Read Amber House: Neverwas Online
Authors: Larkin Reed Tucker Reed Kelly Moore
think twice before taking us all on.”
That was a lot of information I hadn’t considered before. And
it didn’t sound good. “Does Richard know all this?”
“I’m guessing he’s probably better informed than your typical
seventeen-year-old. Anyway, honey, now maybe you can under-
stand a little more why we thought it was so important to come
back to Amber House and do what we could to help get Robert
elected.”
Mom kind of slipped in between me and Dad then. “Enough
about politics!” she said cheerily. “And no talk of this at the din-
ner table in front of Sammy. Some things are too scary for a little
guy, especially one —”
Especially one who doesn’t think about the world the way most kids
do
, I finished mentally.
My dad pulled open one of the ovens. “Goose is about done,”
he reported. “Be on the table in about ten minutes. Can you
round up Sammy?” he asked me.
“Sure.”
My mother linked her arm through mine. “You’re going to
have fun in Richmond with Richard. Do you have any idea what
you’re going to wear?”
I mentally rolled my eyes. Yes, of course I did. I nodded and
pushed out the swinging door to the hall.
The way my parents thought about Robert Hathaway, I
could understand why they’d seemed to be pairing me up
with his son. They looked at Richard and saw an important
man in the making. But, Lord, I wished my mother would stop
pushing.
N
176 O
Cleanup from dinner was an hour-long ordeal, but when it was
done, I was glad to put Christmas behind me. Seemed like it had
been going on forever. I felt so much
older
than I had only a week before.
Up in the Flowered Room, I fussed over the clothes I would
wear to the city in the morning. Something that would travel
well — three hours in the car at least — but would look grown
up and ladylike.
I noticed I had left the little dollhouse partially open. I pulled
the front back and picked up my old pieces of poem.
If you have the chance to choose —
I threw the scraps in the trash.
A familiar tap sounded on the window. Jackson was out there,
standing in the cold, his breath puffing little clouds.
We had to finish our conversation. And I had to try to make
him understand — I was not, could not be, Pandora. I nodded
and pointed toward the conservatory.
N
He was waiting for me by the statue, sitting on the edge of the
pool. “I came to say I’m sorry,” he started. “I shouldn’t have
pushed at you that way. You can’t see what I see, so you couldn’t
possibly want to change things as much as I do.”
“What do you see?” I asked.
He shook his head. He wasn’t going to tell me. He reached
into his pocket and held something out for me. “I also owe you a
Christmas present, I believe.”
“I don’t think
owe
is the operative word,” I said, but I held out my hand.
He dropped a little bow-tied box onto my palm. I opened
the box and was — surprised — by what was inside. A military
o177
medal. I lifted it out of its nest of tissue to look at it closely. It was a British medal of valor.
“It was my dad’s,” he said. “He fought for the last colony
against the Japanese. Got it for charging a machine-gun nest
when his platoon got pinned down outside of Melbourne.
He took a bullet, but he cleared the nest. Whenever I’ve felt
too discouraged to go on, I say those words to myself: ‘Clear
the nest.’ ”
“I didn’t know your dad was British.”
“Yeah. His parents left England just before the end of the
Second European War. Then, when Australia fell, he got out and
went to New England. That’s where he met my mom.”
“You can’t give me this, Jackson.”
“I want you to have it.” He searched for words. “Sare, I know
something about you that you don’t seem to know about
yourself.”
“What?”
“You’re the bravest person I ever met. I’ve always thought so,
from the very first. I’ve never seen you back down from any
challenge or anything you thought was right, even if you were
scared out of your mind. So if you don’t want to” — his voice
dropped lower — “try to change things again, I have to respect
that. All right?”
My nose stung. He was too generous to me. He’d always been
that way. “Thanks,” I managed. “I’m sorry.”
He shook his head. “Maybe someday I’ll be brave enough to
tell you what I see.”
“I still can’t take this from you,” I said, holding it out on my
palm for him.
He curled my fingers around it. “It’s the only thing I have to
give you. And it’s the thing I want you to have.”
He smiled at me gently, then went back out into the night.
178 O
N
Someone is calling my name: “Sa-a-a-rah. Sa-a-a-a-rah!” I slip my feet
out from under the covers and jump down.
“Sarah,” the voice whispers. I run on tiptoes to follow. I see someone
run into the other hall.
The first door is partway open and I see Amber’s hand on it, disappearing inside. I go push the door open all the way.
The moon is so bright I can see everything. An old woman is sleeping
in the bed. She has white hair that spreads all over the pillow like spider
silk. She opens her eyes and looks at me.
“Who are you?” she asks.
“Sarah. Who are you?”
“Fee.” She pushes back the covers and gets up out of the bed, and
suddenly she is a little girl. Like me. She says, “Want to see something?
Come on.” I look back as we leave and see the old woman is still there,
sleeping.
We sneak down the stairs and go through a trapdoor in the kitchen
closet. Down again on secret stairs. Two women are there. A pretty black
woman lying on the bed and a tall white woman sitting beside her. I’ve
seen the two women before, that other time I went with Fee.
There is a little squirming bundle tucked into the nook of the black
woman’s arm. She seems very tired. She is having a hard time speaking.
“You’ll keep your promise.”
“I will,” the tall woman says. “If it comes to that, I will raise her and
love her as my own. But it won’t, Della. You are young and strong. This
won’t kill you.”
“It will,” she says dully. “I’ve seen it. No matter. You tell her . . . I was
willing to pay the price.”
The baby starts to fuss then, and the tall woman picks her up and
gently bounces her in the crook of her arm. “Shh, shh, shh,” she says.
Fee crooks her finger at me. “Come closer.”
o179
We creep up right next to the woman, but she doesn’t notice us. We’re
invisible girls. “Look at her eyes,” Fee says to me. “Do you see?” I stand on
tiptoes to look.
The tall woman says to the other, “What is her name?”
The black woman says, “Call her Amber.”
I am excited.
So this is Amber
, I think, looking right into her large
brown eyes. And then I see and feel that Amber is looking back into mine.
CH A P T ER NI N E T EE N
K
As I got dressed the next morning, my mind worried at my
dream.
Why had ancient Fiona wanted me to see the baby’s eyes?
She wanted me to see that Amber could see the future, like Nanga?
It would explain why Fiona thought Amber had been the one
responsible for making time go wrong.
When I was finished, I looked at myself in the full-length mir-
ror. I knew that the Sarah who’d used this mirror in the other
past would not approve of my outfit: a high-waisted plaid dress
with coordinating wool coat. Gloves. A beret. It was all too —
compliant
. That other Sarah was never compliant.
Which may be why, when Richard pulled up, got out, and
walked around the hood as I came down the steps, I quickened
my pace to beat him to the car door.
He smiled. “You really take all this equality business seri-
ously, don’t you, coz?”
“Yeah,” I said. “I guess I do,
coz
. Got a problem with that?”
He shook his head emphatically. “Not me.” He turned around
and went back to the driver’s door to climb in. He looked over.
“I think the dress just confused me a little. Forgot who I was
dealing with. You look nice, by the way.”
“Nice and girly,” I grumbled.
He laughed.
A memory tugged at me, playing out like a scene in my head.
Richard and I were sitting in a different idling car, and he
was apologizing: “I don’t know why I lied to you like that —
o181
it was stupid, okay? It’s just — I just didn’t want to have to say it out loud, you know? That she up and left us.”
Claire
, I realized. In that other time, she had left Robert and abandoned Richard. But this time around, she was a picture-perfect wife.
There was something more to the memory. That other
Richard — he’d leaned over, put his index finger beneath that
Sarah’s chin, and kissed her. Kissed me. I’d let the other Richard
Hathaway kiss me that night, and I’d liked it very much.
I wondered if I’d like it again.
This Richard Hathaway revved the engine. Then we shot out
of there like a bullet. “This car has no seat belts,” I said.
“Nope,” he said. He was still grinning.
We turned south across a bridge over the Severn, with
Richard going as fast as ever. “How far is it to Richmond?” I
asked.
“About two hundred miles.”
“How long will it take?”
He slowed, downshifting. “About thirty minutes.”
“Not even
you
are that fast,” I said.
He hung a right through a gate. When we cleared the trees, I
saw where we were.
“Yeah, Parsons, I’m that fast.”
A small airfield spread out before us, with a pretty little
Messerschmitt twin-engine plane on the tarmac, ready and
waiting.
He parked the car next to the hangar. A mechanic was there,
wiping his hands on a rag. “All gassed up, Mr. Hathaway.”
“Um.” I’d noticed something missing. Some
one
. “Where’s the
pilot?” I asked Richard.
“You’re looking at him.”
“Oh, no,” I said. “Nuh-uh. I’ve seen the way you drive.”
182 O
He laughed and opened the door on the right side. Then he
took my arm, guessing correctly that some physical encourage-
ment was going to be necessary to propel my body onto that
plane. “Been flying since I was twelve. Got my license when I
was fifteen. Whenever my dad and I go south, I’m the pilot.
Believe me, Dad would never trust his life to me if I weren’t
competent.”
I reminded myself that Richard Hathaway was more than
competent at everything he did. I forced myself to climb into
the seat.
Richard settled himself, turned the engine over, then started
flipping switches and checking gauges like he knew his busi-
ness. “Seat belt,” he directed, and snapped his closed. He pulled
a stick of gum from his pocket and started chewing with great
concentration.
“Wait a minute,” I said. “Shouldn’t we have parachutes or
something?”
“Suck it up, coz. Your fate is entirely in my hands.” He grinned
again, that wicked, crooked grin. “Enjoy the flight.”
He eased the throttle forward and the plane lurched into
motion. We taxied onto the runway, started to pick up speed.
Within seconds, the wheels had left the ground. “The most dan-
gerous parts of flying are takeoff and landing,” he told me.
“You’re already halfway there.”
I nodded my head toward the windshield. “Just pay attention,
all right?”
We flew due west before circling south. Flying was different
in this small plane — the ground was closer. I leaned my head to
one side and watched the country sliding in and out of view
below — the gentle hills, the rivers, the towns, the great estates
like Amber House.
Then the tops of the trees got closer and Richard was talking
into his headset. “Thank you, tower.” I saw a hangar and a lot of
o183
pavement coming up fast. I gripped the arms of my seat and
closed my eyes.
The wheels hit pavement with a little shrieking sound,
bounced and hit again. We bobbled into a steady roll. I could
hear Richard flipping switches, then the motor whined as he
throttled back.
“You can breathe now, Parsons. We’re here.”
I opened my eyes and realized I had indeed been holding my
breath. I exhaled as quietly as I could. “Nice landing,” I offered.
He laughed. “Next time, you’ll have to try to keep your eyes
open.” He taxied into a hangar and shut the engines down.
“Now for the really dangerous part of the trip,” he said, grin-
ning. He gestured over his shoulder with his head. “John is
driving us into Richmond.”
I looked and saw a black man in a chauffeur’s cap standing
next to a gleaming Mercedes limousine.
Again that charming smile. He swept his arm out grandly,
and said, “
Après vous
.”
N
We went straight into the center of the capital — massive stone
buildings with columns and Grecian pediments, huge flights of