Read Amber House: Neverwas Online
Authors: Larkin Reed Tucker Reed Kelly Moore
people perceive your situation or maybe how they see you. A
person who is surprising, exciting, consistent, and faithful.”
“The last card — the most likely future outcome of your
issue.” She flipped it. I looked at it, strangely unsurprised. A
skeleton rode a pale horse across a night landscape scattered with
bodies.
Death
.
The woman hurried to reassure me. “This is actually —”
I interrupted her, speaking in a flat voice. “— a good card
that means the end of an old way of life and the beginning of a
new way of life.”
“Yes,” she said, surprised. “How did you know that?”
“I was wrong. I did have my cards told once before.”
The first
time I turned sixteen.
“Thank you,” I managed. “I have to go.”
N
The library was nearly as warm as the fortune-teller’s shop,
I supposed because the thermostat was under the control of
the elderly librarian. But I wasn’t going to stay long. I found the
alcove that housed the card catalogue. I started in the Ma-Mom
drawer, looking for “Metropolitan,” but was redirected to the
224 O
Mon-Mu drawer for “Museum, Metropolitan.” I flipped through
the cards, searching for something on the museum’s design.
Growing discomfort between my shoulder blades interrupted
me — it felt as if I were being watched. I turned, but saw no
one’s eyes on me. I went back to the cards, still uncomfortable,
grateful when I found a reference to a multivolume set on New
English architecture that promised four pages of photos of the
museum, along with a simple floor plan.
I followed the Dewey decimal number deep into the stacks,
into the silence invoked by muffling walls of books. A neon light
overhead made humming and cracking noises as it decided
whether to stay lit or become permanently burnt out. I ran my
eyes along the book spines, bending over to make out their let-
ters and numbers in the failing light.
I heard — something. And smelled some trace of vanilla,
maybe. I peered through the gaps below shelves to check other
aisles, front and back. I scanned the books faster, looking for a
matching four-book set. Finding it. Pulling out the heavy vol-
ume and starting back, darting into the main aisle where the
rustles and murmurs of other patrons reached me once again. I
felt ridiculous for my attack of nerves.
I begged paper and a pencil from the librarian, and settled at
a table. Opened the book to the Metropolitan floor plan.
Laboriously I worked to re-create its lines to offer to Jackson as
a reference. I hadn’t inherited my mother’s artistic abilities, but
the schema wasn’t too bad. It gave a general idea where the main
rooms and halls were.
That smell. Not vanilla, but something close, mixed with cit-
rus and herbs.
“You are interested in architecture, Miss Parsons?”
I jumped.
Bay rum
, The smell was bay rum and smoke. Karl
Jaeger walked around the table into my view. “May I see?”
he asked.
o225
I looked up into his blue eyes and rudely flipped my drawing
facedown. “Sorry,” I said. “Not much of an artist.”
He smiled. As usual. He leaned to see the original in the
book. I closed it. His smile widened to show teeth. All perfectly
white and even. A phrase — so familiar I could practically taste
it — got stuck to the tip of my tongue. “Evidently you don’t
think the architect was much of an artist either. Fortunately for
Mr. Hunt of the Metropolitan Museum, the rest of the world
does not agree.”
I found his interest distinctly unpleasant. As he intended, no
doubt. “My little brother doesn’t get to go to the Amber House
exhibit. He wanted to know what the museum looked like.”
“Such a solicitous older sister,” he said, tipping his head. He
looked a little puzzled. “It was strange. When I met you in
Amber House, you seemed almost to have an aura around you, a
strong vibrational energy. I have been trained,” he said, “to
observe people closely.”
Trained to observe?
“What’s your job?”
He smilingly wagged his finger at me, as though I was making
an improper suggestion. “Attaché,” he said. “Embassy staff. It is
even printed on my cards.”
I hated him.
“At any rate, now I can see in the bright daylight of this
fine Confederate library, you are a very ordinary girl after all.
Aren’t you?”
I stood, picked up my book and paper, coat, and bag, and
shoved my chair back in place. I looked him in the eyes. “A
very
ordinary girl,” I said, adding as I walked away, “who doesn’t like
Nazis.”
I marched swiftly toward the main entrance, his laughter
echoing after me.
N
226 O
Out on the street, I wanted to be —
home
. I felt, suddenly, exposed and alone. The thought swam forward:
What was he
doing here?
Then another thought, wilder and more suspicious than the first:
Is he following me?
After the heat of the library, the cold had more bite. I quick-
ened my steps, to warm myself and to shake the feeling I was
being pursued. I was nearly jogging when I reached the park at
the edge of town. I made myself slow as I wound through the
naked trees, taking care not to stray from the path that ended
just across the road from Amber House.
A black Mercedes idled on the road’s shoulder in front of the
estate.
I jogged across the road, well east of the car, heading for the
small gate, but Jaeger stepped out of the trees, much closer than
his car. I stopped in my tracks, standing in the center of the road
like a startled deer.
He said nothing. He was a silent presence, tall and wide,
wrapped in a heavy black coat trimmed in silver. My scarf dan-
gled from the hand he held out toward me. His other hand was
hidden in his coat pocket.
He spoke finally. “I found it left behind, beneath your chair.”
I took two small steps forward, but could not make myself go
farther.
“How interesting,” Jaeger said. “Here in the shadows of
Amber House, I can see my first impression of you was the cor-
rect one. There is something quite special about you after all.
Your energetic emanations are quite vivid.” He cocked his head.
“But perhaps, I just see more clearly here. What do you think,
Ms. Parsons?”
All the while he held my scarf out, daring me to come closer.
But I didn’t budge.
“Did you know,” he continued, “that I made an offer in gold to
your mother for the property? She was insulted.” He smiled.
o227
“But she should have taken the offer, because sooner or later I
will have that house, and my price will only go down from here.”
He was still smiling as he started toward me, his footsteps
falling swiftly and silently on the frozen ground. And the phrase
I could not bring to mind in the library finally surfaced. I
thought, suddenly, wildly:
What big teeth you have.
The sound of a gun cocking made him stop short.
A voice spoke from my right. “My dad was in London when
the Nazis reduced it to rubble.”
Jackson
. “I don’t like Nazis very much.” I saw him, then, partially hidden behind a rock, with a
shotgun aimed squarely at Jaeger’s broad back. I could have
wept, I was so glad he was there.
Jaeger had turned at the sound. “If you know what’s good for
you, you will go now. What happened to your grandfather might
turn into a family tradition.”
“I’ve heard,” Jackson said coldly, “a shotgun blast leaves a
pretty big hole in a man. Shall we conduct a little experiment?”
Jaeger dropped my scarf in the road, walked stiffly to his car,
and opened the door. “Jackson Harris, is it not? I wish to get the
name correct in my report.”
“Two
R
s,” Jackson called to him.
“We will meet again,” the Nazi said, smiling before he disap-
peared behind the dark glass of the car.
Jackson trained the gun on the car’s windows as it pulled
away. It roared to the crest of the hill, then the hum of its
engine faded. He sagged down against the rock he’d been using
as a shield. I ran through the gate to kneel beside him. “You all
right?”
He gave a weary chuckle. “Surprising how exhausting it is
keeping the damn thing pointed at someone. It’s a big chunk of
metal.”
“That was incredible. You were incredible,” I said. “Where’d
you get that gun?”
228 O
“The barn. Was your grandfather’s.” I helped him to his feet.
He broke open the barrel and showed me. “It’s not even loaded.”
I just shook my head. “I believed you.”
He smiled. “Good thing
he
believed me.”
“What in the hell was he trying to do?” I said.
“He was trying —” Jackson started, then stopped. He put an
arm around my shoulder and started us walking back toward the
house. I thought to myself that the arm was partly support for
him, but partly support for me too. “I don’t want to scare you,
Sare. But he wanted to make you disappear. Whatever kind of
sense he has that makes him good at what he does, Amber House
makes it a whole lot stronger. When he looked at you, he saw a
threat to his Thousand-Year Reich. And he was right to see it.
Because you’re going to make
them
disappear.”
A mind-blowing thought.
Poof. No more Reich. Could it be
that easy?
“I still have no idea how we’re going to pull that off.” I stopped
walking and pulled my sketches of the museum out of my pocket
and unfolded them. “I had some thought these might help, but
they’re pretty pathetic.”
Jackson pulled a similar wad of paper from his pocket and
handed it to me. “We’ll match yours against mine and see how it
all stacks up.”
I opened his. Page after page of notes, some with times jotted
in the margins. Flecked with — “Blood,” I said. “You’ve been
forcing visions? No wonder you can’t stand up.”
“We need to know what to do.” He shrugged. He took the
pages back. “I’m not done yet.”
“Jackson —” I started. He tried to silence me with a look. I
wouldn’t be stopped. “
If
you need to do this again, I want to be there with you to try to help.”
He started to shake his head, but then said, “Fine. Maybe it
will help.”
o229
“
After
my parents leave,” I said.
“Sure.”
“Anything else we need to handle?”
“I need to get a train ticket to New York.”
“I’ll drive you into town — you’re not walking. You don’t
look like you’d make it.”
“Will I make it with you behind the wheel?” he teased.
We’d reached the house. My mom stuck her head out the
front door. “I’ve been looking for you, honey. Where did you
vanish to? I need your help. Come on in as quick as you can.” She
started to duck back inside but turned back to speak to Jackson.
“Is Rose getting over that bug?”
“Yes, Mrs. Parsons. She told me to thank you for the soup.”
“My pleasure. I know it wasn’t as good as she could make.”
“She enjoyed it very much. It was really nice of you.”
“No problem. You tell her we miss her, all right?”
“Sure will, Mrs. Parsons.”
I watched my mother disappear, then turned back to
Jackson. “Bug?”
He shook his head a little. “She didn’t want them to know. She
didn’t want your mother fussing over her. Don’t tell her or your
father, Or Maggie or Sammy either.”
“She’s going to need help, J.”
“No, she’s not.” He stopped me when I started to answer:
“Come Saturday, we going to fix time, and then she won’t need
any help.”
He sounded so confident. “Did you see us do it? Succeed?”
He thought about his answer. He looked into my eyes. “You
know I wouldn’t, couldn’t, lie to you, Sarah. I’ve seen it go a lot
of different ways. There are a lot of things that can go wrong.
But — I
have
seen us succeed. We just can’t quit. Neither of us.
We have to see it through to the very end.”
Like his father
, I thought.
Clear the nest.
230 O
We agreed to meet again at five o’clock, near the front gate,
to go buy Jackson that ticket to New York.
It was really happening. We were going to break into the
Metropolitan Museum to steal a two-thousand-year-old coin so
we could — what?
Save the world.
CH A P T ER TW E N T Y-FOU R
K
At 4:57 p.m., I slipped out the front door, quietly lifting the car
keys from the tray on the table as I went.
Not quietly enough.
“Hey, hey,” my mom called after me. “Where are you going
with those?”
“I asked Dad,” I said, closing the door before she could squeeze
off another question.
Jackson was waiting just out of sight at the driveway entrance.
I pulled over and he climbed in.
“You didn’t tell me what you saw,” I said as we drove off. “All
those notes.”
“I want to get it all worked out first.”
“They looked pretty detailed.”
“I’ve got pieces of it — I’ve got
most
of it. We’ll have to memorize it all, right down to the minute. I’m going to be responsible