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Until Tomorrow, Mr. Marsworth

Page 1

by Sheila O'Connor




  Also by Sheila O’Connor

  Sparrow Road

  Keeping Safe the Stars

  G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS

  an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

  375 Hudson Street

  New York, NY 10014

  Copyright © 2018 by Sheila O’Connor.

  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.

  G. P. Putnam’s Sons is a registered trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: O’Connor, Sheila, author.

  Title: Until tomorrow, Mr. Marsworth / Sheila O’Connor.

  Description: New York, NY : G. P. Putnam’s Sons, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC, [2018]

  Summary: “Desperate to keep her older brother from being drafted in the Vietnam War, eleven-year-old Reenie strikes up an unlikely friendship with Mr. Marsworth, an elderly shut-in, who helps her in her mission”—Provided by publisher.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2017030531 | ISBN 9780399161933 (hardback) | ISBN 9780698173712 (ebook)

  Subjects: | CYAC: Brothers and sisters—Fiction. | Draft—Fiction. | Vietnam War, 1961–1975—Fiction. | Recluses—Fiction. | Pacifism—Fiction. | Grandmothers—Fiction. | BISAC: JUVENILE FICTION / Social Issues / Friendship. | JUVENILE FICTION / Historical / United States / 20th Century. | JUVENILE FICTION / Family / Siblings.

  Classification: LCC PZ7.O22264 Unt 2018 | DDC [Fic]—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017030531

  Ebook ISBN 9780698173712

  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

  For Amellia, Anna, and Connor

  who asked me to read more

  and

  for Mikaela, Dylan, and Tim

  who made this story possible

  Contents

  Also by Sheila O’Connor

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  1 | Reenie Kelly

  2 | H.W. Marsworth

  3 | Reenie Kelly

  4 | H.W. Marsworth

  5 | Reenie Kelly

  6 | H.W. Marsworth

  7 | Reenie Kelly

  8 | H.W. Marsworth

  9 | Reenie Kelly

  10 | Reenie Kelly

  11 | Reenie Kelly

  12 | Reenie Kelly

  13 | H.W. Marsworth

  14 | Reenie Kelly

  15 | Reenie Kelly

  16 | H.W. Marsworth

  17 | Reenie Kelly

  18 | H.W. Marsworth

  19 | Reenie Kelly

  20 | H.W. Marsworth

  21 | Reenie Kelly

  22 | Reenie Kelly

  23 | H.W. Marsworth

  24 | Reenie Kelly

  25 | Reenie Kelly

  26 | H.W. Marsworth

  27 | Reenie Kelly

  28 | Reenie Kelly

  29 | Reenie Kelly

  30 | Reenie Kelly

  31 | H.W. Marsworth

  32 | Reenie Kelly

  33 | Reenie Kelly

  34 | Reenie Kelly

  35 | H.W. Marsworth

  36 | Reenie Kelly

  37 | Reenie Kelly

  38 | Skip

  39 | Reenie Kelly

  40 | Reenie Kelly

  41 | H.W. Marsworth

  42 | Reenie Kelly

  43 | Reenie Kelly

  44 | Reenie Kelly

  45 | Reenie Kelly

  46 | Reenie Kelly

  47 | Reenie Kelly

  48 | Reenie Kelly

  49 | H.W. Marsworth

  50 | No Man Is an Island

  51 | Reenie Kelly

  52 | Reenie Kelly

  53 | H.W. Marsworth

  54 | Reenie Kelly

  55 | Skip

  56 | H.W. Marsworth

  57 | Reenie Kelly

  58 | Reenie Kelly

  59 | H.W. Marsworth

  60 | Reenie Kelly

  61 | Reenie Kelly

  62 | Reenie Kelly

  63 | Reenie Kelly

  64 | Reenie Kelly

  65 | H.W. Marsworth

  66 | Reenie Kelly

  67 | Reenie Kelly

  68 | H.W. Marsworth

  69 | Reenie Kelly

  70 | H.W. Marsworth

  71 | Reenie Kelly

  72 | H.W. Marsworth

  73 | Reenie Kelly

  74 | Reenie Kelly

  75 | Reenie Kelly

  76 | H.W. Marsworth

  77 | Reenie Kelly

  78 | H.W. Marsworth

  79 | Reenie Kelly

  80 | Billy Kelly

  81 | Reenie Kelly

  82 | Reenie Kelly

  83 | H.W. Marsworth

  84 | Reenie Kelly

  85 | Reenie Kelly

  86 | Reenie Kelly

  87 | H.W. Marsworth

  88 | Reenie Kelly

  89 | Skip

  90 | H.W. Marsworth

  91 | Reenie Kelly

  92 | Reenie Kelly

  93 | H.W. Marsworth

  94 | Reenie Kelly

  95 | Billy Kelly

  96 | H.W. Marsworth

  97 | Reenie Kelly

  98 | Reenie Kelly

  99 | H.W. Marsworth

  100 | Reenie Kelly

  101 | H.W. Marsworth

  102 | Reenie Kelly

  103 | Reenie Kelly

  104 | Reenie Kelly

  105 | Reenie Kelly

  106 | Reenie Kelly

  107 | Reenie Kelly

  108 | Reenie Kelly

  109 | Reenie Kelly

  110 | Reenie Kelly

  111 | H.W. Marsworth

  112 | Reenie Kelly

  113 | Reenie Kelly

  114 | Reenie Kelly

  115 | Reenie Kelly

  116 | Reenie Kelly

  117 | H.W. Marsworth

  118 | Reenie Kelly

  119 | Billy Kelly

  120 | Reenie Kelly

  121 | H.W. Marsworth

  122 | Reenie Kelly

  123 | Reenie Kelly

  124 | H.W. Marsworth

  125 | Reenie Kelly

  126 | Reenie Kelly

  127 | H.W. Marsworth<
br />
  128 | Reenie Kelly

  129 | Reenie Kelly

  130 | Reenie Kelly

  131 | Reenie Kelly

  132 | Reenie Kelly

  133 | Reenie Kelly

  134 | H.W. Marsworth

  135 | Reenie Kelly

  136 | H.W. Marsworth

  137 | Reenie Kelly

  138 | Reenie Kelly

  139 | H.W. Marsworth

  140 | Reenie Kelly

  141 | Reenie Kelly

  142 | Skip

  143 | H.W. Marsworth

  144 | Reenie Kelly

  145 | Reenie Kelly

  146 | H.W. Marsworth

  147 | Reenie Kelly

  148 | Reenie Kelly

  149 | Reenie Kelly

  150 | H.W. Marsworth

  151 | Reenie Kelly

  152 | Reenie Kelly

  153 | Reenie Kelly

  154 | Reenie Kelly

  155 | Betsy

  156 | Reenie Kelly

  157 | Reenie Kelly

  158 | Reenie Kelly

  159 | H.W. Marsworth

  160 | Reenie Kelly

  161 | Reenie Kelly

  162 | H.W. Marsworth

  163 | Reenie Kelly

  164 | Reenie Kelly

  165 | Billy Kelly

  166 | Mrs. Lamb

  167 | H.W. Marsworth

  168 | Reenie Kelly

  169 | Reenie Kelly

  170 | H.W. Marsworth

  Author’s Note

  Acknowledgments

  Other Voies on 1968, the Experience of War, and Work for Peace

  Nobel Peace Prize

  Tuesday, June 11, 1968

  Dear Mr. Marsworth,

  Hello from Reenie Kelly from Missouri, your brand-new summer paperboy. You can count on me to deliver your Tribune. I’m staying with my gram at the top of Gardner Hill. Temporarily. Any problems with your paper, you can find me at Blanche Kelly’s. We’ll be stuck at Gram’s on Gardner until our family has a home.

  No one thinks a girl should have a route except for me, but Gram said that I could split the route with Dare. I’m eleven, twelve in August. Dare’s thirteen. I’m not too young to have my own route, Mr. Marsworth. I helped Dare deliver papers back in Denton, and I helped my oldest brother, Billy, before Dare. It’s high time I have at least six blocks of houses to myself.

  This week I’ve gone door-to-door to say hey to all my customers, and so far I’ve met all of them but you.

  I can’t knock on your door because I can’t unlock your gate, or climb that pointy iron fence around your yard. I’ve rung your rusted bell, but no one comes.

  I saw a shadow in your window so someone must be home. Gram says that you’re a loner, but a loner can say hey. And I’m a loner too now, Mr. Marsworth. I’m a new girl in Lake Liberty without a single friend. Two loners could say hey through that tall fence. Mom always said some friendly never hurt.

  When we meet up face-to-face, you’ll see for yourself a girl can do this job. (If customers don’t want a girl, Gram says I have to give my half to Dare.)

  Give a man a handshake, that’s how Dad taught Dare and Billy to do business, and since this is my first business, I want to do it right.

  Is there a time that you could meet me, Mr. Marsworth?

  Yours Truly,

  Reenie Kelly

  P.S. Could you tell me if you own a mean dog, Mr. Marsworth? That iron fence looks like it’s meant for a mad dog. It’s best if I’m prepared before I start my route next week. In Denton, the Palmers’ vicious shepherd bit me twice.

  P.P.S. I know folks wish Glen Taylor wasn’t moving to Mankato, but I promise I’ll do twice the job Glen Taylor ever did. You won’t be disappointed in my service, Mr. Marsworth. A week from Friday when his route is mine, I’ll prove to you I’m right!

  P.P.P.S. Do you want your paper rolled or folded? AND how will I collect if I can’t get past your gate?

  Thursday, June 13, 1968

  Dear Miss Kelly,

  How fine to learn the Tribune hired well. For a long time, loyal customer, a conscientious papergirl is worth her weight in gold.

  I have no doubt a girl can do the job.

  In terms of my delivery: I prefer my folded paper in the milk box by 6:15 a.m., and in return I shall pay you promptly, every other Friday. Please just leave the bill inside my box. My customary tip is fifty cents for first-rate service.

  I anticipate wonderful service.

  I do not own a dog, but I can say with great conviction my cat, Clyde, will not attack. His prey of preference would be houseflies, now and then a mouse. If you are neither fly nor rodent, you’ll fare well.

  Perhaps your grandmother is right, I am a “loner.” Although it’s not a term I would have used, I will wear the shoe that fits. On the other hand, I doubt you are a loner. It’s never easy to be new, but you won’t be new for long. I’ve never known a Kelly short on friends. Your father was a magnet: most popular, most daring, and your mother, Betsy Kelly, was a brilliant, bright-eyed girl. Brilliant.

  Have we made a proper introduction now, Miss Kelly? I have no need for handshakes; I won’t complain to the Tribune. Any child of Betsy Kelly’s will be a perfect papergirl, I’m sure.

  However, I must close with one request: Might you refrain from clanging? I assume you are the freckled redhead ringing my old bell. A man of my late years naps at odd hours.

  Sincerely,

  H. W. Marsworth

  P.S. My apologies, Miss Kelly. Some words are difficult to write, and worse, woefully inadequate, and thus I shy away. Such would be "my sympathy," which rarely sounds sincere, and doubly sad when writing to a child. Yet I extend my sympathy to you. I am sincerely sorry for your loss. I know it’s been some time since your mother passed away, but she was among the best this world has known. Such a strong young heart. How terrible that she left this earth too soon.

  Friday, June 14, 1968

  Dear Mr. Marsworth,

  Thank you for your sympathy. Everyone says sorry, and most people are sincere, but I just wish those sorries could bring Mom back. It’s sixteen months and twenty-seven days since Mom’s been gone, and we all miss her still, even though the Kellys keep our sadness to ourselves. Dare and Dad especially. We’re not a family to keep crying, because crying doesn’t help.

  If you liked Mom then you’ll like me, because deep inside I have a piece of Betsy Kelly’s heart. (Mom gave a piece to each of us the day before she died.) And I have her gift with old folks, I really truly do. Back before Mom was sick with cancer, the two of us delivered lemon bars or fresh-baked cookies to shut-ins twice a week. Mrs. Jamison. Miss Pearl. Even crabby Mr. Anderson on Grant Street. Mom couldn’t bear to see old folks forgotten.

  Even after Mom was gone, I made my Girl Scouts Good Deed Project a shut-in back in Denton. (Dad FORCED me to join Girl Scouts, I know Mom never would.) My shut-in, Asa Carver, liked to smoke Pall Malls and talk. He told stories about bootlegging, and how he’d smuggled whiskey from Windsor to Detroit, and how once he’d jumped a train to California just to see that big Pacific for himself. The happiest he’d been was as a hobo.

  An old man who told good stories was my best friend in fifth grade. Asa Carver liked that I was tough, and he understood my sadness because he’d lost his sweetheart Lu. He didn’t even care I was a kid. I fit right in with Asa, and he fit right in with me. If he were still in Denton, I’d write to him this morning, but he’s gone off to Kansas City with his son.

  I’d sure like a Good Deed Project in Lake Liberty right now. A Good Deed Project in a new town might make me less alone. How would you like some
friendly visits from a kid? Maybe once or twice a week? I won’t clang your bell. You don’t have to shake my hand. Mom would want to see me be your friend.

  Do you know how slow the time goes when you’re bored? (Tick . . . tock . . . tick.) I can’t play another game of solitaire, I can’t. And Gram’s little black-and-white TV is mostly static, so instead of As the World Turns I’m staring at the snow.

  And it’s not like I have my family for my friends. Dare’s living out in Gram’s woods with his pup tent and Sanka coffee. Even Float, our family spaniel-beagle mutt, sleeps outside with Dare. Most-popular Dare Kelly doesn’t want to make friends in this town. He’s so mad that we left Denton, he hardly even talks.

  Gram’s full-time at Brindle Drug, and Billy’s full-time at Casey’s Conoco, and Dad’s gone to North Dakota to build roads with Uncle Will.

  So why are all the Kellys working, you might wonder? Why can’t anybody play?

  We lost all our money with Mom sick.

  Then we lost our house.

  Then Billy turned eighteen, which means we need $$$$ for his college. If a boy’s enrolled in college, he isn’t forced to fight in Vietnam. Mizzou is the one way to save Billy from this war. (Mizzou = University of Missouri just in case a man in Minnesota doesn’t know that college.)

  So you can see that it’s pretty lonely at the Kellys’. Some nights, I still play chess with Billy, but he usually falls asleep. He’s grease-stained and exhausted from his long days down at Casey’s, but he can’t say no to chess. Or he can’t say no to me, he never could.

  Maybe I should be your Good Deed Project, since I’m a shut-in now myself. Ha-ha-ha.

  Sugar cookies or lemon bars? I’ll make either one.

  Yours Truly,

  Reenie Kelly

  Monday, June 17, 1968

  Dear Miss Kelly,

  Rest assured a friend will come your way, one always does.

  I’m afraid I cannot be your Good Deed Project, and you cannot be mine. Unlike your shut-in, Asa Carver, I’m not the type of man who can entertain a child with wild tales of my youth. I have no taste for whiskey; I’ve never smoked Pall Malls.

  This summer I am solitary by necessity and nature.

  Are there not other Good Deed Projects to be found? Might you inquire with Blanche Kelly? She would have a better sense of local "shut-ins."

 

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