Under the Ashes

Eleven-year-old Elizabeth "Littlebeth" Morgan is staying with her aunt in San Francisco when the Great Quake strikes. In a city that's broken and burning, she must find a way to survive.

Eleven-year-old Elizabeth "Littlebeth" Morgan would rather race the boys, chase skunks, and read about bandits than act like a lady. So her parents send her to her maiden aunt in San Francisco to be tamed and refined. But when an earthquake hits and she's separated from her aunt, Littlebeth must use her fearless nature and quick-thinking to survive in a city that's broken and burning.

1123845926
Under the Ashes

Eleven-year-old Elizabeth "Littlebeth" Morgan is staying with her aunt in San Francisco when the Great Quake strikes. In a city that's broken and burning, she must find a way to survive.

Eleven-year-old Elizabeth "Littlebeth" Morgan would rather race the boys, chase skunks, and read about bandits than act like a lady. So her parents send her to her maiden aunt in San Francisco to be tamed and refined. But when an earthquake hits and she's separated from her aunt, Littlebeth must use her fearless nature and quick-thinking to survive in a city that's broken and burning.

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Under the Ashes

Under the Ashes

by Cindy Rankin
Under the Ashes

Under the Ashes

by Cindy Rankin

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Overview

Eleven-year-old Elizabeth "Littlebeth" Morgan is staying with her aunt in San Francisco when the Great Quake strikes. In a city that's broken and burning, she must find a way to survive.

Eleven-year-old Elizabeth "Littlebeth" Morgan would rather race the boys, chase skunks, and read about bandits than act like a lady. So her parents send her to her maiden aunt in San Francisco to be tamed and refined. But when an earthquake hits and she's separated from her aunt, Littlebeth must use her fearless nature and quick-thinking to survive in a city that's broken and burning.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807536360
Publisher: Whitman, Albert & Company
Publication date: 11/01/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 9 - 12 Years

About the Author

Cindy Rankin earned her BA from Sacramento State University. She has worked as a writer, editor, and teacher. Cindy has lived in five different states and three different countries, but now lives in California.

Read an Excerpt

Under the Ashes


By Cindy Rankin

Albert Whitman & Company

Copyright © 2016 Cindy Rankin
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-8075-3636-0


CHAPTER 1

Paso Robles, California Sunday, April 8, 1906


Saved my little brother's life today. Turned out poorly for me, good for Joey, though. Hard truth is, being the bravest, quickest, most interesting girl in town puts me at a disadvantage. Ordinary folks — even my own family — can't seem to tolerate me.

Was on my best behavior when we came home from the Palm Sunday service. Had to be. There'd been trouble last week after I showed my class where the outlaw James brothers stayed here in the old days. My teacher said it was a reckless act of defiance and I was a bad influence. Mama, Papa, and especially Grandma were still vexed by what I'd done. I worked to redeem myself by doing extra chores and accepted my punishment of tending Joey, plus no dessert for two weeks, without complaint.

In the kitchen, Mama tied an apron over her church dress and then put the cast iron skillet on the stove.

"May I help?" I asked in a cheery tone.

"You up to something?" Mama saw me eyeing the apple pie Grandma had brought over. Sticky sweetness glistened around slits on top of the golden crust.

"No, ma'am," I said, turning away from temptation with a shrug. Couldn't keep my yearning from her.

Joey crawled under the kitchen table and spouted out his favorite song, "Jesus Loves Me," through spit bubbles. His main talents at two and a half years were constant drooling, nose dripping, and darting off whenever I reached for him. But this time I grabbed his leg and pulled him to me before he could escape.

"Aha!" I hoisted him into the air and twirled around. "You're caught, you slippery rascal."

We bumped into Mama as she put lard into the heated fry pan. It sizzled.

"Littlebeth Morgan!" Mama's nerves showed whenever I got near her burners because of the time I tried to scramble an egg and my pigtail caught fire. She took a breath then gently squeezed my shoulder. "You and Joey play outside. That would be helpful."

"Yes, ma'am."

"Stay right by your brother. Don't take your eyes off him."

I understood the warning in her voice, meant to remind me of my solemn responsibility not to let him run off. "Yes, ma'am." Hoped she heard the earnestness in my reply.

Carrying Joey past the parlor, I walked slow enough to hear Grandma prattle on about my latest escapade. Papa cleared his throat now and then but didn't interrupt his mother's lecture. "She'll be twelve in October. She's untamed. Her shenanigans are an embarrassment."

Felt bad for Papa. Grandma could talk a blue streak about my faults. If that old bird had her way, I'd be in the house all day stitching samplers with verses describing the qualities of a well-bred young lady: silent, sweet, soft. Dull, duller, dullest.

Thank goodness she didn't live with us anymore. When Papa became the manager of Citizens Bank four years ago, he bought Grandma a cottage around the corner. But she always has Sunday dinner with us and comes over whenever she wants. Mama says that's to keep us on our toes, because Grandma once caught Mama reading McCall's magazine instead of doing housework.

I put Joey down, and, as much for Grandma as for my little brother, I growled like a grizzly bear, spread my arms, and clomped after him. He squealed, pushed open the front screen door, and ran.

"You have to take the sass out of that lass," Grandma said to Papa, making sure those words followed me outside.

Joey zigzagged around the porch, then went down the steps to the yard on his bottom. Caught him halfway to the picket fence. Tickled him till he begged for mercy. Hummed in his ear while I held him tight and rolled us across the grass. His arms and legs relaxed inside my hug.

"Lil'bit, story, please, story." He couldn't say my whole name. Annoying, but sort of adorable.

I shook the quilt we'd used for a pretend picnic yesterday and forgot to put back in the house. Then I laid it underneath the oak tree and plopped down. Joey crawled onto my lap.

"A long time ago," I said, "the most wanted desperadoes in the whole Wild West, Frank and Jesse James, came to Paso Robles to hide from the law at their uncle Drury James's ranch."

Joey fell asleep before I got to the part when I took my classmates out to that old ranch site last week in Papa's wagon. Knew everything about those bank robbers from the dime novels I'd read. Figured telling some of their bandit deeds, in the very place they'd laid low, would show the class how exciting, and close, history could be.

Hoped they might finally appreciate me. Maybe even like me. It almost worked. Until Miss Hobson, the school board, and everyone's parents got so riled up about the outing. None of the kids will talk to me now. Their folks won't let them.

Eased myself out from under Joey, careful not to wake him. He was on his back so I made sure the oak's branches shaded his face while he napped. Mama said too much sun would give us freckles.

I circled the tree thinking about how wrong everything went last week. Then walked a little faster around the edge of the yard. The injustice of it all simmered my juices. Had to work off steam. Found my skipping rope near the house and started jumping. Counted 227 hops until my foot caught. I stumbled. "Drat, blast it!" Feared my curses might rouse Joey. That he'd tattle on me. But he didn't stir; his baby snores held steady.

Decided to check Mama's garden for some ripe berries to soothe my mood. Looked over my shoulder at Joey as I went through the gate on the side of the house. He'd be in the land of nod a while longer. I'd only be gone a minute.

Didn't find ready fruit on the vines but pulled a few weeds for Mama. Coming back through the gate, I froze when I saw the dreadful triangle shape six paces ahead of me. It moved.

A rattlesnake was poking its big head out from under the house. The serpent flicked its tongue, shook its rattle.

Knew not to catch its eye. Prayed it would go back under the house. But it slithered into the yard. Its long body moved slowly in the warm sun. Problem was, the reptile separated me from Joey. I had no way to get to my brother. If the snake kept going in the same direction, it'd pass Joey by a wide space. Likely neither one would notice the other.

"Stay. Still." I said each word calmly, but my sleeping brother didn't hear. His arm flopped out to the edge of the quilt.

The rattlesnake stopped, lifted its head, and turned to eye Joey.

"Don't move. Please don't move," I whispered.

Just then, my little brother rolled onto his stomach. The snake shifted to face him, coiled itself, and rattled its warning again.

I needed a weapon. Needed one now. The rattler was still a fair distance from Joey, but if he moved again, the snake would see danger. It could attack. I looked around. Clenched my hands so tight my nails dug into my palms. Saw Mama's garden hoe leaning against the fence by the gate.

Joey curled the fingers of his right hand. A sure sign his thumb was about to go in his mouth. That motion would draw the snake. I grabbed the hoe. When Joey latched onto his thumb, the rattler straightened and slid fast toward my brother.

My legs burned as I raced behind the moving serpent. I straddled its tail and raised the hoe high overhead. Held my breath to true my aim then smote that critter to kingdom come.

Its severed head flipped onto the blanket, inches from Joey.

"Huzzah!" I yelled and let out a war whoop.

Saving Joey set my heart to pumping. How could my family stay mad at me now? Could almost taste the tender apples and flaky crust of Grandma's pie. Reckoned she'd give me a piece now and another after dinner.

Hardly heard my brother's screams or the slam, bam, bam of the screen door as Papa, Grandma, then Mama rushed down the steps. I was too busy imagining the shiny dime Papa might press into my hand and Mama's hug, sprinkled with tears of relief. There might even be a story in the newspaper about me being a vigilant sister on this holy day.

"Oh dear, oh dear," Mama cried.

"The head, keep away from the head!" Papa yelled.

Mama scooped my squealing brother off the blanket. "What have you done?" She looked at me then at the rattler's open mouth with fangs ready to bite.

I stood over the headless carcass, holding onto the hoe's handle, blade side up. My chest puffed out. "One whack," I said.

Papa snatched the hoe from me. His jaw tightened, his mustache twitched, but he said nothing. He used the tool to lift the snake, then held it out to balance the dangling body. It seemed to be jerking around trying to find its missing head.

Grandma spoke right up. "Littlebeth, you're a real Calamity Jane!"

What a dandy compliment. I'd read about the adventures of Martha Jane Canary. My courage had earned Grandma's praise.

Then she went on.

"Look at you. Covered in dirt and snake guts, risking life and limb — yours and everyone around you."

How could she be so rude after I'd rescued her grandson from a terrible end? Why didn't she or anyone else say, Well done, Littlebeth?

Mama glanced at the open garden gate, then took Joey into the house, wiping snake blood from his cheek with her apron. Papa told me to get the shovel. "You're going to help me bury this thing so it can't cause any harm."

He walked the rattler, draped over the hoe, to the rubbish pit behind the house. Grandma followed, her arms stretched as far from her body as they would go, holding the four ends of the blanket together to carry the snake's head. "Something has to be done," she said to Papa's back.

I trailed behind them, dragging the shovel. There'd be no pie tonight.


* * *

We sat in the dining room picking at the meal Mama had prepared. She fretted about the food not being hot. Papa mumbled it was fine. Grandma stared at her plate. Joey had most of his dinner smeared across his nose and cheeks. Mama gave him a piece of her roll then turned to me. "Why didn't you bring your brother inside when you saw the rattlesnake and tell Papa? That's what any other girl would have done."

"There wasn't time." I used my fork to bury peas under the mashed potatoes. Couldn't look at her. Might've had time if I hadn't gone into the garden.

Papa let out a deep humph, but I spoke up before he had a chance. "When the rattler saw Joey lift his thumb, it went after him lickety-split." Why couldn't Papa and Mama just thank me? "Lucky I'm so fast," I added.

Grandma sucked in too much air and coughed.

"That head landed next to your brother," Papa said. "Don't you know, even dead, the snake's venom could have poisoned Joey?" Mama shuddered. "One touch of those fangs. One skin prick."

"Littlebeth," Papa said, "if you'd missed, that rattlesnake could have bitten the both of you." He wiped his napkin across his mouth and then tossed it on the table.

"But I didn't miss, Papa. And you're welcome."

"Young ladies don't talk back to their fathers." Grandma squinted at me. "My daughter would never —"

"Why get mad at what didn't happen?" I interrupted. "Can't you be happy Joey's alive?"

That's when Papa sent me upstairs to put my brother to bed.

I let Joey crawl up each step on his hands and knees while I listened to Grandma recite my cowgirl antics and derring-dos, until she said, "Your girl chased skunks into my house!"

"You know that was an accident, Grandma," I called from the top of the stairs. "And I helped you scrub out the stink."

"To bed, Littlebeth." Papa sounded tired.

"She races the boys," Grandma went on.

"And wins," I whispered to Joey, holding my hand over his mouth to keep the giggles in.

"... brags about her brains ..."

"Tells the truth." I nuzzled Joey's neck.

"Not to mention taking your wagon to haul eight children into the wilderness on a school day without telling anyone what she was up to."

Had enough of Grandma. She'd never get over those skunks. Now she wanted Mama and Papa to be just as angry with me for teaching a history lesson Miss Hobson wouldn't allow. Before I took Joey to his room, I heard Mama's loud sigh after Papa said how concerned he was about the school not wanting me back this term.

"And what she did today worries me," he said. "She has no fear."

Grandma said, "There's only one way to prevent her ruination."

I settled Joey down for the night. Then I prepared myself for a spanking by stuffing a folded sweater down my bloomers.


* * *

Papa didn't spank me. He barely spoke to me all week. Mama didn't say much either, but she stayed near when I did chores or played with Joey, always watching, even when I had my nose in a book. She offered to brush my hair at night, something she hadn't done in a long while. But the strangest thing was Grandma not coming over to complain about me for six full days. Couldn't figure out what had changed.

CHAPTER 2

Easter Sunday, April 15, 1906


Smelled bacon frying and heard voices downstairs. I kicked off the bedcovers and dashed to the kitchen. Everyone but Mama sat around the table.

"Happy Easter, sleepyhead." Papa held his coffee cup near his mouth.

Next to him, Grandma tilted the bread bowl toward me. "Sit. I made hot cross buns." She didn't say a word about my uncombed hair, bare feet, and unwashed face.

"Lil'bit, he came!" Joey pointed at our upturned Easter hats stuffed with straw and mounds of bright red, yellow, blue, and green eggs.

Spotted them first thing in front of our places. Was so relieved I hopped like the Easter Bunny himself. "He ate the carrot we left him too," I said, every bit as excited as my little brother.

It had been such a strange week that I feared those nests might be empty. Tossed about most of the night, worried Joey would be disappointed, and somehow I'd be to blame.

"You know," Mama said, standing by the stove, "he leaves those beautiful eggs to remind you of the Resurrection we celebrate today."

I turned to her. Mama's cheeks were pink from cooking. She handed me a plate. At the top, she'd laid two strips of bacon end to end, put the fried-egg eyes below them, and a wide smile of sliced strawberries across the bottom. Same Easter breakfast she made last year. Everything felt normal again. Took my seat beside Joey and started eating.

"Bunny's coming back to hide them," he said, wiggling and squirming in his chair.

Papa waved his fork at him, "Only if you get ready for church on time and behave during the sermon."

"Littlebeth," Mama said, sitting down, "I finished your new Easter dress last night."

Joey kicked me. "What happens after church?" he asked.

"Then," I said, crunching bacon, "we'll search the yard, and if we find every egg, the bunny leaves us chocolates under our dinner napkins." I swallowed, thinking about the taste of candy. "Papa, it's been two weeks. May I have dessert again, please?"

"Yes, but ..." He took a sip of coffee then said, "Littlebeth, we've made a decision."

I'd just put half a bun in my mouth. Couldn't ask what he meant until I chewed it down. Papa shook his head at my fat cheeks and clicking jaw. "Tomorrow, you're going to take the train to San Francisco," he said.

"By mythelf?" Crumbs fell out with the words. I'd never ridden on a train before. The idea of a new adventure filled my mind and didn't leave room to wonder why I'd been given this Easter gift — better than chocolate or hot cross buns. Maybe they'd decided to thank me for saving Joey after all. I stood to hug Papa.

He motioned me down and dropped in the particulars. "You'll need to attend a new school for the rest of the year and stay with your Aunt Sally."

Everything soured. I remembered my aunt's pinched nose and twitchy lips, too thin to hold a smile. She had Grandma's sharp cheekbones, but I couldn't recall if she also had her mother's razor tongue. Don't think Aunt Sally said more than "please," "thank you," and "Do children always make so much noise?" when she visited us last Christmas.

Grandma beamed. "The Presbyterian Academy for Girls, and my Sally will turn you into a proper, refined young lady."


* * *

On our walk to Easter service, Mama held my hand. Before we entered the church, she adjusted my bonnet and pulled out a piece of straw.

I'd been silent since we left the house. The plan for my salvation cut deep. I had to be sent away, had to stop being me.

Reverend Douglas asked the congregation to pray for my safe journey. From the pews behind us, I felt a breeze of happy sighs at the news of my departure.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Under the Ashes by Cindy Rankin. Copyright © 2016 Cindy Rankin. Excerpted by permission of Albert Whitman & Company.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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