Read Amber House: Neverwas Online
Authors: Larkin Reed Tucker Reed Kelly Moore
N
When we went inside, my dad was in the front hall, winding the
grandfather clock. “How was Severna?” he asked, smiling.
I contemplated telling him that Severna was the kind of place
that sicced attack dogs on protestors and gassed little kids who
were just innocent bystanders, but my throat hurt too much. I’d
tell him later.
“Fine,” I answered.
Sammy added generously, “We went to the hardware store,
Daddy.”
Dad nodded and smiled again. “Sounds like you had fun, then.
You two have been making a lot of trips into town. Isn’t that four
times in three days?”
“Nothing else to do around here,” I said, helping Sam shrug
out of his coat as I nudged him up the stairs. “Why don’t you
show me that radio you took apart, Sam?”
Mostly I really liked my dad — always good-natured and
unassuming, even though he was a well-known surgeon at Johns
Hopkins, whose medical innovations had been adopted by doc-
tors all over North America. At the moment, however, I thought
he was incredibly irresponsible for dragging Sam and me away
from Astoria, so I didn’t really want to stay and chat.
14 O
At the upper landing, I followed Sam into his bedroom, full of
antique sailing gear and various disassembled electronic devices.
The Nautical Room, it was called. Which was another one of
those weird pretentious things that came with living in a home
as old as Amber House — a lot of the rooms had names. Not
regular names, like “the den” or “the dining room,” but capital-
letter-type names like the “White Room” or the “Chinoise
Room.” I felt I ought to be wearing pink chiffon whenever I
brushed my teeth in the “Primrose Bath.”
“Thanks for coming today,” I told him.
“You’re welcome,” Sam said. “You really want to see my
radio?”
So I looked at the gutted thing, picking up a couple of pieces,
returning them carefully to their places. “Not much of a radio
anymore. You going to be able to put that thing back together?”
He made a dismissive face. “I’m making something
better
.
Something that will listen to different places.”
I wanted to ask him,
almost
asked him, “what places”, but
thought better of it. I just nodded. “Really cool, Sam.”
He selected a screwdriver, and went back to his work.
My room was just through the arch to the east wing. It was
the Flowered Room — a fairly recent naming, as my mother
had done the flowering of it. She’d been eleven or twelve when
she’d decided to transform the room, covering its pale green
walls with a child’s fantasy garden. Roses, hydrangeas, wisteria,
irises, even bees and snails.
I judged every other bedroom in the world against my moth-
er’s Flowered Room, with its four-poster topped by a crewelwork
canopy and warmed by an heirloom quilt, its cozy window
seat, its bookshelves of first editions that flanked a doll-sized
Amber House faithful in its every detail, right down to the fur-
niture and the tiny compass rose inlaid in the floor at the top of
the stairs.
o15
I saw that Sam must have been playing with the doll house
again, because its catch was undone and the two hinged halves of
its front rooms left slightly ajar. I swung them fully open to make
sure the contents were all present and secure. The only things he
appeared to have moved were the little china dolls — the daddy
and the little blond girl had been put together in the front bed-
room, while the mama and two dark-haired children had been
seated in a circle upstairs in the nursery. I left them as he wanted and swung the front rooms closed.
Dinner wouldn’t happen for an hour or two, so I got out some
note paper, thinking I could dash off a letter to Bethanie back
home. I loved Bee; I loved her family. They were the type of
people who recycled, only bought products from American
nations, and picketed the German Embassy for the full truth
about what had happened to the Jews of Europe. They were
true-blue Astorians. I missed them.
I sat at the desk and started scrawling:
Dear Jecie —
I stopped to stare at what I had written.
Jecie? Who’s Jecie?
Disturbed, I balled up the piece of paper and started again,
describing the protest and the racism still obvious everywhere.
As I struggled to fill the page, I realized I could hear humming.
A simple melody. six or seven notes long.
It seemed to come from the far side of the bed, but no one was
there. It was a sweet, high-pitched voice, singing with no par-
ticular rhythm, as if someone was keeping herself company
while concentrating on a task. As I stood there, staring at the
empty corner, confused, the sounds faded away.
My eyes settled on the heating grate in the wall. The hum-
ming must have been coming through that, probably from
Maggie in her room directly below mine.
I went back to my letter. I told Bee a little about the Amber
House exhibit my parents were putting together to help Senator
16 O
Hathaway. Practically as soon as we’d moved in, they’d started
collecting stuff from the entire life of the house relating to
“women and minorities of the South” for a display the senator
had arranged at New York’s Metropolitan Museum. It was
intended to raise his international profile as someone who priori-
tized civil rights, helping him in his bid for the Confederation
presidency. I knew Bee would be as surprised as I was that my
folks were getting into the whole political thing. Pleased, because
she thought
everyone
should be political. But surprised.
A little tap caught my attention. I jumped, even though I
knew the sound: a pebble on glass. I smiled.
From the window, I spotted Jackson on the flagstones below.
He was getting ready to make another toss but saw me and inter-
rupted himself. He waved and I waved back. He pointed toward
the other end of the house.
I nodded, turned, and headed for the west wing.
CH A P T ER THR EE
K
I crossed the second-floor landing, cut around the staircase that
led to the third floor, and plunged into the west wing’s hall,
where I quickened my pace a little. Amber House was an odd
place at any hour, but it was oddest when the darkness started to
fill it at the end of a day. Especially in the rooms and halls that
were hardly ever used anymore, like the entire second floor of
the west wing.
My mom had told me when I was small not to pay attention to
the house’s “creepies,” as she called them. She said Amber House
was old the way people get old — their knees start to pop, and
they groan a little when they settle into a chair. She said the sighs of an old house can make you start imagining things — hear
voices in the creaks, turn shadows into shapes. I had to try to
ignore it. Shut it out. So I learned how to do that. But I still
didn’t like Amber House in the dark.
I hurried down the hall past the six doors to four bedrooms
and two baths — all mercifully closed this evening, though
sometimes they weren’t. It was too easy to imagine people half
hidden in the deep shadows of a room. I tried to keep the doors
shut; I didn’t know who was forever opening them.
At the end of the hall, I burst out through the French doors
that opened onto a lacy metal landing at the top of a spiral stair.
I stood there a moment, trying to catch my breath and calm
myself down. I didn’t want Jackson to see how panicky I’d let
myself get. From the very start of our friendship, I’d always
tried to pretend I was braver than I was in front of him.
18 O
The conservatory had always been my favorite spot in Amber
House — built in about 1920 as a sixteenth-birthday present for
my great-grandmother Fiona. It was a web of iron framework
that rose from ground level to the peak of the west wing, form-
ing a glass chamber filled with trees and flowers too delicate
to survive a Maryland winter. Above me, outside, large white
flakes materialized from the darkness to settle on the transpar-
ent ceiling, but inside the web, birds sang and orchids bloomed.
Jackson and I had claimed it as our own many winters before.
We’d played every kind of game there, from hide-and-seek to
imaginary adventures. We’d even made up a friend to play with
us, a little girl we called Amber. I wondered how old I’d been
when we finally stopped pretending her.
I found Jackson waiting by the koi pool, standing below the
stone statue who guarded it: a blind-eyed Pandora who wept
tears that trickled soundlessly down her gown.
I went and sat on the stone edge of the pool and Jackson
joined me.
“Saw you at the protest,” he said. “Wanted to make sure you
and Sam were all right. What the heck were you thinking, Sare,
bringing him to that?”
He was scolding me. Again. Seemed like he was always scolding
me lately, but it hadn’t used to be like that, before Gramma died.
“I didn’t ‘bring’ him there,” I said. “We were going to the
drugstore. He just slipped away.”
“ ‘Just slipped away,’ huh? And your own curiosity didn’t have
anything to do with it?” He said it with a smile, but it stung
because it was true. I couldn’t fool him — he knew me too well.
My parents, maybe, but Jackson, never.
He shook his head. “This isn’t Astoria. Sam could have been
seriously hurt. And you could have too. A couple people are in
the hospital. You were lucky Richard was there. What if he
hadn’t been? You’ve got to —”
o19
“Sam’s fine,” I said shortly. I crossed my arms and legs; I hated
him making me feel so small. “Look, I know you’re right. I
should have taken Sam home as soon as I saw what was going on,
but —” I felt like I was talking to my dad. Of course Jackson was
right — he was
always
right — but I didn’t like him lecturing me, acting like he was so much older. We were practically the
same age. “Sam’s fine. I’m fine. I got a sore throat, but I’m fine.”
“I forgot.” Like magic, Jackson reached into his pocket and
produced exactly what I needed — a purple cough drop wrapped
in foil. I rolled my eyes and gave him a small smile — he was
forever doing stuff like that. I took it, unwrapped it, and popped
it in my mouth.
“Look, I know you don’t like it when someone tries to stop
you or tell what to do, Sare, even me. And in general, that’s a
good thing. More people ought to challenge authority. But that
kind of attitude can get you into serious trouble around here.
You have to be careful. You have to be
responsible
. People are counting on you.”
That was the first thing he’d said that wasn’t true. No one was
counting on me for anything. Which was probably a good thing.
But I said, “Got it,” and hoped that he would let it drop. I noticed then that Jackson’s skin had a bluish cast to it. He looked half
made of ice. “Where the heck is your coat?”
“One of the ladies was drenched. I figured she needed it more
than I did.”
I went around to the benches on the other side of a screen of
bushes, and came back with a lap blanket. I shook it out and
swept it around him. “I could not
believe
that fire hose,” I said, remembering. “That was like something the Nazis would do.”
“Fire hose is standard. Hurts
and
humiliates.” He shrugged
a little, but he looked as angry as I’d ever seen him. “We
expected it.”
“ ‘We’? Who?”
20 O
“Oh,” he said, shaking his head, “the people who were there.
The people who showed up.”
That was another thing he’d started doing since Gramma
died — not answering questions. Getting all
secretive
. Not like the way we used to be. I wondered about the yellow handkerchief
tied to his belt loop. I’d seen several other yellow handkerchiefs
at the demonstration. I thought it might have something to do
with who “we” were. But if Jackson didn’t want to explain, I
knew better than to ask.
“Listen,” he said, “can you do me a favor and not mention to
Gran you saw me at the protest?”
“Sure, J,” I said. I was a little angry, to be asked to keep a
secret I wasn’t part of. But of course I would. I’d always kept
Jackson’s secrets, like he’d always kept mine.
I didn’t remember much from when I was really small, but I
remembered meeting Jackson. Twelve years earlier, he’d come
to live on the Amber House estate with his grandmother, Rose
Valois, my grandmother’s housekeeper. He’d hidden halfway
behind her as she introduced him to us — a quiet boy covered in
bandages. His parents had died in a car accident that had burned
the left side of his body and made him have seizures, but I didn’t
know all that then. I just knew he was sad. So little-me took his
hand the way Sammy might have done and we went outside to play.
He’d been sort of a part-time big brother to me ever since,
showing me which trees were the best to climb and where to go
crabbing, guiding me to all the special places he found around