Read Amber House: Neverwas Online
Authors: Larkin Reed Tucker Reed Kelly Moore
a sensuous mouth, eyes both blue and dark.
“Deuced lucky,” the man on the floor agreed.
“But deuced brilliant too, to do so well. They say of him that
his ships always come through, even when all others are lost.”
“Jus’ lucky,” the drunken man sneered. “He makes every
decision on a coin toss.”
“A coin toss?” the younger said, sitting beside the other.
“Surely not.”
“Swear to God,” the other slurred. “He calls it . . . ’s lucky
coin. Always tells him true. And so it does.”
“His lucky coin,” the young man repeated thoughtfully, and
smiled. And I thought irrationally:
What big teeth you have.
I jumped when I felt a touch on my shoulder, but then heard
Jackson asking, “You all right, Sare?”
I looked up at him, squinting a bit in the sudden full daylight.
“I’m fine.”
“Echo?” he guessed.
I nodded, but did not elaborate.
“Come on back. I’m in here.” He entered a stall and finished
forking fresh hay across the floor. I stood at the siding and
watched him work. “Can you grab a square of alfalfa?” he asked,
gesturing behind me.
I turned to where he pointed, went and broke a few inches
off the green bale I saw there, and handed it over the siding. He
tossed it into the feed bin. “You do this every day?” I asked.
“Even holidays?”
144 O
He smiled tolerantly. “I tried to persuade the horses to be
more reasonable, but they still insist on getting hungry every
day.” He shrugged. “I don’t do it three hundred and sixty-five
days a year. If I can’t come over, I have a buddy who’ll come in
and cover for me.” He set his pitchfork outside the stall in the
corridor, then opened the exterior door to lead the roan back
inside. She moseyed over to the feed bin. He rubbed and patted
her neck as he unclipped her lead. “I kind of like doing this today.
Making the animals comfortable and warm. Feels Christmasy to
me — Christ was born in a stable, you know?”
I’d forgotten it was actually Christmas Eve. Somehow slipping
through time made ordinary hours and days harder to keep track
of. I took a moment to breathe in the smells, this other scent of
Christmas. It was a very Jackson-ish kind of observation —
practical, but sort of poetic too. I noticed he was watching me
again. “Look,” I said, “can we talk some more about — the stuff
we were talking about yesterday?”
“I kind of think we have to.”
“I told you I see pieces of a different past — do you have an
idea
why
?”
He leaned on the fork’s long handle. “I figure, Sare, that
someone did something in that other time that changed what
happened — that made events turn out differently.” He looked
at me, waiting, but I didn’t leap in. I was busy wrapping a stray
piece of twine around a finger on my left hand. “You know who
that was?”
“Maybe,” I said.
“Maybe?” He seemed slightly amused. “If I had to guess, I’d
say it was you. Was it?”
“I don’t know,” I answered a little defiantly. “Maybe. I suppose
so. I woke up Maggie. She was supposed to die in a coma in that
other past, but I found her in the mirror world and I woke
her up.”
o145
“Jesus,” he said, letting that sink in. “You remember a time in
which Maggie died?”
“Just bits and pieces. Not real well.” I felt I had to explain, to
excuse myself. “I didn’t
mean
to change things. I was just trying to save Sammy.”
“Maybe,” he offered gently, “you woke her up because she
wasn’t supposed to die.”
That was oddly comforting. It meant I wasn’t Pandora. Just
someone fixing a mistake, mending a broken piece.
“So,” he continued, “you woke up Maggie, and the present
that
used
to be isn’t anymore. That’s —” He paused, marveling.
“Jesus,” he said again. “You’re kind of like a superhero, you
know? Who does something like that?”
And that was oddly
dis
comforting. I didn’t want to be a superhero. I liked being an accidental mistake fixer better. I went
back to my finger wrapping. “Maybe,” I said, “this kind of thing
happens all the time, only we don’t know it because we can’t
remember the other pasts.”
“But
you
do. Remember a different past.”
“Like I said — just little pieces.”
“Like I ‘remember’ little pieces of a different future.”
I seized on that topic. “How do you know it’s a different
future? Maybe it’s this future, the one that’s already coming.”
He shook his head. “You can’t get there from here.”
“Why not?”
“Well, for one thing,” he said, and stopped, a trace of some
kind of hesitancy in his voice. He started again, pushing for-
ward, “For one thing, I’m not scarred in that future.”
I digested that. Not scarred. A different future because it
came from a different past. A different past because Jackson’s
parents hadn’t been in an accident —
I understood then why Jackson had seemed so reluctant to
talk about this. It was because he wanted to get there. To get
146 O
to a time where his parents didn’t die and he hadn’t been scarred
and — What? He grew up to become a doctor? Who could
blame him? Who wouldn’t want that?
But the other thing I understood, in the same instant — he
thought I could make it happen for him. Because I’d done it once
already.
How could I tell him I couldn’t do that?
It gave me a sick feeling inside. I wished I could help him,
but —
No.
I couldn’t change time again. Not on purpose. Not like I had some right to do it. I wasn’t Pandora — I couldn’t be
responsible for the things that might come out of that box. “I
have to go,” I said abruptly, moving toward the door.
“Where you going? Don’t we have to talk about this?” He was
hurt. I knew it, but I couldn’t do anything about it.
“I can’t talk about it, J. This is just all crazy. I don’t even want to think about it.”
“Sare,” he said, stopping me with my hand already on the
wooden door latch. “I know you have no reason to believe this,
but this isn’t the way the world is supposed to be.”
I lifted the latch.
“Sarah,” he said again. His voice held disbelief, outrage even,
but he was trying to keep it in. “You’re the only one who can
fix it.”
I went out the door without answering.
N
The kitchen was deserted when I went inside. I was glad. There
was a chill inside me I felt I could never get rid of. I sat down on the bench by the fire, leaned back, closed my eyes, and let the
heat soak through my skin.
How could I ever make Jackson understand? He thought I
could make things better, but I was afraid that if there actually
o147
was
a way for me to change time again, I would make things so much worse.
Besides which, I didn’t think I’d made that much difference. I
saved Maggie; my family was happier. End of story. How did he
think I could go back and prevent the accident that killed his
parents?
“May I offer you a cup of coffee?” A woman’s voice, not one
I knew.
The house again. I kept my eyes squeezed shut.
Go away
, I
thought.
Leave me alone.
“Thank you, missus,” a man with a New English accent
answered.
I groaned and opened my eyes.
The light had changed again — become the yellow ochre of
an autumn dusk. Fiona set a cup and saucer on the table before a
small man with an oversize mustache, dressed in a brown plaid
jacket and trousers.
She poured him a full cup, then nudged a sugar pot and
creamer closer to him as she sat. “Tell me,” she said.
The man opened a notebook on the table and referred to it.
“The name of the child’s uncle was Josiah Burnes. A black sea-
man living in the township of Acushnet outside of New Bedford.
He owned a small house there up until the year 1877. The
records show an Amber Burnes was enrolled in the school there
from 1874 until 1876.” The man handed Fiona a loose page from
his notes. “Josiah Burnes is listed deceased, lost with all hands on the
Charles R. Morse
on January 14,1877. His house was taken by the bank. Had a hard time tracking the girl after that.”
Fiona nodded at him to continue. He smoothed the halves of
his mustache, warming to his subject. “Spent considerable time
combing the area, checking every orphanage, but most of ’em
didn’t take black children. Some places were long gone, so I was
fearful the trail might have gone cold. Went as far as Providence,
148 O
but they told me the child would have been kept in state. Finally
found her again all the way up in Boston — Sisters of Charity
school and orphanage. One Amber Burnes listed resident there
until 1880.”
“Poor child,” Fiona murmured. “My grandmother never could
learn what became of her. Better for Amber if the uncle had left
her here.”
“Don’t know how she spent the next four years, but in 1884
she married one Peter Cooke, giving birth to two children in
three years, Peter Nathan Jr. and Della Maeve.”
“Named for both of her mothers.” She teared up slightly. “Go
on,” she said.
“Death certificate for Amber Cooke dated 1889, sepsis related
to childbirth. Death certificate for Peter Cooke dated 1897, fac-
tory accident. The younger Peter was old enough to find
employment and kept his sister with him until her marriage in
1904. Peter died childless in 1923. Located one Della Cooke
Martin in Stoughton, employed as a factory worker, mother of
two.” He looked up at Fiona expectantly.
“You did well, Mr. Farnham, thank you. The daughter’s name
confirms your findings.” Her voice was low, strained.
“You want to go forward with the trust for the grandchil-
dren?” Fiona nodded. “You still wish to remain anonymous?”
She nodded again. “I’ll have the lawyer send the papers, then.”
He rose to leave. She looked up at him, a puzzled look on her
face. “And there was nothing else? Nothing strange? Nothing
worthy of remark?”
He lifted his eyebrows. “No, missus. They seemed like very
ordinary lives and deaths.”
She nodded, looking down. “Poor child,” she said. I saw two
wet drops hit the table.
Then the swinging door to the hall opened and she was gone.
o149
Sam stood in the doorway looking outraged. He held the
Advent calendar, all its little windows gaping.
“This isn’t right, Sarah,” he said. “There aren’t enough doors.”
“Yes, Sam,” I said. “You open the last door today, Christmas
Eve, because tomorrow’s the big day.”
He was almost shouting. “Nope! It’s not! You know, don’t
you? Tomorrow’s not the big day!”
“Yeah, bud, tomorrow’s Christmas.”
“That’s not it!” he shouted and hurled the calendar to the
floor. Then he ran back out the door.
CH A P T ER SI X T EE N
K
Even though the Hathaways’ estate was Amber House’s direct
neighbor — the boundary marked by a twisting rivulet that
bent and coiled down a cleft between the properties — we
drove to dinner. The distance in crow-flight terms was less than
a quarter mile, but evidently the inhabitants of the two estates
had never been friendly enough to install a gate between them.
Their house was a three-story redbrick Georgian trimmed in
black, with a columned entry and stretches of balconied porch
along its two-story, mirror-image wings. It was all very sym-
metrical and correct-looking, unlike the silhouette of Amber
House. Every window in the main house glowed golden in the
darkness, a lit candle centered in the bottom of each.
“Be good, kiddo,” Mom reminded Sammy. “Remember what
I told you about eating what’s on your plate. And always say —”
“Please and thank you,” Sammy recited dutifully. “Tell
Sarah too.”
Mom was clutching a bottle of wine with a wax seal. My
gramma hadn’t been a big drinker, but she owned a somewhat
legendary collection of wines. Dad handed me the gift-wrapped
package for Claire that Mom and I had bought in Annapolis.
Sammy was assigned to carry the family gift — chocolates
imported from a province of New England that was now home
to significant numbers of the last century’s Swiss immigrants.
Dad got the rest.
Robert ushered us in. “Welcome, welcome,” he was saying.
o151
Claire stood in the entry, her slender frame poured into the
sleek lines of a pair of black wool pants with matching tuxedo
jacket, a loosely knotted black silk tie dangling above the plung-
ing neckline of a white blouse. I gritted my teeth in envy. I was
in a dress and tights.
Like Claire, the house mixed classic lines with modern,
underplayed drama. The furniture was all antique, and vaguely
European, in impeccable, never-been-touched condition. Lots of
dark wood. The backdrop for all this polished perfection, the space
itself, was
crisp
in a way that Amber House wasn’t — recessed lighting, a palette of pale gray and faint beige and soft white.
“I love what you’ve done with the place,” Mom announced.