Who Won the War?

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Authors: Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

BOOK: Who Won the War?
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For my grandson, Garrett Riley Naylor

Contents

One:         
The News

Two:         
Suspicion

Three:       
Picnic, Sort Of

Four:         
Mystery

Five:          
Dare

Six:            
Shadows

Seven:       
Center Stage

Eight:         
Emergency

Nine:          
Oh, No!

Ten:           
Moving Out

Eleven:       
Stop Complaining!

Twelve:      
Undercover Operation

Thirteen:     
The Magic Underwear

Fourteen:     
Eggs-actly!

Fifteen:        
Seen!

Sixteen:       
Old Rusty Truck

Seventeen:   
Once Upon a Midnight Dreary …

Eighteen:     
Ka-boom!

Nineteen:     
Tippy

Twenty:       
E-mail to Georgia

Twenty-one:
E-mail from Georgia

Twenty-two:
Goodbye! Goodbye!

One
The News

I
t was official: they were going back.

After Mrs. Malloy put down the phone, Caroline sneaked a look at her two older sisters. Was either of them going to cry?

It certainly wouldn't be Eddie, the oldest. Beth? Possible, but not likely. No, if anyone was going to get emotional about leaving Buckman, it would be Caroline herself. She swallowed.

“Well,” said their mother. “I guess that's that.”

“Goodbye, West Virginia! Hello, Ohio!” said Eddie.

When Mr. Malloy had taken a job at the college in Buckman on a teacher-exchange program, they'd all known that it would only be for a year. He had been offered other jobs too in Buckman, however, and the girls—and even their mother—had wondered if he might decide to stay.

But now he was back in Ohio, he'd signed the job contract, and the Malloys would be moving on August 24. The Bensons, whose house the Malloys had been renting, would be back on August 31.

There was silence around the dinner table. The shrimp salad sat half eaten on their plates, the lemon slices undisturbed in the iced tea.

“Well, at least I get to finish out summer baseball,” Eddie said at last. She'd be entering middle school when they got back home.

“I think I'm going to be sad,” said Beth, who was a year younger. “I'll miss the library—being able to walk to it, I mean.”

“I'll miss the river and the swinging footbridge,” said Caroline, age nine. She had a dark ponytail, while her two older sisters were blond.

More silence.

Then Eddie started to grin. “What I
won't miss
…,” she began, glancing at the others, and the three girls chimed together, “the
Hatfords!”
They laughed, but Caroline knew it wasn't true. They
would
miss the boys.

“Do you remember the day we moved in here?” Eddie asked her sisters.

“How could we forget?” said Beth. “We caught them up on the roof of their house, watching us from across the river.”

“And they dumped dead birds and squirrels on our side to make us think the river was polluted, just so we'd go back to Ohio,” said Caroline.

“Why, you never told me that!” said her mother.

“Ha!” said Eddie. “We never told you half the stuff those stupid guys did!”

Caroline knew, of course, that the Hatford brothers—Jake and Josh and Wally and Peter—weren't stupid in the least. Annoying, disgusting, and conniving, yes, but they had outwitted the girls on several occasions and entertained them on others, and though Eddie might not admit it, the girls had never had so much fun in their lives.

Later that evening, when Mrs. Malloy was packing up books in the living room and the girls were doing the dishes, Eddie said, “You know, if we've got only three more weeks here, we'd better make them count.”

“Doing what?” asked Beth.

“Showing the Hatford boys once and for all who's in charge, what else?”

“In charge of what?” asked Caroline. “We're moving back to Ohio. How can we be in charge of anything?”

“In charge of us! In charge of
them!
What I mean is, we have to show them we won.”

“I didn't know we were at war,” said Beth.

“Of course you did,” said Eddie. “War broke out the first day we got here! I just don't want those guys telling the Benson boys that they led us around by the nose all year. That they tricked us so many times we didn't know up from down. We've got to pull a couple more tricks ourselves.”

“Maybe we could just do something
fun
with them,” said Beth. “We don't have to fight.”

“Did I
say fight?”
asked Eddie. “I simply want them to remember that the Malloys are not to be messed with. We'll have fun, all right. Trust me.”

Caroline sighed and took the pan Beth handed her, wiped it off, and put it back in the cupboard. Everything was a competition with Eddie—a race, a contest. There had to be winners and losers, first place and second. The champions and the defeated.

All that Caroline, actress-to-be, wanted to do before they left was sneak into the old elementary school auditorium a few more times and act out little scenes up on a real stage. Her elementary school back in Ohio didn't have an auditorium with plush seats for the audience. It didn't have a stage with lights and scenery and a velvet curtain to pull when a performance was over. The only place to put on a production in the school back home was the gym, which also served as a lunchroom and usually smelled of bananas and pizza.

“So,” said Beth to Eddie. “What are we going to do?”

Eddie's eyes narrowed. In fact, they almost seemed to glow, Caroline thought. Like a wolf's eyes. Glowing eyes on Eddie were bad news. They meant she was up to something, and whatever it was, Beth and Caroline would get blamed for it too.

“Well, you know how Jake brags about all the wild things they used to do when the Bensons lived here?” Eddie said. “I'll bet they didn't do half the stuff he says they did. Knob Hill, the old Indian burial ground
where the spirits roam at night? Ha! ‘Okay, Jake, take us there,’ I'm going to tell him. The old coal mine? ‘Hey, let's go!’ Smuggler's Cove? ‘I'm up for it!’ ”

Caroline didn't especially like the sound of roaming spirits or an old coal mine. And the one time they had been to Smuggler's Cove with the boys, she had almost got thrown into the water. But the possibility of Eddie and Beth doing anything without her was unthinkable. So she said what she had to say: “Sure.”

“We'll tell Jake to put up or shut up,” said Eddie.

“But be nice to Josh,” said Beth. “He's not so bad. And Peter's cute. Wally? Wally is just …”

“Just Wally,” said Caroline.

“Girls,” their mother said, coming to the doorway. “Each day from now until the twenty-fourth, I want you to pack at least three things. I've put a box in each of your rooms, and if you pack a little every day, it won't be such a chore at the end.”

“If we keep packing stuff, we'll run out of clothes to wear,” said Beth. “They'll all be in boxes.”

“That's the idea,” said Mrs. Malloy. “We want to be ready to go, so that as soon as the movers have loaded our things into the van, we can get in the car and drive off.”

The girls trooped upstairs, but instead of sorting through their closets, they sat down on the floor by the window in Caroline's room and gazed out at the river and the house beyond, where the Hatfords lived. The Buckman River flowed into town on one side of Island
Avenue, circled around under the road bridge leading to the business district, and flowed back out again on the other side. It was here that the Malloys lived in the Bensons' house, and a swinging footbridge connected their side of the river to the Hatfords' on College Avenue.

“Do you remember the bottle race we had on the river?” asked Beth.

“Yeah,” said Eddie. “And the time the boys brought over that box with the chiffon cake in it? Only we thought it was dead birds or something and threw it in the water?”

Caroline gave a little sigh. “It's going to be boring walking to school on a sidewalk instead of a swinging bridge,” she said.

“Oh, for Pete's sake, let's quit moaning,” said Eddie. “Let's each throw three things into our packing boxes and then go downstairs and call the Hatfords. I'll do the talking.”

She stood up and yanked open one of Caroline's dresser drawers. She pulled out a pack of Uno cards, a necklace, and a pair of underpants and tossed them into the empty box Mrs. Malloy had placed on Caroline's bed.

“Next!” she said, and led them into Beth's room.

There Eddie opened the closet, grabbed a belt, and tossed it into Beth's box. She found a book and a pair of loafers and added those.

“Next!” she crowed. In her own room, she put two pair of socks and a baseball cap into the packing box.

“Done!” she said, and they all marched downstairs and crowded around the phone in the hallway.

As usual, after Eddie dialed, she held the phone slightly away from her ear so that her sisters could hear too.

“Hello?” she said. “Peter?”

Caroline moved in a little closer.

“This is Eddie,” her sister said. “How you doing?”

“O-kaaaay!” came Peter's voice, and Caroline and Beth grinned at each other. He was the youngest of the Hatfords, just out of second grade.

“How's your summer going?” asked Eddie.

“Boring,” Peter answered.

“Really?” said Eddie. “Well, maybe we can liven it up a little. Is Jake around?”

“No,” said Peter.

“What about Josh?”

“He's not here either,” said Peter.

“Wally? Where
is
everyone?”

“Mom's at work and Dad's cleaning out the gutters. Jake and Josh are holding the ladder, and Wally s picking up the stuff that comes out of the rainspouts,” Peter told her.

“Yuck!” said Eddie. “Well, when they come in, would you give your brothers a message?”

“Okay,” said Peter.

“Tell them that we're moving back to Ohio, and before we go, we want them to show us Smuggler's Cove, Knob Hill, and the old coal mine. Got it?”

There was silence at the other end of the line.

“Got it?” Eddie asked again.

“Does this mean you won't bake any more cookies for me?” came Peter's plaintive voice.

“I'm afraid so,” Eddie said. “But we'll bake up a big batch just before we leave. Okay?”

“I'm going to be sad,” said Peter.

“I know, buddy,” said Eddie. “But that's life.”

Two
Suspicion

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