The Spoils of Sin

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Authors: Rebecca Tope

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THE SPOILS OF SIN

REBECCA TOPE

Praxis Books.
Herefordshire.

ISBN: 978 09559517 49

Copyright © Rebecca Tope 2015

Contents

Acknowledgment

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Acknowledgment

With thanks to Karen McCandles Buck for help with research into Oregon's past, by providing accommodation, transport and information.

Author's Notes

The town of Salem, Oregon was originally known as Chemeketa, an Indian word for ‘meeting place'

One or two real people appear in these pages. Reason B. Hall is an example.

By the same Author

Ebooks

The Indifference of Tumbleweed (volume One of the Oregon stories)

The View from the Cart

Crime fiction

Available from Allison & Busby Ltd, London.

The Cotswolds series

The Lake District series

And other earlier works.

The Spoils of Sin
Chapter One

‘Ready at last!' sighed Fanny. ‘Tell me I'm not dreaming.'

She was too tired to enjoy the moment properly. After nearly two years in preparation, with many bitter setbacks and losses of confidence, the result was a long way from her original vision, but it would serve well enough as a start. With pitifully few sources of advice and a woeful ignorance, she and Carola had been forced to invent every detail for themselves. Now she was about to throw open the doors of ‘The Misses Francesca and Carlotta's Boudoir' for the first time. The building still smelled of the fresh timber used for its construction, the street outside a mess of hoofprints and slops. She had to pick her way with lifted skirt to a dry spot where she could stand back and admire her handiwork. At her side was Carola, without whom she would have failed at the outset.

‘Never known a dream the likes of this,' said the older girl with a laugh. ‘Here's where the real work starts.'

‘And the real money-making,' Fanny reminded her.

The idea had taken root far back at Fort John on the Laramie River in the early summer of 1846, when Fanny had been sixteen years old. She had taken note of the numerous single men travelling westwards on horseback; lonely men with little hope of finding a wife, or even a brief flirtation with a winsome young woman. With the active assistance of young Abel Tennant, in the same party on their wagon train, she had learned the basic sources of a man's pleasure and the ease with which a healthy woman could provide them.

It had taken a while longer than anticipated to put these learnings into profitable practice. Abel had settled to the north of the Willamette Valley and she had not seen him again. As the hundreds of new settlers established themselves as growers, stockbreeders, fence-makers and traders, social conventions quickly followed. Young men in the neighbourhood were prohibited close intimacies with marriageable girls unless there was a clear and early intention to enter matrimony with them – and Fanny had no designs in that direction. But there were always opportunities for practice, throughout the year of 1847, albeit in small discreet ways.

The enormity of the permanent project she was now embarking on with Carola was still terrifying, giving her many sleepless nights and alarming dreams. Money had been needed for the building and its lush accoutrements, and she had no illusions that any bank would provide her with a loan. The first year after her family's arrival in Oregon had revealed the existence of an entire class of opportunists and shysters who were ready and eager to acquire money in a multitude of different swindles. Wagon trains had continued to flow into the region, bringing thousands of families all claiming their acres from the government. Small trading posts developed into towns almost overnight. Strung along the rivers, where bigger and better vessels could bring lumber, clothes, implements and all the other necessities of civilisation, the new towns competed for supremacy. Oregon City was twenty years old, and the default choice of residence for those preferring to live close to others, rather than out in the virgin wilderness, where great forests and capricious rivers deterred many a nervous settler. Fanny had disliked the city from the first, the way it was split into two by the chasm created by the great river an irritation she feared she would never overcome. It was noisy and competitive, and – the final straw – she glimpsed a pair of young women sashaying down the street who were sure to be rivals for customers at some future point.
The fact of so many families was also a deterrent. Girls as young as twelve were taken as wives, along with young Indian squaws, leaving fewer single men in need of Fanny and Carola's services. Added to these considerations was a need to put distance between themselves and their families. The fiction was maintained that they were establishing an emporium for the sale of garments and other necessities for women. The hope was that Fanny's parents and Carola's brothers would be too much engaged with their own lives and work to ever bother making a visit upriver to the sawmills and old missions of Chemeketa. Mission Mills was the fitting name of the industrial area close by, although the Methodists had mostly abandoned their proselytising. The sawmills remained, employing innumerable men, many of them in want of a wife.

To the north of Oregon City was Portland, a place of self-confidence and ambition. To the south was the Willamette valley, with the Mission Mills and Chemeketa, on tamer land. The presence of missions, schools and orderly streets appealed particularly to those who had grown up in New England. Fanny and Carola had taken themselves there, following the Willamette river on a two-day journey of exploration. The settlement was clearly in a state of flux, with even its name a matter for debate. On that first visit, the girls heard it called ‘The Mill' more often than the older Indian name.

‘A mite too respectable for our purposes,' Carola demurred.

But Fanny could see through the veneer to the fact of the countless single men working in the giant sawmills or on construction of new homes and businesses, or plying their barges up and down the waterways. They came in great numbers, many of them fleeing unsatisfactory lives back east, expecting to find space and work and wealth in this new land. Everything in this little town appealed to her. The very trees were better behaved and more firmly rooted than those in Oregon City. The presence of churchmen, alarming to Carola, gave Fanny a sense of security. ‘We shall make ourselves respectable too,' she told her friend. ‘When outdoors, we must dress plainly, and hold our heads high.' An instinct that she had difficulty putting into words was telling her how to proceed. These men spent their days in hard work, their hands never touching softness, their skin never soothed by a warm caress. They lacked the finer elements of life, and would become coarse and corrupt without female influence. Fanny saw this and gave herself the task of softening, civilising, flattering and satisfying the potential brutes. She had a faint suspicion that the more insightful of the churchmen might understand this and accept the presence of two enterprising young females without too much protestation.

The building erected by Fanny and Carola was smaller than originally hoped. The ground floor comprised a single large room, with couches, carpets, curtains and cushions in the softest materials available. Velvet, brocade, fur - all designed with warmth and luxury in mind. It boasted a piano and a stove where coffee would be perpetually brewing. A large cupboard contained bottles of whisky and cigars, to be dispensed sparingly and at a substantial profit. The world outside was made invisible and inaudible by the thick window coverings and the sturdy door. Passers-by could not peer in at the scandalous goings-on. If they wanted to know what took place in a boudoir, they would have to walk in and see for themselves.

The upper floor was divided into three smaller rooms, two of them with a bed festooned with swags of satin and silk, covered with fine cotton sheets scented with musk and rose water. Here Carola had insisted on the finest quality, confounding many of Fanny's early assumptions about her friend. At first, she had seemed only concerned with business and profit. Now, she had thrown herself into the broader conception that had been Fanny's from the outset. The younger girl had lost her virginity in the open air, with prickly leaves and twigs beneath her and birds calling overhead. She had learned what men enjoyed, and how simple a matter it was to satisfy them. But she had quickly understood that men could use Indian squaws for relief of that sort, and indeed many of them did exactly that. But for deeper, warmer reminders of their early lives in the east, with familiar scents and language, they would have to seek out the boudoir. Carola developed ideas about creating a small lush haven for them amidst the sweat and stink of their daily lives that surprised Fanny at first, until she grasped how perfectly it fitted with her own plans. ‘Of course,' she had quickly agreed. ‘I had thought no further than the touch of warm skin and perhaps a little of the music we played at home.'

‘They are not all from your cool New England states,' Carola reminded her. ‘A good many come from the south.' Carola was from South Carolina herself (which explained her name, Fanny had belatedly realised). ‘With all the trappings brought from Europe in their great houses. Their mothers wear perfume and follow the fashions. Out here it's bare and charmless, with scarcely any female touches. We'll draw them like iron filings to a magnet. Just the scent of the place will have them buzzing around.'

‘And where will they find the money to pay us?' Fanny worried.

‘They'll find it,' said Carola with confidence. ‘What else do they have to spend it on?'

There were times when Fanny felt overtaken by the older girl's brisk assurance. She had been so certain herself, back on the trail, that she had found a vocation that fitted her talents and would bring in her own personal income. But without a partner, she quickly lost most of her conviction that it was anything more than a dream. Her parents would never allow it. She would never manage to raise the finances needed. The homestead her family had been allocated demanded immense labours for clearance, fencing, planting before any livestock could be acquired. Her capable sister Charity had married in a tremendous rush and gone off to make her way on her own acres, with two, and then quickly three, small children. Charity knew what Fanny planned, and deplored it. Until they were separated, Fanny has not grasped just how close they had been, and just what a gaping wound was left by her sister's disappearance.

Carola was like an angel sent by God. She had arrived on the first wagon train of 1847, travelling with her three brothers and their wives – the burdensome young sister whose only purpose in life was to find a husband and cease to depend on others. Fanny literally bumped into her outside the grocery store in Oregon City that had been erected some years previously and enjoyed business on a level that often seemed insane. Lines of people filled the street, their carts crammed into every corner, awaiting the essential sacks of seed, meal, rice, salt, sugar and anything else impossible or uneconomic to grow on the homesteads.

Fanny had been idly looking up at the sky, thinking about nothing in particular, when a warm body fell against her. ‘Mercy!' gasped the stranger with a laugh. ‘Tripping over my bootlaces again.'

The boots looked old; the leather thin and the laces frayed. Fanny raised an eyebrow and smiled.

‘Carola Beaumont at your service,' said the girl. ‘Come all the way from the Carolinas, to this new land of opportunity.' She looked round with much the same expression as Fanny had given the boots. ‘And having some difficulty in persuading myself of its virtues,' she added.

‘Fanny Collins, out of Providence last year.'

‘Providence, Rhode Island? A Northerner, Lord save us. Yet you appear to lack the puritan qualities one associates with your countrymen.'

Fanny had been wearing a good cotton skirt, with swirls of red and yellow, her bonnet adorned with feathers. Miss Beaumont sported crumpled silk in a peacock blue. Fanny recognised the effects of a lengthy journey on an overfull travelling trunk in the middle of a wagon. The creases would take months to completely disappear.

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