Read Amber House: Neverwas Online
Authors: Larkin Reed Tucker Reed Kelly Moore
Families of
compiled by fiona campbell Warren in 1933
Sarah-Louise Foster
Anderson Tate
1762- 1835
1762- 1842
Eleanor Tate
Gideon Atwood
1791- 1852
1786- 1847
Bessie Atwood
Quincy McCallister
1812- 1860
1806- 1848
Maeve McCallister
Ambrose Webster
1836- 1909
1824- 1895
Jessamine Campbell
Tobias Webster
1881- 1926
1869- 1926
Fiona Campbell Webster
Dennis Warren
1903-
1900-
Ida Warren
1933-
A spider the color of amber spun a web before me. Her threads formed a
maze I knew I must unravel to find the treasure hidden at its heart.
I followed the twisting path, running lightly in autumn gold slippers,
the night held back by candle lanterns, the leafy branches of the walls
plucking at my gown. The hedges grew into a forest all around, but I
knew which way the spider’s web had revealed.
Right, skip, right, left, skip, left.
A little girl in white observed me, her eyes — green eyes — filled
with hope.
At the center of the maze, I found the chest inside the spider’s house,
wrought in curlicues that told words that whispered. The spider or the
little girl tempted me: “Don’t you want to look inside?”
I knelt on the black-and-white floor before the puzzle of the box, shifting the panels to solve the secret of its opening. But when the catch at
last came loose and the box cracked open, black miseries scuttled out on
eight legs.
The dark creatures ran for the people frozen in the heart — Sam,
Mom and Dad, Maggie, Jackson, Richard. I used a broom to sweep the
things away. Then I picked up my people and put them in my purse.
But the creatures swarmed over the little girl in white and she disappeared before me, one spider-bite at a time.
I watched and wept tears that fell from the hem of my dress.
I could not have the treasure yet. I had to try to solve the puzzle again.
CH A P T ER ON E
K
I was sixteen the second time I had my first kiss.
Maybe we all have more than one first kiss — maybe an infi-
nite number — and we just don’t remember. First kisses. First
loves. First sorrows. Until we get it right. Until we become who
we were meant to be.
But this first kiss I wish never to forget.
So I make myself remember it all. From beginning to end. My
grandmother’s stroke in mid-October. Her funeral, when we
buried her beside my grandfather in the family plot on the hill
above the river. My parents’ hidden conversations that I eaves-
dropped on — about whether they could go back “there” now,
to Maryland, whether things had changed enough. The events
that took us back, and threw us forward. Again.
N
The home I’d grown up in — a sweet yellow Victorian that sat
on the water’s edge on the west side of Seattle — sold just two
weeks after the realtor posted her sign. Thirty days later, my
father, mother, brother and I were on our way to my grand-
mother’s house.
Amber House
. Now ours.
That first day — when we drove up in our station wagon,
with me asleep, wedged in the back seat — I felt the place even
before I saw it. I woke to the sensation of all the little hairs on my arms standing on end. Dad turned in the front gate, carving a
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solitary pair of tire tracks in the snow-smooth drive. The house
sat on a bluff above the Severn River at the distant edge of there
under the gray sky of late afternoon, its blank eyes regarding our
approach.
The estate was famous — one of the oldest in North America,
owned by a single family, my family, since the 1600s. Dormant
gardens surrounded the house, which was all white clapboard
and pillars, brick and green trim. Not stately so much as solid.
Filled with time.
My grandmother used to tell me how three hundred and fifty
years of my ancestors had added to Amber House — a wing
here, a porch there, a balcony, a turret. Decade after decade.
Generation after generation. Century after century. As a child,
I’d had a hazy notion of the house having slowly shrugged up out
of the earth.
A beautiful place. A remarkable home. No question. I just
didn’t want to live there. I remembered once wandering its
hedge maze, thinking with gladness about becoming a part of
Amber House — but that day in December when we took pos-
session, I no longer remembered why.
It wasn’t simply that I was homesick, though that was a part of
it. It was if something was out of place, missing, but I was the
only one who noticed. A phantom limb with pain I couldn’t numb.
The feeling had grown as I’d entered the front door. I’d
stopped still, looking at all of my grandmother’s familiar things
now made unfamiliar because she was gone. It was like the first
time I’d ever seen them for what they were — not just my
grandmother’s
stuff
, but
her
grandmother’s, and
her
grandmother’s before her. As if some kind of thread, spun of place and
possessions, tied us all together down through the generations in
both directions. A lifeline. A chain.
I saw the past in everything. The gleaming stretch of the
golden-hued floor polished by the feet of centuries. The Windsor
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chairs built wide to hold hooped skirts. The tall-case clock with
stars painted on its face, still numbering the minutes between
then and now. Candlesticks, leather-bound books, china as frag-
ile as dried leaves, the sea chest that had been around the Horn,
and some part of me with it, in the man who brought it home to
Amber House.
All of it pulled on me somehow. As if I
owed
the House some-
thing. As if the oil-painted faces of my ancestors, staring down
at me from every wall, were waiting. And day by day, the feel-
ing grew.
Outside was no better than in. The stable with its sweet-sour
smell of horses; the tree house hidden in the high limbs of the
ancient oak; the dock on the river where my grandparents’
sloop, the
Liquid Amber
, rested on blocks until spring; the silence-drifted corridors of the hedge maze — they no longer felt like
the places I had always loved playing during all my visits from the
time I was small. Yet they hadn’t changed. So I must have. I just
didn’t fit. I felt incomplete, deficient.
Beyond the fences bounding the estate, however, that feeling
ebbed. So I developed a need to escape. The Saturday after we
moved in, I was trying to coax my little brother, Sammy, into
walking once again to Severna, the only place we could reach
on foot.
“Nope,” he told me. “I’m busy, Sarah.” He was sitting in front
of a disemboweled radio, most of its guts arranged on the table-
top. He’d turned six the month before; this more grown-up
Sammy didn’t have the same endless enthusiasm he used to for
my various plans and propositions.
“I’ll buy you an ice cream,” I said.
He sighed and pointed out the obvious: “It’s snowing.”
“Hot chocolate, then,” I begged. “You like hot chocolate.”
He finally consented. Not because he wanted the cocoa but
because he’d heard the begging.
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As we shuffled out the front door, my mother appeared in the
arch to the living room. “Going into town
again
?” she said.
Apparently my obsession with being elsewhere was worrying
her. So I shrugged. “I need something,” I said.
“What?”
I considered telling her I needed to get out, but I knew I
wouldn’t be able to explain it. “Chocolate,” I said. “I promised
Sammy hot chocolate.”
Her lips pursed a little. Ever since Sammy’s diagnosis, she’d
honed “concerned parenting” to an art form. It was almost a
supernatural talent. I could tell
she
could tell I was withholding information, but she decided to let it slide. “Make sure to
take Sam’s hand —” she started, with her usual rising note of
anxiety.
“— take his hand on the main road,” I finished, nodding. I
pulled the door closed before she could think of some other
advice to give.
It was a fifteen-minute walk, mostly across parkland that
spread between Amber House and town. When we reached
Severna, I paid Sam back for his kindness in coming with me by
taking him to the hardware store. Sammy had a deep apprecia-
tion for hardware stores. He was all about connecting things, so
the million parts and pieces were like treasure to him. He wan-
dered the aisles the way other people wandered a zoo, staring at
the strange things, occasionally reaching out to touch one. This
trip, he came to rest in the plumbing department. I stood and
watched him for a few minutes as he made a roadmap of copper
tubes and elbows on the floor.
Across the aisle from the bins of pipe, a dozen Sarahs in a
dozen vanity mirrors considered me. Each surface held a slightly
different girl — taller, wider, sharper, pinker. One mirror was
gold-veined, its Sarah caught in a metallic web. I stared at the
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images. For the past couple months, something about my reflec-
tion kept surprising me.
A voice spoke from just behind me. “This is not a toy store.”
I turned, startled, embarrassed. It was the owner. “Sorry,”
I said. “I’ll get all the pieces put back in their correct bins
right away.”
“I’m sure you will,” he said, leaving us to it.
We cleaned up and slunk out, emerging into a moving
crowd — the sidewalks had filled with people heading toward
the center of town.
“What’s happening, Sarah?” Sammy asked.
“I don’t know, bud.”
Someone called my name. “Parsons!”
I searched through unfamiliar faces and then finally spotted
Richard Hathaway zeroing in on me. Wheat hair over bronze
skin; blue topaz eyes; square-cut features that framed a square-
cut smile, just slightly crooked. He was without a doubt the
best-looking boy I had ever met. Plus, athletic, funny, charming,
and smart. The son of my parents’ old friends, who were also
our neighbors. As far as I was concerned, Richard was maybe the
only real benefit to living in Maryland. “Hathaway,” I answered.
“Needed nails?” he asked.