It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!
You never know when I might play a wild card on you!
Today’s Wild Card author is:
and the book:
Memory’s Gate by Paul McCusker (Time Thriller series)
Zondervan (May 1, 2009)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Paul McCusker is the author of The Mill House, Epiphany, The Faded Flower and several Adventures in Odyssey programs. Winner of the Peabody Award for his radio drama on the life of Dietrich Bonhoeffer for Focus on the Family, he lives in Colorado Springs with his wife and two children.
Visit the author’s website.
Product Details:
List Price: $9.99
Reading level: Young Adult
Paperback: 208 pages
Publisher: Zondervan (May 1, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0310714389
ISBN-13: 978-0310714385
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This book is the third in Paul McCusker’s Time Thriller Trilogy. It’s set in the town of Fawlt Line with a lot of the action taking place at the Fawlt Line Retirement Center. Again, Elizabeth and Jeff are involved in mysterious doings. More shifting of the time fault line? There’s a bit of a twist at the end of this one.  I’m usually pretty good at figuring out the end of books before I get there, but not this one. Oh, I figured out a little of it, but the surprises were there. The books in this trilogy are good stand alone reads, but you’ll appreciate the background you get by reading them all in order. You can read my review of book two, Out of Time to help with some of the background.
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AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:
Chapter One
What in the world am I doing here? Elizabeth Forde asked herself as she followed a silver-haired woman down the main hallway of the Fawlt Line Retirement Center.
Of all the things I could have spent the rest of my summer doing, why this? Yes, she had agreed to volunteer at the retirement center. She had even felt enthusiastic about the idea at the time. But walking down the cold, clinical, pale green hallway with the smell of pine disinfectant in the air, Elizabeth wondered if she had made a mistake.
Sheâd been swept along by Reverend Armstrongâs passionate call to the young people of the church. He had exuberantly insisted that they get involved in the community. They must be a generation of givers rather than takers, heâd said. His words were powerful and persuasive, and before she knew what she was doing she had joined a line of other young people to sign up for volunteer service. Just a few hours a day, three or four days a week, for a couple of weeks. It hadnât sounded like much.
An old man, bent like a question-mark, stepped out of his room and smiled toothlessly at her.
Itâs too much, she thought. Let me out of here.
âI know what youâre thinking,â said her guide, Mrs. Kottler, with a smile. âYouâre thinking that a few hours a day simply wonât be enough. Youâll want more time. Everyone feels that way. But if you do the best you can with the hours you have, youâll be just fine. I promise. Maybe later, once youâve proven yourself, weâll let you come in longer.â
Elizabeth smiled noncommittally.
Mrs. Kottler wore masterfully applied makeup, discreet gold jewelry, and a fashionable dark blue dress. She smelled of expensive perfume. Elizabeth thought she looked more like a real estate agent than the administrator of an old folksâ home.
âWe donât call it an âold folksâ home,â by the way,â Mrs. Kottler said, as if sheâd read Elizabethâs mind, âor a âsanitariumâ or any of those other outdated names. Itâs just what the sign says: itâs a retirement center. People have productive and active lives here. Being a senior citizen doesnât mean you have one foot in the grave. People who retire at sixty-five often have another twenty or thirty years to enjoy their lives. Weâre here to help them do it as well as it can be done.â
Elizabeth noted a couple of productive and active people staring blankly at the television sets in their rooms.
âOf course, we do have older residents who have gone beyond their mental or physical capacity to jog around the center six times a day, if you know what I mean,â Mrs. Kottler added as they rounded a corner and walked briskly down a short corridor toward two large doors. âFor the rest of them, thereâs a full schedule of activities throughout the day. Most take place here in the recreation room.â
She pushed on the two doors. They swung open grandly to reveal a large room filled with game tables, easels, bookcases filled with hundreds of books and magazines, and a large-screen television. Unlike the main halls and cafeteria Elizabeth had just seen, this room was decorated warmly with wooden end-tables, lace doilies, and the kinds of chairs and sofas found in showcase living rooms. Tastefully painted scenes of sunlit hills, lush green valleys, and golden rivers adorned the walls.
âPretty, huh? I decorated this one myself,â Mrs. Kottler said. âI know what youâre thinking. Youâre thinking that they should have let me decorate the entire center. Well, that wasnât my decision to make. The residents are responsible for decorating their own rooms any way they like. Most of the other assembly areas were done before I joined the staff.â
âHow long have you been working here?â Elizabeth asked politely.
âFive years,â Mrs. Kottler answered, then added wistfully, âTime. It goes by so quickly, donât you find?â
For Elizabeth, who had been only eleven years old when Mrs. Kottler started her job, the last five years hadnât gone by quickly at all. She had traveled from the carefree days of Barbie dolls to the insecurities of middle school to the early stages of womanhood and wide-eyed wonder over her future. And she had also traveled to a parallel time, not that sheâd be inclined to mention such a thing to Mrs. Kottler. No, it hasnât gone by very quickly, she thought. And as she considered the residents of the center and realized that one day she might have to live in a place like this, she hoped life would never go by that quickly. She shuddered at the thought.
A tall, handsome young man entered through a door at the opposite end of the recreation room. âMrs. K., I was wonderingââ
âDoug Hall, come meet Elizabeth Forde,â Mrs. Kottler said, waving her arms as if she might create enough of a breeze to sail Doug over to them.
Doug strode across the room with a smile that showed off the deep dimples in his cheeks. Heâs a movie star, Elizabeth thought. His curly brown hair, perfectly formed face, large brown eyes, and painstakingly sculpted physique that was enhanced, not hidden, by the white clinical coat made her certain. Heâs a movie star playing a doctor, she amended.
Doug outstretched a hand and said, âWell, my enjoyment of this place just increased by a hundred percent.â
She shook his hand and blushed. âHi.â
âDoug is our maintenance engineer,â Mrs. Kottler explained.
Doug smiled again. âShe means Iâm the main janitor. But Iâm more like a bouncer, in case these old madcap merrymakers get out of control with their wild partying and carousing.â
âStop it, Doug,â Mrs. Kottler giggled. Then she turned to Elizabeth. âI know what youâre thinking. Youâre thinking, whatâs a good-looking and charming young man like him doing in a place like this?â
For once, Mrs. Kottler had it right. Heâs a movie star playing a janitor? It didnât seem appropriate somehow. She waited for the answer.
âWell, if you can find out, please let me know,â Mrs. Kottler said with another giggle. âHe wonât tell anyone. I assume he has a deep, dark secret. Perhaps he was involved in some sort of intrigue in France and barely escaped from the police on his yacht. Why else would he be hiding in a retirement center in a small town?â
âIf you have to know the truth, I ran off with the church funds,â Doug said. He and Mrs. Kottler chuckled as if this little exchange had been their own private joke for a long time.
Doug rested his gaze on Elizabeth, making her feel self-conscious about how she appeared to him. How did she look in her freshly-issued white-and-pink clinic jacketâfrumpy or professional? Had she taken pains with her makeup? Were her large brown eyes properly accented? Did her smile look natural? Her skin was freshly tanned, no unsightly pimples, which made her glad. She had tied back her long brown hair, but now she wished she had let it fall loose. It looked better that way, Jeff always said.
Jeff.
Thinking of her boyfriend at that moment gave her pauseâas if her self-conscious vanity was, in and of itself, an act of infidelity to him. She glanced away from Doug self-consciously.
âWell, back to business,â Doug said pleasantly, as if heâd picked up on her feelings and wanted to spare her any embarrassment. âI was wondering if now would be a good time to adjust the settings on the Jacuzzi. You donât have any plans to let the kids in this afternoon, right?â
âNo, Doug, the âkidsâ wonât be going in today,â Mrs. Kottler replied. âDo whatever you need to do.â
He nodded. âMaybe Elizabeth will want to test it later when Iâm finished.â He gave her a coy grin.
âI think Elizabeth will be too busy getting acclimated to her new duties,â Mrs. Kottler replied.
Doug tipped a finger against his brow as a farewell. âIf thereâs anything I can do to help …â
Mrs. Kottler watched him go. âHeâs such a flirt. A charming, good-looking flirt, but a flirt nonetheless.â Elizabeth detected a hint of jealousy in her voice.
The tour of the center eventually led Elizabeth and Mrs. Kottler outside to the five acres of manicured grounds, landscaped into gentle green slopes that ultimately rolled down to a small manmade lake called Richards Pond. It was enclosed on one side by a natural forest that extended off to the horizon. Elizabeth walked alongside Mrs. Kottler, feeling oppressed by the humidity of the August afternoon. She swatted at the occasional mosquito that wanted to make a meal of her arms.
âThe heat and mosquitoes tend to keep everyone inside on days like this,â Mrs. Kottler said.
âExcept those two,â Elizabeth said, gesturing to two people in a white Victorian-style gazebo near the lake.
âThatâs Sheriff Hounslow and his father,â Mrs. Kottler said, with just enough annoyance to betray her usual professional detachment. âI suppose we should say a quick hello.â
As they got closer, Elizabeth saw that the sheriff, a large man in a light gray uniform, was pacing in an agitated way. His father, a shadow from this distance, was sitting on one of the benches that lined the gazebo. Sheriff Hounslow saw them coming and waved.
Mrs. Kottler spoke to Elizabeth in a low voice, âAdam Hounslow joined us just a couple of days ago. Like many new residents, heâs having a hard time adjusting. Hello, Sheriff!â
Mrs. Kottler and Elizabeth mounted the steps to the shade of the round white roof covering the gazebo. The heat and humidity were not relieved there.
âLook whoâs here,â Sheriff Hounslow announced. âMrs. Kottler andâwell, wellâElizabeth Forde.â
âOh, you know my new volunteer. Elizabeth will be with us a few hours a day for the next couple of weeks.â
âHow nice. You be sure to take special care of my father,â the sheriff said. âHis name is Adam.â
Elizabeth could see the old man clearly now. He was bent over from some sort of arthritis and had a pale wrinkled face with hazel eyes encased in deep, worried frownsâin them, she could see the resemblance between the father and the son. Wisps of thin white hair sprayed out from a spotted crown.
âWouldnât you like a pretty girl like Elizabeth to help take care of you, Dad?â the sheriff asked.
âI donât need to be taken care of,â the old man growled. He tucked his head down against his chest.
Sheriff Hounslow ignored the remark and continued, âIâm surprised to see you here, Elizabeth. Shouldnât you be getting ready for the grand opening of that historical amusement park, or whatever Malcolm calls it?â
âItâs not an amusement park,â Elizabeth corrected him. âItâs called the Historical Village.â
âI didnât know you were connected to Malcolm Dubbs!â Mrs. Kottler said, impressed. Malcolm Dubbs was the closest thing Fawlt Line had to royalty, a member of the English branch of the Dubbs family whoâd been in the area for nearly 300 years. Malcolm came to manage the estate after the last American adult member of the Dubbs family was killed in a car accident.
âSheâs also dating Jeff Dubbs,â the sheriff informed her.
âAre you? Doug will be very disappointed,â Mrs. Kottler teased, then said earnestly, âJeffâs parents died in that terrible accident awhile back, didnât they? That was so sad.â
Elizabeth nodded without responding. Jeffâs parentsâMalcolmâs cousin and his wifeâhad died in a plane crash a couple of years before. Thatâs why Jeff lived with Malcolm.
Mrs. Kottler fluttered her eyes as if she might cry. âI think Malcolm Dubbs is a remarkable man. Imagine taking in that boy.â
âThat boy is the true heir to the estate,â Sheriff interjected sarcastically. âIf I were him, Iâd have a lot of trouble with Malcolm using the family money to build that park.â
âItâs not Jeffâs money unless Malcolm dies,â Elizabeth corrected him. âHeâs entitled to do whatever he wants with it. And Jeff is very proud of Malcolm.â
Mrs. Kottler nodded. âAfter all, Malcolm is using it to create something everyone will learn from. Itâs not as if heâs wasting it.â She turned to Elizabeth. âIs it true that heâs brought in authentic buildings, displays, and artifacts from all over the world?â
âWhatever he can find. From picture frames and hairbrushes to school houses and church ruins, as much as he could find from the past few hundred years is represented.â She covered a smile, realizing she was reciting one of Malcolmâs brochures. âPhase One opens on Saturday.â
âPhase One?â
âMalcolm says the village is a work in progress. Heâll open various sections of it as theyâre ready.â
âAs I said, itâs a Disneyland of history,â the sheriff said derisively.
Elizabeth frowned at Sheriff Hounslow, knowing better than most the adversarial relationship the two men had. Elizabeth suspected that the sheriff was jealous of Malcolmâs wealth and the respect he commanded from the townspeople. But whatever the reason, Hounslow never missed an opportunity to poke fun at Malcolmâs projects or eccentricities.
âI canât wait to go on the rides!â he added.
âAre there rides?â Mrs. Kottler asked, amazed.
Elizabeth shook her head. âNo. Just buildings and displays.â
Sheriff Hounslow grinned. âThereâs going to be a big celebration. The mayor will be there and a special assistant to the governor, and thereâll be a telegram from the president and maybe even world peaceâall thanks to Malcolm Dubbs.â
âDonât be such a pompous fool, Richard,â Adam Hounslow barked at his son. âIâm looking forward to seeing the village.â
âIâm glad youâre looking forward to something,â the sheriff remarked.
âLiving in a place like this, Iâm lucky to look forward to anything,â Adam snapped.
âOh, Iâm sure you donât mean that,â Mrs. Kottler said. âThe Fawlt Line Retirement Center will be like home to you in no time at all, I promise.â
Adam scowled at her. âThis will never be my home. My home has been sold right out from under me by my thoughtful and compassionate son.â
âIâm not getting into this argument with you again, Dad,â Hounslow said irritably.
âYes you will,â Adam replied. âAs long as you force me to live in places where I donât want to live, weâll have this argument.â
The sheriff turned on his father. âWhere else are you going to live? You couldnât stay in that big old place alone. You can barely take care of yourself, let alone keep up with a big house.â
The old man snorted and turned away.
Sheriff Hounslow wouldnât let it go. âDo I have to remind you of what led up to this? Do I have to announce to the whole world how you nearly burnt the house downâtwiceâby forgetting to turn the stove burners off? Or the time you flooded the house by wandering off to the store while the bath water was running?â
Mrs. Kottler caught Elizabethâs eyes and jerked her head towards the center, signaling that they should leave. Heading across the grounds, Elizabeth could still hear the voices of the two men arguing behind her.
âI know what youâre thinking,â Mrs. Kottler said. âYouâre thinking that Adam must be crazy not to like our center. Well, I agree. But heâll get used to it. They always do.â
They approached the building from the back, where a stone patio had been added to the recreation room. It was congested with plants and flowers of all kinds. A man in a wheelchair was pruning the plants, meticulously spraying the leaves and wiping them with a water bottle. He had long gray hair that poured out from under a large baseball cap. Beneath the brim of the cap he wore sunglasses so dark that she couldnât see his eyes at all. A bushy mustache and beard flowed downward. It struck Elizabeth that, apart from his cheeks, his face couldnât be seen at all. He wore a baggy jogging suit that, to Elizabethâs thinking, must have been unbearably hot in the heat and humidity.
âThatâs Mr. Betterman, another new resident,â Mrs. Kottler said. âCome meet him.â
They crossed the patio where Mrs. Kottler introduced them.
Mr. Betterman didnât speak, but grunted and held a carnation out to her.
âVery nice,â Elizabeth said.
âTake it,â Mrs. Kottler whispered.
Elizabeth reached out to take the flower. For a second he didnât let go, but used the moment to lean closer to her and whisper, âI know who you are.â He gave her a slight smile then turned away to fiddle with the planter.
Disconcerted, Elizabeth looked to Mrs. Kottler again, who gently shrugged. They walked inside.
âWhat did he mean by that?â Mrs. Kottler asked once they were inside and clear of Bettermanâs hearing.
âI donât know,â Elizabeth replied. She didnât say so, but something about the manâs half-smile and voice seemed familiar to her.
âStill, Thatâs quite an honor,â Mrs. Kottler said. âHe doesnât usually talk to anyone. Heâs a little eccentric.â
No kidding, Elizabeth thought.
As they drifted through the recreation room, Elizabeth found herself looking for Doug. She wasnât a flirtatious personânor was she interested in anyone but Jeffâand yet she was drawn to him. Maybe because he was someone else in the building who was young and sympathetic, like her.
Mrs. Kottler smiled contentedly. âWell, thatâs most of it. I know what youâre thinking. Youâre thinking that this is more like a beautiful hotel than a retirement center. We do our best. Now, let me show you where the storage closets are and introduce you to your new responsibilities.â
Chapter Two
Malcolm Dubbs lived in a cottage on the edge of the Dubbs familyâs vast estate bordering the north edge of Fawlt Line. It had a manor house, built in the 17th century, which was now part of the Historical Village. The cottage, which he said suited him perfectly and reminded him of England, seemed to fit him perfectly. It seemed to suit Jeff, who lived there with him. Elizabeth thought that the two were remarkably happy, considering the tragedy that had brought them together.
Tall and slender, Malcolm sat at the large desk in his den when Elizabeth and Jeff arrived. The sun was soon to set, and a dim yellow light washed the cluttered room. Thanks to the oak tree just beyond the French doors leading out to the patio, drops of cooler, green light filtered into the room. They highlighted the old-fashioned furniture and skimmed along the dark wood paneling, the classic paintings, the shelves sagging under too many books. Jeff smiled and turned on the bankerâs lamp at the head of the desk.
Malcolm looked up and blinked at Jeff. âOh, hi,â then, âAnd good evening, Elizabeth,â he said wearily, his British accent making him sound intelligent and genteel.
âGood evening,â Elizabeth said, remembering why so many young girls in Fawlt Line had a crush on the man.
âAre you all right?â Jeff asked.
Malcolm sighed. âAll the preparations for the grand opening have left me with too much to do and too little time.â
Jeff gestured to the papers on the desk. âWhat are you working on now?â
He pushed the papers away disdainfully. âThese are daily reports of completed projects within the village, and this is another report discussing the security system and inherent weaknesses that might leave some areas vulnerable to theft.â
âVulnerable?â Elizabeth asked.
âThe security cameras still arenât working.â Malcolm leaned back in his chair and shoved his hands into the pockets of his tweed sports coat. He stretched his long legs as far as they would go.
âItâs not all doom and gloom, I hope,â Elizabeth said.
âNo. The eighteenth-century windmill from Holland is working perfectly. And we wrapped up the construction on the minersâ row houses from southwest Pennsylvania. Iâm particularly proud of that exhibit.â
âWhy that one?â
Malcolm smiled. âBecause it shows the chronology of change better than most of the displays. You start at one end of the row houses, and as you walk through each one youâll see exactly how the miners lived during the last 180 years. Go in the first door, and youâll see how it was in 1820. Move on to the next door and youâre looking at 1840, then 1860 and 1880 and so on until you come to the present day. We spent a lot of time getting every detail just right.â
Elizabeth shook her head. âI donât know how you pulled it all together.â
âSometimes I wonder myself,â Malcolm admitted. âItâs been a long time in the making.â
âHundreds of years, I figure,â Jeff said.
Malcolm waved his hand as if brushing away the subject. âForget about the village for now. How was your first day as a volunteer, Elizabeth?â
Elizabeth was pleased that he even remembered, considering all the other demands on his mind. She said, âIt was mostly just a chance to look around. I only met a couple of people. The center is nice, I guess, if you have to live in a place like that.â
Malcolm chuckled. âYour faint praise is overwhelming.â
Jeff dropped himself onto the sofa opposite the desk and ran his hands through his wavy dark hair. âSheâs sorry she ever volunteered.â
Elizabeth rebuked him with a sharp look. âJeff.â
âWhat?â Jeff asked innocently. âDid I say something wrong?â
Malcolm stood up and smiled sympathetically. âIf itâs any consolation, Elizabeth, I think volunteering to help out at a retirement center is a noble and difficult thing to do. Many retirement homes are downright depressing, and elderly people can be very unpredictable, depending on their states of minds. But if you remember that theyâre people, and not just old people, you have the opportunity to do them a world of good.â
Elizabeth thought of how Doug Hall called them âkidsâ and probably charmed the socks off them, if only because he didnât treat them differently from anyone else.
âAs quirky as your parents are, you should feel right at home,â Jeff said with a laugh. Elizabeth kicked at his ankle before sitting next to him on the sofa.
Malcolm tugged at his ear thoughtfully. âI havenât been out to the center since they renovated it. When I was a kid, it wasnât a retirement home. It was just a house on a farm owned by someone the two of you know.â
Elizabeth and Jeff looked at each other blankly.
âThatâs where the Richards property is,â Malcolm said. âItâs where Charles Richards disappeared.â
Elizabethâs and Jeffâs faces lit up with the realization.
âYou mean the Charles Richards?â Jeff asked.
âMy Charles Richards?â Elizabeth added in disbelief.
Malcolm nodded. The three of them looked at each other silently as the story and the memories came back.
**********
For years the remarkable case of Charles Richards was whispered about around Fawlt Line, but treated as an unsolved mystery by those who investigate such things. Most people considered it one of those small-town myths that make their way into the consciousness of the localsâlike haunted houses and boogy-menâparticularly by parents who want to scare their kids into behaving. But Malcolm, Elizabeth, and Jeff knew this particular story was more than a myth. They believed every word of it, and for very good reason.
The story went that over thirty years ago; Charles Richards, the son of a wealthy merchant, settled with his wife and two children on a modest farm outside of Fawlt Line. One morning, the two children were playing next to the sidewalk leading from the house to the front gate. Charles and his wife, Julia, stepped out of the front door, where Charles kissed his wife good-bye. He was leaving to run a few errands in Fawlt Line. Charles walked down the steps toward his children and patted them on their heads as he passed. As he reached the front gate, a car came up the road toward the house. In it was Dr. Hezekiah Beckett, the local veterinarian, and a young boy who was helping the doctor that summer. Charles waved at the doctor, paused to check the time on his wristwatch, then turned as if he might head along the fence to greet the approaching car. He took three steps and, in full view of his wife, his children, Dr. Beckett, and the boy, he disappeared.
Horrified, the five of them raced to the spot and looked around. They saw only the fence and the grass. There were no bushes or trees for him to hide behind, no holes to fall into, nothing to explain how he could simply vanish into thin air.
Dr. Beckett and Julia Richards searched everywhere. Then the townspeople helped. They even dug up the ground where Charles had disappeared, in the belief that heâd fallen into a sinkhole or underground cavern and was trapped below. The ground was solid. Charles was gone. An investigation over the next few weeks failed to establish any clues. There was no explanation for it. Julia was bedridden for months, lost in the hope that her husband would return. No funeral or memorial service was ever held. Later, the family sold the farm and moved away.
The story would have been easy for Elizabeth to dismiss, had it not been told to her by Malcolm, who was the young boy in the car, working with Dr. Beckett during one of his summer vacations to America. And that was only the beginning. Malcolm spent years studying theories of time travel, parallel universes, and alternative dimensions in the belief that heâd find an explanation. All he wound up with were theories and a deep suspicion about the town of Fawlt Line itself. There had been enough weird occurrences in the areaâMalcolm had chronicled and investigated them allâfor him to determine that Fawlt Line wasnât so named because it was on a geographical fault, but a time fault.
Then, a few months ago, Elizabeth herself became a victim of the time fault.
While taking a bath one night, she had slipped through a fracture in time and wound up in a parallel Fawlt Line where everyone knew her as a girl named Sarah. As she insisted that she was really Elizabeth and didnât know anyone there, she was taken to the hospital and treated as an amnesiac. The understandable pressure on her to become Sarahâand to accept this new and different Fawlt Lineâwas intense. There was no point in arguing against the reality directly in front of her, even though her memories told her otherwise. Alienated and confused, she very nearly gave in to the pressure to be Sarah.
But the circumstances of her disappearance caused Malcolm to think that they werenât dealing with a normal disappearance. Too much didnât add up. And the arrival of someone in this Fawlt Line who looked exactly like Elizabeth but wasnât Elizabeth led Malcolm to work out a theory that she was some sort of âtime twinâ who had switched places with Elizabeth.
In that other time Elizabeth met a man who gave her hope that she wasnât an amnesiac after all: Charles Richards. He claimed he knew how she felt because he had made the same switch from one time to the other. He helped her and, ultimately, saved her life from a couple of people who wanted her dead. It was a nightmarish experience.
Elizabeth eventually made it back thanks to Jeff and Malcolm. But Charles remained trapped in the parallel time.
**********
Elizabeth still got upset when she thought of Charles stuck in a time that wasnât his own. She hardly talked about her time-travel experience because of the sadness it brought to her. Even now, as she sat in the security of Malcolmâs study, it made her uneasy to discuss it again. In the deepest part of her heart, she feared that the nightmare might return just by invoking its name.
âThey tore down Charlesâs house and built a gaudy mansion on the site,â Malcolm went on to say. âIt was the kind of place kids liked to throw rocks at. Then they tore that down and put up the new building a couple of years ago. How does it look inside?â
Elizabeth didnât answer, her mind still on Charles Richards and her own nightmarish adventure.
âBits?â Jeff asked, concerned.
Elizabeth lifted her head, catching up with Malcolmâs question. âHuh? Itâs ⊠modern. Just one story with a lot of hallways. More like a hospital than a home.â
Jeff and Malcolm glanced warily at each other.
âWhatâs wrong?â she asked.
âMaybe you should take her home,â Malcolm suggested. âSheâs probably tired from her first day there.â
âNo, reallyâIâm all right,â she said.
Jeff stood up and held out his hand. âCome on.â
She took his hand and he helped pull her to her feet.
***
Jeff brought his Volkswagen to a squeaky stop in front of Elizabethâs house and turned off the headlights. They both looked up and saw through the front window Alan Forde pacing in the living room. He was waving his hands and talking animatedly.
âIs he lecturing someone?â Jeff asked.
Elizabeth shook her head. âSort of. Heâs been recording a series of talks about the legends of King Arthur.â
âRecording them for whom?â
âWhoever wants them,â she answered. âHeâs been obsessed with Arthur ever since … well, you know.â
The âyou knowâ was a reference to yet another adventureâthis one shared by Jeff, Malcolm, and Alan Fordeâwith a man who showed up in Fawlt Line one night claiming to be King Arthur himself. The adventure resolved itself in England where, according to Malcolm and Jeff who witnessed it all, the man really was King Arthur.
âIâd like to hear what he has to say,â Jeff said.
Elizabeth glanced at Jeff gratefully. âHeâd be happy if you asked.â
âIâll wait for some other time. Meanwhile, I want you to tell me whatâs going on with you.â
Elizabeth hadnât expected such a direct question, though she should have. Jeff could always tell when something was wrong. Sometimes it was a comfort to her. At other times it made her feel uneasy, particularly when she didnât have an answerâlike tonight. âI donât know,â she said after a long pause.
âYou must have a clue,â he probed.
She turned in the seat to face him. âI really donât know, Jeff. Maybe itâs just volunteering at the center. It was so … strange. At first I thought it was because I donât know anything about helping old people. But …â
âBut what?â
She struggled over what to say next. âSheriff Hounslowâs father is a resident there, and the two of them were arguing and it was embarrassing ⊠and then I met a guy in a wheelchair who gave me a carnation, and he said he knew me.â
Jeff grimaced. âHe knows you? How?â
âHe didnât say, and I was too surprised to ask. It was really weird. I had this feeling that Iâd seen him before, but I donât know where.â
Jeff took her hand in his and spoke softly. âLook, Malcolmâs probably right. Old folks can be unpredictable, and that makes you nervous. Do you remember how Grandpa Dubbs was before he died?â
Elizabeth nodded. âHe kept accusing the servants of stealing things.â
âBecause he kept forgetting where he put them,â Jeff finished. âIt used to scare the wits out of me when he launched into one of his tirades. Maybe the guy in the wheelchair really thought he knew you, but he was thinking of someone else. Probably someone from his past.â
Elizabeth agreed silently.
âAnd Iâm just guessing, but it gave you the creeps to find out that the retirement center was built on Charles Richardsâ place, right?â
âIt brought back a lot more than I wanted to remember.â
âThatâs what I figured.â Jeff was quiet for a moment. His expression told Elizabeth that he was forming his words carefully before speaking. âMaybe ⊠you should get some counseling about what happened to you. Maybe we all should.â
âOh, right,â Elizabeth said with an unamused laugh. âI can see me now in the first session with the counselor: âIâm here because I traveled to a parallel time âŠâ Yeah, thatâll work. Heâll have me committed just like the doctor in that time wanted to do.â
âIâm just saying that getting bounced around in time and going through what you went through canât be healthy.â
âYouâre right about that.â
âI mean, especially since you donât like to talk about it.â
âIâm okay,â Elizabeth insisted. âI think itâs just today, volunteering at the center, bumping into some weird people, and then thinking about Charles Richards. Iâll be all right. Really.â
***
Elizabeth had a hard time falling to sleep that night. Images of Charles Richards spun through her mind and mixed with scenes from the Fawlt Line Retirement Center. Mrs. Kottler kept saying, âI know what youâre thinking,â and then Doug Hall offered her flowers carefully pruned by George Betterman in a wheelchair. The floor opened up to expose a dark cavernous time fault that threatened to pull her in. She fellâand never stopped falling.
Elizabeth suddenly sat up in her bed and knew that one way or another she had to take back her offer to volunteer at the center.
Chapter Three
Elizabeth spent most of the next day trying to figure out how to gracefully get out of helping at the retirement center. She knew her parents expected her to be more responsible than to quit without a good reason. The challenge was to find a good and plausible reason. School hadnât started yet, so she couldnât blame homework. She had no other jobs or commitments, so she couldnât say her schedule was too busy. One by one she raised up excuses. One by one her better judgment knocked them down.
Even up to the point when her mother dropped her off at the center, she was thinking of stories she could tell Mrs. Kottler to justify handing in her immediate notice. Despondently, she kissed her mother on the cheek and climbed out of the car. Her only hope was that something might happen during her shift that would provide a solid way out.
Mrs. Kottler gave her a simple assignment to start with: take the cart around and fill the water jugs in all the rooms.
Elizabeth guessed that this was a standard job for new volunteers and a shrewd way to help them get to know the residents. Many were up and about when Elizabeth walked into the various rooms and assembly areas. It was her first full view of the people she would be mingling with. While some were kind and welcoming, others regarded her with wariness or skepticism. Just like kids on the first day of school, she thought. You canât tell about people until you get to know them better. That was a good way to think about them, she decided. They were just older kids watching a new student.
But these âstudentsâ sure looked different from the ones at school. Elizabeth was instantly struck by the crowns of white hair and varying styles of hairpieces worn by both the men and women. Her next impression was that many were quite agile, moving quickly and freely up and down the hallway, in and out of chairs, without the stiff or stooped gait she expected from older people. Some used canes and walkers, others simply steadied themselves against whatever sturdy objects happened to be nearby. Theyâre people, Elizabeth was reminded as they chatted amiably among themselves or played games in the recreation room or strolled thoughtfully alone. There were others, of course, who were less capable and needed more attention and care. Sharp minds were encased in fragile bodies. Sharp bodies sometimes encased fragile minds. It varied from room to room, person to person.
The most uncomfortable moment came when she reached Adam Hounslowâs room. The door was slightly ajar, and she could see through the crack that the room was dark. The blinds had been drawn, and Adam was talking to someone in a wheelchair. Though his back was to her, Elizabeth recognized the telltale baseball cap and knew it was George Betterman. The men spoke in low voices. Elizabeth was unsure whether to knock, clear her throat, or simply walk in. She paused in her indecision.
Adam handed something to George, who quickly shoved it under his loose-fitting jogging jacket. The hushed voices and quick action told Elizabeth that she wasnât supposed to be seeing what she was seeing. She turned to sneak away, but banged the four-wheel cart against the wall. The jugs and glasses rattled, and the two men to spun around to face her.
âSorry to interrupt,â she stammered nervously, âbut Mrs. Kottler asked me to bring some fresh water.â
Adam looked particularly guilty. âI donât need fresh water,â he said with a sneer.
âIâm sorry,â Elizabeth said again and retreated back into the hallway. With shaking hands, she grabbed the handle on the cart. Why was she so nervous? What was it about the men that scared her so?
She heard a soft whirring sound behind her. Seconds later, George Betterman navigated his electric wheelchair past her, pausing to look up at her through the black circles of his sunglasses. I know who you are, she expected him to say again. But he didnât say a word. He rode away, down the hallway.
Elizabeth closed her eyes, trying to calm the irrational fear that gripped her. A heavy hand fell on her shoulder, and she cried out, nearly jumping out of her skin.
âWhoa, now, calm down,â Sheriff Hounslow said. âI didnât mean to scare you.â
âIâm a little jumpy,â Elizabeth admitted quickly.
âI guess you are. Is everything all right?â
âYeah,â she said. âFirst-day jitters.â
âI thought yesterday was your first day.â
âIt was. But that was a tour. Today is my first day of work. Excuse me,â she said and raced away with the cart. Before she rounded the next corner, she heard the sheriff greet his father. Adam Hounslow launched the first assault by complaining about his room.
Safe down the next hallway, she stopped again to take a deep breath. This is stupid, she told herself. Thereâs nothing to be afraid of. It was just two old men talking. She rebuked herself for being so weird and, after a moment, continued her rounds.
The roomsâor apartments, as Mrs. Kottler called themâvaried in their looks. A few looked sterile and hospital-like. Others reflected attempts by the residents or their families to liven them up with a few sticks of furniture, knickknacks, mementos, souvenirs, and treasures. If awards were given for the homiest room, Frieda Schultz would have won hands down.
From the moment Elizabeth stepped into Friedaâs room, she felt transported out of the retirement center into a cozy bungalow. The room was colorful, with bright floral-patterned curtains, and lampshades, and the smell of a light perfume that made her think of purple flowers. A chaise-lounge had been placed in the corner, smothered with pillows that Frieda had probably made herself, Elizabeth guessed, and a quilt that looked older than anything or anybody in the center. The windowsill was covered with cards, fashion magazines, catalogues, and books by authors with names like Baroness Orczy and Georgette Heyer and Elswyth Thaneâpeople Elizabeth had never heard of. Victorian tapestries did their best to hide the institutional-white walls. An oak wardrobe with elaborately-carved edging along the top and bottom replaced the plain pressed-wood box the center issued. The matching bureau and vanity table, squeezed in along the opposite wall, were overrun with costume jewelry, evening purses, scarves, gloves, perfume bottles, jars, cold cream, tubes, magnifying mirror, boxes, silver combs, and brushes. It gave Elizabeth the impression that Frieda might suddenly decide to call her chauffeur and go out to the theater for the evening.
âI know, I know, itâs a cluttered mess,â Frieda said from the bathroom door in the corner.
Elizabeth realized sheâd been standing in the middle of the room, staring. âI think itâs wonderful,â she said.
âWell, arenât you the kind one to say so.â Frieda, a heavyset woman in a silk housecoat, sashayed into the room as if she were making an entrance at a formal ball dressed in chiffon and lace. Her beauty had faded, but she exuded a poise and charm that hadnât. âTell me your name, child.â
âIâm Elizabeth. Iâm here to give you some fresh water.â
âA new volunteer?â
Elizabeth nodded as she flipped open the top on the copper-colored jug. Empty. She retrieved the large jar from the cart and poured water from one to the other.
âYou must be traumatized,â Frieda said. âA pretty young girl like you thrown in with all these fossils. What in the world are you doing here?â
âI volunteered through my church.â
âAnd regretted it every minute since, Iâll bet,â Frieda laughed.
Elizabeth answered with a guilty smile.
âIf itâs any consolation, Iâm very happy to meet you,â said Frieda. âI get so tired of old people. And youâre a churchgoer too. All the better. Iâd go to church if it werenât such a major production to do so.â
Elizabeth was surprised. âProduction? Why is it a production?â
âIâm not about to bore you with my health problems. We have a chapel here that I can pray in. Thatâll do for now.â Frieda pushed aside some of the pillows on the chaise-lounge. âPut down those water jugs and come sit.â
âBut Mrs. Kottler wants me toââ
âForget Mrs. Kottler,â Frieda said. âI want you to sit down right here and tell me all about yourself. I donât get to meet new people very often and, when I do, I want to know their stories.â
Elizabeth shyly sat down on the lounge.
Frieda placed herself on the opposite end, leaned back and tucked one leg under her large frame. âComfy? Now ⊠whatâs your story?â
Elizabeth began slowly, with a few basic facts about growing up in Fawlt Like, her parents, her school. Soon, she was chatting away as if she couldnât help it. Any lull, any missing pieces, any evasion, and Frieda asked just the right question to set it straight and keep the conversation going. Elizabeth surprised herself by talking about more personal experiences: how her friendship with Jeff had eventually led to their dating.
âDo you love him?â Frieda asked.
âYes, I do,â Elizabeth admitted, blushing.
âChildhood sweethearts,â Frieda mused. âMy Alexander and I were childhood sweethearts. We were married for forty-seven years. It wasnât always bliss, but I wouldnât have wanted to spend that time with anyone else.â
They continued to talk for another half-hour. At various points, Frieda would drop in her own memory of a similar experience sheâd had when she was Elizabethâs age. Elizabeth didnât mind. She found comfort in knowing that her experiences werenât unique only to her, but that a woman four times her age felt the same.
Elizabeth glanced at her watch and stood up quickly. âOh! Iâve been here too long. Mrs. Kottlerâll be looking for me.â
âWait,â Frieda said and placed a soft hand on Elizabethâs arm. âThereâs something you havenât told me.â Her gaze was penetrating.
âWhat do you mean?â Elizabeth asked feebly.
âI have a sense about these thingsâa gift, in a way. Thereâs something you havenât told me. Youâre holding something back.â
Elizabeth glanced away nervously. Frieda was right: Elizabeth hadnât mentioned her time-travel nightmare. Having made a friend in the center, she wasnât eager to lose her by talking like a lunatic. âYeah, but itâs too crazy. I canât talk about it now. Maybe some other time.â
Frieda watched her for a moment, then decided to let the subject drop. âAll right. We have time. Other days, other talks, and maybe youâll tell me about it. I feel that somehow you should tell me. Maybe there are secrets I can tell you too.â
Elizabeth felt such an instant rapport with the older woman that she was tempted to take her invitation and pour out the whole tale on the spot. But just then Mrs. Kottler appeared in the doorway.
âThere you are!â she exclaimed. âIâve been wondering what became of you. I need your help in the recreation room. There arenât enough judges for the Twister contest!â
***
Frieda insisted that Elizabeth could go only if she escorted her into the recreation room. âMy ankles are hurting today,â she complained and sat down in a wheelchair that was folded up behind the door.
Elizabeth happily grabbed the wheelchair, clicked it into place, and whisked Frieda away, the smell of pretty perfume trailing back to her.
âWhatâs wrong with your ankles?â she asked as she pushed Frieda down the hall.
âI have occasional bouts with arthritis. Not today, actually, but I didnât want to let you go yet,â Frieda replied.
The recreation room was filled with residents, many of whom Elizabeth had seen on her rounds. They sat at the card tables, on the sofas and chairs, engaged in different games and hobbies. At the opposite end of the room, Elizabeth saw Doug Hall in earnest conversation with George Betterman.
âOh,â she said, without meaning to.
Frieda turned around to look at Elizabethâs expression, then followed her gaze over to the two men. âI see,â she said with a smile. âHandsome, isnât he? But watch out for him.â
âDonât worry. Iâm with Jeff, remember?â she reminded her newfound friend.
âOf course you are. But one canât help but notice Doug,â Frieda said. âIâm sure heâs already flirted with you. No pretty girl goes through here without him pouring on the charm.â
âI talked to him for a minute yesterday.â
Frieda smiled. âUh huh. Itâs nice, isnât itâhaving a handsome young man pay attention to you? Even if you know nothing will come of it.â
âI guess.â
âJust be certain that nothing does come of it, my dear,â Frieda warned.
âWhat do you mean?â
âI know his type. Heâs a charmer, and the charmers are the ones who can hurt you the worst.â
Doug and George Betterman parted, and George wheeled himself out to the patio.
Elizabeth knelt closer to Frieda. The purple perfume lightly tickled her nose. âDo you know Mr. Betterman?â she asked.
Frieda folded her arms across her chest as if she were trying to contain a shiver. âAs much as I care to,â she said.
âYou donât like him?â
âI donât know him well enough to like or dislike him.â
âYouâre evading my question,â Elizabeth teased her.
âI donât know him,â she said carefully, âbut I know my impressions.â
âWhatâre your impressions?â
She thought for a moment. âHow can I put it in terms youâll understand? He gives me the creeps. Thereâs something about him that seems …â Her voice trailed off.
Elizabeth waited. When Frieda didnât continue, Elizabeth pressed her. âSeems what?â
âEvil.â