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Authors: Nancy Werlin

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Love & Romance, #Fantasy & Magic, #Social Issues, #Pregnancy, #Young Adult, #Fantasy, #Romance

Impossible (26 page)

BOOK: Impossible
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This book is dedicated to my mother, Elaine Sylvia Romotsky Werlin, but I want to thank her again here for her love and care in the past and the present. There really are no words, just gratitude—and of course, a gift of the love story she has long wanted me to write.

I am greatly indebted to my first-round readers: Pat Lowery Collins, Ellen Wittlinger, and Lisa Papademetriou, and to my second-round readers: Jane Kurtz, Rebekah Mitsein, and Franny Billingsley. Their intelligent commentary was vital to the shaping of this book, and I will always be thankful for their effort, encouragement, and enthusiasm.

For help with figuring out the solutions to the puzzles, credit must go to Kathleen Sweeney (the shirt), Jim McCoy (the Bay of Fundy), and Franny Billingsley (the grain of corn).

Thanks are due also to the management and staff of the Panera Bread cafes of Danvers, Woburn, Saugus, Burlington, and Waltham, Massachusetts, where the majority of this novel was written and where my laptop computer and I always felt welcomed.

For emotional and practical support during the writing and rewriting process, I owe warm thanks to Toni Buzzeo, Amy Butler Greenfield, David Greenfield, Jennifer Richard Jacobson, A. M. Jenkins, Ginger Knowlton, Jacqueline Briggs Martin, Dian Curtis Regan, Joanne Stanbridge, Deborah Wiles, Melissa Wyatt, and—last but far from least—Jim McCoy.

Finally, and as ever, I wish to express appreciation to my longtime editor, Lauri Hornik. This wasn't the novel I'd originally said I would write next, but when I suddenly pulled a family curse and an evil elf out of my writing hat, she didn't even blink. I continue among the most fortunate of writers in my editor, and I know it.

 

NANCY WERLIN's previous novel,
The Rules of Survival
, was a National Book Award Finalist, among other honors (see below). She won an Edgar Award for
The Killer's Cousin
, which was also named one of the "I00 Best of the Best for the 21
st
Century" by the American Library Association. A graduate of Yale College, she lives near Boston, Massachusetts. Visit her website at www.nancywerlin.com.

 

THE RULES OF SURVIVAL

National Book Award Finalist

ALA Best Books or Young Adults

ALA Quick Picks

School Library Journal
Best Books of the Year

Los Angeles Times Book Prize Finalist

*"Werlin reinforces her reputation as a master of the YA thriller … brilliant."


Booklist
(starred)

 

DOUBLE HELIX

ALA Best Books for Young Adults

Booklist
Editors' Choice

School Library Journal
Best Books of the Year

*"Mesmerizing."—
Publishers Weekly
(starred)

"A suspenseful exploration of love and bioethics … thought-provoking."


Kirkus

 

Jacket photograph of young woman by Dod Miller/Getty Images

Jacket photograph of waves by Jason Childs/Getty Images

Cover design by Monica Benalcazar

0908

Printed in the U.S.A.

 

 

From the sting of my curse she can never be free

Parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme

Unless she unravels my riddlings three

She will be a true love of mine

 

The Scarborough Girls

A Family Tree

 

By Nancy Werlin

 

Fenella, b. 1610 in Wexford, Ireland.

 

Her family (headed by her merchant father) moved to Scarborough in England when she was four. At this time, the famous Scarborough Fair was in abeyance. At seventeen, Fenella, who was pretty and clever, already had a lover (her intended husband, Robert Ennis). But she caught the eye of The Elfin Knight, who attempted to court her. Fenella's attempt to elude the Knight caused him to curse her and her daughters, creating a curse-variant of an old ballad that Fenella knew.

 

Bronagh, b. 1628.

 

Her father, Robert Ennis, died four days before he was to marry her mother, Fenella, and Fenella herself disappeared shortly after Bronagh's birth. Bronagh was raised by Robert's sister, Agnes. She was a dark-haired girl of quiet temperament, much loved by her aunt.

 

Elizabeth, b. 1646.

 

Also raised by her great-aunt Agnes, Elizabeth resembled her grandmother in her lively wits and clever tongue. However, the misfortunes of both her mother and grandmother had already caused talk and superstition, and she was isolated in childhood. Her pregnancy (by a married man who denied all responsibility) was a scandal. When Elizabeth disappeared in her turn following the birth of her daughter, Agnes died and the baby was fostered away.

 

Marjory, b. 1664.

 

Marjory ran away to London at the age of twelve. No other information is available.

 

Barbara, b. 1682.

 

No other information is available.

 

Dorothea, b. 1700.

 

At the age of 14, intelligent Dorothea indentured herself as a servant for seven years and was sent to Virginia in the New World, where she worked for the family of Kenneth Lee in Westmoreland County.

 

Bridget, b. 1718.

 

Bridget was brought up by the Thomas Lee family (Thomas was the son of Kenneth Lee) after the disappearance of her mother. Raised as a companion to a daughter of the house, Bridget was treated well until at seventeen she became pregnant and accused a neighbor of having raped her. She was disbelieved, called "a harlot like her mother," and ran away to Philadelphia.

 

Pamela, b. 1737.

 

Born in Philadelphia, Pamela was a devout member of the Quaker community. She said not a word to anyone about her pregnancy, behaving as if it were not occurring and remaining completely unresponsive to enquiries about it. Many thought her mad before she actually became so.

 

Katherine, called Kate, b. 1755.

 

Beautiful Kate married a British lieutenant at fifteen, against the advice of the Quaker community to which she belonged after her mother's disappearance. Her husband was a younger son of a noble family and repudiated his pretty American wife when he returned home, claiming that he was not the father of the child she was bearing. Kate returned to her original surname, and to her Quaker family and faith. Her obsession with spinning cloth during her pregnancy was accepted by her community as both harmless and useful.

 

Harriet, b. 1773.

 

Red-headed, hot-tempered Harriet was considered to be trouble from the day of her birth, even before her mother Kate disappeared. At sixteen, Harriet stole money from her adoptive parents and took a ship for London, leaving a letter behind that said she was going to find her noble father in England and lead a life of wealth and leisure.

 

Marianna, b. 1791.

 

No other information is available.

 

Julia, b. 1809.

 

Julia grew up as a street child, scavenging for scraps in London. No other information is available.

 

Anne, b. 1827.

 

Anne also grew up parentless on the streets of London but shows up in records in Dublin during the potato famine. How and why she ended up in Ireland is unclear, but she apparently believed she had an Irish father. In 1844, she crowded onto a ship for America, arriving in Boston only to find high anti-Irish sentiments, including riots. She disappeared during one such riot, a church burning, after her daughter was born.

 

Moira, b. 1845.

 

Moira was raised in a Catholic charity orphanage in Boston and employed as a maidservant at thirteen. She left her employment as the Civil War broke out. No further information is available.

 

Minnie, b. 1863.

 

Ambitious Minnie at seventeen was accepted into the nurses' training program at the New England Hospital for Women and Children in Boston, which had begun educating female nurses in the year of her birth. Her pregnancy forced her to leave the program and she disappeared.

 

Jennie, b. 1881.

 

No other information is available.

 

Mary, b. 1899.

 

A pregnant Mary arrived in Peterborough, New Hampshire, masquerading as a war widow and looking for work. She was taken in by a young, well-to-do farmer's wife who was at a similar stage of pregnancy and who subsequently raised Mary's daughter.

 

Ruth, b. 1917.

 

Ruth attended high school in Peterborough, New Hampshire, where she was a member of the girls' choir and was also a home-room representative and a homecoming princess. What happened to her after the birth of her daughter is unknown.

 

Joanne, b. 1935.

 

Joanne also attended high school in Peterborough, New Hampshire. She belonged to no clubs or groups at school at all, and was failing most of her classes when she dropped out of school due to her pregnancy. She was sent to a maternity home for teenage girls in Lowell, Massachusetts, from which she tried twice to run away, claiming that she needed to be nearer to the ocean.

 

Deirdre, b. 1954.

 

Raised in a home for motherless girls, at fifteen, Deirdre ran away with three other girls to attend a concert in Woodstock, NY, and was next seen in Berkeley, California. Why she returned to her birthplace of Lowell for the birth of her daughter is a mystery.

 

Miranda, b. 1972.

 

Miranda's story is recounted in the book
Impossible
.

 

Lucinda, called Lucy, b. 1990.

 

Lucy's story is fully recounted in the book
Impossible
.

 

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BOOK: Impossible
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