables, nothing you haven't done before. But the amount to be prepped today was more than usual. Like, an exceptionally larger amount. "I still get cravings for the stuff, can't find it anywhere 'round here."
His droning tales began to fade away as your mind wondered. Your eyes drifting back and forth to the Juniper tree that sat just behind your tent. The fixation of your attention for the past couple of weeks.
Peel, peel, peel. A glance at the tree. Chop, chop, chop. A glance at the tree. Peel, peel. A glance. Chop, chop. A glance. It had become an obsession at this point. Every time someone would drift a little too close to the tree, you'd feel yourself tense up, unable to look away until they finally move onto another part of camp. You weren't sure what would happen if anyone stumbled upon your little secret hidden away in the winding tangled roots of the grand and old juniper. But after witnessing Arthur's more than adequate show of putting down a man three times your size, you couldn't help but snatch up that precious pistol. It almost seemed like life had deliberately sent it in your direction, right there at your feet for the taking. At least, if it really came down to it, you had a chance at defending yourself.
"Once you're done with those potatoes, throw them in that pot of water. Give the skins to the chickens." Pearson had swung around with his freshly skinned and cleaved rabbits, the choice meat around these parts apparently. He then does a quick count on his fingers muttering softly under his breath. A gradual scowl crosses his face as his brow furrows, his mustache consumes his mouth in a frown. "Hmm... we're not gonna have enough for the next week at this rate." That didn't seem right.
"This seems like a lot of food for just us." Sure, you may be new to the ways of life in the 1800's, but your pretty sure meal prepping wasn't a concept of the time beyond canning.
"It ain't, Dutch made some connections with some of the mining men up in Bingham. Should be here by nightfall." Oh great, more strange men. "Rigorous work like that, tends to give one quite the appetite." He's quick to grab what carrots and onions you have done before tossing them into the cast iron with a big glob of some sort of animal fat. The smell of it was always a little gamey. "I'm hoping this means more money. More money means better eatin'." Pearson was nice enough; he had a sweet face and a nice singing voice. You got the impression he was desperate to socialize. Which might work to your advantage.
"What kind of work does Dutch do?" Maybe you'd get a different piece to the puzzle. "I hear he does dangerous work."
"All work is dangerous in this day and age." Damn it.
"Have you been traveling long? No place to call home?"
"Dutch and couple of the others have been out on the road a lot longer than me. I only just joined up maybe... four years ago."
"Four years?!" You gaped at him flabbergasted. Four years of this same boring routine of grueling work, of never having a roof over their head, and rarely socializing outside of the camp circle. Is that what your future would be with these people? "And you never left?"
"No, and I'm not sure I ever want to." He collects another batch of vegetables from you. "I had made some desperate money decisions, borrowed from a few fellers thinking I'd manage to make up what I owed and some extra to get back on my feet. I didn't, not even close and some real mean-spirited men were sent after me. Forced me to marry a woman and took everything I had to my name. I'm sure they would've taken my life as well had Dutch and Hosea not stepped in." A smile began to slowly build on his lips, and his eyes became misty and soft. "They paid my debts. Some lowly, good for nothing-nobody they knew shit about. But they saved me anyway." His eyes then drifted to yours, his brow was tightly furrowed and his gaze suddenly bold and serious. "Everyone here has a similar story, many of them worse than mine." His voice is deep and breathy. "This world is a cruel and unforgivable place, one that don't want folk like us. People will do what they have to for survival, but folk like Dutch. Like Hosea. They do what they have to for more than just themselves. They do what they have to for us." He didn't say much after that. Leaving you with a new worry in your gut.
YOU ARE READING
Fates of the Fateless
RomanceBrowsing the many articles and advertisements that described an incredibly dated way of life. And as much as you tried to convince yourself of all the excuses to explain your twisted journey up to this point. The number 1891 burned in your mind with...