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Authors: Linda Crew

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Themes, #Emigration & Immigration, #Social Issues

Children of the River (17 page)

BOOK: Children of the River
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CHAPTER
21

Sundara hurried past the city's brightly lit Christmas tree toward the riverfront plaza, hands stuffed in the pockets of her plum-colored jacket, her breath making puffs in the misty air. When she saw Jonathan waiting for her at the fountain, she broke into a run, hood falling back, hair spilling out and flying behind her ai she darted between the shoppers crisscrossing the brick-paved avenue.
Jonathan looked up and spotted her. He stared as she swiftly covered the distance between them.
“Sundara,” he said as she ran up and lurched to a stop, grabbing his hands. “What's happened?”
“My sister” She was breathless, almost bouncing. “My little sister, Mayoury. She safe in a Thailand camp!”
“She's alive? That's incredible!”
“It's a miracle.”
Heads turned and they dropped hands self-consciously, grinning.
“Come on,” he said, and they hurried to the end of the mail, passing the fountain, skipping down the steps to the wooden view deck jutting out over the river. “When did you find out? And how? Tell me the whole thing.”
“Well, yesterday we pick up my other aunt at the Portland airport. Right before she leave the Thailand camp she find Mayoury, but she cannot bring because Mayoury does not have paper yet. But some missionary promise to take care. And look.” She pulled a snapshot from her jacket pocket. “See? They take a picture to prove for me she there. You know, one of those camera where the picture pop right out, you don't wait?” The print showed a child of ten or so, in a T-shirt and tattered sarong. “Look at her poor little arm and leg. She is all bone.” Sundara studied the picture again. “We see so many picture of children, nothing but skin, almost stop thinking about it. But this my
sister.
”
“She's there all alone?” he asked. “What about your parents?”
Sundara hesitated. “I don't know. Maybe we find them, maybe we don't….” One sad moment, then the joy flooded over her again. “But right now I just want to have this good news. Mayoury alive! A hundred way to die but she alive! Can you
believe}
Somebody put her on the back of a bicycle and ride her across Cambodia. Somebody not even family. Mayoury say a man just see her, lost and little, and he want to help.” Her eyes filled.
December's early dusk was falling. With hunched shoulders and hands thrust into pockets, they watched the twinkly lights sparkling in the bare branches of the plaza's trees, thinking of a man who would help a little girl like that. No promise of repayment, no guarantee his effort would do any good. Just to help for the sake of doing the right thing.
“Already I start writing letter,” Sundara went on. “I have to bring her out of there. And until I can do that, I want to send money for clothes and food through the Red Cross. Soka know how. I've got to get a job at Burger King or McDonald or something. I must prepare for her. She depending on me.”
“My dad,” Jonathan said. “Let's write him. Maybe he can find her.”
“Ah, that would be good!”
“We got the first letter from him just today. He says your tapes are really helping.”
“Oh, I'm glad. What does he say? Is it as terrible as it look on the TV?”
“It's bad, but the death rate's gone down. Says it feels good just practicing basic medicine for a change without all the tests, being able to save people.”
She nodded. “You know, I think about your father and what he do. Leave your nice house where he safe, fly off. Those sick, hungry people pray to God for help, but help doesn't come from the sky, it come from the people who say, I think God want me to help.’ People like your father and the man who help Mayoury, they kind of the answer to the prayer.”
“Hmm. Maybe so.” After a moment he cleared his throat, glanced at his watch. “Well … you better head home before somebody gets suspicious, huh? Wouldn't want you getting in trouble.” He turned around and grabbed the damp wooden railing, bracing his foot against the lower bar. “I … it's nice of you to let me know about this.”
“Jonatan!”
She was looking at the back of his denim jacket; He didn't understand. “Don't you know you the first person I want to tell? Why you think I call you, ask you to meet me here? Why you think I run down like a crazy girl?” Still he didn't look at her. “You the one cry at my sad story, you the one gonna be happy when the good news come! You understand?”
He nodded, but when he turned back to her, his smile was still sad. “I really am happy for you, Sundara.”
“Then why you look your face down like that?”
“Can't help it. It's so good to be with you again, but in a way it makes it worse, knowing things have to go back to the way they were. I just wish it wasn't so hopeless. For us, I mean.”
She smiled, tilting her face. “Hopeless? You talk hopeless to me? Jonatan, you cannot talk hopeless to someone who just get a miracle. No such thing! That why I want to come share my feeling with you. It make me think, you know,
anything
can happen.”
Faint hope lit his face, then faded. “Does your aunt know you're here?”
Sundara took a deep breath. “Yes. She know.”
He straightened up. “And it's okay?”
Sundara watched the river churn. “She cannot stop me. I'm here.” She turned to him. “Jonatan, I
have
to come, because I learn something now. Not from my family, not from the American. Just by living.” She stared at the roiling brown water below them, trying to gather the courage to speak plainly.
“I learn,” she whispered, “that if you love somebody …” Slowly she lifted her face and looked straight into his eyes, the American way. “If you love somebody, you just better let them know while you still can.”
“Sundara.” He took her hand, and this time she did not pull away but entwined her fingers with his.
“Five year ago,” she said shyly, “I never dream that someday I stand on the bank of a river so far from the Mekong, holding the hand of an American boy. So who can ever tell about the future?”
The future was a long time, she thought, all the way down the river.
Sometimes it would be a river of deep whirlpools and treacherous shallows; she'd come too far not to know that.
But now she saw that it could also be like this, a river stretching before them clear to the horizon, broad and inviting, shimmering with hope.

Published by

Bantam Doubleday Dell Books for Young Readers a division of

Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.

1540 Broadway

New York, New York 10036

Copyright Š 1989 by Linda Crew

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the written permission of the Publisher, except where permitted by law. For information address Delacorte Press, New York, New York 10036

The trademark Laurel-Leaf LibraryŽ is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

The trademark DellŽ is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

eISBN: 978-0-307-51728-9

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BOOK: Children of the River
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