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Authors: Patricia MacLachlan

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I stopped at Mama’s door. That baby was inside. I didn’t want to see it. I didn’t want to know it. I pushed the door open and saw Mama, lying in bed, her eyes closed. Next to her was a wrapped bundle. Mama turned her head and smiled at me.

“Thank you for reading to me, Cassie. You did a fine job.”

I stood still.

“Come on,” said Mama. “Come in and see the terrible baby.”

I looked at Mama, shocked. I moved closer. Mama patted the bed for me to sit, so I did.

And then she picked up the bundle and gave it to me.

I sat there, staring at Mama. After a moment I looked down. My heart beat faster. The baby had a round head and no hair. The baby had dark, dark eyes that looked up at me, a little like Beatrice’s eyes. The baby yawned then, making the smallest sound. I looked at the tiny fingers, with tiny nails. I bent down, remembering what Papa had said about how I smelled when I was a baby. Papa knew.

“This is supposed to be Beatrice,” I whispered.

Mama smiled.

“That may be,” she whispered back to me, “but that is a strange name for a boy.”

A boy.

“I don’t have any words,” I said to Mama.

“I know,” she said. “But you will.”

All of a sudden I heard noises in the kitchen, Papa’s voice, and Caleb’s. Laughter from Grandfather. Then Papa stood at the door, looking pale and scared, Caleb behind him. And Grandfather.

“I brought you a perfect gift, Cassie!” Caleb blurted out.

“No,” I said, my voice soft. “The perfect gift is here.”

I looked up at Papa.

“He is a terrible baby.”

I smiled at Mama.

“But he’s more perfect than the moon.”

Read on for an excerpt from the last book about the Witting family,
Grandfather’s Dance
.

1

S
pring. School was hard in the spring. Even fourth grade was hard. The windows of the small school were open and the sweet smell of new grass blew in. I couldn’t pay attention. Neither could Ian or Min or Grace. Will was half asleep, and Isabel looked out the window. There were only six of us in school, from first grade to fifth. Mr. Willet read out loud to us, but no one seemed to hear. One of the horses whinnied outside and we all looked out the window. Finally Mr. Willet put down his book and looked out the window, too.

“Let’s go home,” he said softly.

Ian, the youngest of everyone, only six, clapped his hands, making Mr. Willet laugh.

“Go home, go on home,” he said, still laughing. “We’ll try again on Monday.”

I gathered my books and helped Ian with his. I made sure he got home every day. Today I’d ridden Molly, and I gave Ian a leg up. We rode together, Ian’s arms around my waist.

“Caleb and I used to ride home from school just like this,” I said.

“Caleb’s big now,” said Ian.

“Yes. He’s big. Away at school.”

“Do you miss him?”

“Yes. I miss Caleb.”

“Does he tease you?” asked Ian.

“Yes, Caleb has always teased me.”

“I tease my little sister every single day,” said Ian.

I heard him yawn behind me, and I turned and wrapped a long scarf behind him and tied it in front of my waist. Sometimes Ian fell asleep on the way home. I didn’t want him falling off Molly.

“Lily loves me even if I tease her,” said Ian matter-of-factly.

“Yes.”

“Let’s do twosies,” said Ian.

“Okay. Two times two is . . . ?”

“Four.”

“Two times three is . . . ?”

“Six.”

Ian laid his head against my back and Molly walked slowly down the road to his house.

“Two times four?”

Ian didn’t answer. I smiled. He’d fallen asleep, his breath warm on my back.

Way off in the fields, meadowlarks flew and the smell of prairie spring followed us home.

 

“Cassie! Cassie!”

Jack ran out of the barn, Papa and our dog Lottie following him. His pale hair was long and curly around his face. Mama once said he looked like an angel. Grandfather said most times he didn’t act like one.

The surprise was that Jack did act like an angel around Grandfather. He never frowned at Grandfather. He never showed Grandfather his temper. Every evening he sat on Grandfather’s lap and made him tell a story, made him sing. From the very beginning, Grandfather had been Jack’s favorite.

Papa lifted Jack up to sit with me on Molly. Jack leaned down and kissed Molly on her neck, and we went into the barn.

“Doggie,” said Jack.

I smiled.

“Horse,” I said to him. “Molly’s a horse.”

Jack turned and frowned his fierce frown at me.

“Doggie,” said Jack, making me laugh.

I kissed the top of his head. It was warm and sweet smelling.

“All right,” I said. “Doggie.”

“Horse,” said Jack, smiling back at me.

“A joke!” I cried. “You made a joke, Jack.”

I got off Molly and reached up and slid Jack down beside me.

“Doggie,” whispered Jack.

I laughed and took his hand. We walked out of the cool, dark barn into the light. He jumped up and down beside me as we walked.

His hand was tiny and warm in my hand.

About the Author

Photo by John MacLachlan

 

PATRICIA M
AC
LACHLAN
is the celebrated author of many timeless books for young readers, including
Sarah, Plain and Tall
, winner of the Newbery Medal. Her novels for young readers include
Arthur, For the Very First Time
;
The Facts and Fictions of Minna Pratt
;
Skylark
;
Caleb’s Story
;
More Perfect Than the Moon
;
Grandfather’s Dance
;
Word After Word After Word
; and
Kindred Souls
. She is also the author of many much-loved picture books, including
Three Names
;
All the Places to Love
;
What You Know First
;
Painting the Wind
;
Bittle
;
Who Loves Me?
;
Once I Ate a Pie
;
I Didn’t Do It
;
Before You Came
; and
Cat Talk
—several of which she cowrote with her daughter, Emily. She lives with her husband and two border terriers in Williamsburg, Massachusetts.

 

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Also by Patricia MacLachlan

Sarah, Plain and Tall

Skylark

Caleb’s Story

More Perfect than the Moon

Grandfather’s Dance

Arthur, For the Very First Time

Through Grandpa’s Eyes

Cassie Binegar

Seven Kisses in a Row

Unclaimed Treasures

The Facts and Fictions of Minna Pratt

Word After Word After Word

Kindred Souls

Mama One, Mama Two

All the Places to Love

What You Know First

Three Names

The Truth of Me

 

Written with Emily MacLachlan Charest

Painting the Wind

Bittle

Who Loves Me?

Once I Ate a Pie

Fiona Loves the Night

I Didn’t Do It

Before You Came

Cat Talk

Back Ads

Credits

Cover art © 2013 by Jim Madsen

Copyright

More Perfect than the Moon

Copyright © 2004 by Patricia MacLachlan

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

 

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

MacLachlan, Patricia.

   More perfect than the moon / Patricia MacLachlan.— 1st ed.

      p. cm.

   Sequel to: Caleb’s story.

   Summary: Eight-year-old Cassie Witting is upset when she finds out that her mother, Sarah, is expecting a baby, but writing in the journal that was her brother Caleb’s helps her sort out her feelings and she finally learns that Sarah will always love her.

   ISBN-10: 0-06-075179-7 (pbk.)

   ISBN-13: 978-0-06-075179-1 (pbk.)

   EPub Edition © MARCH 2013 ISBN: 9780062285751

   [1. Babies—Fiction.   2. Mothers and daughters—Fiction.   
3. Frontier and pioneer life—Great Plains—Fiction.   4. Great Plains—Fiction.]   I. Title.

PZ7.M2225Mr 2004

[Fic]—dc22

2003022702

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