Read Amber House: Neverwas Online
Authors: Larkin Reed Tucker Reed Kelly Moore
I popped Sammy’s subway token in the slot and shoved the
bulk of my skirts through the turnstile. The guard stepped for-
ward, eyeing this crazed Cinderella slipping past him, but he did
not stop me. I shot into the open doors on the subway car and
whirled.
I saw Richard vaulting the turnstile, arcing through the air. I
saw a clock on the wall, the second hand crawling to 12:15.
Richard was going to make it. He was going to catch me. He was
going to ruin everything.
His hand caught my arm through the open subway door, his
eyes full of confusion. I begged him, “You have to let me go,
Hathaway. It’s more important than you can possibly know. You
can
trust me. Please.”
He held my eyes, as if he were trying to read something
294 O
hidden inside them. Then he smiled — square with just a bit of
crooked — and he let me go.
N
I reached Penn Station in time for the one o’clock New Year’s
special, heading for all points south. I’d brought enough cash for
two tickets, but now I needed only one.
The train car held a fair number of passengers, many in fancy
dress, most of them showing obvious signs of too much alcohol.
It was a measure of how thoroughly all residents and visitors to
New York had been indoctrinated to mind their own business
that no one gave my torn, mud-stained cloak and gown a second
glance. I shoved over to a seat by the window to hide my clothes
as much as possible.
I huddled there, letting the rhythm of the train lull me. I was
weary of body, mind, and spirit, and all I wanted was to look up
and see Jackson magically rejoining me. Telling me what to do
again. Making everything go right.
I remembered then I had never told Jackson about Fiona and
her poem. I had never told him he was the same, time after time.
The same Jackson — whom I loved.
I became aware of the staticky voice of a radio newscaster
coming from a portable radio someone had turned up too loud.
“. . . But reports confirm the blaze was confined to the por-
tion of the Metropolitan known as the Atrium. Because the
exhibit was an ambassadorial gesture by Robert Hathaway,
who is widely predicted to become the next president of the
Confederation, there has been some speculation that this was a
terrorist attack. Again, the only known casualty is a young black
male who is presumed to have set the blaze. . . .”
I didn’t hear anything after that. I sat alone, apart, absolute
silence filling my ears.
o295
I couldn’t let the thought in. I couldn’t face it, pick it up, let it be inside me. Two rivers ran down my cheeks and wouldn’t stop.
It was too horrible to let it be the truth:
He knew all along he
wouldn’t be coming with me.
N
“Miss?” A hand on my shoulder made me turn, made me look up
into kind eyes. A black porter. “Your stop is next.” He watched
me a moment, trying to decide if he should say or do any-
thing more.
I nodded, brushing at the tears. His words hardly made sense
to me, as if they came from a great distance, difficult to hear. I
moved obediently to the aisle seat to show that I was ready,
that I would get up when it was necessary. That is what he wanted
of me, wasn’t it? I watched his pants, his shiny black shoes,
move on.
The train lurched to a stop. I made myself stand. I moved legs
I couldn’t feel, walking in short, wooden steps. I made my knees
bend to take the stairs, almost fell, caught myself on the metal
rail, slipped and staggered the rest of the way to the ground.
Then I started walking. My body knew the direction.
It was still dark, but the sky was growing gray. Dawn was
coming.
I was cold to the center of me, an interior of snow and ice that
hurt like fire. I didn’t want to move anymore, but I didn’t want
to stop moving. I just kept walking and pulling in air through a
throat squeezed tight.
I have to see it through
, I thought, but I didn’t know what that meant. I hadn’t ever known what that
meant.
At the edge of town, I began to jog. Down the trail through
the park. That would take me back to Amber House. Where I
would see it through.
Because Time without him in it must not be.
CH A P T ER THI RT Y-TWO
K
The sky in the east, out beyond the Chesapeake, dreamed of day
in shades of pink and plum. I didn’t know how long I ran, stiff
plodding paces in constant rhythm, on and on. My breath flew
from me in cloud serpents. My velvet slippers were soaked
through from the thin blanket of snow that held the world in
quietude. My toes became dull things of ice.
I felt a stricken spot on my hip and recognized that the gun in
the purse was beating upon me mercilessly. I drew it out and ran
with it in hand.
He knew all along he wouldn’t be coming with me.
I reached at last the road that bordered Amber House. I had come home. The sky
was shot with gold.
I shoved through the hidden gate, hardly slowing, onto the
path that led across the fields.
I came out of the trees — And Jackson was there, waiting for
me at the path’s end. He was sitting on the top rail of the fence,
looking out over the hilltops. He held in his hand a yellow hand-
kerchief exactly like the one I had tied around my wrist. He did
not see me yet.
“Jackson,” I said, and a space opened around us, and then
he saw.
He smiled. “I promised you I would be here.”
I stood with my hand kneading my side, gasping white breaths,
finding enough air to accuse him. “You knew you were never
coming back.”
“I knew,” he agreed.
o297
“We should have found another way.”
“There was no other way.”
I shook my head. I couldn’t speak. It sat like a sickness inside
me. How could he have made himself face death?
That
death, by burning?
I felt terribly cold. I wished he could hold me.
“I waited here to tell you that I love you,” he said. “I have
always loved you. It’s part of who I am.” He slid down from the
fence then and came close. His face had a sheen of prismatic light
that testified to the time between us, that proved he was an
echo, intangible. We could not touch, but he could meet my
eyes. “I wanted you to know — the future that I’ve seen is worth
fighting for. I judged it worth dying for. Now you have to keep
your promise and see it through.”
“What if I fail?”
The smallest sad smile. “It’s a possibility,” he said. “I’ve seen
that also. You become first lady of a new nation.”
“Richard,” I said.
He nodded. “He loves you too.”
I couldn’t let myself think about that. There was something
else. Something I had forgotten to tell him, something he needed
to know. Then it came back to me. “Fiona remembered a poem
from the other time. She found it in the déjà vu. It proves she’s
the same person. You are too. And I’ll remember you. I’ll tell
you every detail.”
“I know,” he said.
“I love you,” I said.
He smiled and nodded. “I’ve seen you and loved you a whole
lifetime’s worth, Sare.
You
were worth dying for.”
Pain filled my chest like an iron bar, cold and dull and heavy.
“You have to go now,” he said.
I forced myself to turn. I forced myself to walk on. When I
looked back, the snow on the rail was undisturbed.
298 O
N
Sam and Maggie opened the door for me when I climbed up the
front steps. The house was warm, so warm my skin was on fire
with the rush of blood returning. “Where’s Jackson?” Sam asked.
I started to sob. Maggie took me in her arms and I rested
there. After a while, maybe a long while, I said, “I don’t know
what to do.”
“You don’t know what happened yet, what was changed?”
Maggie asked.
I shook my head.
“The house will tell you.”
“Why me?” I asked.
“Because you were the one who was chosen.”
I shook my head again. “You say that like there’s something
behind all this, some intention, some reason. How do you know
it’s not all just random? How do you know I can do
any
thing to make it better?”
She hugged me close again and leaned my head against her
shoulder. She stroked my hair to soothe me. “When I write sto-
ries,” she said, “it’s like chiseling a statue. I go back and find
something deeper, layer after layer, until the story is all shaped,
all laid bare.” She lifted me away from her so she could take my
face in her hands. “Maybe God is an artist. He saw something
deeper. And you were chosen to help Him lay it bare.”
Sammy came up and slipped his hand into mine. “Jackson told
me to make sure you remembered your promise.”
I wiped my face with my fingers. I nodded. “I remember,
Sam.” I picked the gun up from where I’d let it fall.
“You’ll make him come back, Sarah,” Sam said.
I didn’t know where to go, what to do, so I started walk-
ing. Living room, library, gallery. Kitchen, dining room, hall. I
would let the house tell me. I would
make
the house tell me.
o299
Ground floor of the east wing, back to the entry. Up the stairs
to the second floor.
Where the light shifted.
Ahead of me, I saw the Captain hauling Deirdre to her
room by one arm. She was protesting, “But I must get ready,
Joseph. Make sure the luncheon is laid, put on a frock. He’ll be
here soon.”
“No,” he said, shoving her through the door. “He’s not
coming.”
“He’s not?” she said. “Did he write again? Send his regrets?”
“He’s not coming,” her husband said again firmly and pulled
her door shut. As he walked past me, he pulled Claire Hathaway’s
pistol from his waistband and checked its touch hole for
powder.
He was on his way to murder someone, I realized, dropping
out of the vision. The man he made Deirdre invite to Amber
House. The man whose name he chose on the flip of a coin.
That’s how time changed.
I rushed back downstairs with renewed purpose. “The
Captain killed someone who wasn’t supposed to die,” I told
Maggie as I continued past to the kitchen. She and Sammy fol-
lowed me.
“Someone who came here,” Maggie said, “because you woke
the other mama up.”
“Yes.”
“Who?”
“I don’t know yet,” I said, “but I think I know how to find
out.” I scrounged a screwdriver out of a bottom junk drawer and
sat down at the table with the pistol. I needed the coin free of
the gun.
I gasped when I picked it out of its socket in the gun. It was
cold in my fingers, and it seemed almost to
squirm
. In a telescope of images, I saw faces, an endless series of them, one supplanting
300 O
the other, each one twisted with some kind of ugly hunger. The
last face was the old man on the coin, lying in dirt among other
coins, his bare feet swinging just above them.
“Maggie,” I cried, and she took my hand. And my vision
cleared. I wrapped the coin in a dishcloth. Then I took it and
went back upstairs, into the Captain’s front room.
I unwrapped the coin, took it again in my fingers, and con-
centrated with all my might, willing the Captain to appear. I
went to stand behind his chair. Nothing. But I was certain this
had to be it.
I put the Janus coin on the side of my curled index finger, atop
the tip of my thumb. Then I flipped it into the air.
Another hand shot out to catch it. The Captain’s. He checked
its face — it was the grim old man. He used his quill to cross
another name off his list. He flipped the coin again. The young
and smiling god.
Yes.
The Captain circled a name in his log and sat back, contemplating. I leaned forward to see.
Washington. The owner of Mount Vernon. The rebel gen-
eral. The father of a lost nation in a time that didn’t exist
anymore.
And the word at the top of the page, the action the Captain
had consulted the Fates about whether to take:
Assassination.
N
The vision dissipated. I was back in my own time. The
wrong time.
How could I stop the assassination? Nyangu was the key.
Through her, I could touch the past. I needed to find Nyangu
again. But I needed her from a specific time, the exactly right
time. No other would do. How could I find her?
“Here, Sarah.” Sam stood in the doorway, holding out his
hand, palm up. On it sat the mottled green stone.
o301
My sweet, strange little brother. Who knew things. And
wasn’t afraid. Who looked forward to the “new years” coming.
I took the stone from his outstretched hand. “I love you, Sam,”
I said, barely able to squeeze out the words. I leaned down and
kissed the top of his head.
“I love you too, Sarah.”
“See you,” I whispered into his hair.
Then I went in search of Nanga. Deirdre’s room, the Nautical
Room, the flowered room, the tower room. I found her in the
little eight-by-eight-foot chamber next to that. I heard her before