Read Amber House: Neverwas Online
Authors: Larkin Reed Tucker Reed Kelly Moore
marble steps and crowning domes. Four of these structures
flanked a long central park of grass and trees and fountains.
Richard acted as tour guide.
“The congressional building is on the west side. On the south,
the president’s mansion. The east, the Supreme Court, and the
north, a monument to the heroes of the Confederation.”
John deposited us at the bottom of a lengthy flight of stone
steps. At the top, Richard was greeted politely by the guards. He
led me to his father’s office, a suite of rooms filled with mahog-
any desks and leather chairs, brass lamps and oil paintings. A
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pretty raven-haired secretary bubbled over to offer us coffee
or tea.
“The tape been delivered yet, Stacey?” Richard asked.
She blinked. “Didn’t somebody tell you? President Stevenson
has that waiting for you across the street.”
Richard kind of startled at that. “God. I had no idea.”
“What’s going on?” I asked.
“The president is expecting us,” Richard said.
N
We were escorted to President Stevenson’s mansion — a white-
washed brick building in the Greek Revival style. We didn’t use
the front door; a guard led us around to a businesslike side
entrance. A man in a charcoal suit and yellow tie came out of
nowhere and rushed forward to shake Richard’s hand. “Right
this way.”
Thick blue carpeting ran down the length of a wide hall
flanked with what might have once been bedrooms but now
were busy offices. People looked up from their work as we were
ushered past. Most of them sat in front of TV screens attached by
snaking cables to banks of metal cabinets punctuated with wink-
ing lights. Computers. Of course the president would have the
latest technology.
Up an elevator, down another carpeted hall, closing in on the
“executive residence,” as the charcoal-suited man explained.
Our pace was brisk, but I took in as much as I could, peering up
stairwells, down bisecting corridors. The complex was massive,
palatial, with arched doorways, elaborate woodwork, and panel-
ing on the walls. All of it was painted butter yellow, or sky blue,
or mint green. I wondered if Claire Hathaway would “revise” the
color scheme when she became first lady.
o185
Our guide led us to a sitting room. Its windows overlooked
the central park of the governmental buildings. From here, in
wintertime, it all looked unpalatably gray.
“He should be ready for you shortly,” the man said.
A crowd stood outside the iron fence at the end of the sweep-
ing lawn. They waved signs and chanted. Many of them wore
red armbands marked with a black figure.
Swastikas.
“Who are they?” I asked Richard.
A hoarse voice answered me: “A small but growing part
of my constituency, I’m afraid. Fools looking for a ‘stronger’
government.”
I turned. President Stevenson was making his way over to the
window, leaning heavily on a cane. I hardly recognized him from
the photos I had seen — he had the same lion’s mane of white
hair, the same shrewd eyes, but his face was older, drawn, lined,
weary. He snorted his disgust at the demonstrators. “Lunatics.
More and more of ’em every day.”
He held out a gnarled hand to Richard, who stepped forward
to take it. “Richard, is it?” the president said.
“Yes, sir.”
He smiled, but it didn’t reach his eyes. “The young prince in
line for the throne. Your father’s smart to be training you.” He
regarded me. “Who’s this?”
“My neighbor, actually, Mr. President,” Richard said. He ges-
tured ever so slightly with his head for me to step forward. I
honestly didn’t know what was expected — was I supposed to
curtsy or something? I stuck out my hand.
“Sarah Parsons, Mr. President.”
The man in the charcoal suit seemed to materialize from
nowhere, stepping forward to whisper in the president’s ear.
“Ah. The heiress of Amber House,” Stevenson said, taking my
hand in his. “Suitable,” he commented.
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For what?
I wondered as he released me. Fixed with the weight of Stevenson’s stare, I found myself wishing I hadn’t come.
Richard broke the silence: “On my father’s behalf, I’d like to
thank you, sir —”
“Your father’s a smart man.” Stevenson put an empty hand out
to Charcoal Suit, who swiftly filled it with a small film canister.
“Don’t much like his politics. Never did. But he’s the right man
for the job in front of us.”
He held the canister out to Richard, who stepped forward to
take it. “Thank you, President Stevenson.”
Stevenson didn’t release his hold on the canister, pinning
Richard in place. “Don’t thank me, boy. I’m not sure I’m doing
your father any favor. Just tell him he has to act fast. Time’s run-
ning out. I’m too old and set in my ways to do it myself.”
“To do what, sir?” Richard asked.
The president let go of the film reel and looked at Richard as
if he hadn’t been paying attention to the obvious. “Prevent a
world war, of course.” He turned and started back out of the
room, done with us. I heard him mutter, “Time for a change.”
Charcoal Suit led us back out. He also had a message for
Richard to give to Senator Hathaway. “Your father should be
careful. Jewish Intelligence says the Reich isn’t happy with him,
and our own agency agrees. They’ll stop him if they can.”
N
John was waiting with the car just outside the side gate. He held
open a briefcase when Richard reached him, and Richard put
the movie reel in it. Then John locked the case and put it in the
trunk of the car.
We climbed in. Richard was quiet. After a moment, he shiv-
ered involuntarily. “Creepy old man. Did you feel the power
radiating off him?”
o187
Maybe I had. “Do you think he’s right?” I asked. “Do you
think there’ll be a war?”
“Stevenson’s nearing eighty. He’s going senile.”
“What a comforting thought. Dotty old man running a
country.”
Richard shrugged, almost shaking off his glum mood. “Well,
you heard what he said, didn’t you? ‘Time for a change.’ At least
he knows it’s time for him to step aside.”
I wanted to ask Richard whether he thought his father could
handle the responsibility. Whether he could really do what
Stevenson hoped he could.
Change the world.
CH A P T ER TW E N T Y
K
Richard had a couple of things to pick up, so we swung by the
Hathaways’ capital residence, in a nearby neighborhood of digni-
fied homes looming over manicured lawns. “This won’t take
long,” he said. “You can wait in the car if you like.”
And miss the chance to see the inside of that house? My curi-
osity must have shown on my face.
“Come in,” he laughed, as he climbed out of the limo. “Look
around.”
While Richard hurried upstairs to fetch a pair of “lucky” cuff
links his father wanted to wear when he announced his candi-
dacy, I wandered into the living room. Claire’s telltale minimalist
aesthetic was present yet again. That soothing palette of neu-
trals. My eye was drawn to a wall of framed black-and-white
photos. A swathed baby in a bassinet; a pearly toothed toddler
being pushed in a swing. The same towheaded boy building
sand castles on the beach, running through fall leaves, put-
ting the finishing touches on a snowman. In many of them, a
blond woman stood off to one side, watching fondly — Claire
Hathaway admiring her perfect son.
But in that other time, she left him. Why was it different? What had
Fiona wanted me to see in baby Amber’s eyes?
“Um.” Richard had appeared in the doorway, just in time to
notice my path forward to get a closer look.
“You were a pretty cute kid,” I said.
He smiled at that. That winning hybrid of Claire’s tilted smile
and Robert’s square grin.
o189
He took me to a charming French bistro for a late lunch. The
food was fabulous — Richmond had an enclave of French refu-
gees who’d fled Europe in the forties and fifties, but had not
wanted to join their compatriots in the French nation west of the
Mississippi River.
We drove back through the capital’s center on our way out of
town. Richard must have noticed the longing on my face as we
passed the Jackson Memorial, because he asked John to stop.
We climbed the smooth steps slowly. The spot was nearly
deserted now, so late in the day. A chill wind blew in from the
west, buffeting me from behind, sending my skirt dancing
around my knees. Inside the monument, the wind rose to an
audible sigh, whipping through the open spaces around the stone
columns. The high pitch of it seemed to catch in my ears as I
focused on the pale, carved seated statue before me.
It was — all wrong, somehow.
The blind eyes gazing out through the columns to the future
of the country he helped to build. The gentle craggy face, slashed
by a long scar. The beloved first president of the ACS, Andrew
Jackson. Behind him, etched in the marble walls, a roll call
of the Confederation’s cherished fallen, the soldiers who died in
the brief, successful revolution against England in 1833.
I thought,
Someone else should be sitting in that marble seat.
N
John secured the briefcase in the Messerschmitt, then we pow-
ered up and taxied to the runway. “I want you to keep your eyes
open as we lift off, coz. I special-ordered this sunset for you.”
We took off and flew west-northwest into a pink-orange sky
darkening to purple. Richard acted as tour guide. “That’s
Charlottesville down there on the left. Several of the most
important leaders of the colonial revolt came from there. The
190 O
guy who wrote the document that they sent to King George —
he lived a little to the southeast of the town. His estate is still
standing, although it was confiscated by the Crown. He called it
something like Montevideo or —”
“Monticello,” I murmured.
“Yeah, that’s right. You’ve heard of him, then.”
No, I hadn’t. I hadn’t ever heard any of this. Had I?
“It’s really a neat place. Beautiful architecture. We should go
see it sometime.”
“Sure,” I agreed.
“Outside of the colony of Massachusetts, Virginia had the
greatest number of insurrectionists, most of them really wealthy
landowners. And most of them probably related in one way or
another to your ancestors.”
He banked north. Ahead, the land was split by a wide river
that bled, shining, into the Chesapeake — the Potomac. We
were nearing home.
“Another one of the old estates, maybe even bigger than
Amber House, off to the left there, near Alexandria. It’s still
standing because the property actually belonged to the wife.
Her second husband — I forget his name — was one of the reb-
els wiped out by Loyalist agents in the 1770s, at the beginning
of the insurrection. The house was called —” He thought a
moment. “Mount something.”
“Vernon.” It swam forward, unbidden and unuttered. In Sarah
One’s time, the owner hadn’t been some failed rebel officer. He
had been called the father of a country — a country that would
never be.
Near Annapolis, Richard stopped chatting to focus on his
landing. I was grateful for the silence. It had become impossible
for me to follow his conversation. I was hunting — searching
the spaces inside me for traces of another world, another time
that — what? Never was? I was gathering embers that I piled
o191
one next to the other in the hope their heat would build until my
mind was filled with it, until it was a roaring flame that would
light every corner.
I hardly noticed Richard’s landing. The wind was harsher
here, farther north, sweeping in off the Chesapeake after its
race across leagues of cold, gray ocean. When I opened the pas-
senger door, my hair rose like snakes, whipping at my nose and
eyes and ears. The door was yanked from my hold, slam-
ming shut.
Richard put an arm around my shoulders and hurried me to
the car, helping me in, closing the door, stilling the wind that
blew outside. He climbed into the driver’s seat. Ever so gently,
the tips of his fingers swept the wild pieces of my hair back
behind my ear. And lingered on my neck.
“You all right?”
“I don’t think so, Hathaway. I have to get back to Amber
House. I have to get home.”
He was stung, but there were ashes and embers of another
Richard inside me too. I couldn’t deal with seeing the shadow
of Richard-past in the Richard who was watching me with such
concern. I needed to go back.
N
The closer I drew to Amber House, the worse the double-image
chaos in my head became. Bright, hot images from the dead past
casting light perversely on all the things of now that hadn’t been
before. I remembered ripped jeans and a palm-sized phone and a
black president of the American nation. Not corseted dresses.
Not a dying Rose. Not a segregated movie theater. Computers