Chapter Eleven

The Forever Room

We watched with big eyes as Urdo moved to an old roll top desk and produced a tiny silver key from a chain around her neck. She took out the key and slid it into the lock. It clicked and the rolling cover that closed the desk rolled up and away with a rattling sound.

There was a lot of stuff on the desk. There were bottles of fine colored liquids and shiny stones. There was a tiny green plant, no bigger than a maple leaf that sat in a pot. It looked green and fresh, but everything else was dusty.

“How did that plant live?” I asked. I put my hand to my mouth as Urdo turned slowly to face me. Her eyes cut into mine.

“Sorry,” I said, “I know you hate questions.”

“Nonsense,” she said, turning back to the plant. “I only dislike silly questions.”

“Um,” said Beth. “It looks like that desk hasn’t been opened in about a hundred years, so how can it be so alive and green in there?”

Urdo froze and her eyes slid to Beth. I knew the only thing she liked less than questions were interruptions.

“There are oddities of science in this place,” she said, as if this explained everything. “Some things are from now, some things are from before, and some things are from after.”

“You mean the past and the future?” I asked.

“Perhaps,” she said, nodding. “But those words are too certain, too definite. These things are from what might have happened, and from what might yet be.”

Beth and I exchanged confused glances.

“We call this room The Forever Room,” said Urdo. “There are things here that can see what might be the past, and what might be the future. Let me demonstrate with a little experiment.”

Urdo opened one of the dozens of small flat drawers in the desk and produced a disk. The disk was about six inches in diameter. She held it up. It was round and made of rose-colored glass. It had a silvery metal rim.

“A lenses for the telescope?” guessed Beth.

Urdo nodded and proceeded to open a sliding door on the side of the telescope. She slid the lens into place. Then she worked small wheels that squeaked as the telescope shifted into place and an oval-shaped viewing cup came up to lock in place in front of us.

She indicated the viewing cup and I stepped forward. Beth jostled into me. We looked at each other and laughed.

“You first,” said Beth.

“You are the guest,” I said.

Excitedly, Beth climbed onto a stool and hunched over the viewing cup. I could see light shine up into her face. Her eyes widened and she made sounds of appreciation.

“You see stars?” asked Urdo. She seemed surprised.

“Oh, yes,” said Beth. “There are stars. Lots of them. Three of the brightest are in a line. Sooo bright. This thing really can look right through the clouds, Connor!”

“My turn,” I said, feeling greedy.

“Give her a chance, she must remember the pattern,” said Urdo. She thumbed busily through a large dusty catalogue of star pictures.

I made a face and practically danced around her.

When she finally sat back, she beamed a smile that lit up the room. “Okay,” she said reluctantly, “Your turn, Connor. Sorry to be piggy.”

I climbed onto the stool and it was warm with her body heat. I put my eye down to the eyepiece.

I did indeed see stars. But they weren’t as bright as she described. And there was no line of three bright shining stars in the pattern. Instead, they looked like a glowy mass at first. There were two reddish ones that looked like eyes, and twinkling hood of dimmer stars around it. These stars were so faint they just made the sky glow, like the Milky Way.

“Do you see stars, Connor?” Urdo asked me quietly.

“Yes, but they are nothing like what Beth described,” I said. “I don’t understand. Did you move the gears or something?”

“Just tell me what you see.”

“Two red dots, like eyes, and a hood of bluish glow around them, forming a mountain or a triangle, sort of.”

“Ah,” she said. She pulled two sheets out of a pile of star charts. She showed one to Beth first.

“Yes,” said Beth, “that’s the pattern. That’s what I saw.”

“Orion,” said Urdo, “The Hunter.”

She showed me another sheet, and it did indeed resemble the constellation I’d seen. I realized now that’s what they were, constellations.

“Loki,” she said, “The Thief.”

“So we saw different things?” asked Beth.

“Of course. When using that particular lens, everyone sees the thing they will become.”

I looked at the telescope in awe. I reached out a finger and tapped it. “This thing is magic.”

Urdo laughed. It was a sound I’d never heard her make before. Her laughter was muted and smooth.

“No,” she shook her head, “We don’t use magic. We only use science of a sort that other people have forgotten. Or which, perhaps, they haven’t yet dreamed.”

“What do you mean?” I asked.

Urdo looked at me for a moment, as if deciding if she should answer or not. I stared back, certain it had not been a silly question.

“If you went back in time to the most brilliant inventors of centuries past, such as Ben Franklin or Leonardo Da Vinci, and you showed them a working television or a computer, what would they think of it?”

“They’d be amazed,” I said.

“Certainly. And what if you showed it to the common folk?”

“They would call it witchcraft,” said Beth.

“Exactly,” said Urdo, gracing her with a rare smile. “Any technology, sufficiently advanced, will be considered magic by someone who doesn’t understand it.”

“But why did we see different things?” I asked, daring another question.

“What you see shows you what you are, or what you will become.”

“I’m going to be a thief?” I asked. “I’ve never stolen a thing.”

She shook her head. “Perhaps you will be something quiet. Something that can move unseen.”

I thought about it, and realized I’d always been a schemer. Thieves were tricky. I wasn’t sure I liked the whole idea. “Something like a cat? My sister is a cat. Danny and Thomas would love to chase my tail off.”

“Does everyone see something different?” asked Beth.

She nodded her head. “Yes, unless they are mundane.”

“What do mundane people see?” I asked.

Urdo lifted a graceful hand into the air and directed her finger out into the open slit that revealed the gray skies. “They see only the sky and the clouds and the falling snow.”

I turned to Beth. “So you aren’t just a normal girl after all,” I said.

Beth’s eyes widened. “Then what am I?”

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