Later, Janey goes to school with the other children from the farm camp. She is most excited at the fair to see a large display of books, and she pleads for the opportunity to remain there to read. Her mom gives her a nickel to spend and Janey buys gum to share with the others. Janey is invited to go with the Romero family to the fair and she's elated with the opportunity. This respect for each other is the heart of the girls' friendship, which grows over the coming months. Though Lupe doesn't understand the importance - that the plate represents Janey's life prior to the family's financial hardships and the hope of a better life - she understands that it's important to Janey. Janey tells Lupe the story of the plate as it's been told to her. The plate pictures a stand of willow trees, a river, a bridge and three people. The first thing Janey shows Lupe is her one important possession - a blue willow plate. Janey doesn't go to meet Lupe but is excited when Lupe makes the first move. She wants to seek out Lupe's friendship but knows that the Larkin family never stays anywhere long so there probably won't be time to develop a friendship. Janey notices that there is a family across the road and that there's a girl about her age, Lupe Romero. She is an only child and lives with her father and stepmother, her mother having died years earlier. Janey Larkin is ten years old when her family arrives in the San Joaquin Valley of California.
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