Each of the Narrators, Augusta, Kaye, and Calvin have their own paths through the various Journeys. In The Journey South, Comets in the Yard, Augusta introduces herself, tells her Backstory, and begins the chronolgy of the search for the Califia Gold. |
Backstory |
Story Glimpses: |
Story Glimspes |
End Augusta |
Backstory | |
Pretinella's Journal and Windpower Arrives
When I turned the first, fragile flyleaf, it occurred to me that I had
never actually read Pretinella's
Journal.
I had only
cradled the old notebook while Grandma Flossie related the story.
Grandma
Flossie had preserved the Summerland History of Everything in the closet
archives, tied the letters in grosgrain ribbon, identified the photos in
her flowery hand, boxed and labelled the generations.
After she died, I believed that Father never disturbed any of it;
he maintained a disinterest in his near relatives—except for the few
tall tales he liked to relate, a narrow repertoire of past events.
Pretinella's Journal begins in the early 1880's, after her marriage to
George Summerland.
Pretinella and George
were living in the San Antonio Township—formerly Rancho
San Antonio Lugo.
They had two children,
John and Mary. George was a
carpenter, but, like so many Californians, then and now, he had
ambitions beyond his day job.
His hopes were invested in the prospecting dream of his
father-in-law, Samuel Walker. Walker lived with them when he was not out
searching for the treasure of Califia.
Pretinella's Journal ends when John Summerland and Samuel Walker came
home from Fish Camp
and
Walker died, in 1895. Windpower Arrives The account of the Great Tehachepi Train Wreck
in Pretinella's Journal (one story my father did like to relate)
is a perfect example of the not-very-credible relationship between cause
and effect in our family narratives.
Assuming that George Summerland was murdered, by Beale and
Vineyard even, and that whoever did it did not scruple to take the lives
of twenty-two other people—we have no evidence that George had any gold,
or ever saw any gold. It was
the Summerland habit to assume that, because La Reina showed up later
and said George was agitated, he had been murdered over the Treasure of
Califia. The Journal must have had some recent importance
to Father, or whoever had messed up his study.
Flossie had always kept Pretinalla's Journal on the top shelf of
the closet—not the kind of thing you would get to accidentally.
And it was hard to imagine Father leaving it tossed on the study
floor.
Among the folders strewn around, I also found a bulky file with other
recent letters from Mr. Kramer at WindPower, Inc.
The gist of these letters was that Kramer had offered several
thousand dollars in exchange for a surface lease on land Father owned in
Kern County, at Liebre Springs, near the
Tejon Ranch.
WindPower, Inc. wanted
the 800 acres for testing, to see if there was enough wind to generate
power. I have enough training in real estate to be
routinely suspicious of promotions like this.
But, as I was in such a tight spot with the finances, I was
willing to entertain a fanciful possibility that my prayers would be
answered. I looked through the brochures.
There were pictures of forests of windmills.
The profitable windmills stretched for miles and miles along the
Tehachepi
Pass.
There were testimonials from satisfied landowners who were
swimming in royalties from the wind machines, charts and graphs showing
how much an acre of leased ground could earn.
And
there was the up-front money.
The cash came immediately, even if the tests turned out negative.
I couldn't wait to call Mr. Kramer and sign up.
My worries might be over.
Father
had been looking out for us, after all.
|
Story glimspes |
End Augusta |
Califia Re | Roadhead | The Journey South | The Journey East | The Journey North | The Journey West |
Archives | Star Charts | Map Case | Augusta | Kaye | Calvin |