by Amanda Gray
Still, Jenny never stopped being grateful that Morgan lived in Stony Creek. Other than Jenny’s dad, Morgan was her only connection to her mother.
Jenny leaned in to examine herself in the mirror. She thought she might look different. Like the experience at Amber’s might have visibly changed her. It hadn’t. She was still the Jenny with hazel eyes and prominent cheekbones under a mane of wavy brown hair. There was nothing remotely interesting about her face. In fact, the only notable thing about her appearance was the small starburst-shaped birthmark on her collarbone. She was always surprised that no one else seemed to notice it when she was so acutely aware of its presence.
Sighing, she turned away from the mirror. She sat on the bed, rummaging in her bag until she found the piece of paper from Amber’s, the words inside visible as scrawled and faded shadows. She wondered who had done the writing while she and Amber had their hands on the pointer.
Assuming, that is, that the story was even true.
And was it? Part of her didn’t want to look, didn’t want to know. But that wasn’t really an option. She had felt something during her brief semi consciousness. The presence, a message conveyed but not quite understood. She needed to know if she’d imagined the connection or if it had been real.
She opened the paper, pulling her legs onto the bed as she read.
The writing was sloppy, almost illegible in places. It was obvious that whoever had done it had been in a hurry. Either that, or their handwriting had never progressed past that of a five-year-old.
She read through it quickly first, skipping the words that were too difficult to make out or didn’t make sense. When she had most of it, she pulled a pen from her bag and went back to the beginning, trying to piece together the words she couldn’t read based on the ones around them, crossing out words and inserting new ones until she thought she had it right.
When she was done, she read again from the beginning.
I am Dolia, warden of time.
I have a message for one among you.
Do not despair. He is coming.
Be prepared and remember.
Open your soul and remember.
Open the door to the past and remember.
He is coming.
She knows to whom we speak.
Jennifer.
Jenny didn’t realize she was shaking until she’d finished reading. The paper rustled and moved in her hands as her body trembled. Her skin was both cold and clammy, the way it was when she’d had the flu the year before and had spent four days in bed, kicking off the covers only to huddle underneath them five minutes later.
He is coming, the paper said.
And then her name. Jennifer.
She didn’t know what it meant. Was it somehow connected to what had happened to her when they’d been using the Ouija board? A completion of the message she hadn’t been able to grasp?
She stared at the words, but the answers didn’t come. Growing frustrated, she folded the paper in half and shoved it back into her bag, pushing it away from her like that would make the questions go away, too.
She went to her easel, dropping onto the stool that sat in front of it. This was where she felt most at home. Where she didn’t have to wonder if she was doing or saying the wrong thing or letting someone get too close. Her art was a puzzle she could always solve.
She took a couple of seconds to let go of everything that had happened at Amber’s. It was still there, but she pushed it to the back of her consciousness, putting it in a little box in the attic of her mind. Then she tipped her head, studying her newest painting with critical eyes.
Like most of her work, the scene had come from one of her visions. She knew it would sound crazy if she said it out loud, which was why she never did, but she had been falling into weird dream states for as long as she could remember.
It wasn’t totally random. She had to touch someone, usually with the palm of her hand, for it to happen. When she was younger, she’d stuffed her hands in her pockets or folded her arms across her chest, but when she’d overheard her sixth-grade teacher tell the school social worker that the other students found Jenny “standoffish,” she’d finally gotten wise. Fingerless gloves in every conceivable color had littered her room ever since, and while she was sometimes asked about it by kids at school, her dad, always preferring denial over confrontation, had never confronted her about it. He probably thought it was some kind of fashion statement.
Jenny had been working on the painting in front of her since the day she’d accidentally touched Hunter, Mr. Bradley’s grandson, at the bakery in town. She’d been getting croissants for Sunday morning breakfast while her dad went to the General for coffee. She’d taken off her wet gloves, hoping they would dry out a little while she was inside the store. Hunter, not yet two years old, was toddling around the store, occasionally falling to his padded-diaper butt with a squeal of surprise. Reaching down to catch him as he stumbled had been a reflex. Jenny’s hands had closed around his plump arms just before he hit the floor, and the icy, barren fields had instantly reached out to her from his eyes. Then, she was standing in the snow, feeling the cold seep through her clothes and skin as if she’d been there forever. As if the warmth of the bakery and the town of Stony Creek and little Hunter were a million miles away.
She wasn’t sure why she was there. She never knew why she was transported to strange places, but she always had the vague sensation that there was something she was supposed to do, someone she was supposed to find.
In Hunter’s snow-covered field, she knew that something was lost in the landscape. Lost forever. She felt it like a punch to the chest. An ache that would never go away. She felt it until the scene folded in on itself and she’d found herself back in the bakery, Hunter toddling away like nothing had even happened.
She’d been trying to recreate the scene on canvas ever since, trying to make it right in time for the show. She’d spent more time on it than on any of the paintings that lined the walls of her room, but she still hadn’t been able to figure out the problem. On the surface, it looked like the field in her vision, but something was missing. And she was almost out of time. With only one day until installation, she was pushing the drying time on her oils.
But this time, something was different. She tipped her head, sensing the change in perspective and willing it to stay. She saw shadows she hadn’t noticed before, places where the color wasn’t quite right.
This time, she knew what was wrong.
She marveled that she hadn’t figured it out before. It was so obvious. The snowy fields weren’t stark enough. Weren’t cold enough. And there were too many trees, there, where the forest started on the right.
She was already making the changes in her mind as she picked up one of the brushes and dipped it into the white paint. Now, she could make it just as it was.
THREE
She was in a large room, the ceilings extending far above her head, the room lavishly decorated. She stood in front of an easel, the paintbrush well used and familiar in her hand. Her sister was next to her in front of an identical easel, though the little shvibzik was allowed to sit due to her painful foot condition.
A gentle hand touched her wrist and Maria looked up into the rheumy brown eyes of Gospodin Vitsin, the teacher who came twice a week to instruct her and Anastasia in the finer points of art.
“You must stop daydreaming,” he said, waving at a bowl of fruit on a table in front of them. “Focus on your subject and paint what you see.”
“But, Gospodin,” Anastasia began, using the word for “teacher” without the appropriate surname, as her mother had forbidden time and time again. That Anastasia was of royal blood was no matter. Mother would be furious at her show of disrespect. “Shall Maria paint it ugly then, if that is how she sees it?”
“Nastya!” Maria used one of the many nicknames for her sister. “Behave.”
Gospodin Vitsin glared at Anastasia without reply. She smirked at her sister, her eyes twinkling wit
h mischief under pale brows.
Maria turned back to the fruit, forcing her attention away from the clock on the mantel.
He wasn’t coming.
She told herself it was for the best. They had only seen each other in passing, daring glances when it seemed Gospodin Vitsin wasn’t looking during her lessons. She had likely imagined the whole thing anyway.
She continued her work on the apple, trying to get the shine on its skin. She almost had it when she heard footsteps enter the room.
She knew it was the young man without turning, and she followed his movements out of the corner of her eye. It would not do for Gospodin Vitsin to think her inappropriate and report back to Mother.
“Please excuse me,” the young man said, crossing the room to the great mantel against the far wall. His voice held a hint of defiance, though there was nothing disrespectful in his words. “I’ll work quietly.”
“Again?” Gospodin asked. “Is the clock still not fixed? This is the third time in as many weeks you have been here to attend to it.”
He nodded. “My grandfather says it is an important family heirloom. The Tsar wants it fixed no matter the time or cost, and it is a complicated piece of machinery.”
The figure held the familiar metal box in his hand, the one with all the tools and devices with which he repaired the clocks. Maria moved her brush aimlessly over the apple, undoing her earlier, painstaking efforts, gazing at the man from around the easel.
He was near her age, though perhaps slightly older than her seventeen years. The fabric of his shirt pulled at his broad shoulders, and his hands were large and strong as they pulled a tool from the metal box. His hair shone like ebony under the light of the great chandelier that dominated the center of the room.
She could not deny his appeal, despite his position as the clockmaker’s grandson. In fact, she had thought of little else since he had first appeared at her lessons three weeks before.
“What on earth are you doing?” Gospodin’s voice broke into her thoughts, his presence creating a shadow over her canvas. “You were doing just fine, and now … ” He waved at the painting, shaking his head in exasperation.
Maria refocused on the painting. She had removed whatever shine she’d managed to put on the apple only moments before, brushing over it with so much red paint that it looked flat and two-dimensional. A child’s rendering of an apple.
“I’m … I’m sorry, Gospodin,” she said, picking up another brush to try and repair the damage.
“I think my sister has become distracted,” Anastasia said slyly.
“Shush, Nastya!” Maria hissed, keeping her eyes trained on the canvas, not daring a glance at the young man still tinkering with the clock across the room.
“You must concentrate,” Gospodin said. “Think of the—”
“Gospodin Vitsin?” A voice from the door interrupted his instruction.
The teacher turned to a jacketed manservant. “Yes, yes! What is it?”
“The Duchess’s governess would like to see you.”
“Now?” he asked. “We are in the middle of a lesson.”
“I understand, comrade. I was instructed by one of the staff that your presence was requested.”
Gospodin Vitsin sighed heavily. He hesitated, glancing at the boy near the fireplace, still working on the clock. Maria held her breath, wondered if he would dare leave them alone with a male in the room.
Then, looking from Maria to Anastasia, he seemed to make a decision.
“Continue. I’ll be right back.”
Maria nodded, her eyes trained on the painting, not wanting to show her excitement at the thought of being alone—well, nearly alone—in the room with the young man.
Gospodin’s shoes clicked against the marble as he made his way from the room, the manservant on his heels.
Maria felt flushed, her gown suddenly too constricting, too heavy. She could feel the boy’s eyes on her, and she wanted to take advantage of the moment. To say something witty and charming. But he was so far away. It would be foolish to shout out a greeting, to say nothing of ill-mannered.
She needn’t have worried. Gospodin was gone only a moment when the boy spoke, his voice carrying across the cavernous room.
“What are you working on?” he asked.
“None of your business,” Anastasia said, before Maria could stop her.
Maria turned to her. “Will you please be quiet?”
“Actually, it was your sister to whom I was speaking,” the boy said.
Maria’s face became hot, and she knew she was blushing. She looked up, watching the boy wipe one of the clock parts with a cloth.
“It is … it is a bowl of fruit.” She laughed, thinking it silly now that she had said it aloud.
“A bowl of fruit?” The boy raised one dark eyebrow, smiling. He gestured toward her. “May I?”
“You want to … you want to see it?” Maria asked.
“Unless you would rather not show me.”
Maria shook her head. “No. You are welcome to look if you’d like, although it’s not very good.” She moved to set down her brush, but she was so nervous it clattered to the floor.
“Here. Let me.” The boy put down the piece he had been cleaning. He glanced nervously at the door as he came toward her. As he approached, Maria saw that he was quite tall, his eyes deeply green.
He bent, picking up the brush and holding it out to her. “Here you are.”
She took it from him, her voice suddenly caught in her throat. “Thank you.”
“You’re welcome.” He held her eyes before turning to the painting. She was momentarily bereft at the loss of his gaze. “So this is the infamous bowl of fruit.”
“Yes. And see?” She sighed. “As I said, not very good.”
“You might have more luck if you focused on the canvas,” Anastasia interjected sarcastically.
Maria narrowed her eyes at her sister, willing her to be quiet, just this once.
“Actually,” the man said, “I quite like it.”
“You do?”
He nodded. “Although I imagine it would be more fun to paint something else. Fruit can only be so interesting.”
She laughed. “Gospodin Vitsin says we must practice on the lifeless before we can bring life to something.”
“Is that so?” the boy murmured.
“Yes.”
“How strange.”
“Is it?” she asked.
He nodded. “I don’t know much about these things, but it seems to me that one would learn how to bring life to something by painting something full of it.”
“That is precisely what I said.” She looked up at him and smiled, surprised to find that his eyes were fixed firmly on her face. She wondered how long he’d been staring.
He returned her smile, and for a moment, it was as if they’d known each other forever. As if their meeting was the final piece to a puzzle long unfinished.
But there was no time to ponder the feeling. A moment later, an urgent voice nearly shouted from the doorway.
“He’s coming back!”
She turned her attention to a little boy, bent over and trying to catch his breath, at the edge of the room. She had no idea to what he was referring, but the young man at her side seemed to understand.
He straightened, reaching into his pocket and lifting Maria’s hand. His skin was warm and dry as he placed a small, folded piece of paper in her palm. He closed her fingers around it and looked into her eyes.
“Please come,” he said, his voice pleading.
Then he turned and hurried to the mantel, picking up his tools like nothing at all had happened.
Maria opened the paper quickly, shielding it from her sister’s prying eyes. The message was simple.
I’ll be in the unused receiving room at the back of the palace tonight at midnight.
Nikolai.
She closed the paper just as Gospodin Vitsin reentered the room, muttering about the ridiculousness of being summoned
by someone who wasn’t even on the premises.
Maria picked up her paintbrush, glancing at the young man from behind her canvas.
Nikolai. His name was Nikolai.
FOUR
The remnants of the dream drifted through Jenny’s consciousness. She knew that it was morning, could feel the press of golden light against her closed eyelids, but she wasn’t ready to let go of the dream. She clung to it, trying to force herself back to the big room, the shoddily painted fruit on canvas, the guy who had pressed the paper into her hand. She could still feel his skin against hers, see his eyes burning into her own.
Nikolai. That had been his name.
But remembering it didn’t help. The dream was gone, and so was he.
She gave up, opening her eyes and picking up her cell from the bedside table. Nine a.m.
She was exhausted, her eyes grainy and heavy. Not a great day to be tired. It might be the first day of summer, but she would be busy from the minute she stepped out of bed.
She lay there for a few more minutes, thinking about the icy field and the progress she’d made the night before. By the time she’d finally stumbled to bed, the painting had felt perfect, but that was no guarantee. Sometimes a piece seemed just right in one light and all wrong in another. She was suddenly anxious to see it in the daylight, even though she knew it was too late to make any changes before the installation.
She sat up, putting her feet over the side of the bed, but when she stepped down, something wet and cold touched the bottom of her right foot. “What the … ” she muttered aloud. The smell was unmistakable, but she touched her fingers to the sticky substance anyway, just to be sure.
What was paint doing on the floor?
Reaching for the tissues on the bedside table, she took a few and rubbed at the sole of her foot. When she was sure she’d gotten most of it, she headed for the easel.
She knew right away that something wasn’t right. She was painstaking with her supplies, washing every brush and covering every bit of paint with plastic wrap. Her art was already a sore subject with her dad. Asking for supplies only made her feel worse about it. Plus, she’d been covering the extra trees before bed, making the landscape more barren by layering white and pale blue over them. She hadn’t been working with charcoal gray at all.