NO MORE STRANGERS
A Short Story by Marsha Ward
She was a lone woman in the wagon train now, and
it made my heart ache to see her standing
there by the flickering campfire, leaning
slightly forward in her anxiety to learn the
captain’s decision. Hers was a slim figure in
the uncertain light, and that was as it
should be, for she couldn’t be over eighteen,
and had only borne one child that I knew
anything about.
Her husband had taken sick with a fever a few
days back, and it had worsened until last
night. Now he lay out under the prairie sod,
and she was left a widow with a son just
beginning to walk.
She stood there, trembling slightly, as the
captain of ten families, John Armstrong,
looked up at her from under his bushy
eyebrows as he sat on a keg of flour. He had
an air of resignation about him as he tossed
the stick he had been whittling into the
fire.
“Sister Porter, you may think it a harsh
thing, but I got to think of all the families
in my care. Now that Brother Porter’s gone,
I got to turn you back to Winter Quarters.
It’s just two weeks back, and I’ll send a
couple of men along on horseback to see you
get there safe.” He stopped and looked into
the fire, then shrugged his shoulders. “You
can go to Zion next season, when you get
someone to take charge of your wagon.”
Captain Armstrong fumbled with his clasp
knife, then stuffed it into his vest pocket.
Sister Porter twisted her hands in the cloth
of her apron. The captain looked miserably up
at her bleak face, then cleared his throat.
“It’s not that I don’t want you to go to Zion, but
a lone woman can’t manage this trek by
herself,” he said.
I don’t know what pushed me out into that
firelight. Maybe it was the look of despair
on her face. Maybe it was that I was all
alone too, and knew the pain of loss that was
in her heart. At any rate, step out I did,
and me a shy young man.
“Captain Armstrong, I don’t have the burden
of a wagon to tend to. Allow me to look after
the Widow Porter. I’ll see that she keeps up
with the others.”
I knew that all the eyes of the assembled
Saints of the company were suddenly swung my
way, and I blushed in their combined gaze.
But the most important glance came from the
blue eyes of the young widow. Her look held
surprise, but solace was there too, and I
felt the hot blush fading from my face. Maybe
my act of kindness would give me a feeling of
belonging to this company of travelers.
“Brother Marshall, if it won’t put you out of
your way, I’m sure Sister Porter will be
thankful for your help.” Relief spread over
John Armstrong’s wide face, and I thought he
was glad that my words had made his decision
unnecessary. He got up from his keg and
disappeared in the darkness.
I turned to the widow, and she was
staring at me, curiosity in her look, but a
wariness too, for she had just that day put
her husband into the ground, and I figured my
offer was making her a bit uncomfortable, for
all its value to her.
I doffed my old black hat and nodded to her, shyness
overcoming my tongue of a sudden, and whisking my words away.
“I thank you for your kindness,”
she rescued me. “I know that Captain
Armstrong meant well, but I can’t wait
another year to go to Zion. I promised him
I’d go on,” she finished in a whisper.
Her face twisted a bit, and I
feared she would cry, but she mastered the
emotion and calmed her countenance again.
I found my tongue. “Is there
anything you need doing tonight?”
“No. Now that my future’s settled,
I can get on with supper. Won’t you come to
the fire and eat, after a while?”
“I’d like that. You can tell me
what to do tomorrow.”

I turned away and tended to the
needs of my animals. The work gave me a
chance to reflect on what I had talked myself
into doing. Here I was, a lone man on the way
to the Rocky Mountains, and I had taken upon
myself the care of a woman and her child, and
the responsibility of getting her safe to the
Great Salt Lake Valley. And I was only twenty
years of age.
Several years back, two missionaries
of the Latter-day Saints had come a-preaching
in our neighborhood. My father, a God-fearing
man, had made them welcome. Though our
friends and our kin had scoffed at their
message, we had not, and we joined ourselves
with the Saints through a ceremony of baptism.
Then the persecutions had begun,
and soon a yearning had come upon us to
gather to Zion, so we sold the farm and
loaded our goods into a wagon. We were five:
my father James Marshall, my mother Emily, my
younger brother John, our sister Mary Eliza,
and myself.
We arrived in Nauvoo, Illinois, to
the devastating news that the Prophet Joseph
Smith and his brother had been murdered.
Despite our grief, we settled in the city for
a while, working on the temple, then were
driven out in the deep of winter with other
Saints.
On February 26, 1846, we crossed
the Mississippi River on a covering of ice,
and arrived at Sugar Creek Camp. Here we were
within sight of our abandoned home, which
caused my mother much sorrow. I was relieved
when Brother Brigham Young counseled us to
move on.
After several days of travel, we
camped on the banks of the Chariton River.
Father was one of those sent out to trade
extra goods for grain and flour. Then we
moved on again, first to Garden Grove, and
then to Mount Pisgah.
We were asked to stay and raise
grain for the Saints who would follow after
us. My obedient father settled in and
assisted with the planting, until an outbreak
of cholera took him, my mother, and my
brother John.
Mary Eliza was the only family left
to me, and since she was but six years of age,
I found her a place with a family in Mount
Pisgah, sold what belongings I had no need of,
and went south to Missouri to buy myself a
horse, and mules to carry our supplies.
I had thought, being a mere youth, that
I could get my animals and be out of that
unfriendly state before it was discovered
that I was what they were calling “a Mormon.”
I was wrong.
When I recovered consciousness, I
found myself penniless. A farmer—who didn’t
care how or if I worshipped God—took me in
and put me to work. I spent a year with him,
gathering funds for those Missouri mules I
wanted. Then a hunger came over me to see my
sister again, so I got my wages, bought my
animals, and journeyed back to Mount Pisgah.
I arrived to find that my sister
and the family keeping her had started for
the Rocky Mountains. I followed her to Winter
Quarters, but she had already left there, and
the season was so advanced that I could not
leave for the west.
Although I chafed with
disappointment at missing her, I spent the
fall and winter making ready for the journey,
and left in the spring as a part of this
large company.
My year among the Gentiles, as
those not of our faith were then known, had
caused a few words to be spoken against me by
those less charitable than most, and I found
myself ill at ease on some days. But for the
most part, the company of ten families headed
by Captain Armstrong, in which I traveled,
was composed of good people. The problem that
rubbed me wrong was that they were mostly
friends of long standing, and I was a
newcomer, and young enough to imagine myself
unwelcome.
When I finished caring for my horse
and mules, I found my way to the widow’s fire
and accepted a plate from her hand.
I could not be sure, due to the
dancing of the small light cast by her fire,
but it seemed to me that Sister Porter’s eyes
were a bit swollen and reddened, and my heart
went out to her in her grief. That she had
prepared a meal for herself and her boy, and
for a stranger too, was a thing of no small
moment to me, and I admired her for her
determination to endure to the end, no matter
what the cost.
As I ate, I glanced up at Sister
Porter from time to time, and once I caught
her brushing a tear from her cheek. She
turned her head, and I knew she was aware of
my look.
I felt powerless in that moment.
There was no way that I, a stranger, could
ease her sorrow. I ducked my head to my meal
once again, resolving to find a way to reach
out and relieve her pain.
When I had eaten the last morsel
from the tin plate, I stood up and took it
and my cup over to the washtub sitting atop a
barrel. I removed my hat and rolled up my
sleeves before she realized that I had
intention of washing the dishes.
She stood and came to the washtub
as I plunged my hands into the water.
“Brother Marshall.” Her voice held
a note of distress. “That’s my duty. I will
clear up.”
I looked down at her and smiled in
a way I hoped was reassuring.
“I have long practice of the task,
Sister. Let me take this way of paying you
back for the meal. It was far better fare
than I usually can stir up.” I smiled again,
hoping she would not press further to do the
job herself.
She returned to her seat and picked
up her son. I circled the tub until I could
look up and see her ever so often. I was
curious to know her feelings, since she
remained silent so long.
“Why did you speak up to help me?”
Her gaze was direct, and it disturbed me. “No
one else, not even my friends, said a word.”
The question was unexpected, and I
took my time to answer.
“I haven’t fully figured it out
yet.” I shook the water from the last cup and
wiped it with a flour sack. “I imagine it was
because you were all alone, and I remember
how I felt to be suddenly alone.” I rubbed my
hands dry on the sack.
“Your wife died?”
My ears burned.
“I never had a wife. It was my
folks and my brother I lost, back in Mount
Pisgah. They got took by the cholera.”
“I’m sorry.” She hugged her son
close. “I don’t even know your name, beyond
‘Brother Marshall’.”
“It’s Elijah Marshall. Most folks
just call me ‘Lije’.”
“Folks call me ‘Etta’. That’s short
for ‘Henrietta’.”
My hat was on my head now, and I
felt I ought to go, but I could tell she
hungered for conversation, so I stayed.
“That’s a fine name. Puts me in
mind of our old farm. There was a girl down
the road name of Etta.”
“I’ve never heard of anybody named
Elijah, except the Bible prophet. Did your
folks give you his name?”
“My pa and ma were God-fearing
folk, but they really named me for my grandpa
Elijah Scow.”
She smiled. I felt good that
something I said brought pleasure to her.
“I expect I’d best get along,” I
said. “You’ll be needing to tuck that
youngster in bed before long.” I stood up.
“Wait . . . Lije.”
A wonder came over me to hear a
woman of her station call my name. I wasn’t
prepared for that, somehow, even after we
exchanged names.
She continued. “We didn’t talk
about what needs doing tomorrow.”
“That’s right, ma’am.”
“Please sit down.”
I sat.
“I won’t need you to drive the
team. I learned to do that while Joshua—Brother
Porter—lay sick.” She stopped for a moment,
and I saw the pain in her eyes.
After a time I said, “I dislike
seeing you walk when you could ride on the
seat with the child. Captain Armstrong will
think I went back on my word.”
“If he says anything, I will make
sure he knows different. I won’t be a burden
to anyone. Please just keep your eye out for
trouble.” Then her voice lowered in pitch.
“Could you lend a hand crossing the rivers?
I—” She looked down for a moment. “I have a
fear of water.”
“I’ll watch out for you. I’ve put
my word to it.”
I was invited to her supper fire
every night for a week, and I enjoyed our
conversations and playing with her son. Once
he looked at his mother and said, “Mama.”
Then he pointed to me and called out, “Papa!”
I know I colored some as I took him
into my arms and replied, “No, I’m Lije.”
That night, Sister Porter asked me
to join her in evening prayer, and afterward
said it was a comfort to have someone nearby
to share that special time. I was glad the
fire had died and she couldn’t see my
reddened face.
The same evening, as I was walking
to my bed, I overheard a woman speaking to
her husband from underneath a wagon box.
“ . . . him a Gentile-lover, and her
man just laid to rest, too. It’s a scandal,
I say. You ought to speak to the Captain.”
I stood pegged to the spot, shaking
with the anger that rose in me, then I fled
to my camp. After that, I didn’t eat so often
with the widow, meaning to spare her from the
wicked tongue of that woman.
Then one night Sister Porter came
to my camp with her son as I laid my fire.
“Lije, have I offended you? It
seems that lately I can’t get you to eat with
us. Joseph misses you.” She bent her head and
kissed the child.
I got up from my task. “Sister
Porter, I—”
She cut me off. “There’s plenty in
the kettle. I miss talking to you. Please
come.”
I weighed the problem of her need
for friendly talk against the gossip sure to
be caused by my presence in her camp, and
wondered if she knew about the woman’s
vicious words.
“Please,” she repeated. “It seems
that no one but you will speak to me. I think
they’re afraid to hurt my feelings in case
they accidentally mention Joshua.”
So the
poison is spreading, I
thought. I tried to conceal my anger from
her, not wanting her to guess the real reason
behind the silence she was experiencing. Then
I made my choice, vowing to not leave her to
suffer in a silent void, despite the wagging
tongue.
“I’ll come to eat, but you must
share my supplies from now on. I’ve eaten
more than my portion of yours.”
Her voice was soft as she answered.
“You know I have plenty since—”
“I’ll not eat up your goods,” I
replied, a trifle hotly. “You’ll need the
extra when you get to Zion, else you’ll
starve.” Then I wished to bite off my hasty
tongue, as I could see my words brought to
her mind that she had no man to fend for her,
and she winced at the thought. “Etta, I’m
sorry.”
I stepped back a pace. I had called
her by her Christian name, and it surprised
me to do it.
“I know you don’t mean me harm.
You’re right to counsel me to caution. I have
been thinking what I can do to earn my way
when I reach the Valley, but I fear my
talents are few, and they suit me only to be
a farmer’s wife.”
I stared at her, fighting down the
impulse to comfort her in my arms. I had
called her ‘Etta,’ and something within me
grew. I hardly heard her words as I tried to
stop the growing bubble by reminding myself
that just weeks past she had been the wife of
another man, but the feeling expanded still,
and I had no power to suppress it.
“Since I will share your meal
tonight, I’ll bring along my fire.” I stooped
and gathered the fuel I had laid, more to
hide my face than from her need for fuel,
then I preceded her to her camp.
The next day, after I yoked her
oxen, I put my foodstuffs into her wagon, and
redistributed the load of my belongings on
the two mules. On the way back to where I’d
left my horse, I saw one woman whispering
behind her hand to another, and I sidestepped
out of their sight. Let them talk, I thought.
I’m only keeping to my duty.
The river swung into the path of
our westward progress later that week, and I
stopped on a rise to gaze at the watery
obstacle. Brush and a few trees grew on the
banks of the river, but there was clear
evidence of a ford that had been used the
past season.
Remembering the fear Etta had
expressed to me, I hurried toward her wagon.
She had halted on the top of the bank,
waiting her turn to enter the water while the
first company of ten crossed over.
I pulled up my animals alongside
her, and looked down into her frightened
eyes.
“Oh Lije, I can’t drive them over.
My hands are shaking just to think about that
current.” She clasped her hands over the ox
goad.
“I’m here,” I answered, and took my
leg from the stirrup. I swung down, then led
my horse and mules to the rear of the wagon,
where I tied them to the tailgate. At her
side again, I took the shaking goad from
Etta’s hands, and boosted her to the wagon
seat. She loosed a small sigh, and I glanced
up to her tight face, grinning to lighten her
mood, and saw that some of the pallor was
fleeing as she regained color. The corners of
her mouth tried to respond to my grin, but
her effort was what some folks might call
wan.
“You set easy now. I’ll get us
safely across.” I started to go forward to
the lead team, then returned and looked
around for her son. “Where’s Joseph?”
She gestured behind the seat.
“He’s asleep. I hope he’ll nap through the
crossing.”
When our turn finally came, I urged
the oxen into the water. Although they didn’t
favor getting wet, they had nothing against
slaking their thirst, and part of the way
across, one of the lead animals quit pulling
and dipped his head into the stream.
This action surprised the other
beasts, and their agitation at the unexpected
stop caused the front of the wagon to tip
forward a bit. It wasn’t much, but Etta lost
her hold on the seat, and fell in the river.
She landed flat on her front, then rolled as
the current caught her. I dropped my ox goad
and plunged after her.
I’d swum some in our pond back
home, but that water didn’t grab at your arms
like this did. I concentrated on reaching
Etta, who was about ten yards out of my
grasp. I heard her splashes as she struggled
against the swift current, trying even in
her terror to keep her head in the air as the
water tumbled her around. From time to time I
heard a sound from her, a strangling gurgle
as she surfaced.
I made a great effort to swim with
long strokes, keeping in the middle of the
current so that it would carry me toward
Etta. Then the muddy water swirled as it
tugged me down, but I fought to keep my own
head up, conscious that my sodden clothes and
heavy boots were a danger to me. I was
tiring, and gasping to get breath, but I
labored on and pulled closer to her.
Then I was alongside her, she
grabbed me around the neck, and I thought we
were doomed to drown. I cried out, “Etta,
please!” and she ceased to struggle and
allowed me to grasp her about the waist.
I swam to the riverbank, dragged
her up to the top of the rise, then held her
while she coughed and gagged up the water
she had swallowed.
My muscles shook as I held her,
retching and choking, but I thought I’d never
seen a more lovely sight than the bedraggled,
soaked, but live woman in my arms. We both
sank to the grass and lay in an exhausted
heap until one of the brothers brought up my
horse and another. The man was followed by
men running along the bank to see if all was
well with us.
I got slowly to my feet, aided by
the first man to reach us. Then I pulled Etta
to her feet amid cheers from up and down the
river.
Seeing that we were alive, all but
the man holding our horses drifted back to
the ford and their work. Etta raised her
head, and her first weak words were to thank
me.
I stood quivering to hear her
praise, wondering where I’d gotten the
strength to fight the river, remembering what
a poor swimmer I’d always been. Then I knew
some power not my own had aided my rescue.
Etta turned to the brother with the
horses. “My baby. Is he safe?”
“Quite safe, Sister. The captain
rescued your wagon, and the boy slept all the
way across. He’s fussing a bit now, though.
He was looking around for you.”
“Thank the Lord!”
Thank the Lord, echoed in my soul.
Etta turned to me. “I could not
have wished for such a crossing, but you kept
your word to get us safely to the other side.”
I helped her mount the spare horse
as the other man rode off to continue his
work. I took a deep breath.
“If I had my wish, I would ask that
you never leave my side.” I stammered a
little as I realized the enormity of my
statement, but I went on, compelled to share
my feelings. “When you were out of my reach
in the water, I knew that if you were to die,
my life would be empty.” I paused for another
breath. “Etta, once you said you were fit
only to be a farmer’s wife. I’m a farmer,
though I’ve no land yet. When your sorrow has
eased, will you be my wife?”
I looked up at her, holding fear in
my hands along with my reins, knowing that
her answer was the key to my future.
Somewhere deep in my belly a feeling stood
poised on the edge of a pinnacle, waiting for
her reply. Her blue eyes gazed into my dark
ones as she kept silence for a time. Then she
spoke.
“You, of all the members of the
company, have eased my grief. Now you have
saved my life. You, who were a stranger to
me, I now count my dearest friend.” She
stopped, suddenly self-conscious, and fussed
the hair away from her face. Then she
smoothed the sodden dress across the horse’s
back. Last, she looked again at me, and I
held my breath.
“I will wed you whenever you say,
my Lije.” She smiled, and the mud on her face
only made her seem a rare flower of great
beauty.
I stepped into my saddle, heart
pulsing hard in my throat, feeling the spread
of joy I knew as belonging. We are no more
strangers, I thought. I turned my horse and
grinned at Etta.
“Let’s go see Joseph. Tell him he
can soon call me ‘papa’.”
© 1986, 2001 Marsha Ward
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