Heartlight
HEARTLIGHT
T.A. Barron
HEARTLIGHT
Philomel Books
New York
Copyright © 1990 by Thomas A. Barron.
First published in the United States of America
in 1990 by Philomel Books, a division of
The Putnam & Grosset Group, 200 Madison Avenue,
New York, NY 10016. All rights reserved.
Published simultaneously in Canada.
Book design by Gunta Alexander.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Barron, T. A. Heartlight / by T. A. Barron.
p. cm. Summary: Kate and her grandfather use one of his
inventions to travel faster than the speed of light
on a mission to save the Sun from a premature death.
ISBN 978-1-101-65099-8
[1. Science fiction. 2. Grandfathers—Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.B27567He 1990 [Fic]—dc20 89-70947 CIP AC
To Currie
Contents
I The Mystery of the Morpho
II Almighty Wings
III The Green Box
IV The Wings of Morpheus
V The Darkness
VI The Cocoon
VII Ariella
VIII Nimba’s Flight
IX The Bottomless Blue
X Strange Encounters
XI Earthbound
XII The Voice
XIII Trethoniel
XIV The Promise
XV Apple Cider
XVI The True Music
XVII Grandfather’s Choice
XVIII Revenge of The Darkness
XIX The Black Hole
XX Chrysanthemums
I
The Mystery of the Morpho
Kate spun around when she heard the crash.
“Cumberland!”
The golden retriever had Grandfather pinned on the kitchen floor. She dashed over and pulled the dog away, but not before he gave his victim one last slobbery kiss.
“Cumberland!” scolded Kate. “No jumping on Grandfather!”
“Nonsense,” grumbled the old man as he painfully regained his feet. “I’m eighty years old and I’ve had a lot of practice falling. He’s just keeping me in shape.”
“Are you sure you’re all right?”
Grandfather reached shakily for the arm of the rocker. He steadied himself, then slid into the seat. Pushing a tangle of white hair off his forehead, he glared at the dog.
“You will be the death of me, Cumberland.”
The dog padded over to the chair and nuzzled his leg affectionately. Heedless of any scorn, he assumed a dignified posture by the old man’s side, his fur shining regally with the rust color of heather moors in autumn. Only his still-wagging tail revealed the irrepressible puppy underneath.
“Do you still feel like a picnic?” asked Kate.
Grandfather raised the great bushy brows that hung like clumps of wild moss over his eyes. “A picnic? Oh, dear—I did agree to that, didn’t I?”
“It would be the first break you’ve taken from work in the last week,” she coaxed.
He looked distractedly over his shoulder down the long hallway leading to his laboratory. “Could we put it off until tomorrow, Kaitlyn? I have so much to do just now.”
“But, Grandfather … I’ve got everything all ready: cold chicken, carrot salad and two Granny Smiths. I even made you some lemon poundcake.”
“Did you?”
“With Grandmother’s recipe.”
The white head cocked toward Cumberland, who was still briskly wagging his tail. “She is a terrible taskmaster, isn’t she? I should be glad she doesn’t own a whip.” He looked up. “Although lemon poundcake is even more effective. I guess it would do me good to enjoy the garden colors at least once this year. Lord knows I need the break. And autumn in New England turns to winter so quickly.”
Kate had already climbed atop a wooden stool and thrust her head into one of the deep cabinets built into the kitchen walls. Her muffled voice declared: “Drink some of that tea I made you, while I look for some plates. They must be in here somewhere.” Pushing aside the jars of raspberry preserves her mother had made in August, she hunted for the stoneware she had eaten from so many times. “This kitchen has the deepest shelves! You could store an elephant in here.”
“That’s a farmhouse kitchen for you. Two hundred years ago, when this house was surrounded by nothing but wild woods and a few apple trees, those shelves had to hold all the provisions needed for a long winter.”
“Now they hold mostly spider webs,” said Kate, still searching for plates.
“Yes, I know. It’s only thanks to your mother that this house has any food at all. If left to my own devices, I’d end up dining exclusively on books and prisms … with an occasional cup of tea to wash it all down.”
Pouring a heavy dose of cream into his teacup, he reflected: “Sunshine and cream, that’s all my mother said she ever required for a happy life. In Scotland she found plenty of good Jersey cream, but not much sunshine. Now here I am in America, with plenty of sunshine, but inferior cream.”
As he took a sip, his eye caught a spiral-shaped prism, hanging from a string in the sunlight. Tiny fragments of rainbows swam across the wooden walls of the kitchen like shimmering fish of liquid light.
“You know,” he said pensively, “a person’s life should be like a prism: inhaling light … exhaling rainbows.” He pushed back some stray strands of hair. “If only it weren’t so brief. If only there were more time.”
“Time for what, Grandfather?” asked Kate, descending from the cabinet with two handfuls of dust and spider webs, but no plates.
Grandfather didn’t answer. Since moving to this quiet college town a year ago, Kate had been his constant companion, watching him do experiments in the lab, helping him mount butterflies for his collection, joining him for long walks in the university woods, or entertaining him with attempts to mimic his rich Scottish accent. Even before the move, when she had lived an hour away, she had enjoyed visiting Grandfather every bit as much as her schoolmates would enjoy going to the beach or the amusement park. Although she had always been something of a loner, the kids at her old school had seemed to accept that fact; they understood that she was more interested in her books and her collection of rocks and crystals than in the usual after-school games.
Now, however, life was different. Because her parents’ appointments at the university—her father as chairman of the history department and her mother as a professor of geology—had caused them to move into town, a mere two blocks from Grandfather’s house, Kate invariably came here straight after school. All the teasing she now had to endure about her “eighty-year-old boyfriend” made her angry, of course—enough to have broken the tooth of one especially loud-mouthed boy—and there were moments when she dearly wished she had never moved at all, or at least had some friends of her own age. But whenever she stepped through the door of Grandfather’s house, those problems seemed to melt away. If Grandfather was preoccupied with an experiment, she would just curl up for the afternoon with one of his books on crystals, cloud formations, space travel, or Greek myths.
“Two peas in a pod,” her mother had often called them. To which Grandfather invariably replied: “Two biscuits in a basket, if you please.”
They were inseparable.
But not lately. For the last month or so, Grandfather had retreated deeply into his work, so deeply that even Kate’s best efforts to rouse him had failed. He had always been a little absentminded, even during the years when he had been in charge of the Institute of Astrophysics. Yet now something was different. Even Cumberland sensed it. Most painful of all, Grandfather had taken to locking the lab door at all times, and he wouldn’t?
??or couldn’t—open it when she knocked.
“You are feeling all right, aren’t you? No more of those dizzy spells?”
“Of course not, dear child. I’m fit as a fiddle.”
Trying not to sound overly interested, Kate asked: “Then what’s been keeping you from answering the door to the lab? What is it you’re working so hard on?”
The old man drew in a thoughtful breath. “It’s complicated,” he finally replied. He scratched behind Cumberland’s long ears. “Too complicated.”
“Is it another telescope?” she asked. “Like the huge one you built in South America?”
“No, Kaitlyn. Designing that telescope was exciting, but not really my normal line of work.” His face creased slowly into a smile. “I did enjoy those trips to Chile, though. I used to do some of my best butterfly collecting en route to the Southern Observatory.”
Kate continued to probe the cupboards for plates. “Another laser, then? You’re inventing a new one?”
A sparkle from the prism flashed in Grandfather’s eyes. “No, not another laser. That would be a much simpler task.” He resumed rocking the chair, as if for a moment he had forgotten Kate was there.
She leaned across the counter. “Grandfather, do your experiments have something to do with traveling faster than light?”
Grandfather stopped rocking, and his eyebrows lifted high on his forehead. “How did you ever—”
“The pamphlet in your bookshelf,” replied Kate. “It’s your most recent one, so I thought it might be what you’re working on.”
“Don’t ever tell me you’re not a budding scientist,” nodded the old astronomer.
“But I’m not. You know I almost flunked science!” Kate looked at her feet. “I just miss you, that’s all.”
“Miss me? But I’m right here. I haven’t gone anyplace.”
“Oh, yes you have!” Kate’s eyes began to brim with tears. “You’ve been so buried in your mysterious project for the last month I’ve hardly seen you! Right after school started, something happened to you. All of a sudden. It’s like—why, it’s like you took off to another planet.”
Grandfather stiffened. “I suppose I have been a little distracted lately.”
Kate tossed her blond braid over her shoulder. It reached almost to her jeans, which not so long ago had drooped about her legs like wide pantaloons. Now they pinched her uncomfortably, like so many of her clothes. So much had changed during the past year, and her jeans were the least of it. New home, new school, new braces … The only thing that hadn’t changed, she used to tell herself, was her friendship with Grandfather: Nothing could ever change that.
“I’ve tried not to disturb you,” she continued. “I’ve really tried! Mom and Dad keep saying it’s just a project you’re doing, and all projects have to end sometime. But I’m getting tired of waiting! I don’t have anybody to talk to now except Cumberland! Sometimes … sometimes I wish you weren’t a famous astronomer, with a dozen projects always on your mind!”
The old man beckoned and Kate stepped slowly to the side of the rocking chair. Kneeling, she rested her head against his familiar white lab coat. As his arms enfolded her, she closed her eyes and tried to swallow the lump in her throat.
“I’m sorry, Grandfather! I just miss you.”
“I’m the one who’s sorry, Kaitlyn. I’ve been so wrapped up in my work I haven’t remembered anything else.”
Suddenly, something wet and scratchy slapped Kate’s face.
“Cumberland!” She struggled to push the dog away, but he continued to lick her hands and arms and even the air when he could no longer reach her face.
“Down, Cumberland!” commanded Grandfather, his eyes twinkling. “You never miss a chance for a bit of affection, do you?”
The great retriever swished his broad tail in agreement.
Grandfather turned to the girl kneeling by his chair. “It’s a great blessing for me that your parents got teaching positions right here at the university.”
“For me, too. I’d rather spend time here than anywhere else. It’s better than school, that’s for sure.” She glanced at the cupboard. “Now, let’s eat. I’m hungry! Where do you keep your plates these days? I can’t find them anywhere.”
“I think they’re all in the lab,” came the sheepish reply. “I guess I’ve let things get a little disorganized around here in the past few weeks.”
“So what do you use for a plate when you’re in the kitchen?”
Grandfather pointed guiltily to a tottering wooden chair in the corner. On it was a half-eaten cheese sandwich, sitting inside an old Frisbee.
“Yikes!” Kate exclaimed. “If Mom knew you were eating out of a dirty old Frisbee, she’d be over here in ten seconds with a truckload of new dishes.”
“No doubt,” agreed Grandfather. “But let’s not ruin her day by telling her, all right?”
Sometimes Kate felt Grandfather needed a mother more than she did. She grinned. “All right, I won’t tell.”
“Now let’s have that picnic. I want to try some of your famous lemon poundcake.”
“Without any plates?”
“I have an idea,” Grandfather suggested, lowering his voice to a whisper, as if he were about to impart a valuable scientific secret. “How about this: Let’s both eat out of the Frisbee. Just this once.” He touched her nose gently as he rose from the rocker and walked over to an oaken table piled high with various papers and journals of astronomy and physics. Opening a drawer beneath it, he pulled out a faded cotton tablecloth printed with green and purple flowers. He regarded it affectionately before laying it over his forearm. Kate knew it had once belonged to Grandmother.
“Take your sweater, Kaitlyn. The sun is out, but there’s an autumn chill in the air already. We may get our first frost tonight.”
Arms laden with picnic makings, the old man and the girl stepped down the flagstone walk to the garden. Close behind them followed Cumberland, his tail wagging energetically.
Kate used her shoulder to push open the old wooden gate, and Cumberland strolled through immediately, rubbing her leg as he passed. Then came Grandfather, moving more stiffly than usual, it seemed to her. His eye was on a patch of unruly grass next to the great stone fountain, but before he could speak, Kate had already put down her load at the very spot.
Grandfather shook open the picnic cloth and set it carefully on the grass. Grape arbors, hanging heavily with Concord bunches, sent the fragrance of their fermenting fruit in all directions. Shafts of purple aster grew tall and proud, the better for being untended by gardening hands. A few milkweed stalks, their seed pods full and ripe, stood like streetlamps amidst the fallen leaves surrounding the old maple. Most glorious of all were the chrysanthemums, which decorated the garden with a full array of autumn colors.
“I’ve never seen the mums so beautiful,” said Kate, patting down the cloth.
“My favorites are the purple ones. Chrysanthemums are usually gone by now. It’s rare they last into October, but this year the frost has been kind to them.” He sighed wistfully. “It doesn’t seem so long ago that your grandmother first planted them here. She had a long wooden box filled with roots and took great care to plant each one individually, letting it know it was specially appreciated. I’m afraid I haven’t been doing my garden chores very well since she died … There won’t be any daffodils, tulips, or hyacinths next spring.”
He looked back at the garden gate, swinging slowly in the breeze. “There is no better place than a garden to see the changing of the seasons, Kaitlyn. Birth, death, then rebirth, all happen naturally, regularly, and peacefully. Flowers don’t fight against death like people do.”
He submerged in thought for a moment, then cast an eye toward Kate, his voice a whisper. “This was her favorite spot to sit, you know.”
“I know, Grandfather.” Kate wanted to reach over and hug him, but held herself back. She added gently: “This was her favorite tablecloth, too. I hope she wouldn’t mind our using it for
a picnic.”
“She wouldn’t mind. She used it for quite a few picnics herself.”
Together, in silence, they unpacked the meal. Cumberland positioned himself nearby, his brown eyes filled with longing for a taste of lemon poundcake.
They ate quietly in the crisp autumn air. Every so often Grandfather’s misty eyes would glint in the sunlight. He seemed to be remembering other places and times, and Kate did not want to disturb him. Some of their best conversations, Grandfather had once observed, happened without any words at all. Often one of them would finish the other’s sentence; just as often, the sentence wasn’t even started and the other understood.
Nobody else but Grandfather made Kate feel so comfortable—just as she was, braces and all. Nobody else but Grandfather welcomed her endless questions (usually inspired by her forays into his vast collection of books)—unless, of course, he was in the middle of an experiment, in which case even an earthquake couldn’t distract him. To Grandfather it made no difference whether she asked about how the universe began or how the penny-farthing bicycle got its name: Both questions deserved an answer. One day last winter, a simple query about the formation of snow-flakes prompted Grandfather to lead her outside in a raging snowstorm, where they caught the falling crystals on their gloves and talked about the endless variety until their numbed feet finally forced them to go back indoors. Rather often, it seemed, she would raise a question that even Grandfather couldn’t answer. At those moments, his bushy brows would climb skyward and he would reply: “Only God knows the answer to that one, Kaitlyn. But if you keep asking, perhaps He’ll give us a hint.”
Of course, having a famous astronomer as a grandfather wasn’t always peaches and cream. Grandfather’s image often haunted her at school, whether from the other kids’ teasing or from her tendency to daydream during class. Only last week, she hadn’t been listening when Mrs. Donovan, her seventh-grade science teacher, had assigned a special overnight homework project. When Kate arrived the next morning empty-handed, her classmates made great sport of her. Somebody slipped a small dunce cap into her book bag; somebody else taped a sign to the end of her braid that read: “Pull here to wake.”