Digging through Frances's room takes stamina. Which clearly I lack, for after the 5th or 6th start of a story that I found (buried on her desk, crumpled on the floor, tucked into a bag), I could stand it no longer and had to tell you about it.
Here's the first. Just two sentences:
Edward Fuller lived on 1563 Green Street. Everything there went well, except one thing.
What is that thing?? I shall never know. Next:
PROLOGUE
I will write this story in a very strange way. Of course Penelope Gray, and Dorcas and Thomas Carnegie are the characters my readers will grow familiar with and hopefully grow to love. But in parts of this, I will talk and describe parts of my own childhood.
The story takes place long ago. Slavery was done, but Abraham Lincoln was also. This is how the children find out how to turn the torn-apart, young America into a better place. First you meet a child called Penelope. Penelope had hope and spirit, but not enough to redo American. She needed help.
It goes on, written on tiny notebook paper. Here's another I found, written on square pieces of yellow stationary:
-1-
"In Congress, July 4, 1776." Those words lingered in Charity Carnegie's heart. She was an American girl, not British! Charity reached into her blue linen dress. She pulled out a bit of slate and her chalk and wrote:
Dear Mr. Jefferson, In true honor of American, please press this onto the Declaration:
Charity nailed a bit of parchment to her slate. The parchment read:
Charity Carnegie.
Charity tied a piece of twine to the peg on her slate. Then she slowly lowered the slate into the Congress Building. "Well, what's this?" exclaimed John Hancock.
"It's addressed to Mr. Jefferson," said Ben Franklin. They handed it to Thomas Jefferson.
Who is this just-turned-8, moody, brilliant, creative, wild young lady novelist with the vivid historical imagination? Can you believe she lives in my house?
The flow of regular family life is so dense, so full, so brimming to the very top. Children's outward behavior takes center stage for us - how they conform to expectations and how they do not. I forget sometimes to be more curious, to wonder more about their mysterious inner lives. But oh, these stories! What an extraordinary glimpse.