W - O - W !!! This is a riveting book. We were not sure of the ending. My wife and I read this as we traveled. We haven't read that many books in the car lately. We finished the last half on a long road trip to Crater Lake in Oregon. She reads and I drive. By the time we got to the national park, I am insisting we read it for awhile each time we get to the hotel. We finally finish it in the hotel at Winnemuck, Nevada, as I call it. In the hotels, I take a turn at reading, too
First, the setting of this novel is 1770 in the New Mexico colony of Spain. Who could of thought of such an unknown place to make a novel. Author Carla painted such a beautiful picture of it and how everything worked, even including some phrases in Spanish, which I interpreted for my wife, who is totally "gringo."
Such a story, so well worked out, and such a love. The love of any couple is the exposition of charity and God's true love .... the supreme reward of why we have come to the earth. Carla Kelly hits that on the head every book she writes. We know as we have read many her books. The initial Apache raid killing all of the caravan except Maria, a wonderful person pummeled by tribulation, who fought her way back to respectability and in the end to receive a gracious prize, Diego, who at the moment of their marriage, had also been stripped of everything by his own tribulation. So two similar people in love, a man and a woman, both so passionately in love but too shy to say it for fear it would be an importunity upon the other. With that "importunity," author Kelly drags us through enough suspense to last 50 pages.
There is Diego's half-Pueblo Indian brother, Cristobel, who has realized he will never get what Diego will receive from his father. Cristobel is not satisfied to be an important member of the Masferrer family and feels he must help his Pueblo people. He tries to use Maria in a ploy to hurt Diego. She is Spanish and to marry Cristobel would negate her hopes of a good life. I felt as the story line progressed that Maria would have to help Diego kill Cristobel. Diego could not do it alone. He was too loving of a person. That was one thing I got right.
The atrocities of the Indian raid were very stark. I think they showed the hate these Indians showed to the Spanish. I didn't like to read of them. The Spanish probably did some similar things years before when they subjugated the Pueblos and turned them into their slaves. That Cristobel would be so mean to his step-mother and step-sister is sad and was bemoaned by me.
I was glad they made it to safety from the Indian uprising, although there was much doubt seeing Diego and his two younger sisters and Maria sneaking through cornfields, piercing Indian attackers with arrows, and eating honey from bee boxes. This was a classic book. It is hard to believe its copyright was 1985. We have read many of her books written much closer to now. I think this is her best book I have read. That is like deciding between which baseball player is best, Mickey Mantle or Willie Mays. To me this is the best one. Diego was such a good man and Maria was a fine woman.
Diego and Maria are like a two piece puzzle. One complimented the other. The only thing they lacked was the passage of some time and oh, that thing that so often postpones a perfect match: the guts to say, "I Love You," and then take that leap of faith to move forward to marriage in love. And with their four children and the re-establishment of a new Las Invernes 13 years later, hopefully with the Indians as willing employees, now, rather than slaves, it looks like they have all their ducks in a row.
I can see them, on a horse, Diego and his "chiquita," and he, Maria's "corazon mio," riding a horse how they often did with her on the saddle in front of him and her leaning back on his chest as the full moon shined above on their small part of the Kingdom of Rios. It gives us all hope we can pass through problems and tribulations and eventually fulfill our destiny, not that that is the end of any of those but hopefully a long time of blessings, goodness and enjoyment, that we all seek, as we pass through time, with the faith that "our ride" will now be safer and less taxing. Thanks for the illumination, Mrs. Kelly