Read Amber House: Neverwas Online
Authors: Larkin Reed Tucker Reed Kelly Moore
the rear of his waistband.
“You’re not going to set the bomb off while you’re standing
here,” Jackson said. “You don’t want to die.” He stepped in front
of me a little, partially shielding me from Jaeger, and spoke to
me without taking his eyes off the Nazi. His voice was hard and
cold. “You do what I tell you this time, Sarah.
Every
thing depends on it. You hear me?”
“Yes,” I whispered.
“Then RUN!”
As he said those words, he leapt on the Nazi. I ran. Behind me,
I heard the sounds of breaking glass, splintering wood. A gunshot.
The thud of a fist on flesh. The sound of feet pounding after me.
I couldn’t find the way out. The women of Amber House had me
in their grasp. The exhibit was a maze and I was trapped in it.
I looked up toward the ceiling to find a direction, to stop run-
ning in circles. I veered around this wall, around that, but kept
heading for the point in the glass web above me that I knew was
over the exit. And then there were the stairs, just ahead.
o287
“Leaving, Miss Parsons?” Jaeger was just behind me. He was
going to catch me. I made my feet go faster. I would have
screamed, but I had no breath for it.
Oh, God, oh, God
, my brain gibbered.
He is going to catch me
.
From the corner of my eye, I saw Jaeger go down as Jackson
tackled him again. I staggered up the steps, gasping, out of
breath. Behind me, Jackson and Jaeger were still struggling. I
looked back. Jaeger raised a hand, and a blade snicked into view.
He stabbed it into Jackson. I saw the crimson of blood spreading
all around the wound. The Nazi pulled his knife out and raised it
up to stab Jackson again.
“Stop!” I screamed.
Jaeger glanced up at me, and started laughing again. I stood
on the steps, gasping for breath, pointing Claire Hathaway’s gun
at him. I used both my thumbs to pull back the hammer.
“You are so amusing, my dear Miss Parsons. Your family has
such touching faith in its ridiculous heirlooms.” He got up and
started walking toward me, the bloodied knife in his hand.
I pulled the trigger. The gun leapt in my hands, gouting flame
and smoke, knocking me down.
And Jaeger staggered back, sinking to one knee, his hand
clapped to his shoulder. He brought his hand away to see; it was
covered with blood. His moan turned into a snarl as he shoved
back to his feet and started up the steps. A hole from an antique
iron ball was not enough to down the consummate Aryan spy.
But somehow, Jackson threw himself at the Nazi yet again.
“Run, Sarah,” he groaned, “now!”
I made my legs climb the stairs. Tears were clouding my vision
and I needed to see. I turned left and left again, away from the
entrance. I’d seen a case here earlier — a display of ancient
Japanese artifacts. I used the gun butt to smash the glass that
protected them, grabbed a short blade, and started back.
And was knocked against the wall by an explosion.
288 O
The hall filled with dark gray smoke. An alarm was blaring,
but I could hardly hear it over the dullness in my ears. I stumbled
back to the exhibit gate. All around me, metal paneling was clos-
ing over paintings and tapestries on the walls — fire protection.
I saw the entrance to the exhibit stairs just ahead of me. A grille
of metal bars was descending across it.
A man hurtled out beneath the dropping bars. Jaeger. He
turned back and spoke to Jackson. “I wish I had the time to kill
you slowly for that stunt, Mr. Harris — triggering my surprise
event prematurely. But perhaps none of the guests are as impor-
tant to eliminate as your little girlfriend. Yes? I promise you: I
will find her.” Then he ran off toward the entrance.
I dropped the blade. Pointless now. I reached the gate and
clung to the metal bars. At the foot of the stairs, Jackson was
struggling to rise. A large bloodstain spread across the front of
his shirt. He staggered up the steps to stand opposite me.
“What do I do? How do I get this open?”
He shook his head. “You don’t.” His voice was muffled by the
dullness of my ears, but still audible. “You have to hurry, Sare. If you don’t stick to the schedule, you’ll miss the train home. The
guards will be here soon. They’ll let me out. You have to get that
coin back to Amber House.”
“Are you crazy? I’m not
leaving
you here!”
“You’ve got to go or you won’t make it in time. I promise — I
will meet you back at Amber House.”
“No —
no
.” I was sobbing. I must have been sobbing all along, because I was gasping for air, tears spilling down my cheeks.
Jackson caught one with his fingertip, then traced his fingers down
my jaw and under my chin, gently angling my face to meet his gaze.
“Sarah, listen to me. You have to trust me now.”
“I do trust you. I do.”
“I know. Listen to me — you have to finish this, all right? See
it through to the end —”
o289
“Clear the nest,“ I said.
He smiled. Set his teeth, and nodded.
“You remember that page I asked you to memorize?”
“Yeah. Yes.”
“Good. That’s good. You have to focus, Sare. That’ll get you
home, if you do it just the way I wrote it. Here.” He tied his yel-
low handkerchief around my wrist. “Take this. It’ll help.”
“Jackson —”
“I told you, you have to hurry.”
This was all wrong. I could hardly focus — the alarm seemed
to knock the sense right out of my head. “I can’t.”
“You
can
. I believe in you.”
Jackson stepped close. His presence was like an anchor. A
silent, stable place in the middle of the chaos. One hand cupped
my chin — my head pressed into the feeling of his palm, its
smooth, cool certainty. His other hand traced down my arm and
behind my waist, pulling me nearer, as near as possible with the
bars between us.
I breathed him in. My breath became his breath. Strangely, I
felt my heart slow — almost as though it were working to match
the steady rhythm of Jackson’s own. Above him, and behind,
through the glass of the atrium ceiling, the sky blossomed
golden, silver, and gleaming red. Fireworks, heralding the begin-
ning of the year to come.
“I’ve seen this moment a long time,” he said.
His lips met mine. Gently — so gently — but also fiercely.
As if this belonged to him. As if he had waited for it. As if there
was nothing in the world but that kiss. It could have lasted for-
ever and it would have ended too soon.
My first kiss.
And then —
“Go,” he pleaded. And I finally obeyed.
CH A P T ER THI RT Y-ON E
K
As I stumbled toward the doors of the museum, I repeated the
litany of instructions Jackson had written another lifetime ago.
South exit. Follow dirt path. Stay off the sidewalk. Turn right up
hill before fountain. Cross at light. One block to the subway. 12:15.
I wondered what time it was now. How many minutes, how
many seconds were left?
I switched on my flashlight and pushed out the south exit. A
new alarm started to blare. There was a cement walkway, but it
led back to the front.
Where in God’s name is the
dirt
path?
I trotted up the walk, playing my flashlight over the ivy
and bushes that bordered the cement. There was nothing — I
couldn’t find the dirt path, there wasn’t any dirt path.
Suddenly, I realized I was standing in light. I had gone so far
forward, I was within the reach of the streetlamps.
“Sarah?!”
Claire Hathaway was standing on the museum steps, staring
at me, her mouth dropped slightly open. “Richard,” she said,
turning behind her, “I think she has my gun.” She looked back at
me. “That’s my gun.” She took two steps forward. “Why do you
have my gun?”
But my attention was diverted by someone running toward
me, someone tall and blond and dressed in black.
I turned and fled back up the cement walk, shoving the damn
gun butt-first into Maggie’s bag.
Where’s that path?
A few inches of brown cut through the ivy. I gathered up my skirt and plunged
through the branches, following that rivulet of brown. My
o291
slippers chattered down the dirt slicked with snowmelt turned
to ice. Every rock jabbed up through shoe soles made for parquet
dance floors. The bushes and trees grabbed at my clothes.
I heard Jaeger crashing through the bushes after me. I made
an easy target. Flame red, with a flashlight beam shining out in
front. I went faster.
The trees came to an end. Ahead I saw a plaza with a fountain.
Right, up the hill.
I was breathing hard, and the air was too cold to be sucking it
down in such big gasps. My throat hurt, my lungs hurt. But I
kept running.
See it through.
On the far side of the plaza, the hill rose sharply under a cover
of trees and bushes. I pushed into the thick of it and switched off
my light. I would shove up in the dark. I could see light from the
street ahead. It wasn’t that far.
Behind me, shoes were pummeling the pavement. The sound
stopped. He was looking around, listening. I kept going, tried to
go faster still.
A stone wall rose above me. The top was shoulder high.
Oh,
God
, I moaned in my head. I switched on my flashlight. More light hit me from below. He was climbing through the bushes after me.
I found what I was looking for. I scrabbled to the right, under
some low branches, placed a foot in the tree, grabbed higher,
and shoved myself up. With my skirts wadded in my arm with
the flashlight, I placed my other foot higher.
He spotlighted me then, an oversize cardinal perched in a
tree. He crashed through branches, hurling himself toward me.
I pulled myself up and pulled myself up until I put one foot on
top of the wall.
A hand caught my other ankle. Without stopping to think, I
kicked back toward the hand holding me. He lost his grip; my
heel collided with flesh. Branches cracked and snapped as Jaeger
fell back through them.
292 O
I pulled, shoved, dragged myself back up onto the wall and
dropped the few feet to the sidewalk. Then I was off and running
again.
The road was full of fabulously dressed gawkers watching the
flames above the Metropolitan. The circling lights of two fire
trucks threw garish flashing shadows on the buildings around
us. I reached the corner just as the traffic light turned yellow.
I ran out anyway. The light turned red. Cars lurched forward
even though they had no place to go — the firemen had filled
the road. I wove between bumpers. As I reached the other side,
I glanced back and saw Jaeger, sliding across a car’s hood, press-
ing forward, gaining on me.
For blocks, the traffic was at a standstill, with rerouted cars
jamming the roads. The sidewalks were equally full of people
running down to Fifth Avenue to see the fire. I felt like a salmon
hitting the falls as I pushed and shoved through an oncoming
river of humanity. I was limping, and my lungs were on fire.
A hand caught my elbow; I felt myself swung around. I saw a
glint of metal. I looked up into Jaeger’s eyes. I saw satisfaction there.
His free arm was slashing toward me when it was stopped by
two little bird claw hands belonging to a man so withered and
shriveled he might have been a hundred years old. “Kelev,” he
rasped, his eyes burning. “Rotseyekh! MURDERER!”
“Unhand me, you filthy Jude,” Jaeger snarled, twisting his
knife with a move so fast I couldn’t follow it. His other hand still held my arm with fingers of iron.
I thought he would stab the little man right before my eyes,
but his thrust was intercepted by an immovable grip.
A giant stood between the German and the Jew — a black
man with a yellow kerchief in his jacket’s breast pocket. His eyes
touched briefly on the yellow fabric on my wrist. Then
his
free hand came up and slammed into the Reichsleiter’s face. I felt the
Reichsleiter’s fingers slide off my arm.
o293
“I am a diplomat!” Jaeger shouted. “An attaché!” The pitch of
his voice was rising.
“Nazi,” someone growled and I heard another blow connect.
“Murderer!” from someone else.
I backed away, rubbing my arm. Jaeger’s eyes were on me. I
saw hatred in them, and fear.
But then his face sank into the circle of backs surrounding
him. The crowd seemed to swallow him. His protests ceased.
The thuds of the blows continued. I knew that one way or the
other, he would no longer be following me.
I turned and ran on. One block more. The subway entrance
was just ahead. I rounded the end of the rail to the stairs down.
“Sarah!”
I looked back, hopeful, expecting to see Jackson.
No. Richard Hathaway. Chasing me for his mother’s gun.
I started shoving my way down the stairs. I could hear Richard
above. “Let me through!”
I pushed harder. Ahead I saw turnstiles. I kept running as I felt
around the bottom of the bag frantically.
There.