Read Amber House: Neverwas Online
Authors: Larkin Reed Tucker Reed Kelly Moore
Gramma’s property. Spending time with him had been one of
the best things about visiting my grandmother. Until her funeral.
When I finally realized that Jackson wasn’t really like a big
brother at all.
That had been such a weird day. I’d wandered around the
reception after the service, with this feeling that there wasn’t
enough air to breathe. Like the space between this world and the
o21
next had grown thin somehow and the oxygen was leaking out.
I’d had a constant feeling of déjà vu, too. And then I’d bumped
into Jackson and —
It was like the first time I’d ever really seen him. He wasn’t
just this nice older boy I could always count on. He was . . .
well, he was almost a man. All the long, thin angles of his
frame — the lankiness most boys go through, but which had
been worse for Jackson because he grew so tall — had rounded
out with muscle. His face had changed too; his features had got-
ten stronger somehow. Firmer. He was — attractive. Handsome.
It left me feeling really off balance.
When I’d found him that day, while I was talking to him, he’d
touched a tear on my cheek. And I’d wondered for a moment,
with this uncomfortable feeling in my chest, what it would be
like if he slid his hand along my chin, and tilted my head, and
stepped in close —
Like I said. I’d felt really off balance.
I realized he was watching my face as we sat there by the pool,
as though he had some idea of what I was remembering. So I
made that thought go away, just like I did with the creepies.
I widened my eyes to innocence:
No thinking going on here.
“You don’t like it much at Amber House,” he said. A question
posed as a statement. Yet another thing he did without fail.
“Definitely liked the place better as a visitor. But I won’t be
here that long. I’ll probably go back to Seattle for college.”
He shook his head and looked down, as if I’d just disappointed
him again.
Honestly
, I thought irritably, he was only fourteen months older. He didn’t have to treat me like I was such a child.
I’d grown up too.
“You don’t feel you owe something to this place?” he said.
“Not many people have a home like Amber House.”
“It’s not my home,” I said, matching his tone. “I’m Astorian,
remember?”
22 O
He shrugged a little with just his face. I felt judged. Again. It
was frustrating. Why couldn’t I connect with him the way I
used to?
“Truth is, I don’t want to stay here either,” he said. “I don’t
fit
here. I don’t belong. But I don’t know how to get to where I do
belong.”
He’d said the same words I’d used in my head to describe
myself.
Odd.
Impulsively, I reached out. “If I can help you somehow —”
But it was the wrong move. I’d touched his scarred hand. He
pulled it back, shoving it into his pocket. Then he noticed what
he’d done and lifted his eyes to mine, smiling a little, sadly.
“I don’t really think it’s possible to get to there from here.”
A voice inside my head said:
It
is
possible.
A line I’d heard in a movie, maybe. Or something from a dream.
“I gotta go,” Jackson said. “I want to have some supper ready
for Gran when she gets home.”
I pinked up and was glad he couldn’t see it in the darkness of
the conservatory. His gran would get home after she got off
work — making dinner for
my
family, a dinner she didn’t eat any part of. He started to slide the little blanket off his shoulders. I shook my head severely. “You’d better just wear that
home and bring it back tomorrow, mister,” I said.
He smiled and pulled it closed around him. “Thanks, Sare.”
And it almost sounded the way it used to, when we were best
friends.
“See you, J,” I said.
N
The ground floor of the west wing stood between me and the
rest of my family, a tunnel of night. I fumbled for the light
o23
switch. I wasn’t going to walk through the dark. Bad enough I’d
still have to walk past all the gaping mouths of unlit doorways.
At its end, the hall bent right and joined up with a gallery that
ran the width of the main house. The library’s rear door opened
into the gallery, as well as the passage that led past the kitchen’s swinging door and on into the entry. I ducked right into the
kitchen, softly lit and fireplace-warm. Rose was dishing up din-
ner plates.
I felt another twinge of embarrassment. It had never bothered
me much that Rose had worked for Gramma — Gramma had
hired Rose as a cook and housekeeper after Jackson’s grandfather
died, and I had the impression there was some story there I’d
never been told. But when Gramma passed, Mom had suggested
Rose might want to retire on full pay — we simply weren’t the
kind of people who were used to help in our own home. Rose
had refused. Said she wasn’t taking charity.
“Can I carry something in, Mrs. Valois?” I said.
I could almost see her mentally shaking her head. She was
impatient with our Astorian compulsion to help “the help.” But
she said, “Sure, Sarah. Just give me a second.” She picked up a
spoon and started ladling green beans onto each plate. “You go
into town again today?”
“Yeah,” I said, instantly anxious to avoid saying what Jackson
had asked me not to say. Which was a mistake. Rose had a grand-
mother’s near-psychic ability to pick up on anxiety.
“You didn’t go anywhere near the cinema, did you?”
“
No-ope
,” I said, accidentally adding an extra
o
to the word. “I took Sam to the hardware store.”
“You see Jackson?”
“Nup.” That one was too abrupt. “What I mean is, I didn’t see
him in
town
, but I did just see him a few — a little
while
ago, when he stopped into the conservatory to say hi.”
24 O
She was looking at me squirm, her skepticism plain on her
face. But she let the subject drop. “Can you carry in yours and
Sammy’s plates?”
“Sure. These two?” I asked, happy to get out of there.
She picked up another three. “Thank you, child. You’re a
good girl.” She turned for the other swinging door that led to
the dining room. “Sometimes a little distantly connected to the
truth, but a good girl.”
She backed through the door, and I made myself follow.
Mom was going around the table with a pitcher, filling water
glasses. She smiled at me as I entered. I loved my mother’s smile.
It was a part of her gracefulness — the way she moved, the tone
of her voice, the shape of her words, the ever-present hint of
smile. I almost smiled back. But then I reminded myself how
angry I was about being in this house and this country.
The fifth place set at the head of the table was empty. Sammy
said, “She’ll be here in a little moment.”
“She” meant Maggie. “I thought she was already here,” I said.
“Nope,” Sam said.
I wondered who’d been humming in the room below mine.
Rose, probably, or maybe Mom, or even Sammy.
I seated myself and started picking at my food. Mom sat down
opposite Sammy. “I am enjoying Maeve’s photographs so much,”
she said in my direction. “She really captured what it was like to
be alive and breathing in the late 1800s. You should help me,
honey. It’s fascinating.”
Maeve McCallister was my great-grandmother’s grand-
mother, who’d achieved a certain post-mortem fame for the
thousands of tintypes she’d taken of everyday life — women,
children, servants, and slaves. Subjects most other photographic
pioneers didn’t deem worthy of capturing for posterity on
expensive metal plates. Mom was searching through Maeve’s life
work to cull the best pieces for the Metropolitan exhibit.
o25
“Not interested in the twisted history of the ACS, Mom,” I
said with a tight smile. “I’m Astorian.”
She blinked, a little surprised by my brittle tone. Dad, ever
perceptive, asked, “Something happen today, Sare?”
“There was a big crowd on the main street of Severna. Sam
dashed over to see what was happening, and by the time I caught
up with him, the police were lobbing gas canisters and hosing
down a line of protestors in front of the movie theatre.”
“Oh, my God,” my mother said, her face going pale.
“We got out of there as fast as we could,” I said, adding, “and
Sam wasn’t hurt.”
“The boy who likes hardware stores lifted me way up above
the gas,” Sammy contributed cheerfully.
“Who?” Dad asked.
“Richard Hathaway,” I explained.
“Well, thank God for Richard,” he said. “You shouldn’t have
been there.”
“No,” I said, “
We
shouldn’t be
here
.”
I didn’t know how my father could stand living in the ACS.
Mom at least had grown up here. But Dad was from New
England, born in Nova Scotia. He’d met Mom while he was
at Johns Hopkins — she was attending the all-girls college of
Notre Dame in Baltimore at the time. After Dad finished his
residency, they’d both wanted out of the South. But Mom
refused to go north, because she didn’t want to live in a country
that still recognized royalty. The two of them had instead headed
west, to the nation built on the bones of John Jacob Astor’s trad-
ing posts. A country of free thinkers who’d emigrated from all
over the Pacific Basin and North America. My real home.
Astoria.
My father started to reply, but then Maggie finally appeared,
smiling, removing her coat and gloves. Mom jumped up, real
happiness lighting her face. She hugged her sister so hard she
26 O
squeezed an “oomph” from Maggie. “Magpie,” Mom said, “so
happy you’re here.”
Maggie made the circuit, returning Sam’s enthusiastic hug,
reaching up to kiss Dad’s cheek, then coming round to hug me.
“Sarah, too,” she said.
After Gramma’s funeral, Maggie had gone north into
Louisiana, to the area just below the New English province of
Ohio, to oversee the use of the family foundation’s resources to
help fight an outbreak of meningitis. We were all happy and
relieved to have her back again.
There was something about Maggie, something fragile, that
made you want to keep her safe. She was a lot like Sammy: sweet
and generous and gentle. She fell in the autism spectrum too,
only she fell a little deeper in than he did. She was beautiful and
fine-featured, like my mother, but where Mom was all drive
and channeled perfectionism, Maggie had this hint of tenuous-
ness that was almost like sorrow. Perhaps because she’d nearly
died when she was young — she’d fallen from the tree house in
the old oak on the front lawn and hovered in a coma for several
weeks. Maybe that accounted for the slightly dreamy and far
away quality she had.
The dinner ran more smoothly after that, since my lack of
participation became less noticeably obvious. As Mom cut up
the huge chocolate cake Rose had left on the sideboard, Sam
went to fetch the Advent calendar he’d been diligently opening
every day.
“Look, Maggie,” he said, “the special day is almost here.” He
graciously let her break the seal on the day’s window, revealing
a tiny plastic compass. “Great!” he said with enthusiasm. “I
needed that.”
Maggie looked into my eyes over the top of his head and
smiled. It was hard to stay angry around her and Sammy, but I
kept working at it. After I polished off my cake, I cleared my
o27
plate and disappeared upstairs. I thought I’d force myself to
crack open one of Mom’s old books.
By nine, the house was mostly quiet. I could hear the ticking
of the clock in the entry and the faint, faraway sound of voices
rising — the television still babbling in the sunroom. It was
only six-ish my time — Pacific time — but I got into my PJs
anyhow. I wanted to put an end to my misery for the day.
And I was evidently pretty tired. My eyes were playing tricks
on me — making shadows in the corners, giving me double
vision as I walked down the hall to the bathroom. I had the
strangest notion that the girl in the mirror, brushing her teeth,
was moving just a fraction of a second slower than I was.
Maybe I needed glasses.
Back in my room, I slid in under the heavy Tree of Life quilt
that covered my bed and shut off the little table lamp. Outside
the window, caught in moonlight, fat snowflakes were still fall-
ing, making me feel cozy and warm. I wished I could like this
place. But it just didn’t feel right.
N
Amber ran ahead of me, down the green corridors of the conservatory. I
caught glimpses of her pale dress flashing behind the leaves. She slowed
to let me catch up. “Let’s play a game,” she said.
“Hide-and-seek?” I asked.
“Nope,” she answered, pushing farther through the branches. “Let’s
hunt for treasure.”
She disappeared into a hedge hall lined with doors. It went on and on,
and I gathered up my gold skirt and ran faster. I knew I had to choose.
But which door was the right door?