Number the Stars

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Authors: Lois Lowry
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pitchers until the table tops were crowded with their bouquets.
    Inside the house, Mama scrubbed and dusted, tsk-tsking at Uncle Henrik’s untidy housekeeping. She took the rugs out to the clothesline and beat them with a sticky scattering dust into the air.
    â€œHe needs a wife,” she said, shaking her head, and attacked the old wooden floors with a broom while the rugs aired.
    â€œJust look at this,” she said, opening the door to the little-used formal living room with its old-fashioned furniture. “He
never
dusts.” And she picked up her cleaning rags.
    â€œAnd, Kirsti,” she added, “the God of Thunder made a very small rain shower in the corner of the kitchen floor. Keep an eye on him.’”
    Late in the afternoon, Uncle Henrik came home. He grinned when he saw the newly cleaned and polished house, the double doors to the living room wide open, the rugs aired, and the windows washed.
    â€œHenrik, you need a wife,” Mama scolded him.
    Uncle Henrik laughed and joined Mama on the steps near the kitchen door. “Why do I need a wife, when I have a sister?” he asked in his booming voice.
    Mama sighed, but her eyes were twinkling. “And you need to stay home more often to take care of the house. This step is broken, and there is a leaking faucet in the kitchen. And—”
    Henrik was grinning at her, shaking his head in mock dismay. “And there are mice in the attic, and my brown sweater has a big moth hole in the sleeve, and if I don’t wash the windows soon—”
    They laughed together.
    â€œAnyway,” Mama said, “I have opened every window, Henrik, to let the air in, and the sunlight. Thank goodness it is such a beautiful day.”
    â€œTomorrow will be a day for fishing,” Henrik said, his smile disappearing.
    Annemarie, listening, recognized the odd phrase. Papa had said something like it on the telephone. “Is the weather good for fishing, Henrik?” Papa had asked. But what did it mean? Henrik went fishing every day, rain or shine. Denmark’s fishermen didn’t wait for sunny days to take their boats out and throw their nets into the sea. Annemarie, silent, sitting with Ellen under the apple tree, watched her uncle.
    Mama looked at him. “The weather is right?” she asked.
    Henrik nodded and looked at the sky. He smelled the air. “I will be going back to the boat tonight after supper. We will leave very early in the morning. I will stay on the boat all night.”
    Annemarie wondered what it would be like to be on a boat all night. To lie at anchor, hearing the sea slap against the sides. To see the stars from your place on the sea.
    â€œYou have prepared the living room?” Uncle Henrik asked suddenly.
    Mama nodded. “It is cleaned, and I moved the furniture a bit to make room.
    â€œAnd you saw the flowers,” she added. “I hadn’t thought of it, but the girls picked dried flowers from the meadow.”
    â€œPrepared the living room for what?” Annemarie asked. “Why did you move the furniture?”
    Mama looked at Uncle Henrik. He had reached down for the kitten, scampering past, and now held it against his chest and scratched its chin gently. It arched its small back with pleasure.
    â€œWell, girls,” he said, “it is a sad event, but not
too
sad, really, because she was very, very old. There has been a death, and tonight your Great-aunt Birte will be resting in the living room, in her casket, before she is buried tomorrow. It is the old custom, you know, for the dead to rest at home, and their loved ones to be with them before burial.”
    Kirsti was listening with a fascinated look. “Right here?” she asked. “A dead person right here?”
    Annemarie said nothing. She was confused. This was the first she had heard of a death in the family. No one had called Copenhagen to say that there had been a death. No one had seemed

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