Read Amber House: Neverwas Online
Authors: Larkin Reed Tucker Reed Kelly Moore
baptisms, even funerals — was an opportunity to schmooze
with members of the community and further one or another of
her charitable causes. Consequently, most of the old-money
crowd between the Potomac and Baltimore, and plenty of the
new-money folks as well, were accustomed to gathering at
Amber House each winter for a solstice celebration and dessert
buffet.
This year’s official raison d‘être was to preview a small por-
tion of the items that had been selected for the Metropolitan
Museum exhibit in New York. It included period fashions, tex-
tile art, paintings and photographs, framed poetry and samplers,
furniture, folk art, portraits — and more. Mom had spread
small displays of the items throughout the ground-floor rooms
and halls of the main wing so that people could meander.
The rest of the celebration followed all of Gramma’s rituals
for the event. Guests trickled in a little after eight. Each carload of arrivals was greeted at the door, where my mom accepted
gifts as she handed off packages of her own — a Christmas
ornament and a dozen beeswax candles hand-dipped in the colo-
nial manner, to invoke (in solstice tradition) the return of the
light. Desserts weighed down the trestle table in the dining
room, second door to the left, with champagne and eggnog set
on the sideboards.
74 O
I stood out of the way on the staircase and watched this year’s
receiving line — Mom, Dad, and Maggie, and Senator and Mrs.
Hathaway. Beyond them, the sweep of car lights through the
glass on either side of the front door foretold a constantly renewed stream of guests.
I had another one of those moments — a slipping-sideways
moment of déjà vu — as I stood there with my hand on the ban-
ister. I thought helplessly and disconnectedly that I should have
been wearing a long gold dress instead of a short black one, and
that I should have been standing next to my mother. And then
the moment was gone, and the smiling face of Richard Hathaway
rose into my line of view.
He stopped on the step below mine. Which put me pretty
much on a level with him. “Still adjusting to the time change,
Parsons?” he teased me. “Or have you been sampling too much
eggnog?”
Evidently I’d let my face go too slack. I chased away the rem-
nants of the confusion I’d felt a moment before and lifted all my
features with a small smile. “That depends, Hathaway,” I said,
raising my eyebrows innocently. “How much is too much?”
He grinned. “You watching my old man work?” he asked.
“He’s pretty good with people.”
“No,” I said. “He’s pretty
amazing
with people.” Which was
the absolute truth. It helped that Robert Hathaway was being
pegged as the next president, but his charisma had more to do
with the way he seemed to make people feel. Like he was
charmed to see each and every one of them. Like they all, to a
man and woman,
mattered
to him. He
needed
them on his team.
Together, he and they could accomplish
great things
. It also didn’t hurt that he was really handsome and athletic — qualities he
wore with shrugging modesty. It was all pitch-perfect; people
adored him. “Really. Amazing.”
“Yeah,” Richard said. “Wish I’d inherited some of that.” He
o75
stood there in his golden perfection, his head tipped a little rue-
fully, shaking his head with aw-shucks humility, and I just started
to laugh. “What?” he said.
“I think you got your share, Hathaway.” His eyes narrowed
with pleased calculation, so I excused myself before he could
run with the compliment. “I gotta save Sammy,” I said. “A couple
old ladies have him trapped.” Then I scooted.
I pulled Sam away from the two elderly women who were
listening to him with some befuddlement. Probably a mono-
logue about dinosaurs, I thought. “Hey, bud,” I coaxed him,
“how about we get you a few of the best-looking desserts to sam-
ple and set you up in front of the TV?”
“That would be good, Sarah,” he said gratefully. “Talking to
these people is pretty hard work.”
I loaded up a plate with a half-dozen desserts — fruit tarts,
little cheesecakes, Christmas cookies, a scoop of trifle.
“Too much,” Sam protested.
I leaned down and whispered in his ear, “Save half for me. I’ll
sneak away and join you as soon as I can.”
When I returned from the west wing, I wandered the crowd,
listening. My dad always told me that eavesdropping was a bad
habit of mine, but it was really more like an instinct. Maybe it
wasn’t entirely ethical, but I wouldn’t have learned half of what
I knew about the important stuff in life if I hadn’t eavesdropped
every once in a while.
Our guests seemed slightly adrift at a celebration that was, for
the first time ever, occurring without its original hostess. Very
few paid attention to the displays Mom had put out; mostly
people grouped and regrouped to gossip and speculate. Some of
the guests remembered Gramma; some talked about the house
and its reputation for ghosts. Most people were wondering about
Robert’s candidacy and when he would announce. I liked that I
had that piece of insider’s knowledge.
76 O
A couple raps from the door knocker signaled a late arrival.
Maggie was closest and went to greet the newcomers. But when
she opened the door, she stepped back, away.
An older couple entered, smiling, followed by a mid-thirties
blond man in a black wool overcoat that had two small silver figures on its collar points. I stared, confused. The man looked like —
Claire Hathaway rushed over to hug and air-kiss the couple:
“Agatha, Harold, so good to see you.” She extended her hand
to the third member of their party. “Reichsleiter, a pleasure to
meet you.”
— a Nazi.
My mother trailed in Claire’s wake. “Mr. and Mrs. Wexler,
welcome. And —” She paused awkwardly, waiting for someone
to fill in the blank.
The Nazi held out his hand, with a little bow of his head.
“Karl Jaeger, Mrs. Parsons. Attaché from the German Socialist
Republic. Please forgive me for intruding on your festivities. I
have been staying with the Wexlers, and they insisted you would
not mind an extra guest.” All in perfectly accented English,
accompanied by a humble smile.
My mother’s voice was tightly cheerful. “Of course not, Mr. —”
Mr. Wexler interrupted: “Reichsleiter Jaeg —”
But the Nazi interrupted him in turn. “Karl,” he said, bowing
slightly again, “please. It is easiest.”
I realized my jaw was locked, my back teeth clenched together.
I was incensed —
incensed
— to have him in my grandmother’s house. In seventy-five years, the Nazis had wiped out all the
Jews, Gypsies, homosexuals, and disabled people in Europe,
except those who had escaped to the Americas. They’d taken
over every country on the continent but a small remnant of
Russia. Just twenty-five years ago, they’d bombed London to a
hole in the ground, finally forcing the rest of the nation to sur-
render. For the past two decades, they’d been working hard to
o77
put a human face on the “new” German Socialist Republic, but
no one I knew was ready to forgive and forget.
Except, evidently, the Wexlers.
My mother excused herself, and I could see by the tightness of
her mouth that she was not happy with this addition to her party
either. I wondered why she hadn’t asked him to leave — perhaps
it would have been just too rude. Claire continued to chat with
the Wexlers’ guest, and then led him to her husband for an
introduction.
I surveyed the rest of the room. Some people looked disap-
proving, but most were indifferent or even nodding a hello.
Senator Hathaway was all polite formality but did not show him-
self especially friendly to the Nazi. I supposed as a government
official, he had taken the proper route. I didn’t know if I could
be so polite.
It was time I went to join Sammy.
The little hall that led past the kitchen held a small display of
mounted insects — butterflies and iridescent beetles, arachnids
and moths. I had seen some of these bug collections around
Amber House before but had never wondered where they’d
come from or who had made them. I paused to read the white
card pinned beside them. “From the extensive work of the early
entomologist Sarah-Louise Foster Tate.”
Sarah-Louise
, I thought,
and her twin brother, Matthew
. I wondered where I’d learned those names.
The gallery was hung with quilts, including one I didn’t rec-
ognize, detailed and edged with green appliqué shaping a
symmetrical maze — I guessed in honor of the real one.
Treasure
in its heart
, I thought, reaching out a hand to touch it.
Richard walked up behind me. “Talented line of women you
come from.”
I was startled and a little pleased.
He followed me.
“Too bad none of it filtered down to my generation.”
78 O
“I’m sure one or two gifts found their way into your chromo-
somes. You just have to wait and see what they turn out to be.”
He gestured with his head toward the front hall. “Come on.
We’re supposed to be in there.”
Oh
, I thought, disappointed.
Didn’t follow. Came to fetch.
I trailed after him, wondering what surprise was coming next.
The entry brimmed with people who’d filtered in from the adja-
cent rooms. Richard caught my hand and tugged me up the stairs
a little to stand with his parents and mine. Speech time — and
Richard and I were part of Senator Hathaway’s backdrop.
The senator talked about the Amber House exhibit that would
open in New York City on New Year’s Eve. He kept his spiel
short, punctuating it with some decently funny jokes. I felt hid-
eously uncomfortable being part of the official grouping, but I
fixed a smile on my face and tried not to focus on anything or
anyone in particular.
He came to a close: “I know you all were hoping for an
announcement tonight of my ‘plans’ for the coming year, but
we’ve decided to save that news for the unveiling in New York.”
The crowd groaned and booed. The senator laughed. “Well, y’all
should come on up and join the party — it promises to be a
good one.”
A wall of hands reached out to the senator once he finished —
everyone wanted to wish him good luck. I faded back up the
stairs to the first landing to wait it out. I took a seat on the bench beneath the mirror there. I longed to be sitting with Sam and the
desserts and the TV but couldn’t imagine how I’d get through
that block of people.
I could go around — take the stairs in the conservatory
, I thought, rising, turning away.
“You must be the young Miss Parsons I’ve heard spoken of.”
This was said in that perfectly clipped English I’d heard ear-
lier. I looked back into the face of our uninvited guest, smiling at me with easy friendliness. He was maybe thirty-five or -six, and
o79
a poster child for the Aryan ideal — strong jaw, long nose, tou-
sled blond hair. He wore the black woolen jodhpur trousers of
the SS uniform tucked into glossy boots, coupled with a black
tie and a white silk button-up shirt stretched over muscular
shoulders.
“Why ‘must’ I be the young Miss Parsons?” I realized my
entire face was tight with dislike and outrage, but I did nothing
to change that.
He continued to smile, as if my revulsion were entirely appro-
priate. Or entirely unimportant. He ticked his logic off on his
long fingers. “A member of the senator’s group, but not his child,
for he has only one son. While, on the other hand, the owners of
the famous Amber House, Dr. and Mrs. Parsons, have one
daughter about the age you appear to be.
Ergo
: Miss Parsons.”
“Famous?” I said.
“Oh, yes,” he said, leaning forward confidentially. “Tell me,
are the things people say about this place true?”
I noticed that my nose was actively working to breathe in his
odor — a complicated mix of leather, smoke, and bay rum. It
made me even angrier. “I don’t know,” I grated. “Why don’t you
tell me what you’ve heard?”
That amused him. “Amber House has a certain —
reputation
,
shall we say? You may be aware German science is interested in
some of the more
esoteric
branches of knowledge. Etheric energies. Temporal anomalies. It has been hypothesized that this
house is located on a confluence of several ley lines and that it
therefore has the potential for enormous amplification of ener-
getic abilities.”
I smiled in incredulity. “
Who
hypothesized that?”
He shrugged. “Someone in a position to have an authoritative
opinion. Can you not feel it?” he said, holding out his hands.
“The electricity in the air? It is intoxicating.” I shook my head
dismissively. He dropped his hands, clasped them behind his
80 O
back. “I take it, then, that
you
have not experienced any amplification of abilities?” He smiled, as if complicit in my disbelief, but he looked — hungry. Predatory.