CHAPTER
110: Humans
by Nicky
Voiceover by Lara Parker: “Tragedy
has struck at Collinwood, for on this night, Barnabas Collins has been gravely
injured by fellow vampire Roxanne Drew.
And while Julia struggles to put the pieces together again, two other
souls will likewise struggle … with the darkness inside them …and one will
lose.”
1
1693 –
Collinsport
She
lived in the biggest house Collinsport offered, besides the Collins mansion, of
course. It was new, as all the houses
were new, and built to her specifications; money, as she assured the architect
and builders with a tight smile, was no object.
They own this town, Miranda thought as the house came together, but I
own this land, and they do not – never will – own me.
And
there they were, Isaac, his brother Aidan, and Aidan’s bride Samantha Collins,
the three of them in that enormous house (though not, Miranda would think,
smirking, as enormous as mine), and
Isaac went into the village every day to ensure their fortunes would continue
to thrive, but of Aidan and Samantha there was no sight. They rarely, if ever, left Collins House.
The
villagers talked. Mostly employed by the
Collins Fishing Fleet, they couldn’t afford to criticize, but as the town grew,
so did the talk.
Miranda
DuVal, meanwhile, didn’t have to work.
Once upon a time she had labored as a servant in the Collins household
in Bedford. That was, of course, before
she met Nicholas Blair. Before she
exchanged secrets with Judah Zachery. Since
then, her coin purse was never empty.
There were whispers of that
phenomenon in the village as well, and Miranda allowed such whispers. Judah Zachery was dead. His followers, his coven was destroyed as
well. Collinsport was cleansed of
witches; everyone knew it. And the talk
gave Miranda an aura of mystery that allowed her to do most anything she
desired.
But
Miranda, they said, could predict the future.
Miranda could heal or curse with a glance, depending on her mood. Miranda possessed a magic purse, and if she
handed out coins, they disappeared once spent, returning, inevitably, to the
purse. Miranda could fly; fishwives
swore they saw her silhouette passing before the moon on nights when hoarfrost
lefts it rime on window. They feared
her; they left her alone.
Gossip
in that vein made her smile, though of course it was all true. Fishwives.
Her lips would curl into a smirk.
For the majority of the town, the people that mattered, she was Miranda
DuVal, wealthiest woman in Collinsport, besides the Collinses themselves, of
course. An heiress, they said, from England, and the
Collinses, who knew better, did not correct their perceptions. They knew better about that aspect of her life as well.
I
am a chambermaid, she thought now, standing at the edge of the woods, staring
at Collins House, which reared itself like white proud bones from the ground. I am a chambermaid still, only none of them
really knows.
There’s
something in thy breast and in thine eyes that has a power. ‘Tis thy choice, Miranda, how you use
it. For helping ... or otherwise.
Her mother’s voice, her poor lost
mother. And her words – were they true,
really? Could she help?
Aidan
is married, she thought, and that reminder filled her with that familiar fury,
the one that knotted her hands into fists, that sent cold shivers down her
spine and into the pit of her stomach.
But he loved me, she thought miserably; he left Collinsport because old
Amadeus sent him away; he never would have looked twice at Samantha Good unless
…
…
unless …
Unless thou art not the only witch in
Collinsport.
Perhaps,
Miranda thought, perhaps Collinsport is not as cleansed of its sorceresses as
the villagers think.
She
could still remember that day a year ago when, heart filled with hope and love
at finally finding her beloved Aidan again, Miranda traipsed up the steps to
this very house before her, knocked on the door, a fool, only to find Samantha
Collins glaring at her, her face twisted into a snarl, and the snarling woman
said, “So, you have finally found us after all.” I used my powers, Miranda thought now, all my
art to send her away. And yet Aidan
found her again.
Or
she found Aidan.
Did
he know what she was? Did he know all
she had done? Had Samantha told
him? Ah, but if Samantha was also a
witch, it wasn’t exactly in her best interest to alert Aidan to her knowledge
of the arcane.
It
matters not, Miranda thought, and allowed herself a tiny, cold smile. After today, it will not matter a whit.
“Thou
wilt be caught someday,” a voice said from behind her, and she stiffened, “and
clapped in the stocks, mark me.”
Amused. Familiar.
Beloved.
“Aidan,”
she whispered, and flew to him, snaked her arms around him, pulled him to
her. All too soon she pulled back,
staring at him with her wide blue eyes full of tears. “Thou art a tree, a stone,” she sobbed, “firm
and inflexible. Has she caught you in so
powerful a snare that you must be hard and cold in my arms? You were never before such as this.”
“I
know thee, Miranda DuVal,” Aidan said.
His voice was firm, not cold, not stony, but firm, and he didn’t blink
as his eyes caught hers. “I know a bit
of thy soul, methinks. And … and of thy
powers.”
She
was filled with ice in that moment, and looked away, as guilty as if he’d
caught her looking at herself naked in a mirror. The world went on around them; a bird passed
overhead, crying joyously; she wished it dead.
But, ah, there it was inside her:
that spark, that flare, a flame that made her different, in some
fundamental way, than almost everyone else she had ever encountered, including
Aidan himself. It rose up and glimmered
in her eyes, which she lifted and focused on Aidan. “So,” she said, “you know.”
He
hesitated, then drew a speedy breath. “I
do,” he said at last. “I think … I think
I have always known.”
Her
smile grew wider and colder. “And who
wilt thou tell, Aidan Collins? Wilt thou
see me burnt at the stake?”
Alarm
widened his eyes. “You misunderstand me,
Miranda,” he said. “I have come seeking
thee!”
“To
what purpose?” She couldn’t force the
suspicion from her voice.
“To
tell you … to try to explain ...” He
closed his eyes and shivered. When he
opened them again, they were agonized.
“I cannot. The words will not
come.”
“Thou
art bewitched.” Ice floes inside
collided; she wanted to shiver, but she felt paralyzed. It was true, then. Someone had cast a spell over Aidan.
“I do
not know,” he whispered. “It is always
the same. For the past two years. I have held my suspicions, but I dare not – cannot – speak them in words. I know only that I want to leave this place,
Miranda.
“And
… and I want thee at my side when I go.”
The
breath caught in her throat. “She will
not let thee go so easily,” Miranda said.
A tear slid down her cheek.
They
were together suddenly, his mouth pressed to hers, her face pressed against his
chest, and he was whispering, “It comes in like the tide, the waves pulling me
out, and I never know when it will happen, dearest, I never know … at any
second …”
She
pushed him away, her hands gripping his shoulders. Her eyes blazed into his. “One more spell,” she said from between gritted
teeth. “One more, and then no more. Ever again, my darling. After I free thee from Samantha’s
enchantment, I will give up my powers forever.”
2
“There’s
someone out there,” Audrey said. She
stood at the window that looked out over the Old House’s portico, the curtains
parted only the slightest bit. She
leaned forward so that her forehead pressed against the glass. Julia, in the midst of her administrations,
noticed that she did not fog up the window with her breath, because she had no
breath. When would the injections begin
to take hold? she growled to herself.
Dammit. At this rate, Audrey
would stay a vampire forever.
Or until she was staked.
That
was a grim thought. She pushed it away.
“We’ll
deal with them later,” Julia said. Her
teeth were gritted. Barnabas, below her,
stared up at her with his one good eye.
Clinical, she thought, clinical, and allowed her fingers to brush gently
against the new scar tissue that formed already over the place where his eye
used to be. “Sensation? Any pain?”
“None,”
he said. His eyes skated over to
Angelique, who stood in the corner by the fireplace, gazing up steadily at the
portrait of Barnabas circa 1967. “It’s
just … gone. There is nothing there but
darkness.” He didn’t sound mournful or
angry or much of anything. Simple,
matter-of-fact.
She
swallowed back the pain. “Angelique’s
spell was successful, then.”
“You
should see to her,” Barnabas said quietly.
“I tell you that I’m fine, Julia.”
She nodded curtly, began to move away, then stopped as she felt his
fingers, icy, curl around her wrist. But
gently. Tenderly. She turned back to him and he was looking up
at her. “Thank you,” he said. “You saved my life once again. I will never be able to repay you. Never.”
She
nodded, unable to actually form any words that would have made any kind of
sense, then pulled away from him and briskly crossed the room.
Angelique
still wore the simple green servant’s dress that had materialized after … after
whatever it was Roxanne Drew had done to her.
The separation or whatever you wanted to call it she performed using
that weird dagger thingie. “Angelique,”
Julia said softly, and the other woman jumped and spun around. She seems so young, Julia thought, startled, as if she hasn’t lived yet. As if none of these terrible events have
occurred yet to touch her. “Are you all
right?”
“I
don’t know,” Angelique said softly.
“Honestly, Julia. I have no
idea. It’s as if I feel … nothing.”
“And
you don’t know exactly what happened.”
“The
Dagger of Erishkegal,” Angelique said.
Her voice grew bitter. “I thought
it was a myth. I suppose I shouldn’t be
surprised that Roxanne got ahold of it.
Or used Edith Collins to get it for her.”
Julia
edged closer to her. “Besides the loss
of your powers,” she said carefully, “are there any other ramifications you’ve
noticed?”
“No.” She sounds tired, Julia thought. She touched her face, then rubbed her
temples. “I don’t know. I don’t know why I look like this, Julia. Erishkegal is a death goddess. There’s no indication that she – it – would
be used to cause mystical divisions. The
knife is rumored to have certain powers, but I never expected that it could do
… could do …” She turned away, back to
the portrait of Barnabas. Her shoulders
quaked. Julia reached out for her, then
pulled her hand back at the last second.
“He’s
gone, whoever he was,” Audrey said, still at the window.
“The
other … the other you,” Julia said, gesturing helplessly in the air. “Who – what – is she, exactly?”
“She’s
me,” Angelique said with a jagged laugh.
“But she isn’t me at all. The
powers of the Mask of Ba’al, if I had to hazard a guess. Personified.”
“That’s
insane.”
“What
isn’t, these days?” All her fury
collapsed, and Angelique’s eyes filled with tears. “Julia, I’m terrified. Without my powers, we’re easy pickings for
Roxanne and her merry band of monsters.
Or for the Enemy.” She took a
deep, hitching breath. “Or … or for
me. The other me.”
“We’ll
figure out a way to get your powers back, Angelique,” Julia said. “And as for Roxanne … you – or the other you
– seem to have taken care of her and her followers fairly efficiently. Seaview was destroyed, certainly.”
“We
can’t assume that any of them were destroyed with it,” Angelique said
miserably. “They’re all too clever to
let a little fire stop them for long.”
Which
was the moment the doors to the Old House opened and a figure stood there for a
moment, framed against the night sky, still stained orange with the glow of the
flames that continued to consume Seaview.
Then the figure toppled forward and collapsed onto the floor.
They
ran to him, Julia, Audrey, and Barnabas; only Angelique remained in her place,
watching, seemingly unperturbed by this turn of events.
The
man below him gazed up at them with bleary eyes. He was all over soot, but his face was red
with fever. He groaned. Julia’s eyes narrowed, and she made a hissing
sound as she saw the ugly slash across his chest, where something sharp,
perhaps a piece of the wall or ceiling as it collapsed around them back at
Seaview, had slashed through his Mickey Mouse tee-shirt and cut him, and
deeply.
“Nathan Forbes,” Barnabas
growled.
His
eyelashes fluttered; his tongue flickered out of his mouth to moisten his lips,
which were cracked and dry. “Help me,”
he murmured.
3
The
werewolves were just ahead of her, loping through the open field with what she
was shocked to find was unabandoned joy; I suppose, Alex thought, it makes some
kind of sense, since they don’t know I’m behind them, and they certainly don’t
know I’m carrying this.
The
silver sword in her hand, a gift from Mr. Best (she continued to have a
difficult time thinking of him as simply her uncle anymore, even after their
come to Jesus talk a few weeks before), sang against her fingers, said, Find, find, slash, kill, kill, kill,
mystical vibrations urging her on. And
the cloak, another gift from her benefactor, magically concealed her features
from her prey.
They
were her prey. She would not fail this
time as she had before.
You’ve met them. As humans.
You talked to them; you even liked one of them, that Christopher
Jennings. You liked him, Alex, and now you’re going to kill
him?
I
have to, though, she whispered to herself.
It’s my duty.
It’s for the greater good.
For
humanity.
The
werewolves, one’s man-like body nearly eight feet tall and covered in dark
brown fur, the other nearly as tall but shaggily, glowingly white, were
playing, it seemed to her.
Frolicking. The white one pounced
on the other, knocked him to the ground, and they rolled around, snarling and
snapping, but it wasn’t vicious; it was playful. They were, she thought, like a couple of
overgrown puppies, frisking the way that dogs did.
Her
fingers tightened around the grip of the sword.
I have to do this, she told herself.
They’re not always monsters.
She
stopped again mid-stride. Her fingers
relaxed a bit. That was true, she
supposed. Most of the time they were men,
ordinary men. It was a curse they
suffered from, one that compelled them to kill.
But
they have killed, a little voice
whispered in her ear. Both of them. Does it matter if they feel compelled or
not? A killer is a killer. And they will kill again. Shaw nearly killed you, and he would have, if you hadn’t wounded him with the
sword.
Take them.
Take them out. Both of them. Do it now.
And
what am I? she wondered again, as she
had wondered so often in recent days, especially in the light of the
revelations Mr. Best had presented her.
I am the daughter of Petofi, she thought, a creature of the most intense
darkness this world – any of the worlds – has ever known. I carry his blood. My powers comes from him, my powers comes
from darkness. So what am I?
Am I any better than the monsters I have slain all my life?
Do you even need the sword?
That
was a new voice. Seductive. It didn’t sound like Best, it didn’t sound
like her, it sounded …
Serpentine. Hissing.
A sibilant, cold little whisper, like a snake’s tongue tickling her ear.
Do you even need the sword? You have powers. Many powers.
You haven’t even begun to explore them all. Do you even need the sword?
She
made a strangled gasping sound and dropped the sword; it thumped into the grass
and lay there, glittering silver under the light of the moon. That voice, she thought, horror-stricken,
that voice … I know that voice …
It
was Petofi’s. Of course. The voice of the serpent, the Naga, the voice
of the Leviathan, but they were all the same:
his voice. The voice of her father, her true father.
And
he was right. There was power inside
her, dark power, rising up, something terrible; she felt her teeth sharpen and
her eyes darken as she thought, It would be easy, terribly easy; I wouldn’t
even need the sword; I could burn them to an ash right this moment, wouldn’t
even need to think about it; I could just do
it …
She
knew how they would smell: the acrid
odor of burning fur, the sick-sweet smell of cooking meat. She could almost hear their cries,
high-pitched yipping and howling …
Do it.
Take them out. Do it now.
“I
don’t think you should do that.”
She
froze.
Quentin
Collins stood before her.
He
can’t see me, she thought desperately, and reached down to retrieve the sword.
“Excudo,” Quentin said casually, and the
sword flew away, disappeared somewhere into the grass.
She
snarled at him, and turned to run.
“Congelo,” Quentin said, and Alex snarled
again, frozen in an invisible mire.
He
walked toward her, the dew-frozen grass crunching under his boots. He was smiling a little. The collar of his dark navy peacoat was drawn
up, and his hands were crammed into his pockets. “Cold night,” he said, “which is why I’m so
surprised you’re out and about, Miss March.
Wouldn’t you be more comfortable all safe and warm in your little beddy
bye at the Collinsport Inn?”
Terror
unfurled inside her on tenebrous wings.
“You … you can see me?” she whispered.
“Old
trick,” he said. “I learned it from a
Gypsy acquaintance of mine.” He passed
his hands through the air. “A few Latin
incantations, a little waving of the arms, and …” He snapped his fingers. “Poof!
Allows me to see through all kinds of hoodoo.”
“What
are you going to do with me?”
He
raised his eyebrows. “My dear, I know I
have a reputation with the ladies, but I have never, never, been reduced to applying force when my companion was
unwilling.”
“You
know what I am.”
“I
have only the faintest idea of what you are.
I know that you have injured friends of mine, and that it seems likely
you were just about to try again.” His
smile faded, and as it went, so did some of the good-humored jollity she heard
in his voice. “And one of those
gentlemen out there you’ve been scrutinizing with such intensity happens to be
my great-grandson. So I hope you can
understand,” and he removed his hands from his peacoat so she saw how they were
clenched into very sizable fists, “that there’s no way in hell I’m letting you
anywhere near him.”
“I
have powers,” she said with more confidence than she actually felt.
“I
suppose you do,” Quentin said. “As you
have no doubt noticed by now, I am not without my own particular arsenal.”
“They’re
monsters,” she barked. “Don’t you understand that? They’re killers.”
“Everyone
has problems.”
“I’m
going to destroy them,” she said. “And
if you get in my way again, I’ll destroy you as well.”
“I
don’t think you understand the name of the game,” Quentin said, sighing. “Your timing, dear heart, is just a wee bit
off. We don’t have time to deal with
you, these days, dearest, none of us do.
In the grand scheme of things, you don’t matter. You’re a nuisance. We have bigger problems than a magically
endowed vigilante with a werewolf grudge.”
“I
don’t have a werewolf –”
“You
ever heard of the Enemy?” He overrode
her swiftly, maddeningly. She wanted to
slap him, punch him. “Stupid name, I
know, but that’s all we’ve got. Now he’s a threat. To every world in existence, apparently. And you?
You’re just … annoying.” He made
a shooing gesture. “Now why don’t you
just take your little sword and go home.
Get some sleep. And then
tomorrow, after you’re all rested up, you can pack your bags and get the hell
out of Collinsport.”
She
was shocked, embarrassed, and then furious to find that tears stung her
eyes. “You … you can’t talk to me like
that!”
“I
can, and I can do a great deal more if you don’t follow my directions.” He took a step closer to her. “I will do anything to protect my family, you
see. Anything.” He looked down into her eyes … and then
paused. She watched him, completely full
of mistrust, as his eyes widened, his face softened. “You have her eyes,” he whispered. “My god, you don’t just look like her. You are her, aren’t you.”
“You’re
talking about Victoria Winters,” Alex said.
She didn’t need to guess.
“You’ve
heard of her.” She was surprised that he
was surprised.
“She
was my sister.” Well, why not? Alex
thought distantly as he recoiled, took a stumbling half-step backward. Why not let him in on the secret? All cards on the table. Besides, she thought, he was bound to find
out eventually.
“That’s
impossible.”
“It
isn’t. She was my twin. Our mother was adopted by –”
“Adopted?”
“—adopted
by the Collins family, seduced by Count Petofi, and bore him twins. I was taken away before anyone even knew I
existed. Since then I have waged war
against the forces of darkness.”
A
sneer, flash of his very white teeth. “The
tiniest bit melodramatic, don’t you think?”
She
refused to be taken in by him. “Your
family houses monsters, Mr. Collins.
Vampires, werewolves, witches.
Murderers. And I am sworn to take
them down, to protect the human race.”
“Because
you’re so human.”
“And
you are?”
“Maybe
not anymore. But I was. Once upon a time. You’ve never known what it’s like, really,
truly like, to be a human being. How do
you know these monsters, as you call them, very offensive, bad form; how do you
know that they aren’t trying to change?
That they aren’t struggling with their baser natures, that they aren’t
seeking redemption?”
“How
can they ever hope to redeem themselves for what they’ve done?”
“What
about you?”
She
dropped her eyes, refused to meet his.
“You don’t know anything about me.”
“I
know that you’ve done things you regret.
That you would like to atone for, perhaps. If you are truly the daughter of Count
Petofi, then you undoubtedly possess some of his powers. And I’ve seen those powers at work. They destroyed Victoria Winters.”
Alex
whipped her head back around to snarl some bitter retort, and then looked at
him. Really
looked. “You … you loved her,” she
whispered, struck by the emotion she saw before, the depth of the feeling – the
emptiness – she saw in his eyes.
“I
loved her more than any other woman I’ve known,” he said in a low voice. “You have no idea how much.”
“Until,”
and she matched his tone, his sadness, “until Angelique destroyed her.”
“She
had to,” he whispered. He grinned
ruefully. “Look, I’m the last person
who’s going to defend Angelique. But …
but what she did was necessary. Vicki
wasn’t herself. Lost in the
darkness. Out of control. She would have killed us all. Probably take the entire world out too while
she was at it. Angelique did the right
thing.”
“She
was my sister. I’ll never meet her. Never talk to her. Nothing.”
Something was opening inside her, beyond the dark place: an ancient well, a hidden lake maybe, full of
dark, fathomless water. Green water, and
it was beyond bitter, beyond painful.
Dark, dark, dark, and heavy, and full of despair. She could lose herself there, she could feel
it. It would be so easy.
“I’m
sorry, Alexandra,” Quentin said. “I
really am. But I can’t let you do
this. I don’t know why you’re on this
misguided quest, but I can’t let you.”
She
felt herself hardening and turned away from him again. “You don’t have a say.”
“I’ll
stop you, you know.” His voice was soft,
caressing. Deadly.
She
began to walk away. She stopped. Glanced over her shoulder. Showed him her grin, flash of white
teeth. “I’ll count on it,” she said, and
slid, vanishing, into a beam of moonlight.
Quentin
watched after her for a long time, hands crammed into the pockets of his peacoat,
head bowed. After a time he looked over
his shoulder, saw that Chris and Sebastian had disappeared as well, then began
to move slowly, stiffly away, back toward Collinsport.
She
isn’t Vicki, he told himself, over and over, she isn’t, she isn’t, she isn’t.
Which
begged the question: what exactly was she?
4
1795, December
“This
is it,” Nathan said, bowing, sweeping his arm out grandly, and then lifted his
head and smiled at the visible astonishment on his companion’s face. The foyer of Collinwood grew up around them
in all its opulence: the staircase, the
chandelier, the portrait of Barnabas Collins glaring at them from its place on
the wall. Everything, he thought, the
marble in the floor, the walnut paneling in the walls. It will be mine. It will
all be mine.
Todd
Jennings, looking around, finally forced his mouth to close and then smiled
sheepishly. “I’m sorry,” he said. “It’s all so overwhelming.”
Nathan
laid a strong hand on the small of his back.
“It’s a lot to take in all at once,” he said, grinning his confident
grin. “Don’t try to get it all.”
Todd
leaned in, echoing Nathan’s grin. “I’ve
heard you say that,” he said softly, “before.”
Nathan’s
grin grew larger. He leaned in so that
his lips brushed against Todd’s earlobe.
“I have a room upstairs,” he purred.
“Mrs. Collins offered it to me whenever I wanted it. No one needs to know, not even dear, mad
Millicent.”
“Lieutenant
Forbes,” Todd whispered, squirming deliciously, “you are a scoundrel.”
“I’m
something,” he said, and turned Todd, pushing his lips against the other man’s.
“Lieutenant
Forbes!”
The
two men broke apart, Todd sweating, stammering, head dropped, but Nathan didn’t
move. He smirked his finest smirk, and
offered a mocking bow to the master of Collinwood as Joshua Collins descended
the great staircase. His face was a
cloud that grew steadily darker by the moment.
“Mr. Collins,” Nathan nearly sang with as much cheer as he could
muster. “I’m here to see my
fiancée! Is she available?”
“There
are no words for you, sir,” Joshua growled.
“You dare to step foot in this house after all that you’ve done? You dare to defile my house, my town, with
your … your …” He began to bluster, so undone by what he had
seen but had no words to describe that he became utterly unable to complete a
sentence. So gratifying, Nathan thought,
something I’ve waited far, far too
long to experience for myself.
“Toddy,”
Nathan purred, “why don’t you wait here?
Mr. Collins and I,” and his eyes flickered to the older man, “need to
step into the drawing room for a bit.
Won’t take but a moment.”
Todd’s
eyes jumped back and forth from Joshua to Nathan and back again, then widened
but slightly. He began to smile. “Oh,” he said his quiet, even tone, “yes.”
“I
have nothing to say to you,” Joshua said a moment later as Nathan closed the
twin doors of the drawing room behind him.
“You are an abomination.”
“Sticks
and stones, Mr. Collins,” Nathan said.
His grin had faded slightly, but he allowed a tiny smile to quirk the
corner of his mouth. “Such an
interesting word, ‘abomination,’ coming from you, what with all the …
happenings this house has seen, and still in its infancy!”
Joshua’s
eyes narrowed. “I don’t have the
slightest clue as to what you are referring,” and he sneered, “sir, but I am ordering you off the
premises this moment, this very moment. You are a cad and a liar and a cheat, and an
abomination, something so foul and
indescribably monstrous –”
Nathan
used the back of his hand to stifle a yawn.
“But I’m not a murderer, Mr. Collins.
I’m certainly not the Collinsport Strangler.” He dropped his hand; his blue eyes flashed,
and he focused them on those wide and astonished pair held by Mr. Joshua
Collins. “Because I know who he is. We both know.” Flash of teeth, sharp, shark-like. “It’s Barnabas, Mr. Collins. It’s your son.”
Joshua’s
face colored beyond scarlet, became purple and ferocious like a plum. His mouth opened and closed; a freshet of
foam collected at one corner. “Get out,”
he wheezed, “get out now.”
“I’m
very comfortable here, Joshua,” Nathan said, accenting the other man’s
name. “This house will prove to be a
fine home for Millicent and me.”
“Millicent? Why, the nerve, the very suggestion –”
“And
of course we’ll want our friends to visit.
Frequently. Starting right this
very moment. I think you can understand
that,” Nathan said, and turned to the drawing doors. He paused.
“I think you can understand that very well.” And flung them open.
Todd
was waiting for him, as Todd always was and, Nathan knew, always would be; he
led him upstairs, and Joshua Collins could do nothing, nothing; led him upstairs by the hand, down winding hallways, to a
room in the East Wing he had scoped out a few days ago; through the door, onto
the bed, where love waited.
Afterward,
stroking Todd’s cheek with a tenderness he rarely showed to anyone, Nathan,
nearly drowsing, said, “I’ve never had a house like this before. Did you know that?”
“I
know so little about you,” Todd whispered back, watching him closely.
“You
will.” Nathan smiled. “You will know everything there is to
know. My father, his strap, my mother
the whore, every ugly cliché. Every
moment I spent waiting,” and he swallowed, his smile fading, “every dirty
moment I counted until I could run away, go to sea. And then I went.”
“And
you met me.” Todd’s fingers wound their
way sinuously through the thicket of hair on Nathan’s chest. He toyed languorously for a moment with one
of Nathan’s nipples, and the other man made a contented purr.
“Best
thing,” and Nathan yawned, “best thing that ever happened to me.” His eyelids fluttered. “I love you, Toddy.” It was the first time he’d said it. Todd didn’t pause, didn’t stop. His hand moved lower, down onto the soft
pouch of Nathan’s stomach. “No house, no
money … nothing … nothing …”
“What
if we don’t need the money, Nathan?”
His
eyes flew open, then narrowed. “What do
you mean?”
Todd
didn’t back down, didn’t stop his ministrations. “I mean, what if it really were just you and
me? What if we forgot all of this, the
Collins family, everything, and just went?
And never looked back?”
“Don’t
joke, Toddy.”
“I’m
not joking.”
Nathan
thought for a moment, his blue eyes turning internal, looked to a place above
Todd’s head. “No,” he said at last. “Go back to that other life? With the rats and the filth, the seamen, the
bilge rodents and the shit and the stench of piss, forever? No, Toddy.
Not even for you.”
“But
I –”
“Collinwood
will be ours, Toddy, yours and
mine. All Miss Millicent Collins’
fortune at our disposal.”
Todd
took his hand away from Nathan’s stomach, and moved away, and looked at him.
Nathan
looked back. “It’s all for you. I’ve never … I’ve never cared for another
human being like I care for you. I mean
that. Do you believe me?” The ball of his thumb stroked gentle circles
beneath Todd’s chin.
“Yes,”
he whispered.
“Everything,”
Nathan said. “For you.” He moved forward, guided Todd’s mouth to
his. They kissed each other with growing
passion until they broke apart, panting, both hard, both ready for another
go. Nathan reached down, found what he
sought, and held it firmly. “I’ll never
go back to that other life, Toddy. And
neither will you.” And his eyes closed
as Todd moved to him and they came together again.
5
He
opened his eyes. Angelique was looking
down at him, her hair twisted into golden ringlets, wearing the green servant
dress he recognized instantly. For a
moment panic gripped him with thin fingers; had he gone somehow back in time?
Would that be so bad? Really?
“Todd?”
he croaked. “Where is Todd Jennings,
wench?”
Angelique’s
eyes narrowed. “I am no ‘wench,’
Lieutenant,” she said sharply, “and I would advise you to watch your foul
tongue.”
He
tried to move, and groaned as the pain gouged at him again. He looked down, saw that his shirt had been
cut away, and that an enormous bandage of gauze and tape covered his
chest. His tongue flicked out and licked
his lips, which felt cracked and dry. He
was thirsty … so thirsty. Where am I? he
wondered, glancing around the room, taking in the four poster, canopied bed he
lay upon, the portrait of … good god, was that Josette Collins? It was, wasn’t it?
Have I gone back in time?
Modern
jeans. Modern loafers. He could see the band of the orange and blue
striped jockey shorts rising above his jeans, the ones he knew Toddy liked and
so he wore them special today.
He
relaxed a bit. He was in the twentieth
century. He was alive.
Why is she dressed like that?
“I’m
thirsty,” he croaked again.
Angelique,
her face revealing nothing, poured him water from a silver pitcher and handed
it to him wordlessly. He drank it in
three large gulps then handed her back the glass. “More,” he said, and for a moment he thought
she wasn’t going to do it, that she would strike him again, but she had been a
servant, hadn’t she, he thought; why, taking orders must be just like riding a
bicycle!
He
drank the water again, more slowly this time.
The pain was subsiding, but it was still there, just beneath the surface,
like the black bodies of sharks cruising through the glassy ocean he and Todd
used to watch together from the ship. Once
or twice they harpooned one, laughing together.
Something at that house, he thought, remembering, something fell on
me. Smoke … fire … and Angelique …
But
Angelique was here. So who was that
other woman who destroyed Seaview?
“You
are lucky to be alive,” Angelique said, watching him.
“Again,”
he said. “Fortune favors Forbes. I’m harder to kill than a cat.”
“Perhaps
you used up another of your lives this evening, Lieutenant.”
“Perhaps.” He settled back against the comfortable
pillows and stretched, but only a little; he didn’t want to upset whatever work
dear Dr. Hoffman had performed while he was out. He laced his fingers together and used them
to support his head. “How come you’re
dressed like that?” he asked her. “You
guys holding an improperly timed costume party?
Felt like reminiscing about old times?”
She
ignored this. “Why did you come to us?”
she said. “You are one of her party.” She was gritting her teeth, barely
maintaining her fury. “You helped
her. Helped them with what they did to Barnabas.”
“Barnabas,”
Nathan said. His good humor faded a
bit. “How is the old boy? I imagine that he’ll take to sporting an eye
patch, much like a gentleman I used to sail with once upon a time. Quite the pirate look, arrrrr, matey,” and he
began to laugh.
She
watched him carefully, expression free.
Then she slapped him.
His
laughter died instantly. “No one touches
me like that,” he snarled. “Not ever.” She smiled, then slapped him again. “Ow!” he cried, touching his face, which
burned red with the shape of her tiny hand.
“Jeez! That hurts!”
“Tell
me what you know,” she said. “Tell me
Roxanne’s plan.”
“You
know it,” he said, suddenly tired of the whole thing. “Look, I’m sorry about Barnabas, okay? Even if he did kill me once upon a time, it
isn’t like I’m holding a grudge. I mean,
look – I’m here, right? So why not let bygones be bygones?”
But
Angelique was quaking, her blue eyes overly bright. “Tell me,” she said furiously, “tell me why
she did this to me. What is her plan?”
“Did
what to you?” Nathan said. “That biz
with that knife thingie? I have no
idea. I didn’t get a real clear looksee,
see. Why, what did she do?”
“She
took something away from me,” Angelique snarled. “Cut away, quite literally.”
Nathan’s
eyes widened. “So that’s why you look
like you do,” he said. “And that’s why
there were two of you. The knife thingie
–”
“The
Dagger of Ereshkigal,” Angelique said, rolling her eyes.
“Whatever. The Dagger thingie cut you into two: Angelique the mortal and Angelique the
witch.”
“Something,”
Angelique whispered, “something like that.”
He
thought for a moment, then shrugged. “I
dunno,” he said at last. “Roxanne isn’t
incredibly forthcoming with her plans.
All I know is that she wanted to know how Dr. Hoffman made it back from
the future. Like, who helped her do it,
who saved her from Gerard Stiles, who had the power to make a big change like
that. And she wanted to kill
Barnabas.” He cringed. “Please don’t hit me again.”
She
seemed not to hear him. “You don’t know
anything,” she whispered. A tear grew in
the corner of one eye like a brilliant pearl, then spilled down her cheek,
leaving a silver shimmer in its way.
“You are worthless. Utterly
worthless.”
“I
don’t think that’s completely true,” Nathan said grumpily, and crossed his arms
over his chest. “Ow,” he whispered as he
disturbed Dr. Hoffman’s bandage work. “I
can have plenty of worth. Listen, I
didn’t ask Roxanne to bring me
back. I got no allegiance to her,
really. I care about one thing and one
thing only.”
“You’re
human,” she said, “no powers, no magicks.
You’ll sell yourself to the highest bidder. Why should we trust you?”
“Because
you have Toddy,” he said simply. “Toddy
is on your side.”
She
frowned. “Toddy?”
“Or
Chris,” he said. “Jennings. Whatever he calls himself now. You can dig reincarnation, can’t you? It’s him.
He’s back. And he’s mine. And since he’s on your side, I’ll be on your
side too.”
“Sides,”
she said, a sibilant sound between her clenched teeth. “I am weary of sides. I am weary of all of this.” She put a trembling hand to her brow. “Maybe we’re luckier, you and I.”
“What
do you mean?” He tried to sit up, then
fell back, wincing.
“I’ve
given up my powers before. Tried to be
human. It never ended well. Maybe this time …” She frowned.
“No. To lose one’s powers never
ends well. Humanity is a weakness. Our enemies are far from human and they are
stronger than we and they will overcome us and they will destroy us.”
“Don’t
freak out,” Nathan said. “We’ll be all
right.” But suddenly he was frightened,
really frightened for the first time since Roxanne and Count Petofi resurrected
him, and he looked up at her with wide rabbit’s eyes. “Won’t we?”
She
didn’t respond.
The
door to Josette’s room creaked open.
Chris Jennings stood there, Julia Hoffman just behind him. “Oh Julia,” Chris said. His voice cracked. “You didn’t. Not him.
Not here.”
“Christopher!”
Nathan cried, joy flooding over him, making him forget his fear and his
pain. “You came! You really came!”
Christopher
ignored him. He glared instead at the
redheaded doctor at his side. “How could
you do this, Julia? How could you help
him?”
Julia
didn’t answer him. She entered the room
instead. “How are you feeling,
Lieutenant?” she asked, and lifted his wrist.
She looked to the ceiling while she took his pulse.
“Still
hurts,” Nathan said. His eyes rested on
Christopher. “But not so bad. Now.”
“Julia,
he’s one of them,” Chris said,
striding up to her. “He’s one of the bad
guys, and you brought him here?”
“It’s
nice to see you too,” Nathan grumbled.
“He
was hurt, Christopher,” Julia snapped.
“He would have died.”
“He’s
already dead,” Chris snarled. “Besides,
it wouldn’t be the first time.”
“I
couldn’t just let him die,” Julia said.
“And I don’t believe you would have let him die either.” They glared at each other. Finally Chris looked away.
“No,”
he said, and sounded very tired, “no, I suppose you’re right. I wouldn’t.”
“Besides,”
Nathan said brightly, “I’m not one of them.
I’m here to help!”
“Like
hell you are,” Chris growled. “You
bastard, you selfish sonofabitch. You’ll
do anything to get what you want, and everyone else can screw themselves. That’s true, isn’t it.”
“It
doesn’t have to be,” Nathan said in a small voice.
“But
it is. You don’t care who you hurt, so
long as you get what you want.” Behind
them, only Julia saw Angelique flinch and turn away. “I could never love someone like you.”
“Listen,”
Nathan said, “I know you don’t remember, but I told you once, a long time ago, that
everything I do is for you. I love
you. I’ve never loved anyone before
you. That’s why I keep coming back,
Toddy –”
Chris
bared his teeth. “My name is –”
“Doesn’t
matter. We’re still who we are. We’ll always
be. All I want is for you to love
me. You’re right about one thing – I’ll
do anything to get you to love me.”
Chris
shook his head. “Never gonna
happen.” He swallowed, his face sad and
disgusted at the same time, and then he turned to Julia. “I’m going back to the cottage. Sebastian is waiting for me. Quentin called. Says he has some news about our mystery
attacker.” He glanced one more time at
Nathan, opened his mouth, closed it, shook his head again, then walked out the
door.
“I
should go with him,” Julia sighed.
“Angelique, will you stay with Barnabas?
I want to make sure that nothing interfered with your healing
spell. We don’t know what other
properties that Dagger might have.”
Angelique nodded, but she was staring up at the portrait of
Josette. Julia made a sound of exasperation
and turned to Nathan. “I’m leaving
these,” and she set two pills down on the table beside his bed, “with you. They’re for pain.” She smiled tightly, touched him gently on the
shoulder, then walked out of the room.
For
a moment, neither of them said a word.
Then: “He’s wrong,” Angelique said. Her voice was quiet. Gentle.
Nathan watched her carefully.
“People do change. They change
all the time. I’ve seen it happen,
Lieutenant. If you love him – if you
really do – it isn’t too late. You can
change. I promise you that.” And she swept out of the room.
“People
change,” Nathan murmured. “People change
all the time.”
He
thought for a moment, then stood and hobbled to the window and looked out over
the lawn, painted silver by the cold, cold moon. “Power,” he said. “Humanity.
Weakness.” And thought and
thought.
6
1693
The
wind whipped her hair, free of its cursed bonnet, in a golden tide across her
face. Below her, a thousand feet, lay
the jagged shards of rock. Dimly, far
away, she could just see Aidan’s body, torn and smashed. She hoped fleetingly that his death had been
quick.
The
woman before her was grinning wickedly.
The magic had blackened her eyes, stretched purple veins like branches
across her face, now lightened so it glowed in the darkness, white as salt. “You thought it would be so easy, didn’t
you,” Samantha Good Collins purred.
“Both of you. My lying husband …
and his whore.”
Miranda
didn’t dare to even draw a breath. I can
escape this trap, she thought, there must be a way, some way …
And
yet – yet she remembered the night, only a week ago, when, beneath the moon,
she and Aidan consummated their love under its silver-water light, and
afterward, cleansed and baptized, she had forsaken her powers; she knew they
were gone, had felt them fly from her, leaving her gasping and weak … and
mortal.
A fool.
Nothing but a helpless fool.
Aye, and she was helpless
now. She was human. She could hear the mocking laughter of her
former coven master, the sadly deposed Nicholas Blair, echoing in her ears.
“Hast
thou no denial for me, Miranda DuVal?”
The witch before her was furious, Miranda could tell that much. The wind howled around them, whipping the
other’s auburn hair into a frenzy. “Hast
thou no words in thy own defense?”
“You
would not believe a word from my lips,” Miranda said. “You have killed the only man I ever
loved. You bewitched him and then you
murdered him.”
“So
I did,” Samantha, said smirking. “But I
haven’t lost, my darling. Thou art even
more of a fool than I thought thee if you believe that. For I have bound him to me, darling Miranda –
bound him to me with a curse.”
Miranda’s
eyes grew wide.
“He
will see my face again,” Samantha said, and lifted her head so that she smiled
into the moon, “and he will find me. For
the love of Aidan Collins belongs only to me, as thou must know.”
“I
know no such thing,” Miranda snarled through clenched teeth.
Samantha’s
laughter was tinkling, the shattering of crystal. “Idiot girl,” she said. “Know thee nothing of the Collins
family? Where they have built their house,
over the grave of a monster? But that
monster – that daemon – feeds us its magic, for I am a Collins now as surely as
the others, and the Collins curse can be twisted and used for my purposes.”
“Thou
art mad!” Miranda gasped. She glanced
over shoulder. Human, she thought,
human, and doomed. I should have held
onto my powers; they could have saved me now …
He will see my face again. And he will find me.
She
drew herself up. Steel rose up inside
her, the same ice that came when she called upon the powers of darkness. I am strong, she thought, and her eyes
flashed silver; I will return as well; hear me, spirits that exist and that
know, hear me and hear me well – this
will never be over.
Human or not, I will return to this place.
“Aidan
will be mine again,” Samantha said dreamily, “and you will be lost … lost …
lost –”
Miranda
opened her mouth and shrieked, a bestial sound, a battle cry, and it had the
exact effect she had hoped: it caught
the other witch off guard.
Giving
Miranda enough time to seize her rival with both hands full of that beautiful
red hair, seize it and pull –
–
so that they both went over the edge of Widow’s Hill.
She
ignored the bitter shrieks of her rival as the rocks rushed up to greet them. I will return, she thought firmly, that is
all I know. That is all I must know.
I will return to this place.
She
closed her eyes and imagined Aidan, Aidan’s lips against hers, Aidan’s arms
around her, Miranda DuVal, human at last, and in the moment before impact she
found she was smiling.
7
The
light of the candle flame he cradled with both hands had glowed a serpentine,
bitter green for the past few minutes, and Nathan figured that must mean it was
working. The spell, summons,
incantation, whatever it was. He really
had no idea what he was doing – he was no witch, no sorcerer – but who
cared? Without Toddy, the world was
meaningless.
The
green flame reflected itself in the shard of glass he discovered under the bed,
pacing the room like a lion bored in its cage after the others left him behind
with only his thoughts to tear at him.
It was nearly two inches long and needle sharp. The back was painted silver. Something expensive broke here once, he had
thought as he picked it up; I wonder what it was … a goblet? A mirror?
Which
was when it occurred to him – an idea. The idea … the only idea that
mattered. It had unfolded in his mind
like poisonous black petals.
He
shivered now. The temperature in
Josette’s room had plummeted suddenly.
The hair on his arms was standing up, he saw, and goosebumps trilled up
and down every exposed inch of skin.
I’m not alone.
He
smiled.
People change all the time.
Angelique
had said that.
“I
should kill you for using that spell to summon me,” a toneless, deathless voice
said from behind him, so familiar, yet so very different.
Nathan
turned around, already knowing full well what – who – he would see.
The
shadows in the farthest corner of the room clung thickly to each other, but
suddenly they were scattered as a dull green light, the same color, Nathan saw,
as the flame of his candle, began to glow there.
Tom
Jennings appeared. His face was cast in
that same greenish light, his sandy hair scattered across his forehead, his
muscular arms bared beneath the sleeves he had rolled up.
Nathan
felt desire and fear rise up inside him in equal parts.
“Perhaps
you should,” he said with a bravado he didn’t really feel.
Tom
took a step toward him. “You abandoned
us,” he said. “You went to them.”
“Looks
like,” Nathan said.
Tom
bared his fangs. “Traitor,” he
said. “Roxanne wants to save us, and you
throw it all away because of one little boo boo.”
“That’s
not why,” Nathan said lowly.
Tom
raised his eyebrows. “Is it
Christopher?” He roared sudden laughter. “Oh my god, it is, isn’t it. You, of all people, giving it all of up for love.”
“Wouldn’t
you?” Nathan said. “If Julia Hoffman
came and offered herself to you?”
“She
won’t, though,” Tom growled. “Just as
Christopher will never come to you.”
“I
know he won’t.”
Tom
looked at him, surprised. “Then what do
you want of me? Am I to be a courier,
returning you to the fold?”
“Not
exactly. When we’re done, I expect that
I’ll be able to take care of myself quite efficiently, thank you.”
“When
we’re done? I don’t …” The vampire’s face registered shock. Nathan was shimmying out of his
tee-shirt. “You’ve got to be
kidding.” Nathan stared at him stonily,
bare-chested. “Look,” Tom said, and held
up two hands in a warding off gesture, “I’m not like you. I’m not like my brother; I’m not my brother, and I won’t play the
part, not for you, not for –”
“Shut
up,” Nathan said, and Tom did, though he continued to glare, his eyes a sullen,
wolfish red. “I’m not asking you to be
Christopher. I know better than
that. But I need you, Tom. I need your power.”
“You
… you want to be like me.” He cocked his
head quizzically, genuinely puzzled.
“Why?”
“I
can’t be human,” Nathan whispered.
“Don’t you understand? You have
power. You are power. I need it. You’re right – Chris will never come to me as
I am.
“But
I can change. I can make him come to me.”
Tom
considered this. “Yes,” he said at
last. “Yes, I suppose you could, at that. If
I do it.”
“Why
wouldn’t you? You’re hungry. I can tell. I can see it in your eyes.”
Tom
licked his fangs. “The Undead are always
hungry,” he whispered. “This is a curse,
Nathan. You don’t know –”
Nathan
held up the sliver of glass, and wondered for a moment why Tom recoiled from it
the moment he recognized it for what it was.
That couldn’t matter now. With
ruthless efficiency, Nathan ran the glass across his palm. The mouth that opened there instantly ran
black in the flickering candlelight with his blood.
He
rose from the bed and took a step toward the vampire. “I don’t care,” he said, and tossed his head
back, exposing the long, white curve of his neck. He held out his palm. Tom’s red eyes took it in, and his tongue
flashed across his crimson lips. Dime
sized droplets of blood splashed black onto the ancient carpet Barnabas Collins
had selected especially on a visit to Paris in 1795 for his bride-to-never-be. “Do it,” Nathan said, taking another
step. He was trembling, stone inside his
pants. His breath came in sharp little
gasps. They were only inches apart now. The vampire’s inhuman eyes watched him,
watched him. “Make me like you. Do it now.”
Tom’s
tongue lashed out, snake-like and inhumanely long, settled on Nathan’s palm,
then withdrew back into the cavern of his mouth. He began to make a leonine growling sound.
Nathan
closed his eyes. He felt Tom’s icy hands
as his fingers sank into the meat of Nathan’s shoulders, pulled him nearer, nearer. The charnel stink of the vampire’s breath
fell over him like a shroud, and Nathan held his own breath. He wouldn’t need it much longer anyway. His erection throbbed against Tom’s lifeless
body. He wondered briefly if he hadn’t
been anticipating this moment all his life.
People change all the time.
His
eyes flew open as Tom’s mouth settled on his throat, the twin points denting
Nathan’s sensitive skin, holding there, pausing, just waiting.
Power. Humanity.
Weakness.
Ecstasy
and a dark crimson pain exploded inside him as Tom’s fangs slid effortlessly
into his neck, and Nathan’s mouth opened but he made no sound, and they sank
together to the floor of Josette’s bedroom as Nathan descended into an emerald
green water, and heard there in the sweet depths chiming voices singing silver
of far away, and he thought, I’m coming Christopher, I’ll be there soon; and
then the darkness swallowed him whole.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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