In antebellum America, two teens bury their secrets and join the historic Pony Express, soon discovering that the mortal world is not the only one on the brink of war.
When bright, brash Jessamine Murphy finds a recruitment poster for the Pony Express, her tomboy heart skips a beat: not only for adventure, but for the chance to track down her wayward father in California. Eager to reunite her fractured family, Jessamine cuts her hair, dons a pair of trousers, and steps into the world as Jesse.
With a bit of trickery, Jesse wins a special assignment—as does Ben Foley, a quiet but determined boy who guards secrets as closely as Jesse does. The two are to transport unusual cargo along an unusual route: the Nightland Express. They ride west together, one excitedly navigating the world as a boy, the other passing as white to escape the monsters from his past.
Ben and Jesse soon realize their assignment is special in more ways than one: their tireless horses cover ground faster than should be possible, and inhuman creatures watch their journey from the darkness. The Nightland Express is more than a mail route—it traces the border between the mortal world and a vibrant, magical land just beyond.
As both realms hover on the precipice of disaster, Jesse and Ben must learn to fully trust one another before a catastrophic rift separates the two worlds—and the two riders—forever.
Release date:
October 11, 2022
Publisher:
Erewhon Books
Print pages:
368
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Jessamine stared at the copper braid coiled in the bottom of the washbasin. It reminded her of the dead fawn their dog had found under the apple tree behind the farm, all tiny and still wet from birth. Stuck-to with blossoms and leaves, hanging limp out of the hound’s mouth. They’d left a candle to burn out over the little grave.
For the Faeries to find, Alice had said.
Jessamine set down the shears and ran her hand along the back of her neck, where the hem of her hair was jagged and thick. She wondered if she should put her braid in the ground, too.
Alice was in the front yard chopping wood, a chore she insisted on doing even at eight months pregnant. Her bangs, a browner shade of red than Jessamine’s, were matted with sweat. She looked up when the top step squeaked, then wrung her hands round the handle of the axe when she saw her younger sister.
“Oh Jess,” she said. “Can’t the trousers be enough?”
Jessamine rolled her eyes and strode past her—indignant strides were easier in trousers, after all—to chuck the braid into the brush beyond the yard.
“The meadowlarks can make a nest of it, I reckon,” she said. “How do I look?”
Alice set down the axe and looked her up and down, taking in the shirt and vest, the trousers and boots. Though Jessamine was tall for her age, and lean, she’d still had to alter almost every seam. The top half had come in at the sides while the lower half shrank up from the bottom, and everything puckered in the middle where she’d tried to pull it all together with a belt. But she couldn’t have felt prouder.
Alice’s disappointed frown was proof that the outfit was a success. “Like a boy,” she sighed.
Jessamine beamed and tipped an imaginary hat. “Well thank ya, ma’am. And how d’ya do.”
“It ain’t natural, Jess. Aunt Mary says so. A woman riding a horse astride like that.”
“Alice . . .”
“She says if you can’t bear children, that’ll be the end of you!”
“Aunt Mary says if you look a leprechaun in the eye and say his name three times, he has to tell you where he keeps his lucky gold.”
“It’s not a joke, Jess!” Alice whispered, as if someone were listening from the woods beyond the yard. “Little folk keep their power in names. And in gold.”
“Listen. You should be happy I’m going to join the Pony. Once I’m back you’ll have your sister and your father. The bank won’t take the house and we’ll be warm and well fed through the winter. It’s all going to be all right.”
That evening they ate supper in silence, listening to the crackling in the fireplace. Jessamine only had one thing on her mind, but she didn’t say anything for fear of hurting Alice’s feelings. Her plan had never been a secret, and neither had Alice’s disapproval. They had both seen the advertisement on the door.
Pony Express Special Assignment, it read. Two riders wanted.
It even said orphans preferred, just like the usual ones soliciting thin, wiry fellows, but the rest of the assignment details were different. The most startling difference was that these riders were to take a parcel from St. Joe’s all the way to California. The Pony’s full route was almost two thousand miles, made up of relay and home stations. Dozens of horses and their thin, wiry riders.
Jessamine had dreamed of it all. Escaping the growing tensions in Missouri, just her and a horse and a saddle between them. But she’d never thought there might be a chance to ride all the way to California. It seemed impossible that a single rider would be assigned the full route, with no handoffs, but she wasn’t about to argue with destiny. This special assignment was the miracle she had wished for.
All the way to California.
Edward Murphy had always said migrating along the Overland Trail was as close to following the anointed path of God as any man was like to get. Laden with terrors and adventures, rewarding only the most virile with unending milk and honey in the wealth of the West.
In and out of their lives he’d been, seeking that ambrosia. Until one day he’d left for good.
Now, finally, Jessamine could go after him. She knew what she would say to him, had rehearsed it before she slept, long before she’d seen the poster and every night since. Daydreamed about her father’s face slowly changing from shock that she’d come all the way to Carson City for him to remorse for what he’d done, understanding that he’d been a cowardly father, a rotten dad. Knowing that the right thing to do was to admit how awful he’d been to Jessamine. To Alice. And come home.
If she’d been born a boy, none of this would matter. Even without their father, they’d be able to convince the bank to give them longer. Negotiate some kind of payment plan. But the bank wouldn’t give the time of day to two girls, one that had a bastard in her belly and the other that got the side-eye from everyone in town for her unladylike manner.
They were still human, both of them, and hard workers. But that didn’t matter to no one. There was no man of the house, not even Edward Murphy. It made Jessamine so mad she wanted to spit.
Alice cleared the table while Jessamine collected the dishes, setting them on the floor for Old Dix to lick. She’d wash them clean in the basin tomorrow, but crumbs attracted mice, especially as the days grew chill. Jessamine shivered at the thought of the cold water under the late September air.
“When I bring pa back, maybe he’ll have found some of that gold after all and he can buy us a proper cookstove. We might as well be living in a cave at this rate.”
She brought Alice a blanket, and the two of them sat by the fire. Alice rocked gently in her chair, her knitting draped over her belly. Jessamine sat cross-legged on the floor, stitching the final piece of her costume.
“Oscar’s family has a cookstove,” Alice murmured. “Cast iron, from Charleston. Four burners with an oven, and the iron would keep Faeries out. It said in the advertisement in the Courier that it will make you cry for joy.”
“Oscar,” Jessamine grumbled. “I’ll give him something to cry about.”
Alice sniffled, not because she had actually started crying but as a warning that she might if Jessamine didn’t school her tone. They had informally agreed not to mention the young lawman, but his name still boiled up. Like a rash. Some good he and his four burners were doing Alice and their baby now.
Jessamine reached up and put her hands on Alice’s knitting needles. The wool yarn was thick and rough.
“Alice. Listen. While I’m gone, you have to promise not to try and find him. He left you like this. He’s no good. And if something were to happen to you while I’m out west, I wouldn’t forgive myself. Hear? Even if you find him, he made it clear what his priorities were when he ran out on you.” Alice found it impossible to lie, and they both knew it. It was one of the things that Jessamine found most endearing about her. She squeezed her sister’s hand. “All I ask of you, while I run this little ol’ errand, is don’t go looking for that trouble named Oscar Montero.”
Morning came quick, but Jessamine was ready.
While her sister slept and the white light of the morning crept through the cracks in the farmhouse’s old wood walls, she stripped off her vest and shirt. She’d slept in them, like she reckoned she’d be doing on the trail. It felt good to wake dressed like this, but the look was incomplete. Missing something Jessamine had been reluctant to wear yesterday in front of Alice.
The undershirt was waiting where she’d left it folded at the foot of her bed. It was snug and hard to get on, but once she had it tugged down over her chest and most of her ribs it wasn’t too bad. Back on went her shirt and vest, and she quietly crossed the room to steal a moment in the mirror.
Cut hair tousled from sleep, breasts flattened under the tight garment, the result was astonishing. She smoothed her hands over her chest and tossed her bangs, watching her reflection with a surprising spark of pride. The person staring back at her was bright-eyed and confident, androgynous and handsome. For the first time in a long time, Jessamine felt she recognized the face in the mirror.
She heard Alice stirring in bed and splashed some water on her face, ran her fingers through her hair. It was time to go.
“You’ll call on the doc if anything feels strange, right?” she asked as she wrapped rolls and some cheese in a kerchief. “I asked Danny to come round once a day and check on you. And Aunt Mary is planning to be up from Kansas City in two weeks. Anything feels wrong, take Annie into town and someone’ll get you what you need.”
Alice pulled her shawl tight and followed Jessamine to the door. She stood on the porch while Jessamine saddled Morgan.
“But it’s you I need, Jess. Why can’t you just stay here? We can do all right on our own. Without pa. And without Oscar, even, if that’s what you think is bettermost. We could even go live with Aunt Mary—”
“But we shouldn’t have to,” Jessamine said. “Edward Murphy helped bring us into this world. The least he could do is provide for us like a respectable father now that we’re here.”
Alice sniffled. Jessamine patted Morgan’s sturdy neck and left him to meet her sister on the porch.
“Don’t cry. Hey, ain’t you the older one here?”
“Years on God’s earth don’t mean nothing in the big world, and you know that.”
“Well, in my world you’ll always be my big sister. Listen, I’ll be back before the baby comes. Draggin’ pa by his bootstraps if I have to. Okay? I promise.”
Alice was crying, but she nodded. “Oh . . . I almost forgot.”
Out of her shawl came a dried flower. It was delicate and flattened from one of Alice’s books, its little white star-shaped blossoms paper-thin and fragile. She tucked it in Jessamine’s vest pocket.
“Your namesake,” she pointed out. Then she smiled. “So you don’t forget where you came from.”
Jessamine wrapped her sister in a hug from the side, making room for the baby and squeezing tight. “I will think about you every day.”
Then, to keep any more tears from falling between them, Jessamine turned away. For a moment, as her heel pressed into the stirrup, doubt sprang through her. But when she felt the worn leather seat of Morgan’s saddle, warm from the rising sun, it steadied her. With a cluck and a nudge he was off, and Jessamine was on her way to St. Joe’s.
Chapter III
Welcome to the City of St. Joseph.
A dozen brick buildings stood against the blue autumn sky, squatting proudly over clusters of smaller structures like red hens over clutches of eggs. Penn Street cut between them, full of horses, ox-drawn wagons, and young white boys offering to do anything and everything for a penny.
“Carry your bag, mister?”
“Got a horse, mister? Need someone to brush it?”
“On your way to the California Road, mister? I got dried beans, just a half dime a quart! Gallon molasses, fifty cents!”
“Public meeting of the state of the Union!” This time it was a less-young white boy pushing a handbill into Ben’s chest. He was immediately off to pin his broadside to the next man. “Defend our rights! Vote Breckinridge!”
Ben crumpled the paper and threw it in the street without reading it. He already knew what it said and what it meant. Defend our rights. The second half of the sentence was implied: to own slaves.
The call to arms, in all its versions, had flitted along the streets of every border city from Kentucky to Missouri. Many of the posters and handbills simply depicted a Black man with a cane and top hat, as if the mere image were enough to convince anyone of the cause. They flew in the wind, like flags marking territory already won. Ben wanted to burn every one of them.
But he couldn’t. He had to pull through. And keep pulling through, all the way to California. That was the way to make good on his promise.
He yanked his hat down further over his brow and took the folded advertisement from his breast pocket to confirm the address of the Pony Express headquarters. REGISTER AT THE PATEE HOUSE HQ, the ad read. 1202 PENN STREET. Only a few blocks away.
The Patee House took up a full block, a white-trimmed brick building with big arched windows on the ground floor and rectangular ones on every floor above. It had been a luxury hotel since it had been built in ’58. Ben guessed not a one of those fancy rooms was empty, even so late in the season; St. Joe’s was one of the busiest jumping-off places at the head of the California Road.
Jumping-off place. The phrase reminded Ben of the old dock back home, where on the hottest summer nights he and his friends would line up to jump off into the river.
But the currents these settlers were leaping into would take them far away from here. All the way west, if they were lucky. Family after family, a fleet of wagons, on a journey that would take most of them months, if not years, along the Overland Trail. Through Kansas and Nebraska prairie and the Rockies, through Salt Lake Valley and the unforgiving southwestern desert. All the way to Sacramento.
Thousands had made the journey, even before James Marshall struck gold in ’48. And though the rush had subsided some five years ago, thousands more continued to make it. Ben couldn’t imagine traveling two thousand miles with a family and all their belongings. Good thing he had neither.
The quiet office was empty except for the clerk, who glanced over his spectacles and the Gazette when Ben doffed his hat and entered. A painting of the Pony Express founders hung at the back wall: Russell, Majors, and Waddell. The three suited businessmen whose partnership formed the basis of the country’s most beloved and patriotic enterprise.
Ben cleared his throat.
“Good morning. I’m here to register for the Pony,” he said, pushing every ounce of white inflection he could muster into the words. He’d found the first impression was the most important; if he could pass in the first moment, there was never a second glance.
It was the case now. The clerk saw a white boy with hazel eyes and a tan. He nodded his chin at Ben’s brow. “What happened to your hair, son?”
Ben ran a hand over the top of his head. “Caught fire,” he said. “Would have burned my eyebrows off, too, if it weren’t for the loving embrace of the Platte.”
The clerk chuckled at the idea of the brown, slow-moving Platte River being anything but dank sludge. Ben unfolded the advertisement he’d found nailed to the fence post out front of his father’s property line, placed the sheet on the desk. The clerk let his spectacles slide down his nose to read it. He seemed to forget all about Ben’s shaved head and tabled the Gazette.
“Hm. Stationmaster Declan’s special assignment, eh?” He peered up at Ben, eyelids heavy with doubt. “You sure?”
“What’s not to be sure of, sir?”
The clerk took a long look at him, and Ben resisted the urge to hide his face. Maybe this was a stupid idea. If he went back to Penny now, she’d still be there. It would be bad, but at least they would be together. Maybe they could find another way.
But the clerk just shrugged and turned in his chair. He yanked open a drawer full of paperwork and slapped a simple, empty form on the counter.
“Sign here and record your next of kin. Bring the form to the station where they’re doing the hiring. If you get the job, it’ll serve as your employment contract. If you get thrown out of the saddle and break every bone, it’ll serve as a safety waiver.” As Ben read it, the clerk added, “Or let us know where to send your body.”
Ben didn’t hesitate. The regular ads for the Pony Express read orphans preferred for a reason. It was a dangerous job, and it wasn’t a stretch to believe that a special assignment might be even riskier. He took the form, folded it, and slipped it in his breast pocket alongside the other piece of paper hidden there. The three sheets that documented his life: his past, his present, and—he hoped—his future.
“Sir, I’ve been in the saddle since I was a baby, driving cattle and sheep. I didn’t come all the way here from Louisville to turn back now.”
The clerk seemed neither surprised nor impressed. “Stables are down the street,” he said. “And you better hurry—I think they’re starting soon. Majors himself is here for the hiring.”
Ben nodded, shoving his hat on his head before turning to leave. He shouldered out the door, nearly barreling over a slender white boy with dark copper hair who was on his way in.
“Watch it!” the boy snapped in a high, almost sweet voice. His glare, on the other hand, had nothing palatable about it. Ben would have liked to admire such a pretty face, but he had a one-way ticket to California to earn. So he settled for a polite tip of the hat before he jogged out into the bustle of Penn Street.
The Pony Express stables were a modest brick building in front of a grassy stable yard, practically within spitting distance of the Patee House. Past the yard were the actual stables, sheltering half a dozen hardy horses of all colors: Morgans and thoroughbreds, some famously plucked from cavalry ranks. The beasts were the lifeblood and the namesake of the Pony Express.
He followed the cracking, uneven laughter of boys and hopped the log fence, rounding the stable and entering the yard. A group of young men, all close to his age, stood round, most of them thin and trying to be manly in shirts and trousers borrowed from fathers or older brothers. Each had the same advertisement in his hand.
Ben sized up his competition. There were eight of them—seven boys and one girl, Ben realized, dressed up like a boy with her blonde hair tucked into her hat and her body drowning in a boy’s shirt and trousers. They were observed by a handful of aloof young men, who stood leaning against the fence in riding clothes and deerskin jackets. Each had a red neckerchief hanging at his collar—Pony riders. Real ones.
Ben tried not to envy those neckties too much. He didn’t want the riders to notice him noticing them. He wanted to stay as invisible as possible. Before the afternoon, he told himself, he would have his own kerchief to wear round his neck. Then it could be as soon as ten days that he’d lay eyes on the green hills of California, where he’d build the house he’d dreamed of. Make a plan to find Penny and bring her there, too.
“Gather round, boys. Gather round.”
It was a tall man in a black coat calling them over. He had a thick beard and the stiff posture of a longtimebusinessman, and Ben recognized him from the photograph in the clerk’s office. It was Alexander Majors, as narrow and gaunt as Ben imagined Abraham Lincoln might be, from the stories Penny had told.
“Sad lot, ain’t they?” The apple-sweet voice from earlier popped up from Ben’s shoulder. The pretty boy from the Patee House stood beside him. From his clean skin and clothes, skinny arms, and soft, shining hair, Ben wondered if he’d ever worked a day in his life. To someone who hadn’t, anything less fortunate must seem “sad.”
“Speak for yourself,” Ben said.
The boy snorted, then chuckled. He pointed at his neck, decorated with no bright scarf, and waved his own copy of the special assignment ad. “Sorry. Sad lot, ain’t we?” he said, voice softening. Then, as an afterthought, he said, “Jesse Murphy.”
“Ben Foley,” Ben replied. They shook hands. Murphy’s was slender, but calloused in the palm from reins and horse tack, and along the fingers, no doubt from chopping wood. Maybe Ben had been too quick to judge. “Best of luck in whatever’s coming next.”
Jesse’s eyes twinkled. “When I win, luck’ll have nothing to do with it,” he said.
Ben raised a brow. Took a certain kind of boy to have confidence like that—or a certain kind of upbringing, anyway.
“Now then. As you’re aware, we’ve a special assignment requiring two riders. The supervisor of the assignment has requested fresh blood, and he is seeking a certain manner and demeanor which will befit the unprecedented nature of the assignment.”
Majors spoke in the same slow, proper Kentucky drawl as Ben’s father had, and for a moment Ben felt like a child in a schoolyard, being instructed in letters and numbers. Not that he had ever attended school, of course. That had been an opportunity bestowed only on his half brother. But Randall had had no qualms about describing the experience in great detail, and as a child Ben had committed the fantasy to heart.
“Thus, any one of you is eligible, regardless of your riding experience or the status of any noteworthy referral.” Majors paused to clear his throat, looking down at the ground for a breath as if repressing any personal objections to the vetting process.
“On what criteria are we to be judged?” asked one of the boys. He, like all of them, was impatient to be on with it.
“Speed, horsemanship, and understanding the rules,” Majors replied. “This is the Pony Express, after all. Now then. There is a welcome sign on the eastern side of town. On the back of it is a basket, and in it are ten gold neckerchiefs. One for each of you. And there are ten horses in the stable yonder—again, one for each of you. The first two riders to bring back one of those neckerchiefs will be hired.”
Ben found it uncomfortably fortuitous that a basket on the other side of town would already be filled with exactly the number of neckties as there were candidates in the yard, especially since it seemed several of them had just arrived. But he tried not to pay it too much mind.
The girl dressed like a boy whooped. “A race! Howdy! When do we start?”
Majors was unimpressed. He flicked a stray sliver of stable hay from his shoulder. “Right now, I’d imagine.”
Ben turned when he heard Murphy bolt from beside him, taking off like a bullet. The other boy’s movement was like a spur in Ben’s side, and he leapt into a sprint for the stables, shooting a glance over his shoulder for only a second. Murphy was headed away from the stables at top speed. Where was that kid going?
Focus! It doesn’t matter what he’s doing!
Ben slowed as he reached the stable aisle. The horses were alert to the sounds of running men, ears perked and hooves pawing. But they weren’t nervous, hand-picked and trained as they were for the. . .
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