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Authors: Michelle Chalfoun

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“In the cottage,” Maria said. “Behind an eave in the attic.”

“Well, we'll have to get the Island Conservation Foundation in there,” Mr. Ironwall said. “Maria's little cottage may be worth more than we all realized. I hope you don't mind if the old historians snoop around
your cottage
, Maria dear.” He gave her an exaggerated wink.

“Why are you saying, Maria's cottage?” Celeste said.

He turned to Celeste. “Oh, did I neglect to tell you? Maria owns the cottage now.”

“Maria owns the cottage?” Celeste said slowly, as if the words were in a language she barely understood.

“Now and forevermore. Nothing you can do about it,” Mr. Ironwall said to Celeste. “No going back to the Bronx for you. So just unpack your bags. I still need a nurse.”

“We don't ever have to leave!” Maria said. She jumped up and wrapped her good arm around her mother.

“I don't know what to say.” Celeste looked bewildered.

“How about congratulations?” Maria suggested.
“Mabrouk!”

“Mabrouk,”
Celeste murmured. She reached for something to steady herself. Frank stepped over and gave her his arm. “It's a miracle.”

“Of course it is,” said Frank. “None of us wanted you to go.”

“Especially not you.” Hattie hit her brother in the shoulder with the back of her hand.

 

35

T
HE
L
AST
P
RIVATEER

Maria and Paolo wandered around the Great House lawn, checking out the party. The tents were packed beyond capacity and people spilled out onto the grass. They'd planned to have the screening in the Great House's movie theater, but when the tickets sold out on the first day, Frank called Tilton Rentals and booked the largest tents they had and a giant outdoor screen for the showing. Still more people wanted to come, even if they couldn't fit under the tents. So Mr. Ironwall let people bring lawn chairs and beach blankets and settle down anywhere they could.

Food had come in from all corners: Hattie and Grandma Newcomb had been cooking all week, a smoker was brought in for a pig roast, and Pops directed the Newcomb men to dig huge pits on the beach for the largest clambake ever seen in local memory. Cater-waiters carried enormous platters of steamers, lobster, and corn on the cob to the guests, while Grandma ladled her famous clam chowder and dished out slices of pie. Even Tante Farida had come up from the Bronx bearing
meze
and pastries: tubs of
hummus
,
baba ghanoush
,
tabbouleh
, and stuffed grape leaves, cartons of olives, rounds of cheese, trays of
baklawa
, and
knafeh
. Hattie grilled Tante for recipes, and the old woman happily obliged.

Under another tent strung with twinkling white lights, a jazz band played old cinema classics. A woman in red sequins crooned about dancing cheek to cheek, while Celeste and Frank spun around on the parquet tiles. Frank said something and Celeste tipped her head back and laughed. Maria noticed that her mother laughed a lot lately. And smiled and sang. Now Celeste smiled at Maria over Frank's shoulder, and Maria smiled back.

It seemed everyone was happy and smiling. Taylor Bradford had come with his mom, and nearby sat other kids Maria had just recently met, now that school had begun. School on Martha's Vineyard wasn't so scary after all. Hattie hadn't sent Paolo to reform school, so Maria saw him every day. And there were no more snarky comments. When the story came out that she had found Captain Murdefer's real map and followed it to the right place in a stolen antique schooner, no one cared that the treasure had been long gone. And more than a few kids were envious that Paolo and she had had such an adventure, and that their adventure had made it onto TV news. Now, when they called Paolo Captain Dirt in the hallway, they said it in a friendly way.

Surveying all, Mr. Ironwall, dashing in his tuxedo, sat at the head table, eating a bowl of chowder while Joanne hovered anxiously by. He had insisted she was not allowed to mash it into “pureed pablum” or spoon-feed him. He would eat it as Grandma Newcomb cooked it, using his own hand, and if he choked to death, then at least he would die happy. But he seemed to be in no danger as far as Maria could tell. Maybe he
was
getting better. He certainly seemed better, lately.

Something was happening in front of the screen, and the guests closest to it began clapping. Maria turned back to see Joanne wheeling Mr. Ironwall toward a podium. A man in an elegant suit and a bow tie stepped up to another round of applause.

“Thank you, thank you.” The man adjusted his notes and his tie. “We are all here as guests of the esteemed and talented Peter Ironwall. I wonder how many of you remember his movies from your youth…”

As Mr. Ironwall sat regally in his wheelchair, the man talked of Mr. Ironwall's long movie career, his history on the island, and finally the wonderful gift he was making to its people.

“When Mr. Ironwall agreed to this showing of
The Last Privateer
,” the man said, “he contacted the old studio to send any costumes, props, and photos they had. After the film, this valuable memorabilia will be auctioned off in the Great House Ballroom and the proceeds will go toward the Conservation Foundation.”

“Let's go sit up front,” Paolo said. He took Maria's hand and steered her to a blanket near the screen. The man finished his speech and passed the microphone down to Mr. Ironwall.

Mr. Ironwall waited patiently for the applause to end. Then he cleared his throat and said, “Well, now, you're all very welcome to my humble abode.”

More applause, a few whistles and whoops. Mr. Ironwall smiled calmly like a man used to waiting for his audience.

“As a young friend of mine would say, this is a fabulous party.” He caught Maria's eye and winked. “But it wouldn't be fabulous if it weren't for all of you!”

People cheered in agreement.

Mr. Ironwall went on. “The money from this and future fund-raisers will be donated to the Conservation Foundation to preserve Island history and arts. I will be using my own private funds to restore Ironwall Estate to its original magnificence. The Great House, the grounds, the outer buildings, the beach, the boat, and the dock—in fact, the entire property with the exception of the cottage and its surrounding acre—have been deeded to the Conservation Foundation, to be used by the Island as an Arts and Nature Center in perpetuity.”

Applause flooded the crowd. Paolo put his lips near Maria's ear so she could hear him.

“What's ‘in perpetuity'?”

“It means forever,” she said into his ear. “Ironwall Estate will be here forever.”

“And you will, too,” Paolo said. “Isn't it weird how everything worked out?”

Maria nodded. The chain of events that made up the past few months were so strange. If the Bad Barbies had never attacked her, her mother would not have looked for a new job. They would never have come to Martha's Vineyard. She would never have met Paolo or Mr. Ironwall. She never would have found the map, or fixed up
The Last Privateer
, or sailed to find a pirate treasure. She certainly would never have gotten the cottage. Mr. Ironwall would have had a different nurse. And that nurse probably would not have had a daughter to stir things up. Most likely, Mr. Ironwall would have stayed in his room until he died, but now, because Maria had made just the right amount of trouble, he sat proudly at the podium, cheered by people who loved him. And Maria sat in the audience, surrounded by people who had become her family.

“And now,
The Last Privateer
!”

The audience applauded, the lights under the tents dimmed, and music swelled. Paolo leaned his shoulder against Maria's shoulder. Maria leaned back.

On the movie screen, a white sun shone in a silver sky, and silver waves crashed in a silver sea. A black pinpoint began in the top left corner. As it moved across the screen, closer and closer to the camera, it resolved into a wind-lashed schooner. Their schooner.
The Last Privateer.

The shot pulled in, swooping down to a lone figure on the deck. Captain Murdefer gazed out over the stormy waters. He looked troubled and the music was ominous. But Maria was not worried. She already knew how the story ended. He would find this island and he would bury his treasure. It didn't matter that the gold and jewels were long gone. All that he had built with his riches was preserved here on this island, on Ironwall Estate, as long as Ironwall Estate itself still stood. And as long as Maria lived in the cottage, she would see to it that Ironwall Estate would stand, until the land upon which it stood fell into the sea, and the waters washed it away.

 

A
BOUT THE
A
UTHOR

Michelle Chalfoun
is a pediatric nurse who lives with her husband and children on Long Island, New York.
The Treasure of Maria Mamoun
is her first book for young readers. You can sign up for email updates
here
.

 

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C
ONTENTS

Title Page

Copyright Notice

Dedication

Author's Note

1. Maria Theresa Ramirez Mamoun

2. Bad Barbies

3. The Republic of Ugly

4. Fishy Butter and Funny Accents

5. Into the Woods

6. Captain Murderer

7. The Great House

8. Twice Twice Two

9. Something to Do

10. Mr. Ironwall

11. Bicycles and Sails

12. Over the Rail

13. Mr. Ironwall, Revisited

14. Stranger Danger

15. The Triangle Island

16. That Sort of Girl

17. A Boy Raised by Wolves

18. Captain Murdefer, Revisited

19. Up-Island

20. The Dread Pyrate Paolo

21. High and Dry

22. Help from Major Dirt

23. Onward … Onward!

24. An Old-Fashioned Fourth

25. Tuning the Rig

26. Shakedown

27. Square One

28. Fire Escape

29. The Same or Worse

30. Engaging the Enemy

31. Batten Down the Hatches

32. The Queen's Door

33. Treasure Island

34. What Kind of Trouble

35. The Last Privateer

About the Author

Copyright

 

Farrar Straus Giroux Books for Young Readers

175 Fifth Avenue, New York 10010

Text copyright © 2016 Michelle Chalfoun

All rights reserved

First hardcover edition, 2016

eBook edition, July 2016

mackids.com

The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:

Names: Chalfoun, Michelle, author.

Title: The treasure of Maria Mamoun / Michelle Chalfoun.

Description: First edition. | New York: Farrar Straus Giroux, 2016. | Summary: “An island adventure about a girl from the Bronx on a journey of mystery and discovery”—Provided by publisher.

Identifiers: LCCN 2015026267 | ISBN 9780374303402 (hardback) | ISBN 9780374303440 (ebook)

Subjects: | CYAC: Adventure and adventurers—Fiction. | Buried treasure—Fiction. | Lebanese Americans—Fiction. | Martha's Vineyard (Mass.)—Fiction. | BISAC: JUVENILE FICTION / Mysteries & Detective Stories. | JUVENILE FICTION / Action & Adventure / Pirates. | JUVENILE FICTION / Social Issues / New Experience. | JUVENILE FICTION / Social Issues / Self-Esteem & Self-Reliance. | JUVENILE FICTION / Lifestyles / Country Life.

Classification: LCC PZ7.1.C475 Tr 2016 | DDC [Fic]—dc23

LC record available at
http://lccn.loc.gov/2015026267

Our eBooks may be purchased in bulk for promotional, educational, or business use. Please contact the Macmillan Corporate and Premium Sales Department at (800) 221-7945 ext. 5442 or by e-mail at
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.

eISBN 9780374303440

BOOK: The Treasure of Maria Mamoun
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