DIAL BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS

  PENGUIN YOUNG READERS GROUP

  An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

  375 Hudson Street

  New York, NY 10014

  Copyright © 2017 by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley

  Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

  Ebook ISBN 9780698197138

  Jacket art © 2017 by Josie Portillo

  Hand-lettering by Maggie Olson

  Jacket design by Samira Iravani

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Version_1

  To Jessica Dandino Garrison

  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Author’s Note

  About the Author

  Chapter 1

  You can know things all you like, but that doesn’t mean you believe them.

  “Ada! You need to drink something!” Susan’s voice, scolding. Susan’s hands, pushing a cup of cold tea into mine.

  “I don’t want to,” I said. “Really I don’t.”

  Susan curled my fingers around the teacup. “I understand,” she said, “but please try. It’s the last thing they’re going to let you have. You’ll be thirsty in the morning.”

  My right foot was twisted sideways at the ankle. It had been all my life. My ankle bones grew curled, so my toenails scraped the ground and what should have been the bottom of my foot faced the sky. Walking hurt like anything. Despite the calluses, the skin on my foot tore and bled.

  This night in the hospital—nearly three years ago now—was September 16, 1940. A Monday. It was a little over a year into the war between Hitler and most of the rest of the world. Eleven years into the war between the rest of the world and me.

  The very next day surgeons were going to chop my curled ankle bones up and rearrange them. Maybe into something like a functional foot.

  I put the teacup Susan gave me to my lips. I forced myself to sip. My throat closed. I choked. Tea splattered across the bedcovers and my tray.

  Susan sighed. She mopped up the spilled tea, then motioned for one of the nurses that was putting up the blackout to come take away my tray.

  Since the start of the war, we covered our windows with blackout screens every night, so that German bombers wouldn’t be able to aim at our lights. My hospital wasn’t in London, which was getting bombed every night right now, but that didn’t mean it wouldn’t be hit. You never could tell what Germans would do.

  “Letter for you, Mum,” the nurse said, handing Susan an envelope as she scooped up the tray.

  “Delivered to the hospital? How odd.” Susan opened it. “It’s from Lady Thorton.” She unfolded the letter inside. “She must have sent it before she got my note with the boardinghouse’s address. Ada, are you quite sure you don’t want something to eat? Toast?”

  I shook my head. The mouthful of tea I’d swallowed swirled in my stomach. “I think I’m going to be sick.”

  Susan gasped. She looked up at me, snatched a basin from the bottom shelf of my bedside table, and thrust it beneath my chin. I clenched my teeth and held everything in.

  Susan’s hand shook. The basin shook too. I looked at her face. She’d gone pale, her eyes dark and wide.

  “What’s wrong?” I asked. “What does that letter say?”

  “Nothing,” she said. “Breathe deep. That’s it.” She put the basin down, folded Lady Thorton’s letter, and tucked it into her handbag.

  Something was wrong. I could see it on her face. “Is it Butter?” I asked.

  “What?”

  “Has something happened to Butter?” Butter was Susan’s pony. I loved him. He was staying in Lady Thorton’s stables while I was in hospital.

  “Oh,” Susan said. “No. That is, Lady Thorton didn’t mention Butter, but she would have if anything were wrong.”

  “Maggie?” Maggie was Lady Thorton’s daughter, my best friend.

  “Maggie’s fine,” Susan said. Her hands still shook very slightly. Her eyes didn’t look right. “Everyone’s fine in the village.”

  “And Jamie’s fine,” I said. It was a statement, not a question, because it had to be true. My brother Jamie wasn’t in the village—he was here with us. Susan and Jamie and Bovril, Jamie’s cat, were staying in a rented room in a boardinghouse near the hospital. Jamie was there with the landlady now.

  Jamie was six years old. We’d guessed he was seven, but we had his birth certificate now and he wasn’t, not quite.

  I was eleven. I had my birth certificate too. I’d known my real birthday for just over a week.

  Susan nodded. “Jamie’s fine.”

  I took a deep breath. “Is something stopping my surgery?” Before last week, when Mam tried to snatch us away from her, Susan had said she couldn’t give permission for me to have surgery. She still couldn’t give permission, but she didn’t care anymore. She said that what was right and what was permitted were sometimes different things. I needed surgery and I was going to have it.

  I didn’t ask questions.

  Susan smoothed my hair back from my forehead. I pulled away. “I won’t let anything stop your
surgery,” she said.

  There was still something off about her voice and expression. I knew it had to do with Lady Thorton’s letter. Lady Thorton could upset just about anyone. When I’d first met her, before I knew her name, I called her the iron-faced woman. She was sharp like an ax.

  Lady Thorton couldn’t meddle with us here. We’d lost everything inside Susan’s house, but I still had Jamie, Susan, Bovril, and Butter. And surgery tomorrow. It was more than enough.

  • • •

  You can know things all you like, but that doesn’t mean you believe them.

  A little over a year ago, I’d taught myself to walk in Mam’s one-room London flat. I kept it secret, wiping up the blood before Mam came home every day. I’d only wanted to be able to leave the flat, not the city, but learning to walk saved me. When Mam sent Jamie away from London with all the other kids, because of Hitler’s bombs, I snuck out too. We ended up with Susan and Butter in a seaside village, in Kent.

  Susan didn’t want us then. We didn’t want her either, but I wanted her pony, and Jamie and I both liked her food and eventually we all three wanted to stay with each other. Of course that was when Mam showed up to take us back. Only a week ago, that was. Susan decided to fight for us. She followed us to London, which meant we were all away from Susan’s house the night German bombers destroyed it entirely. So the worst thing—Mam’s return—became the best thing—not dying from the bombs.

  Now everyone was acting like my surgery tomorrow would be the best thing ever, which made me worry it might turn out bad. Susan said it couldn’t be bad. She said she hoped my foot would work properly after the surgery, but if it didn’t I would be fine. I was fine now and I would be fine afterward, no matter what.

  Maybe.

  Depended entirely on what you meant by fine.

  We were still in a war. The nurses claimed they’d be able to get all the patients into the basement quickly enough if the air raid sirens went off. They hadn’t had to do it yet, so who knew if they really could.

  Susan leaned forward. She hugged me. It was awkward for us both. I let out my breath. My stomach still churned. “Don’t worry,” Susan said. “I’ll see you in the morning. Go to sleep.”

  • • •

  I couldn’t sleep but the night passed anyhow. In the morning Susan held my hand while a nurse wheeled my bed down the hall. We stopped outside a heavy white door. The nurse said to Susan, “This is as far as you can go.”

  I hadn’t realized Susan would have to leave me. I clung to her. “What if it doesn’t work?”

  For a moment her fingers tightened around mine. “Courage,” she said, and let go.

  • • •

  In the operating theater a man in a long gown held a mask in front of my face. “When I put this over your mouth,” he said, “I want you to very slowly count to ten.”

  I only made it to four before I fell asleep.

  • • •

  Coming out of the ether was harder. My right leg was pinned, trapped. I couldn’t move. I broke into a sweat struggling to pull myself free. I’d been caught in a bombing, buried in rubble. I couldn’t move my leg. Then somehow I was trapped again in the dank cabinet beneath the sink, in our old flat in London. Mam had locked me inside. The cockroaches—

  “Shh.” Susan’s voice, soft in my ear. “Settle down. It’s over. You’re fine.”

  I was not fine. Not in the cabinet, not with Mam—

  Someone pinned my arms. Threw a blanket over me, tucked it tightly around my sides. “Open your eyes,” Susan’s voice said, still gentle. “The surgery’s over.”

  I opened my eyes. Susan’s face swam blurrily in front of me. “You’re safe,” she said.

  I swallowed hard. I said, “You’re lying.”

  “I’m not.”

  “I can’t move my leg. My right leg. My clubfoot leg—”

  “You haven’t got a clubfoot,” Susan said. “Not anymore.”

  • • •

  I woke properly in the middle of the night. Screens surrounded my bed. A dim light shone behind them. “Susan?” I whispered.

  One of the night nurses came to my bedside. “Thirsty?” she asked. I nodded. She poured me water and I drank. “How badly does it hurt?”

  I couldn’t move my right leg because the doctors had put a cast on it after the surgery. I remembered that now. Beneath the plaster, a strong dull ache centered around my right ankle and pulsed toward my knee. “I don’t know,” I said. “It always hurts.”

  “More than you can bear?”

  I shook my head. I could bear almost anything.

  The nurse smiled. “That’s right,” she said. “Your mother said you were a tough one.” She handed me a pill. “Swallow this.”

  I said, “Susan’s not my mother.” Thank God for that. I swallowed the pill and fell back asleep.

  • • •

  When I opened my eyes again Jamie’s face was inches from mine. His hair looked like it hadn’t been brushed in weeks. His eyes were red and swollen. He was crying. I pushed myself up in a panic. “What’s wrong?”

  Jamie launched himself onto the bed. He banged into my cast. I winced.

  “Easy,” Susan said, pulling him back.

  Jamie burrowed against me.

  I put my arms around him and looked over his head to Susan. “Tell me what’s wrong,” I said.

  “It was in Lady Thorton’s letter,” Susan answered.

  I nodded. I knew that.

  Jamie said, “Our mam’s dead.”

  • • •

  You can know things all you like, but that doesn’t mean you believe them.

  Chapter 2

  I knew my mother—Mam—worked nights in a munitions factory in London. I knew bombs were falling on London now, every single night in fierce, horrendous waves. I knew the Germans targeted factories, especially munitions ones. I’d been caught in a bombing raid myself. Brick walls exploded above my head. Afterward shattered glass drifted across the streets like snow.

  So I knew Mam could die. I just didn’t believe it. Even despite all the bombs. I thought Mam would live forever.

  I thought Jamie and I would never be free.

  I hugged Jamie. He sobbed. He thunked my cast again. I managed not to scream.

  Susan tucked a pillow between Jamie and my cast. She eased herself onto the corner of the bed. She rubbed Jamie’s back.

  “Is it real?” I asked.

  “It’s real,” she said.

  “Really real?”

  “I’m sorry,” Susan said.

  I said, “Are you sorry?”

  Was I sorry? I supposed I was. Maybe? My mother hated me.

  You’ll never see us again, I’d said to her, a week ago in London. She’d said back, Is that a promise?

  Now it was.

  “This isn’t a happy ending,” Susan said. “It’s not the worst possible ending, but it isn’t happy, and I’m sorry for that. I am grateful to have an ending, though. Your mother can’t hurt you anymore.”

  “No.” I don’t know whether Mam and I could have had a happy ending. I always hoped so—of course I did, she was my mother—but it was another thing I didn’t fully believe. I turned to Jamie. “Why are you sad? Mam hated us. She said so.”

  Jamie sobbed harder. “I loved her,” he said.

  Jamie was nicer than me. He probably did love Mam. I didn’t. I wished I did. I wished like anything she loved me.

  I looked at Susan again. “How am I supposed to feel?” A good daughter would feel sad, I supposed. But if Mam was dead, then I was no longer anyone’s daughter.

  I wasn’t sad. I wasn’t happy. Or angry. Or anything.

  Susan’s hand clasped mine over Jamie’s narrow back. “However you feel is fine.”

  “Is there a word for feeling nothing?”

/>   “Yes,” Susan said. “Stunned. I felt stunned when I first heard my mother died.”

  I looked at her. “When did your mam die?”

  “A few years ago. Several months before Becky.”

  Becky, Susan’s very best friend, died of pneumonia three years before the war. I knew that. They had lived together; Susan’s bombed house had belonged to Becky first, and it was Becky who gave Susan Butter.

  “Both deaths were hard,” Susan said. “My feelings about my mother’s were more complicated.”

  I let go of Susan’s hand. “How did Lady Thorton know about Mam?” Before last week, we’d heard nothing from Mam for an entire year, not one word despite all the letters Susan and I wrote her, until she showed up in person to drag me and Jamie back to London.

  “I’d given the WVS your mother’s new address,” Susan said. “One of the WVS groups in London contacted Lady Thorton. I suppose they’re monitoring casualty lists.”

  The WVS was the Women’s Volunteer Service. They did war work. Susan was part of our village’s WVS. Lady Thorton was its head, which made her in charge of evacuees like Jamie and me.

  Susan reached for my hand again. I pulled it away. Jamie kept crying. I wanted to comfort him, but my insides felt hollow. I didn’t know what Jamie and I were, if Mam was dead. Could we still stay with Susan? Were we still evacuees?

  “What happens next?” I asked.

  Susan paused. “I don’t know,” she said. “I’ll ask Lady Thorton about the arrangements.”

  I blinked.

  My heart stuttered.

  It wasn’t the answer I expected.

  It wasn’t the answer I wanted.

  Arrangements.

  The word came ringed with worry. It arrived on a wave of panic. It fell to the pit of my stomach. Where had I heard that word before?

  Susan didn’t say, Don’t worry. She didn’t say, Of course you’ll live with me. She didn’t say, I’ll make sure you’re taken care of.

  She had said all those things the day she rescued us from Mam for the second time, the day her house was bombed. She said we’d stay together always.

  I’d believed her.

  Had she been lying? Or did everything change because Mam died?

  “Is there a word that means children with dead parents?” I asked.