A little girl explores an abandoned house near her home on the San Juan Islands and discovers something entirely unexpected.
Mae longs to visit an abandoned house across the bay, but her father says she’s not old enough. On her birthday, she discovers a rowboat with a broom and key inside, and she’s warned to return before dark to avoid smugglers: “Their boats are full of whiskey / and bales of wool to sell / but I have heard they sometimes hide / a poor, scared man as well.” Once at the house, Mae uses the key to unlock it and the broom to sweep it. After cleaning all day, she heads out after dark and discovers two boats on the water. When she hears a splash, Mae discovers a man abandoned on a rock and brings him back to the house where she offers him food and shelter. When Mae and her father visit the house together the next day, the only sign that anyone had been there is a bracelet woven from broom straw. Hippely subtly inserts the San Juan Islands’ history (specifically its role in smuggling Chinese laborers after the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, which is explained in a concluding historical note) into the story (written in an ABCB rhyme scheme); all elements blend well. Moore’s watercolor images are simple but effective, with minimal facial details and a muted color palate of dark greens, yellows, blues, and browns.
A charming tale that weaves together history, serene illustrations, and a pleasing rhyme scheme.