| Chapter One
Emily Goes to the Post Office
The things that happened to Emily Bartlett that year!
It seemed to Emily that it all began one bright spring day, a day
meant for adventure. The weather was so warm Mama had let her take
off her long stockings and put on her half socks for the first time
since last fall. Breezes on her knees after a winter of stockings
always made Emily feel as frisky as a spring lamb. The field that
Emily could see from the kitchen window had turned blue with wild
forget-me-nots and down in the pasture the trees, black silhouettes
trimmed with abandoned bird nests throughout the soggy winter, were
suddenly turning green.
Everywhere sap was rising, and Emily felt as if it was rising in
her, too. This made it difficult for her to sit still long enough
to write to her cousin Muriel, who lived in Portland and had so
many wonderful things--things like fleece-lined bedroom slippers
with kittens on the toes, cement sidewalks to roller skate on, and
a public library full of books.
"Finish your letter, Emily," said Mama, who was scrubbing
out milk pans at the kitchen sink while the washing machine churned
away on the back porch. "Then you can take it to the post office."
Emily looked up from her letter. "Mama, I just know something
wonderful is going to happen today," she said. "I can
feel it in my bones."
Mama laughed. "Adventure is pretty scarce here in Pitchfork.
I think your imagination is running away with you."
Mama often said this and whenever she did, Emily could just see
herself hanging on for dear life in a buggy pulled pell-mell down
Main Street by a frightened horse, the way a horse once ran away
with Mama when she first came out West to teach school. All Mama's
hairpins came out, her long black hair came tumbling down around
her shoulders, and by the time someone stopped the horse she was
a sight. Emily was always sorry she could not have been there to
see the horse run away with Mama the way her imagination was supposed
to run away with her.
Emily read Muriel's letter once more.
Dear Emily,
This week I went to the library. I got Black Beauty. It is about
a horse. It is the best book I ever read. I read it three times.
I have to go now. Write soon.
Yours truly,
Muriel
P.S. Mama sends her love.
It was not an easy letter to answer. Muriel was always writing
about the library books she read--books like Heidi and Toby
Tyler, which Emily had never even seen. Aunt Irene, Muriel's
mother, said Muriel was a regular little bookworm.
Emily did not envy Muriel the fleece-lined bedroom slippers or
the cement sidewalk for roller skating, but she did envy her that
library. She longed to be a bookworm, although she did not think
she would care to be called one. Unfortunately, the town of Pitchfork,
Oregon, did not have a library. Oh, there were things to read--the
Burgess Bedtime Story in the newspaper, Elson Reader Book
IV, and the Sunday-school paper, but none of these qualified
Emily to be a bookworm. Emily was not lucky like Muriel, who could
ride a streetcar downtown to a big library full of hundreds, even
thousands, of books, although of course Emily was lucky in other
ways.
Emily was lucky because of Mama, who right now was sitting down
to rest her feet while the washing machine did its work out on the
back porch, Mama was so little she always wore high heels, even
though she had a great big house to take care of. Tap-tap-tap went
her heels all day long. Once, three years ago, during the war, when
Mama had been an Honor Guard girl and had marched in a parade to
get people to buy Liberty Bonds, she had lost one of her heels right
in the middle of the parade, but that did not stop Mama. She had
marched tap-bump, tap-bump all the way down Main Street to help
sell Liberty Bonds. Mama had spunk.
It was funny about Mama's being so small, because Daddy was big
and strong and handsome. Once when he was just out of high school,
some men came out from Portland and told Daddy he should be a prize
fighter, but, Daddy said, no, thank you, he would rather be a farmer.
This was lucky, because sometimes when Emily got into an argument
with one of the girls at school, she settled it by saying, "My
father could have been a prize fighter if he'd wanted to, but he
didn't want to. So there!"
Emily was lucky in her ancestors, too. They had been pioneers,
and whenever things were hard, Mama always said, "Remember
your pioneer ancestors." Emily had always liked the stories
of their trip across the plains in their covered wagons. Now Emily's
pioneer ancestors were all dead and buried in the weedy little cemetery
called Mountain Rest, but she did have Grandpa and Grandma Slater,
Mama's parents, right here in Pitchfork.
Emily was lucky in many ways. She was lucky in the house she lived
in, a house with three balconies, a cupola, banisters just right
for sliding down, and the second bathtub in Yamhill County. Emily
did not know who owned the first bathtub, but having the second
bathtub was still pretty important. It showed that their house,
known as the old Bartlett place, was very old.
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