Spinning Through Time

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by Barbara Baldwin




  Spinning Through Time

  By

  Barbara Baldwin

  Digital ISBNs

  EPUB 9781771457088

  Kindle 9781771457095

  WEB 9781771457101

  Print ISBN 9781771457071

  Copyright 2015 by Barbara Baldwin

  Cover art by Michelle Lee Copyright 2015

  All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.

  The Carousel

  From afar, she heard the music,

  A slow waltz from another time.

  And the horses danced to the tune

  They could not hear.

  The carousel spun round and round,

  Painted horses galloped freely.

  And magic wove a wondrous spell

  Through the silvery night.

  Proud heads held high, the horses pranced,

  Chasing mystic sounds to the past.

  Seeking a world of fantasy,

  They lured her through time.

  Yet when the music ended,

  And the horses finally stopped.

  The magic still coursed through her,

  Love had found her heart.

  Chapter One

  Dallas, Texas — Present Day

  “Damn!” Jaci let the expletive escape without thought as she scrutinized the negatives in her darkroom. Positive her camera lens had been clean and the film fresh, she developed several prints to determine the problem. No matter in which position she had taken the photos, an image existed behind the black carousel horse. Although faint, the figure appeared to be a man, dressed darkly and with dark features.

  She called Mackey, the carousel operator, and arranged a meeting the next morning. When she showed him the pictures, he shook his head, reiterating what she knew — no one had been around when she took the pictures. Anxious to get on with her assignment, she shot several rolls of film, making sure the black lead horse appeared in some, but not all, of the photographs of the restored Dentzel carousel.

  “For Pete’s sake.” This time when she developed the film, the man’s image appeared much more distinct. Jaci studied the proof sheets under a magnifier, chose several and made enlargements. Gray eyes seemed to mock her, as though defying her to find the source of the problem. Yet in another photo, shadows surfaced; dark brows bunched over haunted eyes. Jaci had spent most of her twenty-six years studying people, if not interacting with them, and she felt this man’s pain.

  She grabbed the photos and closed the door to the darkroom.

  “Mandy, take a look at these.” She tossed the photos on the coffee table in front of her younger sister. Logically, she knew there had to be a problem with her camera. She would just have to narrow down the options.

  “Now?” Mandy peered over the top of a dog-eared romance novel. Sliding her glasses up the bridge of her nose, she frowned.

  “Now.” Jaci’s command received a big sigh, but Mandy did pick up the prints.

  “The horses are very nice, Sis, but the good looking hunk in the background is sort of out of focus.”

  “There is no good looking hunk.”

  “But he’s right here in this—”

  “There was no body; man, boy or otherwise. I must have a smudge on my lens.” As she talked, Jaci stuck her head under the coffee table in search of her tennis shoes.

  For the moment ignoring her sister, she shoved her feet into her shoes and jerked at the laces. She didn’t even know why she had asked Mandy’s opinion. Her younger sister was a hopeless romantic and would find a handsome man in the middle of any photograph, even if Jaci knew better.

  She stopped to look at Mandy when her sister heaved the big sigh. Mandy had schooled her face in a serious expression, turning wide eyes to Jaci and allowing yet another sigh to escape.

  Jaci pulled on a hooded sweatshirt. She flipped the hood off her head and ran her fingers through her short blonde bob, making a face as she headed for the door. “I will not fall for your theatrics.”

  “Fine, be that way,” Mandy replied. “Why did you ask me to look at them if you won’t listen when I have something to say?”

  “Geez, Mandy, you sound like...Okay. Let me hear it, but make it fast.”

  Mandy bent over and retrieved the photos from the table. After studying them for several seconds, she grinned. “My theory? How’s this? There’s no doubt this man is a hunk. Judging by his clothes, I’d say he’s actually a gentleman from another era.”

  Jaci rolled her eyes at the explanation even as she wondered why she hadn’t noticed the difference in the clothes.

  Mandy hurried on. “He looks very unhappy. Perhaps he’s lost his lady love, and must spend all eternity floating around trying to find her. Or maybe he’s finally located her, and is making his presence known before he sweeps her off her feet and carries her away to his manor.” Mandy hugged a pillow as she pretended to swoon, giving one last dramatic sigh. “They will, of course, live happily ever after.”

  “Good God, Amanda Elizabeth Eastman! That tops anything you have ever said. Are you trying to tell me I took a picture of a ghost?” Why had she thought Mandy would be serious? Jaci didn’t even wait for an answer. She slammed out the door, trotted down the steps and out into the night.

  Running would clear her mind, and she now wished she had kept to her regular workouts for the past weeks. The time alone in the quiet night seemed a precious commodity. As much as she loved her sister, she could be a trial.

  Unlike Mandy, Jaci felt love and romance were fairy tales for children and had no place in her life. While Mandy was a dreamer, Jaci often stated if she couldn’t photograph it, it didn’t exist.

  She sucked in a lungful of crisp night air and slowly exhaled, hoping at the same time to expel the doubts from her mind. But tonight it didn’t work. The further and faster she ran, the more his image came to mind — dark features, strong hands wrapped around the center pole of the carousel horse, or was it a cane? And his eyes — shimmering silver beckoned her; begged her for something. Understanding? Help? What did he want?

  The strenuous exercise of her body did nothing to eliminate the confusion in her mind. The only resolution was to start again at the beginning.

  * * *

  Jaci rose the next morning determined to exorcise whatever gremlin existed with her work. Knowing the fall weather in Texas, she dressed in layers, figuring she could peel off garments as it warmed up. She pulled on worn blue jeans over Lycra running shorts and grabbed a sweatshirt to wear over her tank top. She never consciously thought about her clothes, and being a freelance photographer, she dressed as she pleased. According to Mandy, that was exactly the reason she never had any dates.

  “No pizzazz to your dress,” Mandy would say.

  Jaci looked at herself in the mirror as she brushed her teeth. “Whatcha mean, no pizzazz?” She made a face. What could possibly be wrong with a sweatshirt emblazoned with the words photographers do it better in dark rooms?

  She grinned; who was she kidding? She had no desire to date and perhaps she dressed to deliberately ward off proposals.

  “Yeah, right,” she told her reflection. “Like you’ve had so many of them.” She snapped on her fanny pack, putting an end to her inner conversation.

  In less than half an hour, she punched the lock on her car and headed for the carousel. She had chosen to arrive later today when the ride was full of people. Setting her camera on a tripod, she softly whistled to the t
une of the Wurlitzer. Mackey was already taking tickets and helping youngsters aboard the brightly painted horses and menagerie animals.

  Tucking her hair under a cabby hat to keep it out of her eyes, Jaci adjusted the focus, and then turned the timer to automatic so she could study the carved animals as they slowly revolved. She tried to imagine the Dentzel carousel before the turn of the century, in the heydays of amusement parks and county fairs. Prancers and jumpers would have carried laughing children round and round to the tune of a pipe organ. The carved and painted frieze edging the upper facade of the carousel was as ornate as the horses themselves. Even the kiosk, the part containing the operating equipment, was encrusted with carved figures and scenery panels.

  Any artist would be in awe of the craftsmanship of this bygone era. But like too much of America’s history, the original carousels had practically disappeared before anyone became concerned. Jaci Eastman was pleased her name would accompany pictures of the restored Dentzel for Life magazine. Her photo essay would remind people of an artistry which only existed in our modern world as a part of the past.

  She reloaded her camera, keeping an eye on the ride. Round and round — speed up — slow down — stop. All riders off. New riders on — round and round again.

  Nowhere did she see anything, or anyone, remotely resembling the image in her photographs. Perhaps he wasn’t here today, although why he had appeared for the last two days, she couldn’t say.

  “Oh, lord, I sound like Mandy,” she chastised herself. She couldn’t believe she was thinking of the blur on her negatives as a real person. Quickly adjusting the camera, she watched the riders debark.

  While the carousel cleared, Mackey stood in the middle, smiling and waving at the youngsters as they happily begged their parents for another ride. Suddenly, he clutched his chest and doubled over.

  Yelling, Jaci raced to the carousel, which Mackey had set in motion as he fell. She jumped onto the moving platform and tried to make her way to where he had fallen within the kiosk. Holding to reins or pommels, she zigzagged in and out of the horses as they moved up and down.

  Feeling intensely dizzy, she stopped for a moment to clear her head. She grabbed the cool, wooden mane of the black horse, closing her eyes to clear her vision. An intense electric shock raced up her arm, paralyzing her motion. She felt the carousel spin faster and faster, the motion throwing her against the horse. She moaned, knowing she was going to be sick. She clutched at the horse’s neck, but that didn’t prevent her from falling.

  * * *

  Shrill whinnies brought Nicholas and his trainer, MacAdoo, on a dead run from the side of the barn to the exercise arena. Sam, the stable boy, running from the opposite direction, collided with Nicholas as they both rounded the corner. MacAdoo, though older, surged ahead to locate the problem while Nicholas tried to untangle himself from the gangly youth.

  By the time he reached the turn-around where they exercised the horses, MacAdoo had untacked Wind Dancer. The trainer handed the lead rope of Nicholas’s prize black stallion to a stable boy. One by one, the other thoroughbreds were released and led away as he cautiously watched their movements.

  It took some time for his heartbeat to return to normal. His entire livelihood centered on the thoroughbreds he raced and the colts they sired. He couldn’t afford to have even one of them injured.

  “What should we do with him?” MacAdoo asked, bent over an inert form lying face down in the mud, right in the middle of the exercise ring.

  “Good God in heaven,” Nicholas muttered in vexation. “How on earth did he get under the horses? He’s quite lucky not to have gotten hurt.”

  MacAdoo agreed as he turned over the unconscious lad. “What should we do with him when he comes to?”

  Nicholas Westbrooke, Pennsylvania born gentleman and horse breeder, had no idea what to do with some wayward youth, although he was curious as to how he had ended up in the horse pen. “Since it appears he likes being under foot of the horses, we could put him in the barn shoveling manure.” Even in the most trying situations, his humor usually came through.

  “Boss, I don’t think that would be a good idea.”

  Nicholas flashed a glance at the youth but his real concentration remained on the horses, reassuring himself none had been hurt by the haphazard appearance of the lad into their midst. Suddenly, an abundance of blonde hair registered in his mind, and his gaze snapped back to the limp figure on the ground. He quickly skirted the tack to kneel beside his friend.

  “Well, I’ll be damned. It’s a girl?”

  “I think — hard to tell with all the mud on her face.”

  But Nicholas knew. The strange shirt she wore, though much too large, still outlined the high, firm curve of her breasts. As he gently wiped the mud away, his handkerchief revealed a straight nose, high cheekbones, and full lips. Feathery eyelashes lay against pale cheeks, concealing the color of her eyes.

  Disregarding the mud now splattered on his lawn shirt and buff riding breeches, he gently lifted her from the muddy ground. Long strides carried him to the house, where he called to his housekeeper while climbing the stairs.

  “Mrs. Jeffrey, come to the guest room at once. And bring warm water and clean towels.”

  The housekeeper quickly appeared by his side, five year old Amanda peering around her skirts. She placed the necessary supplies on a table before she even glanced at the bundle Nicholas placed gently on the bed. When she did, she inhaled sharply.

  “Mister Nicholas, pardon my saying so, sir, but wouldn’t it be better if you, or Mister MacAdoo, were to do this?”

  “Why on earth would I want to do that, Mrs. Jeffrey? It would seem to me this falls under your area of expertise. Amanda can help get these dirty clothes off and find some sleep wear.” He stood back, surveying the unconscious form.

  “Amanda, sir? I must put my foot down. No child of her tender years and sensibilities should—”

  “What are you prattling about?” He scowled across at his housekeeper, who was normally a sensible woman.

  “Why, sir, I did powder your behind when you were just a wee little thing, but you were family. I don’t think it at all proper for me to bathe this young lad, not knowing him, if you see what I mean.” Nicholas watched her blush fiercely as she placed the pitcher of warm water on the table near the bed.

  “Young lad?” He laughed. “If you look closely, you’ll see you are mistaken. This boy is a girl, or rather a woman, I would imagine. She is dressed rather strange, though, don’t you think?” He fingered the odd cap that had covered her very short hair.

  As soon as she realized her mistake, Mrs. Jeffrey wasted no time shooing Nicholas out of the room. He turned toward the door, hearing her cluck like a mother hen over the girl, though she remained unconscious.

  He couldn’t fathom why any woman would wear the odd looking trousers and shirt this one had on. No explanation came to mind for her extremely short hair, either. Certainly her unusual mien, not to mention her sudden presence at Wildwood, indicated she was no lady. He sighed, knowing his questions would have to wait for answers.

  As he closed the door to the guest room, he heard Amanda, her voice full of curiosity. “She looks like a fairy princess, Mrs. J. Will she disappear if we leave her alone?”

  Nicholas would have to make sure the impressionable five year old didn’t spend too much time with the strange, but beautiful, golden-haired woman. Not until he found out more about her.

  * * *

  Jaci tried, without success, to open her eyes and move her limbs. The fall on the carousel may not have broken anything, for she didn’t hurt other than a headache, but she felt as though she floated on a cloud. Through her half-conscious state, she heard voices, and tried to concentrate on their sound although the accent sounded foreign to her ears.

  “We found her. Can we keep her, Uncle Nicholas?” A child’s voice, full of enthusiasm and excitement, made Jaci think of Mandy many years ago.

  “Of course not.” The rough, dee
p timbre of a man’s reply reminded Jaci of the giant in Jack and the Beanstalk. She tried not to flinch or react in any way that might indicate she was awake, for she didn’t feel ready to confront the person who owned that particular voice.

  “But we kept Sir Lancelot.”

  “A dog is different. You don’t keep people, child.” The male voice, still deep and distinguished, was now laced with humor. Jaci thought perhaps he was not an ogre after all.

  “She looks like a fairy princess. Maybe if you kiss her, she’ll wake up.”

  “A-m-a-n-d-a.”

  Jaci drifted back into a void, the stern voice creating images of dragons and swamp monsters in her mind.

  * * *

  The buzzing in her head finally quieted, though it still hurt abominably. She cautiously opened her eyes but found it difficult to adjust her vision to the darkness of the room. Turning her head to the side, she searched for a night light beside the bed. Instead, she found herself staring into the curious gaze of a little girl.

  A memory floated to the surface of her muddled brain — a child’s voice requesting a kiss to awaken the sleeping princess. Jaci smiled. The child’s countenance immediately changed from studied intensity to brilliant sunshine as she returned the smile. She silently offered Jaci a glass of water.

  Jaci slowly scooted to a sitting position, careful not to move her head any more than necessary. Even so, the pounding continued.

  The child shifted from one foot to the other as Jaci scrutinized her over the rim of the glass. She wore a bright blue dress that came clear to the tops of her shoes, covered by a somewhat wrinkled white pinafore. Of course, it didn’t help any that the little girl kept twisting the cloth between her chubby hands as she watched Jaci with wide eyes.

 

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