by Amanda Gray
* * *
Jenny worked the cafe alone while Tiffany was in the front with Ben’s mom. Apparently, Clare Daulton had worked in a clothing boutique in the last town she and Ben had lived in. She was a fast learner, already quicker on the register than Tiffany.
Jenny made sure everything was well stocked in the cafe, the tables and counters clean, before she opened up her laptop in the back kitchen room. She set the computer on a metal rolling table and pulled up a stool, checking out front to make sure there were no customers while the photos uploaded from her phone to her laptop.
Then she sat down and opened the pictures in Photoshop.
She started with the first one she’d taken of the stained glass at the retreat center. The quality was crappy, which was to be expected. The camera on her phone wasn’t nearly as good as her dad’s Nikon. Plus, the sun was setting and the picture was dark. The image in the window looked like nothing but blobs of abstract color.
She brightened the shot. The colors became brilliant red, green, and blue jewels, but the picture still wasn’t anything she could define.
Next, she tried sharpening the image, adjusting the contrast while she was at it. Zooming in, she thought she saw a face in the stained glass, but it was still a long way from anything helpful.
She leaned back in the chair, letting out a frustrated sigh. She was sitting there, trying to figure out what to do next, when she heard the laughter coming from the cafe.
Jumping up, she hurried to the front, slowing a little when she saw Amber, Gary, and Heather standing there.
“Oh, hey!” Jenny said. “What can I get you guys?”
Amber glanced at the chalkboard that listed all the drinks and baked goods the cafe had available. “Um … I’d like a large coffee with a side of freakishly weird. You should be able to handle that, right?” She tipped her head, her smile flinty and cold.
Jenny felt the heat rush to her face and didn’t know if it was from embarrassment or anger. Probably both. She took a deep breath, reminding herself that even Tiffany thought Amber was a moron.
“You’re hilarious,” she said. “So just the coffee, then?”
Amber’s eyes hardened. “Yeah, just the coffee.”
Jenny heard them laughing and whispering while she made the coffee. She was glad her back was turned. She really didn’t want to know.
She gave Amber the coffee. Amber dug around in her coin purse for change, came up short, and took fifty cents from the cup marked tips on the counter. Jenny let it go. She just wanted them out of there, something she realized wasn’t going to happen when they took up residence at one of the small tables against the wall.
Great.
Sighing, she made a show of wiping down the counters, trying to maintain an expression of calm disinterest while she waited for them to leave. She could feel their eyes on her while she cleaned, heard Amber whispering and Gary’s vacant guffaw. She was about two seconds from totally going off on them when Tiffany walked purposefully into the cafe, marching right for Amber’s table.
“Hey, Tiff! I didn’t know you were—”
Amber stopped in mid-sentence as Tiffany picked up her coffee cup, still mostly full, and twisted around to dump it in the trash.
“What the—” Amber started, her mouth hanging open in shock.
Tiffany stood over their table, her face calm while a storm brewed in her eyes. “You can leave now. By which I mean, get out.”
Amber laughed a little. “You can’t make us leave. You don’t own the place. God! We were just having a little fun. You should really lighten up, Tiff.”
“I might not be able to make you leave, but the owner of this place can and he won’t let you come back. You should go before I get him. He doesn’t like people who harass his employees.”
Jenny watched, fascinated and shocked. She’d known Tiffany wasn’t crazy about Amber and the others, but they were friends. Jenny had always assumed their history was more important than any distance that had grown between them.
Amber and Tiffany stared each other down for a minute before Gary shifted nervously in his seat. “Come on,” he said. “Let’s get out of here. This place is lame anyway.”
Amber held Tiffany’s gaze a few seconds before she stood. “Yeah, you’re right. This place sucks. And so do the people who work here.”
Gary and Heather followed her out of the cafe. Tiffany watched them make their way to the front of the store. She didn’t turn to look at Jenny until she was sure they were gone.
“You okay?” she asked.
Jenny nodded. “You didn’t have to do that. I was fine.”
Tiffany shrugged. “I know, but I was looking for an excuse to get rid of them anyway. This one was better than most.” Tiffany came toward her. “And you know they’re idiots, right? Morons? Dumbasses?”
Jenny laughed. “I’ve gotten that impression.”
“Well, then, you have to consider the source, you know?”
“Yeah,” Jenny said, smiling.
“Hey, are there any muffins left from yesterday?” Tiffany asked, stepping behind the counter. “I’m on break but I’m so totally broke.”
“I think there are some in the back,” Jenny said, rinsing out the rag. Samuel didn’t like them selling anything that hadn’t been made that day, so the unsold stuff was fair game for the employees to take home or eat the next day.
“Cool.”
Tiffany headed to the kitchen while Jenny laid the rag over the faucet to dry.
“Hey! What’s this?” Tiffany called out.
It took Jenny a second to realize what Tiffany meant. Jenny had left her laptop open, the pictures from the retreat center still on the screen where she’d left them when Amber had come in.
She hurried to the back. “It’s nothing. Just some pictures. I’m trying to make them clearer, that’s all.”
She tried to close the laptop, but Tiffany stopped her. “Wait a minute! I might be able to help.”
“It’s okay. It’s … it’s no big deal. I was just playing around.”
“Jen! Stop. Let me … ” Tiffany tried to see around her, but Jenny was blocking her view. “All you have to do is,” she reached around Jenny and pressed something on the computer, “this.”
Jenny glanced down at the image on the screen, the picture now clear. “Wait a minute. How did you do that?”
Tiffany rolled her eyes. “That’s what I was trying to tell you. The image was backwards. You just had to use Flip Horizontal.”
Jenny leaned in, soaking up the image. “What’s Flip Horizontal?”
She used Photoshop to help her dad create Before & After reports for his clients, but it was basic stuff. She’d never used anything called Flip Horizontal.
“You use it when you have a backward picture,” Tiffany explained. “Like in a mirror or something.”
“In a mirror … ” Jenny muttered, finally understanding.
Stained glass images weren’t meant to be viewed from outside a building. They were meant to be viewed from inside it. No wonder the pictures hadn’t make sense.
“These are crazy.” Tiffany bit into a muffin, eyeing the image over Jenny’s shoulder.
“Yeah,” Jenny said quietly, studying the first frame. “Where is that Flip Horizontal key?”
Tiffany reached for the keyboard, showing Jenny how to access the command.
Jenny opened the rest of the pictures, flipping them the same way, brightening and sharpening as she went along. After saving them, she clicked on the first one again, too intent on the images to care that Tiffany was there, watching over her shoulder.
The first picture was still pretty grainy, but now Jenny could actually make out figures. Six of them, all sitting in a circle. In the background was a tree. Nothing earth-shattering. Just a bunch of people in a circle.
She looked for more details.
They wore robes similar to those worn by the center’s monks. In the stained glass image, the hoods were pulled up, concealing the
features of the people who wore them so she couldn’t tell if they were men or women.
Jenny minimized the photo, pulling up the next one.
Almost exactly like the first, the second scene depicted the same figures in the same location. The tree was still there in the background on the right, but the angle was different this time. She could see that they all were looking at something in the center of the circle. Jenny zoomed in until she could see that the object of their attention was a book.
But not just an ordinary book.
The book was made of silver, and shards of brilliant gold glass streamed from it like light. There was something else about it, something that teased her memory. She zoomed in on it even more, playing with the contrast to see if she could read the writing on the front cover, a fragment of knowledge in the back of her mind, like a word on the tip of her tongue.
She sharpened the contrast one last time, worried that she’d gone so far she was just making it worse, when two words became clear on the cover: of Time.
But it wasn’t just the words that stopped her cold, fingers hovering over the keyboard. It was their placement on the book, at the end of what looked like a sentence, that shook something loose from her memory.
She saw it in another context. A book, this one not silver but deep blue, its title just peeking out from behind her mother’s fingers as she stood next to Morgan on their college campus. A title with the words “of Time” at its end.
She’d always assumed it was a textbook.
“This can’t be right,” she whispered.
“What can’t be right?”
Jenny twisted in the chair. She’d forgotten Tiffany was there.
“This book … it reminds me of a book my mom’s holding in an old picture.”
“Well, a book is a book, right?” Tiffany asked. “I mean, just because it looks like the same one doesn’t mean it is.”
“Yeah … ” But dread had settled in the pit of Jenny’s stomach. She thought back to the conversations she’d had with Morgan about her mother. What had Morgan told her, really, other than anecdotal stuff—that her mother had liked pizza with ham and pineapple, that peonies were her favorite flower, that she loved the Doors?
What had she told her that painted any kind of factual picture of her mother’s life? That they’d been roommates at Marist College and had stayed best friends until her mother’s death. That her mother had loved to paint and that her favorite smell was the air right before a summer rain. That her own parents had died when she was a senior in high school.
That was about it.
Jenny pushed aside the questions cropping up in her mind to focus on the next picture.
It was different from the other two. The robed figures were moving—flying?—through a night sky. It was an eerie, beautiful image, even captured with her phone camera. The glass was a deep indigo. The stars in the sky were iridescent—silver with sparks of blue and purple and crimson.
“Jenny … ” Tiffany’s voice was questioning.
Jenny shook her head, pulling up the second-to-last picture. The monks were back on the ground, but in a field filled with long, golden grass that almost seemed to be swaying in a breeze. She could make out what looked to be a forest looming in the distance.
She pulled up the last photo, and this time she recognized the location.
It looked exactly the way it had when she and Ben had snuck onto the grounds for a closer look. Exactly the way it had every day of her life if she turned her eyes to the mountain, the church-like building seeming to hang from the cliff in midair, almost suspended in the clouds.
The retreat center.
Jenny resized the images so they would fit on the screen at the same time. Then she lined them up in order, the way she’d taken them. Tiffany was silent behind her as she studied the images, her mind a whirlwind of confusion.
“What is all this, Jenny?” Tiffany finally asked from behind her.
Jenny considered the question. Considered making something up to avoid telling Tiffany the truth. Instead, she turned the stool to face her.
“How much time do you have?”
TWENTY-ONE
Tiffany only had five more minutes on her break, so Jenny promised to tell her everything on the ride home. She felt sick to her stomach the rest of the day, but once their shift was over and they were heading toward Tiffany’s house, Jenny started talking.
She told Tiffany everything, starting with her visions and continuing with the feeling she had had the night they’d used the Ouija board at Amber’s.
Then came the hard part. Telling her about Nikolai and who he claimed to be.
Who he was.
How his stories and memories fit in with the dreams she’d been having of Maria and the boy named Nikolai who was trying to save her.
Tiffany asked a question here and there, but mostly she was quiet while Jenny talked. Jenny was glad it was dark as they traversed the more rural roads of Stony Creek. There were hardly any streetlights outside of Main Street, and the dim light of the dash and the darkness outside the windows gave Jenny an odd sense of comfort as she talked. Like they were in their own world, a world in which everything Jenny described wasn’t weird or crazy or unbelievable.
She told Tiffany about her mother, about the ring with the moon symbol that matched the one for the retreat center and about Eben and how they’d followed him to the monastery after he’d made another offer on the music box.
“So that’s where the pictures are from?” Tiffany asked when Jenny was finally finished. “The retreat center?”
“Yeah, except I have no idea what they mean.”
“Have you tried looking online? I could research some stuff for you if you want,” Tiffany offered.
“I tried. I couldn’t find anything about the monastery at all except … ” She stopped, remembering the first time she’d looked up the retreat center online.
“Except what?”
Jenny glanced at her before turning her eyes back to the road. “I found a website, but there was no information or anything, just an address for the retreat center, an e-mail address, and a saying or motto or something, ‘Helping those out of time.’”
Something clicked in her mind as she said it.
“‘Helping those out of time’?” Tiffany repeated. “Do you think it could have something to do with Nikolai?”
“If what Nikolai says is true, if he really traveled through time to get here, maybe the monastery does have something to do with it,” Jenny said, pulling into Tiffany’s driveway.
“I’d say at this point, anything’s possible.”
Jenny put the car in park and turned to Tiffany. “Do you think I’m crazy?”
“No,” Tiffany said. “Just because there are stupid people in the world who will slap a label on you for being different doesn’t mean I will. Give me some credit. There are all kinds of unexplainable things in the world—ghosts, psychics, those knives on the Home Shopping Network that can cut through anything. Why not time travel?”
Jenny smiled. “I can think of a few reasons, but thanks.”
“You sure there’s nothing I can do?”
“Not now, but it means a lot that you asked. I’m going to ask Nikolai about the retreat center and find a way to do some more digging about my mom. I’ll let you know what I find out.”
* * *
Jenny went home first, relieved to see that her dad wasn’t there yet. She wanted—needed—to see the photograph of her mom and Morgan, just to be sure she wasn’t imagining things.
She parked the car in front of the garage and ran up the stairs two at a time, anxious to spend time with Nikolai before her dad got home. She couldn’t fully explain Nikolai to herself. There was no way she could give her dad a plausible excuse for his sudden presence.
Once in her room, she went right for the dresser. She picked up the photo, bringing it close to her face and focusing on the book in her mother’s hand.
There was no way to
be sure. Her mother’s fingers were covering part of the title, but the two words at the end of it were definitely “of Time.”
Jenny stood there, trying to gauge how many books there could be in the world with “of Time” in their title and of those, how likely it was that two of them could end up in her life in such a strange way.
But the thing that bothered her most, the thing that ate at her stomach and made her feel sick, was the possibility that Morgan had lied to her. If her mother really did have something to do with the monastery, Morgan would know. If Morgan hadn’t said anything to Jenny about it, wouldn’t that be what her dad called a lie of omission?
And if Morgan had withheld information about her mom’s history, what else was she hiding?
Jenny stared at the picture a couple minutes more, formulating a plan. Then she set it down and went back to the car, driving it over to Nikolai’s so her dad wouldn’t see it in the driveway and freak when he didn’t find her at home. Then, just to be safe, she texted him saying she was going to hang out at Tiffany’s for a couple of hours and would be home by midnight.
She felt bad about the lie. She’d been lying more than usual, but until now they’d all been spur-of-the-moment lies, told because she felt she had no other choice.
This was different. Selfish. A lie told just so she could be with Nikolai.
He was standing on the porch when she got out of the car. The moon, almost full, hung heavy in the sky. Fireflies danced in the woods that surrounded the clearing, the chirping of cicadas a soft lullaby in the background. The air was surprisingly chilly for summer, an insistent wind blowing through the trees.
“Hello, Jenny,” Nikolai said as she approached the porch. Even the simple greeting seemed careful, and she wondered if it took effort for him to not call her Maria.
“Hello.” She stopped at the foot of the stairs. “Is it alright that I came?”
He reached out a hand. She took it, and they met halfway on the stairs. She was still one step below him when he pulled her against him. It didn’t seem strange or sudden or forward.