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Authors: Marilyn Hilton

BOOK: Found Things
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Theron stuffed his few belongings into his backpack. “This might sound crazy, but I've seen that girl before—the one on the bridge.”

“Meadow Lark? You mean around town?”

He shook his head. “About three weeks ago, I was up in Conway. I thought someone on the street recognized me, so I dodged into a pet store. There was this girl with orange hair looking at parakeets. But not just looking—she was talking to them.”

“Meadow Lark? How did she get up to Conway?”

“She was the same girl, I swear. And after that I couldn't get her out of my head because she reminded me so much of you. That's when I knew I had to stop hiding and come home.”

We had left the house I knew so well, but now I could go back to it without dreaming. Theron held Mr. Tricks under one arm and me under his other, sheltering us from the rain. I realized that if I had tried to write a wish for that moment, I would have failed, because walking home with Theron was so much more wonderful than I could have imagined. My heart knew what it hoped for, and in looking for my brother, I had found the missing parts of myself.

“Where did you find Mr. Tricks?” I asked.

“He showed up one night and made himself at home,” Theron say.

I reached over and petted Mr. Tricks's head.

“Oh, he had this in his beak.” Theron reached into his pocket, and then he pressed something into my palm. It was my little emerald ring.

Chapter 27

On the last day of
school, flowers of many colors spilled over Ms. Zucchero's desk, and each one of them had come from Mr. Sievers.

“I know someone who got a lot of cake today,” Sonya say at the art table. She looked over to me, bouncing her ponytail. “River, is your family going on vacation?”

I was still getting used to Sonya talking to me like a normal person, so I answered her quietly. “Just to Utica for a week.”

“Maybe we can do something together?” she asked shyly.

“We can't go anywhere,” Kevin say. “All of a sudden my dad's got too many patients.” He looked at me. “It all started with Mr. Clapton. Dad's letting him pay in eggs.”

I smiled at all the wishes that had come true.

There was more to smile about when Ms. Zucchero asked me to stay after class. “River, I'd like you to think about joining the art class I'm teaching this summer. It's for students who show special creativity, and it will be fun. Would you like that?”

Special creativity, me?
I thought. “Yes,” I say, feeling so much happiness.

She wrote the information on a piece of paper. “Give this to your parents. They can talk to me about it anytime.”

“This was fun,” Meadow Lark say as she put the last of her clothes in her duffel bag. Her daddy was back, she say, and she was going home.

Meadow Lark seemed to have forgotten about the night she almost drowned in the river. I wanted her to think it was all a dream, so I never mentioned it to her.

I was sitting crisscross on my bed. Theron told me I was walking crooked from sitting W, so I was trying to change how I sat. “It was fun,” I say, pushing down on my knees. “We have the whole summer to do it again,” I say.

She sank onto her bed, and bent down to feed carrots to Mr. Tricks on the floor. “Well . . . not really,” she say.

“What do you mean?”

“I got a letter from my dad last week, and we're moving again.”

“No,” I say. “You can't move, Meadow Lark. We're best friends.”

“We can still be best friends far away. And maybe I can come back to visit.”

“I hope you can. Let's make a wish!” I say. “But, where are you . . . ?”

“South Carolina. My dad found a teaching job there.”

A burst of sunlight grew and then faded in the room as clouds cleared from the sky. The rain had stopped a week ago and everything was drying out. The river had sunk to its normal height, and Daddy say the Quincely town council was talking about rebuilding the covered bridge.

Meadow Lark zipped up her backpack and slung it over her shoulder.

“I'll walk with you.”

“You don't have to, you know.”

“I want to. Mama say it's hospitable.”

“Your mama and her rules,” Meadow Lark say, and tossed her pumpkin-colored hair behind her shoulders.

I smiled about Mama and her rules. It meant we were cared-about girls.

“Okay,” she say, “but just to the library. I want to look up South Carolina and learn about my next home.”

I looked out the window just as Mama was backing the car out of the driveway. Daddy in the passenger seat was clutching the dashboard. Just before they drove off, she looked up at me and waved.

When Meadow Lark and I went outside, Theron come from the garage on his Giant, with his backpack hitched over his shoulders. “See ya,” he say as he passed.

“Where's he going?” Meadow Lark asked.

“Tutoring . . . his old student.”

Meadow Lark's eyes got huge. “Daniel?”

I nodded, and then remembered something. “Wait here. I'll be right back,” I say, and ran back up to our room and took the collage out of my closet. It had been there since the day I'd come home and found Mama and Meadow Lark making the cake together. All that time, the collage was supposed to be for Mama, but now Mama didn't need it.

Meadow Lark and I say good-bye in front of the library. “For now,” she say, “because I'll come back.”

“Okay,” I say, hardly able to believe she was really going away. “You're my best friend.”

She nodded and hitched her hair behind her ear. “And you'll always be mine.”

We hugged, and after she went inside, I carried the collage down the path to the river. I kicked off my sandals and walked out to my ankles. And then I walked out farther, until the river reached my calves, where the current ran free.

I looked at the collage one more time, touching each thing glued to it—the glass pieces brushed soft, the place on the porcelain doll head where the nose once was, the piece of wood that looked like a hand, the
R
typewriter key, the watch face, the black bear's tooth, the peach-colored leaf that was still soft, the stone that looked like a face, the gold beads, which I now believed were real gold.

Then, one by one, I picked off each thing I'd found and tossed it as far as I could into the river, and watched the ripples slide along the surface.

At one time I'd needed those things that the river gave me, but they weren't mine to keep. Theron was back, Mama and Daddy were happy, I had a best friend, I'd found my other mama, and the song in me was starting to sound just right. They were all I needed and all I wanted.

The last thing left on the collage was the bald plastic baby with arms and legs and head that moved. I picked it gently off the poster board. Then I found an old shingle near the forest and gently laid the baby on it.

Setting it on the surface of the river, I made a wish that the next person who found that baby doll would treasure it as much as I had. Then I say, “Good-bye,” and let it go, and watched until it disappeared into the ripples and sparkles.

I wished I'd had Mama's faith from the beginning, the faith that believes even when there's no reason to. Angels are everywhere, I discovered. You just have to look for them.

After I returned all those gifts to the river, I remembered my three lucky feathers. I didn't need lucky feathers anymore. But when I reached into my pocket for them, my fingers touched something stiff, like paper.

I pulled it out. And smiled at what I saw—a folded-up napkin with a little red heart.

Acknowledgments

This book began with a few
words and a voice. And then a girl named River appeared who wanted me to tell her story. So I listened to her and wrote what I heard.

No book is ever created by one person alone. As I was writing
Found Things
, many other people stepped in to provide their support, interest, and expertise. And together we told and retold River's story until it was just right. Here, I want to thank those people for making a few words and a voice become a story, and a long-held dream become a book.

My (rockstar) agent, Josh Adams, for his encouragement and support, and a little strip of yellow paper.

My wonderful editor, Namrata Tripathi, who, with her wisdom, insight, and enthusiasm from the very beginning, gently coaxed this story into full bloom.

Steve Copley, for providing his linguistics expertise in determining where River might have come from.

The Nevada SCBWI Mentor Program, and Ellen Hopkins and Suzanne Morgan Williams, for making it possible for me to participate in the 2010-11 session, and for exemplifying the spirit of giving.

The SCBWI Sue Alexander Award committee for recognizing
Found Things
, and for its continuing support of writers of children's literature.

My fairy godmentor, Emma Dryden, for her love and respect for story, and for teaching me to give each story the time and space it needs to become what it was meant to be. And Emma Ledbetter at Atheneum for her careful shepherding.

My tough and tender critique group, the Turbo Monkeys: Amy Cook, Craig Lew, Ellen Jellison, Hazel Mitchell, Julie Dillard, Kristen Held, and Sarah McGuire. Marcy Weydemuller for her thoughts.

Celeste Putnam, for making me laugh and drink coffee and write on Saturday mornings.

Dene Barnett—Lucy to my Ethel—who never stopped believing.

My grandparents, who gave me a magical childhood in the magical town on which Quincely was based.

My children, Julia, Emily, and Andrew, who opened my eyes to love. And my husband, Leon, for his never-ever-ever-ending support. And to God, who makes all things possible, all things new.

About the Author

Photograph by Jessica McCollam

Marilyn Hilton grew up in Massachusetts in a nest of family filled with a delightful abundance of cousins. From her father she learned to explore New England's back roads, and from her mother she learned to look beyond what can be seen. She has published numerous short stories, poems, and essays as well as a nonfiction book for tween girls.
Found Things
is her first novel. Marilyn now makes her home in Northern California with her husband and three children, where she writes, tap dances, and finds miracles on life's back roads.

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