Novels2Search

What We Carried from Earth

The grown-ups unpacked all the children and the few things we brought. We went out; it was warm and very dry, and the ground was all a fine rose-gold dust, powdery like flour (Mother said it must be a kind of silt), and we amused ourselves by kicking it up in big clouds. Aunt Eva said we would get our clothes dirty, but Mother said, “Oh, but it’s a new world!” and kicked up her own cloud, and soon all the grown-ups were making big clouds, and laughing with us. Then they grew serious again. For now, something had to be done. We had landed in a big flat place with no water in sight, just the flat dust from horizon to horizon, excepting a few darker and redder smudges in the distance, and a line of big, flat-topped chimney-shapes in the West. Some said we should go towards the chimneys; others said the smudges might be vegetation. It looked like an argument would break out until Aunt Eva said, “The first thing to do is to see what we’ve brought with us.” All saw at once that she was right—the rush to leave, both from our Earth houses and from the ship, had left the inventory in disorder.

Mother at once became very excited about taking inventory and said that she had remembered a notebook. Of course she had forgot a pencil, which Aunt Karina supplied, and soon everyone was lined up youngest to oldest with the items they had brought. Everything besides the clothing on our backs was counted.

Eloise brought:

1 box strawberry-filled panda cookies

2 felt unicorns

1 toy mirror

Michele brought:

1 stuffed black bear

1 butterfly net

5 nesting plastic bowls

1 set of cooking utensils: spatula, spoon, ladle, and cake knife

1 tote bag

Ransom brought:

1 slinky

4 silicon pendants

1 solar-powered fan

River brought:

1 blanket

1 Beginner’s Bible

Keziah brought:

5 white mice with enclosure

1 bag mouse pellets

The Horse and his Boy

The Baby-Sitter’s Club #4

1 Adventure Bible

1 Stack of activity sheets

2 sketchbooks

31 water bottles, filled

4 cans Coca-Cola

6 cans lemon San Pellegrino

1 duffel bag

Ezra brought:

Waterfalls of Northern Minnesota

Mini Swiss Army knife

2 water bottles, empty

1 jar trail mix

1 bag beef jerky

1 small canister lighter fluid

1 Zippo lighter

1 can insect repellent

1 bottle sunscreen

1 spork

1 small backpack

1 pair binoculars

Silence brought:

Grimm’s Fairy Tales (illustrated)

Anderson’s Shorter Tales

Classics to Read Aloud to your Children

The Lord of the Rings

Perelandra

Little House in the Big Woods

Anne of Green Gables

1 NKJV Study Bible

1 backpack

Ezekiel brought:

1 tent

1 frying pan

1 pair of men’s boots, small

2 pairs of shoelaces

The Audubon Society Guide to Insects of North America

1 magnifying glass

Maranatha brought:

3 tarps

30’ rope

Mischa brought:

1 Advent calendar

12 candles

1 box fishing tackle

1 backpack

Zion brought:

12 boxes matza bread

12 sticks butter

6 apples

4 lb smoked salmon

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1 tin almonds

2 ice packs

1 cooler bag

John brought:

1 collapsible fishing rod

1 box fishing tackle

1 trowel

1 inflatable raft

6 Frog Togs

25 ponchos

1 Duluth pack

1 rifle with case and ammunition

Genny brought:

1 lined notebook

1 polaroid camera

4 boxes polaroid film

3 Sharpies

16 pencils

1 pencil sharpener

1 pencil box

3 pairs pants, small

1 dress

4 T-shirts, medium

1 backpack

Moshe brought:

1 sewing kit

2 belts, medium

1 can opener

3 paintbrushes

6 small jars paint

Judah brought:

1 hunting knife

1 folding pocket knife

1 large jar peanut butter

Heaven brought:

6 rolls duct tape

1 pair noise-cancelling headphones

3 sweaters

Cory brought:

1 Swiss Army knife

15 spoons

4 nested pans

1 pot

1 jar curry powder

1 pepper grinder

1 salt grinder

1 lighter

1 ocarina

Aunt Anastasia brought:

4 Micron pens

1 box Pocky

1 box raspberry hibiscus tea

Mothflight’s Vision

Aunt Karina brought:

5 bottles sunscreen

4 towels

1 gallon water

1 bottle vegetable oil

10 spoons

2 pencils

2 wooden stir spoons

1 ladle

1 sewing kit

1 first aid kit

1 tote bag

1 ESV Bible

Uncle Juan brought:

1 fishing rod

1 compound bow, with arrows

Aunt Christina brought:

6 sketchbooks

3 boxes Mac n’ Cheese

4 erasers

20 boxes cinnamon gum

1 saddlebag

1 NIV Bible

Pride and Prejudice

Aunt Joy brought:

2 boxes raspberry hibiscus tea

8 pillows

1 backpack laundry hamper

3 cans French onion soup

3 cans clam chowder

10 cans tomato soup

4 cans Boston baked beans

Uncle Alan brought:

1 rifle, with case and ammunition

1 file knife

1 Swiss Army knife

1 roll Gorilla tape

1 bottle Superglue

1 wrench

1 needle nose pliers

1 box screws

1 box nails

1 hammer

1 tool belt

Aunt Tex brought:

1 jar of soil from Earth

1 packet pumpkin seeds

1 packet sunflower seeds

1 box family photographs

1 ESV journaling Bible

Uncle Enrico brought:

1 lb. dried apricots

1 lb. dried pears

1 lb. dried pea pods

2 jars strawberry preserves

2 jars pickles

1 paper bag

Aunt Eva brought:

6 blankets

27 sweaters

3 sticks ChapStick

4 brushes

16 toothbrushes

1 box baking soda

1 bag hairbands

1 jar Eucerin

4 bottles Tylenol

½ bottle Maalox

1 bottle cough syrup

5 bottles kid’s cold medicine

1 first aid kit

1 Duluth pack

1 Greek New Testament

1 Hebrew Bible

Uncle Isaac brought:

19 winter coats

1 Duluth pack

Aunt Lydia brought:

1 bottle Tabasco sauce

7 black tea bags

4 2-lb jars of mixed nuts

23 bags Shorty’s smoked sausages

4 1-lb cans tuna

6 8oz bricks cheddar cheese

9 8oz cans black beans

7 bags tortillas

3 1/2 1-lb summer sausages

1 Duluth pack

Uncle Robert brought:

1/2 box kindling

1 lighter

2 bottles iodine

5 toothbrushes

5 water filtration pumps

1 bag firewood

1 pistol with ammunition

3 gallons water

Mother brought:

1 agate

1 trilobite fossil

1 box raspberry hibiscus tea

2 bottles Adderall

1 can Creole seasoning

1 jar red pepper

1 jar basil

1 jar curry powder

1 roll medical gauze

1 pair scissors

1 notebook

The Man Who Was Thursday

2 boxes Ziploc bags

Father brought:

1 bottle hydrogen peroxide

7 large bars chocolate

26 Roman candle rockets

So we found, gladly, that some food stores had still been brought, but were disappointed to find that we had left most of the extra clothes behind, that we only had one tent, and that some of us had left our Bibles as well. Aunt Tex said everything must now be shared in common, like the first Christians. Then Uncle Enrico’s bag tore, and someone suggested consolidating some things—perhaps the first aid kits. We found that by using Ziploc bags for the medicines this could be done easily. Then Aunt Karina said that we should sort all the supplies into groups, which Mother again set about excitedly. Little Eloise wanted a piece of chocolate, but Father said No and that it was a special kind of chocolate with more nutrients, and that we would have only a little at a time. Many of the children asked what the fireworks were for; Father said that if we got separated, we could use them to signal to one another. And so we were quieted a little.

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