**Thirteen-year-old Martha and seven-year-old Jake must do what adults
cannot to ensure their own and others' freedom.
**
Martha Bartlett has a secret. Her life has already been changed by the
Underground Railroad. Now the safety of her younger brother Jake depends
on her willingness to risk her own life to bring Jake home to their
abolitionist community in Connecticut. It's 1854 and though all people
in the North are supposed to be free, seven-year-old Jake, the orphan of
a fugitive slave, learns otherwise. Using aliases, disguises, and other
subterfuges, his older sister Martha struggles to elude slave catchers
while adhering to her parents' admonition to always tell the truth.
Being perceived sometimes as white, sometimes as black during a perilous
journey also throws her sense of her own identity into turmoil. Alonso
combines fiction and historical fact to weave a suspenseful story of
courage, hope, and self-discovery in the aftermath of the Fugitive Slave
Law of 1850, while illuminating the bravery of abolitionists who fought
against slavery.