Read Amber House: Neverwas Online
Authors: Larkin Reed Tucker Reed Kelly Moore
parents’ car, which was stopped just before the exit. The driver’s
door was open; I saw Sam’s head above the car hood just before
he disappeared. I started to run between the parked cars in the
lot, taking the shortest route to the exit, keeping low, trying to
avoid the sheriff’s notice. I got to the end of the last of the parked cars just before the sheriff did. Sam threw himself on the ground
in front of my parents’ car, his limbs splayed out like a broken
doll’s. Then Maggie started screaming.
The sheriff stopped of course. “What in hell?” he said as he
heaved himself up out of the car.
Maggie was babbling, shrieking, about the little boy shooting
out from nowhere, dashing in front of her car, so she couldn’t
stop, it wasn’t her fault. “Is he dead? Is he dead?” she screamed.
248 O
Jackson leaned forward to look at me through the window
and gestured with his head —
Come
.
Oh!
Crouched over, I dashed to the sheriff’s car, but someone else
beat me there. A young black woman wearing a yellow scarf.
“Get the keys,” she hissed as she opened the rear door and helped
Jackson up and out.
I snatched the keys from the ignition and snagged the strap of
Jackson’s pack, still keeping low, watching the sheriff and my
aunt. I’d just heard Maggie exclaim, “I don’t know what in the
Sam hill
he was doing,” when Sammy leapt up and started sprinting down the sidewalk. I realized his name must have been a
signal.
“Come back here, boy! Come back here!” The sheriff started
after Sam as Maggie whirled around to climb back into her car,
and the young woman, Jackson, and I ducked down between a
row of parked cars.
“Give me the keys,” the woman ordered, then quickly sorted
through them to find a little silver one she used on Jackson’s
cuffs. I heard Maggie’s car squeal away. I heard the sheriff yell-
ing, “Stop, dammit! You come back here.”
Jackson said to me, “When I tell you, run like hell for the
tracks to the right of the station and don’t stop for anything.” I
saw his nose was bleeding. “Thank you,” he told the woman,
clasping her hand. Then he took my elbow and started moving.
“Run!” he said. And I did.
Behind me I heard the sheriff’s voice. “Stop those two! Stop
’em.” A couple men near the station entrance looked up and
started running to try to cut us off. I could hear the sheriff’s
heavy footfalls pounding after us, gaining ground. I wondered
hysterically if he would shoot.
We reached the tracks. My train was gone. I could see its
caboose just disappearing far down the track. Where were we
o249
supposed to go? A freight train was charging in from the oppo-
site direction, hardly slowing. Jackson grabbed my hand, pulling.
“Faster!” he said.
The men were behind us, all three of them, putting on speed,
sprinting to catch us.
I understood then what Jackson meant to do. Put that freight
train between us and our pursuit. It was almost on us, a wall of
moving noise. Its engineer had spotted the two mad teenagers
trying to outrace his locomotive and started yanking on the
whistle. Its shriek went on and on. “No, no,” I sobbed, but did
not slow. I had to look to leap the rails and keep my footing — I
couldn’t watch the train, but I could feel it coming. Noise and
heat and thunder in the ground. I jumped another rail, singing
with vibrations.
Oh, God, oh, God, oh God
, my brain whimpered as I struggled to gain footing on the gravel between the ties.
Jackson yanked my hand hard, pulling me up, over the last rail.
The train’s wake of wind blew my hair high as we staggered to
stay on our feet on the other side.
All I wanted was to sag to the ground, but Jackson was still
pulling. “
Keep going!
”
Ahead of us, another freight train was beginning to move, to
build up speed, going in the same northerly direction as our
missed train to New York. An open door to an empty car went
past before me; Jackson tugged us right, toward that door.
“Oh, no,” I moaned. I had a stitch in my side, I was sobbing for
breath, and the floor of the freight car had to be at least chest
height. I would never be able to get inside.
We pulled level with the open door. Jackson heaved his pack
in. He shouted to me, “I’ll get in and pull you up. Keep up with
me. Don’t stop.”
“Yes,” I gasped, watching the ground, trying to run on the
thick wooden ties. Jackson jumped, grabbed a metal handhold,
and pulled himself up out of sight.
250 O
“Take my hand!” he called to me. I raised my arm in the air,
reaching blindly, afraid to take my eyes from my footing. “Look!”
he commanded.
I lifted my eyes and swung my arm toward his. My toe hit the
edge of a tie. I started to go down.
But he caught my wrist and held it fast as he pushed himself
upright, pulling me into the air. My feet found the floor of the
boxcar. I straightened up into his arm, holding me steady, hold-
ing me safe.
“Oh, my God,” I sobbed, “I can’t do this. I want to go home.
I just am not strong enough or brave enough or
anything
enough for this.”
“Stop it!” he said. He held me out so he could look me in the
eye. He shook me a little. His voice was harsh and unrelenting.
“Too many people have suffered because of what happened —”
Because of what I did.
“And more people are going to suffer before this is done.”
No. Please, no.
“You can do this, Sare. You can make it to the end. You have
to promise me that you won’t give up, no matter what, or all that
suffering will be for nothing.”
I squeezed my eyes shut. The tarot card —
the nine of Wands:
“Finish what has been started.
”
I nodded my head. “I promise.”
N
Jackson did what he could to make us comfortable, closing the
sidings, pulling a couple sweaters from his pack for us to sit on.
Even with the doors closed, it was still freezing. We braced our-
selves next to each other against the rear wall, the sweaters
beneath us, our packs wedged on either side, my coat over our
legs, his wrapped around us and tucked up under our chins. The
o251
light in the boxcar had been reduced to dusk, with random
beams falling through chinks in the walls.
“It isn’t all going to be like that, is it?” I asked.
He shook his head. “I didn’t bother to see us leaving from the
train station. I had no idea we’d have a problem. Wonder why
we did.”
“The sheriff had a swastika. Just like that creep when we went
to get your ticket. Maybe they were connected to Jaeger?”
“Maybe. But they didn’t stop us. We can still make this work.”
He put his arm around my shoulder to keep me a little warmer.
“You were pretty impressive back there, Sare.”
“I was scared out of mind back there, J,” I said. I didn’t want
to think about it. “You have any idea where we’re headed?”
He shook his head. “The tracks branch in four different direc-
tions a little north of here. One line toward New York, two into
Pennsylvania, and one west. No way of knowing till we get there.”
I remembered something. I fished Maggie’s silk purse out of
my pack, peeked inside, and pulled out one of Sam’s Christmas
gifts. I held it out on my palm: a little functional plastic compass.
“Think this’ll help?”
“That ought to. If I know which way we’re headed, I can fig-
ure out how and where to catch the train back to New York in
the morning.”
“ ‘In the morning’? Great. My parents are going to be
hysterical.”
“We’ll figure out something you can tell them before we get
there.”
“I’ll be seventy-two before they let me travel by myself again.”
“Day after tomorrow, they won’t remember a thing about it,”
he said. A true believer.
The rocking of the train combined with the exhaustion of the
day to fill my mind with a craving for oblivion. My head found
Jackson’s shoulder. I slept there until he spoke my name.
252 O
“What?” I said, jerking upright.
“You were having a bad dream.”
“Where are we?”
“Pretty much at the end of the line.”
“We coming to a station?”
“Nope. We hit a long climb. We’ve slowed way down. We’re
hopping off.”
“We’re hopping off a moving train?” I said, panicked again.
“You can do it,” he said, and I heard the smile in his voice. “It’s
a lot easier than hopping on.”
He yanked open the side door. Frigid air spilled in. I put my
coat on, slung my pack over my shoulder, and forced myself to
walk to the edge of the car. The moon was down to a slim cres-
cent, but it cast enough light to show that the train was running
along a narrow ribbon of leveled ground that fell away sharply.
“No way,” I said.
Jackson came up next to me, zipping up his backpack. “I’ll get
out, you toss this down to me, and then you jump. I’ll catch you.
It will be all right.” In an easy movement, he crouched, planted
his hand, and disappeared over the edge. His head popped up
after a couple seconds as he jogged beside the door.
“The pack,” he said. I tossed it to him and he transferred it to
the ground. “Now you,” he said, but I couldn’t make myself. “Sit
on the edge,” he directed. “Then just push off. I’ll catch you. I
promise.” Still I hesitated. “Got to hurry, Sare. This thing is
going uphill and I am running out of steam.”
I sat. I braced my hands. I pushed off.
He caught me and held me as my feet slid in the gravel at the
edge of the slope.
“What do we do now?”
Clouds threatened to extinguish what little light we had from
the moon. The air was substantially below freezing, and a light
snow dusted the ground, with more drifting down lazily.
o253
“We’re walking back down the tracks about a half mile.”
We set off between the rails, his arm linked through mine to
keep me steady. He took up his pack as we passed it.
It grew steadily darker. A sharp wind blew up the gap the
tracks made in the trees on either side, burning my cheeks with
cold. I had no idea where we could be headed. Aside from the
moon and the wind, there was not a hint of light or sound any-
where around. We walked between the two rails, keeping
centered by the dull gleam of moonlight on the metal. “This is
the way people get hit by trains, you know,” I fretted.
“Not to worry,” he said cheerfully. “We’re here.”
CH A P T ER TW E N T Y-SE V E N
K
Jackson directed me over the rail and down a slight embankment.
A small shack materialized from the darkness. “What is this?”
“A place for railroad workers. My sense is, it isn’t used much.”
He bent down, felt along the ground, then stood with a large
rock in his hand. He climbed the steps. I heard him hammer-
ing on something metallic, then the sound of metal sliding on
metal. “Come on,” he said. He pushed open the door and we
went in, out of the wind. He felt the wall beside the door for a
light switch.
“Wait a minute,” I said, slipping my pack off my shoulder. I
found Maggie’s black purse, opened it, and searched the insides
by touch. I fumbled for a second, then “Voilà,” a small blue flame
sprouted from the lighter in my hand.
“Oh, you’re good,” Jackson said. “Exactly what we needed
again. What are you — psychic or something?”
“As a matter of fact,” I said, “Sammy insisted I take this. The
compass too.”
“Huh,” Jackson said. “He’s an odd little guy, isn’t he? And I
mean that in the best possible way.”
I smiled and agreed, “He’s an odd little guy. But as far as I
know, not a fortune-teller either.”
“Just someone who believes in being prepared?”
“I guess,” I said.
We set to work trying to make ourselves comfortable. I
located and lit a lantern. Jackson pulled the drapes closed over
the single window. “Keep out some of the cold.”
o255
The room was maybe ten by ten, containing a table, four
chairs, a set of hanging shelves with some canned goods and a
stack of folded blankets, a Franklin stove, a bag of old news-
papers, and a pile of cordwood. A door in the back wall led to a
lean-to add-on that held a functioning toilet and sink.
“All the comforts of home,” I said.
Jackson chuckled. “If you live in a freezer.”
It was true I could see my breath. Pennsylvania was a lot
colder than Maryland, and outside air spilled in through gaps in
every surface. We went to work building a fire in the stove.
As the stove heated, it took the worst of the chill out of the
room, but it was still far from comfortable. Jackson pulled a
chair near the stove, shook out two of the blankets, and draped
one around me. He spent a few minutes stuffing some of the
worst cracks in the walls with newspaper. Then he poked
through the stuff on the shelves. “A few cans of food up here.
There must be a can opener too.”
My hand dove back into Maggie’s purse. Triumphantly, I held