Each of the Narrators, Augusta, Kaye, and Calvin have their own paths through the various Journeys. In The Journey South, Comets in the Yard, Kaye introduces herself, tells her Backstory, and begins the Legends, Family Myths, Geological Certainties, and Star Lore that provide a different dimension to the Califia story . |
Backstory |
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Story Glimspes |
End Kaye |
Kaye's Backstory WHEN I WAS A CHILD, I believed, as Seekers will,
that desire was always
fulfilled. I'd look up at
the stars and imagine the way it might feel to step out on a beam of
light and travel along the highway of dreams.
Cities of gold, lost mines, and hidden riches were always possible
there. It was the world of
early seafarers, sifting through the mud of the bays and estuaries of La
Isla de California for pearls
.
Where survivors of a
Spanish shipwreck walked thousands of miles, tracking the vision of
Cibola.
Coronado
followed. Before the
faithful had given up the dream of Indian villages paved in gold, ore
was discovered in the creek beds and hills—gold nuggets as big as a
bear's head, and silver, too.
In the rush, fortunes were made and lost, and hidden, and
forgotten. And wished back
into existence. The
stories haunted the California landscape where I grew up, in a small
house in Santa Monica. Tales
of gold whispered in the winter fog, jumped carelessly off the cliffs
above the ocean, sold grass in Topanga, slept in the kelp beds, wandered
Sunset Boulevard, shuttled
through
the stars of a windy night, sat at the dinner table on cool evenings.
My
dad, Henry, mourned his losses, Philo and Nellie Clare. Dad was seven
years old when Philo was killed in a plane crash with
Erskine Summerland
, and he was only
fifteen when Nellie Clare disappeared.
But he seemed not to notice that their spirits were with us. So
he never dared to step out on the highway of light.
He went nowhere but to the U.S. Post Office on Wilshire
Boulevard— where he worked all his life, waiting for Philo to
materialize, Nellie Clare
to
reincarnate. Henry was waiting for Nellie to show up in 1954,
when I was born—was still waiting when he died in 1964, paper in hand,
scanning the news, as always, for the ghost face on the third page. Mae, my mother, seemed relieved that the years
were over with the handsome, dreamy, boring postman.
She wasted no time in landing a second husband, settling happily
into the life she wanted all along:
a club woman with tickets to the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion.
We moved to Hancock Park.
I never tried to fit in with the social life—all the cotillion
parties in the world could not make me belong, there.
But the spirits stayed to keep me company.
And I listened carefully to everything they said. When I was fifteen, Mae sent me away to a fancy
private school to make me normal.
I just felt more isolated, and the spirits gathered more closely
around.
I
got a degree in geology and then moved to a commune in Simi Valley.
When the others drifted away, back to jobs at the malls or into
the therapy business, I stayed on, working as a part-time surveyor,
taking in boarders, telling fortunes, following the path of
enlightenment.
The spirits directed me in the search.
I recreated the Beveridge history of 150 years and then confirmed
it. I collected letters and
information from the L.A. Court House, libraries, and junk stores.
Sometimes the right information just fell in my hands, sometimes I was
led to it. Patience is
good—and a willingness to be diverted for months by a lover or a falling
star.
Nellie Clare and Philo, gold-hunting
spirits. We live where
planes fly into mountains in bright daylight, where a woman leaves a hand-drawn map at a drug-store counter in
Palmdale and is never heard from again.
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Backstory |
Story Glimspes | |
End Kaye |
Califia Re | Roadhead | The Journey South | The Journey East | The Journey North | The Journey West |
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