CHAPTER
111: Pieces
by Nicky
Voiceover by Donna Wandrey: “Danger
for everyone in the town of Collinsport.
For Angelique has been torn from her powers, and those powers have manifested
in a very dangerous manner. And while
Julia strives to maintain the humanity of the monsters who surround her, there
is one human among them on this night who would seek to become a member of the
living dead.”
1
“Does
it hurt dreadfully?”
Barnabas
looked up at her with his good eyes – the other, it pained her to see, and she
figured it always would, was completely overgrown with a patch of flesh still
so new it glowed pinkly at her – and then sighed heavily. “No,” he said at last. “Angelique did her work well. There is no pain at all anymore.”
Julia
nodded.
“How
is she?” Barnabas said.
“She
is in her room,” Julia said carefully.
She didn’t want to talk about Angelique, not even now, after all they’d
been through. She wanted a smoke. She would kill for a smoke.
Which
means, she thought desolately, no smoke for me.
“I
must speak to her,” Barnabas said, and began to rise.
Julia
laid a firm hand on his shoulder, and he sank back into the softness of the
chair. His eyes grew narrowed,
accusatory, and she could almost hear him, the vampire part of him, hissing,
“You betrayed me!” “Let her be,
Barnabas,” she said, her voice as firm as the weight of her hand on his
shoulder.
“We
still don’t understand all that has happened this night,” he growled. “She may be in severe danger, Julia.”
“Or
she might be dangerous,” she snapped back despite herself.
His
eyes grew wide. “I don’t believe you,”
he whispered. “After all that she’s done
for us – after all that we’ve been through, especially the both of you – that
would think, that you would dare to
think –”
“I’m
thinking of her as well,” Julia said.
Her voice was deadly cold, and she hated it more than he did, but she
couldn’t help it. “I have to. Especially because, as you point out, so much
has happened tonight that none of us understand.”
“That
isn’t the reason,” he growled, “and you know it.”
“Barnabas,”
she said sharply, and knelt down beside him so that they were face to face, “I
came to save you this evening. So did
Angelique. We both love you, in case you
hadn’t noticed, enough to risk our own lives for yours. Look at me,” she hissed as his eyes flickered
away from hers, and his jumped back to hers and widened, like a little
boy’s. “I need you to understand this,
because there are times, and we both know this, when you willfully forget vital facts and pieces of information. I will not allow that to happen now.
“One,”
and she held up the pointer finger of her left hand, “Angelique was seduced by
the Enemy in the future, or fell under its spell, enough so that she was
willing to kill me to have you.
“Two,”
and she added the middle finger to lay beside the first, “neither of you are
accustomed to thinking terribly clearly when it comes to the other. Now that both of you are in, shall we say, a
more precarious state of health, I think that fact bears repeating.
“And
three,” and she added her ringless ring finger, “she is human again, which
means that she doesn’t have her powers to help mask her pain. I believe that seeing you in the state she’s
in now could only be harmful. For her, Barnabas.”
“That’s
very big of you, Doctor,” Barnabas said nastily.
She
slapped him then.
He
stared at her, then lifted a hand to his cheek.
No imprint glowed there; there was, she realized, no blood pumping
through his lifeless body to rush to the veins and capillaries there. “Julia,” he whispered.
She
rose. “That’s more like it,” she
said. “I’ve been wanting to knock some
sense into you for a long time, Barnabas.
A long, long time.” She began to
march smartly toward the stairs.
He
half-rose. “Where are you going?” he
cried.
“To
check on my patient,” she said.
“Lieutenant Forbes may not be a gentleman or a scholar, but he is a
human being. Plus I want to make sure he
hasn’t defaced Josette’s room or scratched open his stitches or something else
equally as asinine.”
“I’ll
… I’ll wait for you here,” he said.
“You
do that,” she said. “Then I’m going back
to Collinwood. I’m exhausted,
frankly. I haven’t had even my customary
ten minutes of nightly sleep.” Smiling
grimly, she mounted the stairs.
Oh
Barnabas, she thought with sudden mournfulness as she approached the door of Josette’s
room, oh Barnabas, Barnabas, what am I going to do with you?
Forget him.
Let him go.
“I’m
done.” Hadn’t she said those words less
than twenty-four hours ago?
She
didn’t know what to do. What to
feel. She shook her head. The craving for a cigarette dug at her with
its tiny clawed lizard feet. She would
check on Nathan, she would check on Angelique, then she would enjoy one – one!
– ciggy on her walk back to her own sweet bed at Collinwood.
She
paused mid-knock. There was something
happening inside Josette’s room; a sound, small, a moan, a gasp, and something
else … something familiar …
Julia
laid her ear against the door.
The sucking sounds …
“Oh
god,” she whispered, and threw open the door.
Tom
Jennings glared up at her from the place where he crouched beside the bed, the
still, white form of Nathan Forbes clutched in his hands. Tom’s mouth leaked great gouts of blood that
flickered black in the firelight. He
grinned at her, and his eyes flashed red, like sullen embers, the eyes of a
wolf. “Julia,” he said. “My dearest, my most darling. Did you miss me?”
The
cross was in her hand in a moment. She
didn’t wait; she held it up, and winced as it flickered to life and threw forth
an elven blue radiance that Tom shied away from, cried out, dropped Nathan’s
lifeless body to the floor, and then leaped to his feet with feline grace. “Put that away,” he whimpered.
“You
know I can’t,” she said. “What did you
do to him?”
“I
think that’s obvious,” the vampire said.
“What he asked me to do.”
She
gaped. She hadn’t expected this newest
wrinkle. “Why would he …” Then she understood. And she wasn’t at all surprised. “He wants to be a vampire,” she said slowly,
“so that he can … so that he can …” She
couldn’t finish the sentence. It was too
horrible.
Tom
shrugged. “Not the most altruistic of
men, but who is these days? I’d do the
same thing. Hell,” he said, chuckling
with monstrous amusement, “I have done the same thing! And I’d do it again.” The humor faded. He took a step toward her. “I need you, Julia. I love you.
I want you forever – in a world without end …”
She
had lowered her arm, lowering the cross at the same time. Stupid of her. She raised it again, and it flashed with that
magical blue brilliance. “Get out of
this house, Tom,” she said, choking back a sob.
“Next time I’ll have a gun with me.
Loaded with silver bullets.”
“Could
you destroy me, Julia?” the vampire said, cocking his head in a curiously
canine manner. “Could you really? I know you still love me, that a spark of
that love remains. I can feel it.
Like I feel you.” He was fading
away, gradually, like the mist of morning.
“You’ll come to me. I promise
you. You’ll come to me for help … and
soon … very soon …”
And
he was gone.
Cursing,
Julia knelt beside the still form of Nathan Forbes. She felt for a pulse; for a moment there was
nothing, and then, yes! There it
was. The tiniest flutter, like a baby
bird beneath her fingers, struggling to live and breathe …
She
shook her head. She’d go downstairs and
fetch her medical bag. Gritting her
teeth, she stalked swiftly back to the door and into the hallway; and Nathan
Forbes better pray, she thought furiously, that I have enough of the serum left
for him and Audrey and Barnabas.
2
The
woman who was not a woman at all anymore hovered a mile above the ocean that
gnashed and wailed far below her. She
wore nothing, but her body – which wasn’t even really a body, if anyone cared to examine it – didn’t feel the cold
of winter, approaching. It was mostly
energy, magical and otherwise, and glowed entirely a shimmering, shining
silver. It wasn’t required that she
maintain this shape, but it was … it was comfortable,
she thought. Familiar. Easier.
Of course, everything was
easier now.
She
remembered everything. The energy
composing her core fairly pulsed with the memories of the lives of the women
she had inhabited over the past several millennia: the wise woman with sea-green eyes, the first
of her kind, and the tribal scars that held spells and secrets bound to her
body, betrayed by the chieftain’s son whom she loved, and so she used her
powers to bring down ruin upon the heads of all the men of all the tribes; the
witch-woman who prowled outside the windows of the huts of the Picts, stealing
their babies for sacrifice to the black and evil demon-god who promised her
powers; the sorceress dwelling on one of the isles of ancient Greece who
supplied potions and granted the wishes of local maidens who sought her out and
who transformed bodily foolish young men who dared approach her into reptiles
and amphibians and pigs; the witch ordering sacrifices of Mayan maidens for the
good of all the people; the Puritan woman cursed to be a servant, but rising
above her station; the young blonde girl with sea-green eyes cursed to
servitude on the island of Martinique, but rising, rising above her station;
the witch Miranda; the witch Cassandra; and now she was the sum of all these
disparate pieces, but more than they as well.
She was all; rising, rising; she
was everything.
She
was a goddess.
She
should return to earth, she supposed, and then wondered, What’s the hurry? What’s the rush? There’s time, isn’t there?
Her
lips that weren’t really lips at all curled into a smile. It might have been a gentle smile if she were
human; her face, if observed, would have appeared mask-like. Her eyes were black pits.
She
would return to earth, she decided.
After all, there was so much to do.
3
Danielle
winced as Edith ran her hands for the final time over her leg, where the wound
she had sustained during the dissolution of Seaview had burned and leaked for
the past hour or so. “Sano, sano, sano,” Edith whispered, and
there: the wound was gone. But it left an ugly pink scar in its wake,
and Danielle rolled her eyes. “You might
have erased that as well,” she said
tightly.
Edith’s
enormous almond-shaped eyes flashed up to Danielle’s and widened. She said nothing, though her mouth grew
fainter and more pursed until it was gone completely. “That’s the price you must pay,” she said at
last, and suddenly Danielle realized that the witch was nearly quaking with
fury, “and you’re damned lucky that it’s the only one. A wound any bigger than that would have
required substantially more magic … and a far bigger sacrifice than a simple
scar.”
“Sorry,”
Danielle muttered. Her eyes juttered
away from Edith, who flounced away from her anyway, and scanned the room of the
house to which they had retreated after Angelique’s wrath had cooled. It wasn’t much – an old monastery Petofi knew
of, on St. Eustace’s Island. Ironic, if
you asked Danielle, but it had proven accessible for all of them, even the
vampire. Whatever white magic had once
possessed the place was all but faded now.
Danielle’s
eyes narrowed. Her mouth curled into a
sneer. She rose and walked across the
room to the place where Roxanne Drew sat, staring out a glassless window into
the night. It would be dawn soon. She and Tom would need new coffins, and it
was not in Edith or Petofi’s powers, it seemed, to simply conjure them up.
“If
you’ve come to tell me that this is all my fault,” Roxanne said without turning
around, freezing Danielle in her tracks, “then you needn’t bother. I know.
I understand my culpability.”
“Bon,” Danielle said, and laughed. “You should allow the sun to rise and greet
you full in the face. Let it crumble you
to the dust you should have been a century ago.”
“Perhaps
I should,” Roxanne mused.
“I
don’t understand what you could possibly have been thinking,” Danielle said,
“changing the witch like that. You gave
her more power –”
“Power
I assumed she would use to help us,” Roxanne said, and blinked. “How could I have known that she would turn
against us so swiftly?”
“Did
you know what that … that dagger would do?”
“I
had an idea, yes.”
“You
have scattered us,” Danielle said furiously.
“Ruined us!”
“Perhaps
you’re right,” Roxanne whispered. She
rose then, and smoothed out the wrinkles in the peasant blouse and skirt she
wore, both colored a deep, burnt sienna.
“I’ll make this right,” she said, and for the first time turned to face
Danielle.
But
Danielle was gone, standing next to Edith, whispering in her ear. “I’m sorry, cheri,” Danielle purred, and allowed a hand to rest on Edith’s
shoulder for a moment, then slide down her back, lower, lower –
Edith
relaxed against her. “I know,” Edith
whispered back. “I understand, my love.” She traced Danielle’s chin with her finger
lovingly, emotions she hadn’t shown for another human being in more than a
century and a half. They hadn’t
discussed it, either woman, just as they hadn’t discussed the room they had
shared together at Seaview, a room that was now destroyed. We’ll take one in this dreadful place, Edith
thought now, and twined her fingers with Danielle’s. We’ll make another. We.
“We aren’t finished yet,”
Roxanne called to them, but they ignored her.
“I swear it. I will –”
“I’m
afraid that you are, though,” a man’s voice said from the doorway, gloating.
The
three women spun in tandem. It would
have been amusing, the synchronized movement, under different circumstances.
Roxanne’s
face twisted into a snarl. “You
bastard,” she spat. “How dare you come
here now. How dare you –”
Which
was the moment that Gerard Stiles revealed the pistol he held.
And
fired a single silver bullet into Roxanne’s chest.
4
Nathan’s
eyelids fluttered as he rose back to consciousness.
The
Countess had come into his room, he thought muzzily, what could she possibly
want? Then he groaned. Come back to reality, Forbes, he thought;
that’s the doc.
She
saw then that he was awake. Her eyes
narrowed. “You idiot,” she said quite
clearly.
“Ow,”
Nathan said, and touched his head. It
throbbed. So did his throat. So did everything else. “I’m alive,” he said at last. “How?
Why?”
“Because
I broke up your little tryst,” Julia said.
“Tom is my ex-boyfriend, by the way; did you know that?”
“So
what?” he croaked. “Why’d you stop him?”
“Because
what happened to Tom is partially my fault,” she said with obviously straining
patience. “Barnabas made him a vampire
after Tom came snooping around. If Tom
made you a vampire, and you in turn made Chris a vampire …” She purposefully allowed the sentence to
trail off. “Do you see? I love Chris.
I won’t have his blood on my hands.
Or in your mouth. You idiot.”
“I
love him so much,” Nathan groaned. “You
have no idea how I feel, Doc. Like I’m
all torn up inside. Like nothing will
ever make it better.”
“And
becoming a bloodsucking fiend will?”
“You
love Barnabas Collins,” Nathan said petulantly.
“You’re fixing up that vampire girl.
You can’t think we’re all
bad.”
“You
don’t understand what it is to be a vampire,” Julia said. “Not even I do, not completely, but I know
more than you. When they bite you –
after you die – you come back. But you
aren’t you anymore; not
completely. The vampire-mind takes up
residence inside you, and it forces
you to commit acts that would have repelled you in your former life.” Her eyes narrowed. “Though, when it comes to you, Lieutenant, I
question your scruples enough to realize that perhaps you wouldn’t change so
much after all.”
“Thanks,”
Nathan said.
“Vampires
delight in bloodshed and cruelty. It’s
their nature, Lieutenant; even if you managed to turn Chris into a vampire, he
wouldn’t be the man you loved. Just as
Tom isn’t the man I loved; not really.”
“And
… Barnabas Collins?”
“Barnabas
is different,” Julia said tightly. “He
is the victim of a curse. For some
reason I cannot fully fathom, that difference has allowed him to maintain a
semblance of his humanity, little pieces.
Sometimes the pieces are bigger than others. I have not observed that same semblance in
other vampires I have encountered.”
“My
arm hurts,” Nathan said petulantly.
“What’d you do to it?”
“I
administered a drug I have developed,” Julia said, rolling her eyes, “a serum
designed to help current vampires revert to their former human state, and to
prevent their victims from succumbing to the disease itself.”
“You
think it’s a disease, huh? I thought it
was a curse.”
“I
believe both definitions to be true,” Julia said stonily. “Now, if you’ll excuse me, Lieutenant
Forbes. The sun is rising, and I am bone
tired.”
“What
makes you think I won’t try it again?” he called to her.
She
paused. “Because,” she said, and turned
to him, smiling a deadly little smile, “I’ll kill you if you try. With my bare hands.”
And
she was gone.
Nathan
relaxed against the pillows. He
frowned. Perhaps she was right, he
thought; perhaps trying to become a vampire wasn’t the brightest of ideas. Ah, well.
There were other ways to Christopher.
He’d find them.
“Not
a bad idea, you know,” a voice said from the window. It was distorted somehow, Nathan thought,
frowning, as if the being that spoke didn’t quite have human vocal cords, a
human mouth.
He
turned his head, and found that he was absolutely right.
The
shaggy white werewolf dropped into the room and landed on all fours. It shook itself delicately, then rose to its
full height … standing on two legs.
Nathan’s
bladder wanted very badly to let go.
The
wolf-thing grinned at him with a mouthful of teeth the size of piano keys. “Killing you with my bare hands,” it said,
and demonstrated them for him: long
fingers, ever so long, and each tipped with a wicked black claw. “To keep Christopher safe? I think tearing you to pieces is exactly the
solution I need after all.”
5
“Get
behind me,” Edith growled, and without waiting for a reply, she shoved Danielle
away, then blocked her wholly with her body, her arms spread, her face a
writhing mask of hatred.
Gerard
Stiles turned away from the collapsed form of Roxanne Drew, and cocked an
eyebrow at them. “Ladies, ladies,
please!” he said calmly. “Why, that’s a
fighting stance! And a fighting stance
means you’re going to be difficult, and you being difficult means this is going
to take a bit longer than I planned, and I really have better things to be
doing.”
“Like
dying, I suppose,” Edith snarled.
“Mrs.
Collins,” Gerard said sadly, shaking his shaggy head, “surely you learned the
last time you tried to play how sadly outmatched you are. It’s nice to see you again, by the by.”
“Wish
I could say the same,” Edith said, and thrust forth her spellcasting hand. Black energy that collected in her eyes also
danced from her fingertips and flew in a stream toward Gerard …
…
who held up one hand and, with a disinterested sneer, murmured, “Dissolutum.”
And
the magic fell away harmlessly.
Dissipated.
Edith
gaped.
“My
master’s power is stronger than yours,” Gerard said. “Which is why he sent me here. Your little cabal is interesting, I’ll grant
you, and he sends his regards – he’s encountered you all in one way or another
over the past hundred years or so – but he wants me to let you know that he
can’t just go on allowing you to interfere.
And you were just about to interfere, weren’t you.”
“Your
master,” Edith said, “wants to destroy the world.”
“All
the worlds,” Gerard said quickly. “All
of them, my dear. Not just this one.”
“And
why would you allow that to happen?”
“Why,
faith, my dear!” he said in mock-shock.
“I have faith that my master knows best, and that my master’s plan is
meaningful, not just for me, but for everyone.
You have faith aplenty, don’t you?”
He blinked at them, the question serious. “Hasn’t your own master resurrected you time
and again, helped you use the powers inside you, while magnifying them with his
own, which are, admittedly, not inconsiderable?
I should think you’d understand faith above everyone else here, Edith
Collins!” He shook his head again. “Unfortunately, your faith isn’t enough to
save you. Because when it comes down to
it, faith isn’t enough.
“Because
we are more powerful than you.
“And
power trumps faith.”
“I’m
getting that,” Roxanne said from behind him, and before he could turn,
registering his shock, the vampire had backhanded him, sending him flying
across the room.
Danielle
put her arms around Edith and, grinning, snuggled against her.
“Vampires
turn to dust when they’ve been killed, dummy,” Roxanne said, baring her fangs,
“especially when they’re as old and as powerful as I am.”
“I’ll
remember that for next time,” Gerard said.
He held the gun again, but Roxanne kicked it delicately from his hand
with the tip of her leather boot.
“There
won’t be a next time,” she said, and knelt beside him. “I’m going to enjoy sucking you dry, Stiles.”
“Forgive
and forget, Miss Drew,” Gerard said.
“Why, if it weren’t for me and the master, you wouldn’t be here right
now!”
“You
made me a monster,” Roxanne snarled.
“We
gave you immortality!”
“An
eternity of misery,” Roxanne said, and slashed the five claws of her right hand
across his face. He screamed. “Which I am happy to share with you.”
She
was lowering her fangs down to the pulse in his throat, slower, slower …
…
and stopped as a cheated, furious scream rose from the throat of Danielle
Roget.
Roxanne
stopped and lifted her head.
She
roared like a lion.
The
energy-goddess-magic-thing that still bore a resemblance to Cassandra Collins
held up the head of Edith Collins in one hand.
In the other she held the witch’s heart.
The eyes blinked; the mouth worked furiously; the heart throbbed. The body’s other pieces lay scattered in a
mess of blood and internal organs at the creature’s feet.
Simultaneously,
all turned to dust and slid through the creature’s fingers.
“NO!”
Danielle shrieked. “NON! NON! NON!
I will not allow this! I will
NOT!” She tried to rain down a fusillade
of blows upon the Angelique-thing, but she didn’t appear to be substantial
enough for any kind of damage at all.
Howling, Danielle sank to her knees, smearing the blood of her nascent
lover across the stone floor of the monastery.
For
a moment, with the exception of the unfortunate Danielle Roget, no one moved.
Suddenly
a stream of smoke rose from Roxanne’s shoulder as the first rays of the sun
fell across her. She shook her claws in
the Angelique-thing’s direction, and then, in the blink of an eye, she had
vanished.
Gerard
stood shakily to his feet. “Thanks,” he
said. “I’m not sure why you’re helping
me, but let me tell you how –”
The
Angelique-thing cocked her head.
“Helping you?” Those inhuman lips
twisted into a smile without mirth, without humor, or anything mortal. “I’m not helping you, Gerard Stiles. I plan to destroy you as well.”
At
Gerard’s side, the air wavered and quivered, and a pair of enormous crimson
eyes danced into being. “GO … AWAY,” a
voice hissed from nowhere. “LEAVE …
USSSSS … ALONE.”
“You
haven’t the strength to materialize, I see,” the Angelique-thing said. There was, Gerard realized uneasily, no
emotional resonance in that voice; it was hollow, metallic, incurious. He began to feel afraid, even with the master
at his side. “How unfortunate for you.”
“YOU
CAN DO NOTHING AGAINST ME.”
“I
can, though,” the Angelique-thing said.
“And I will. I have much to
do. And I’ll do it. But I’ll take my time. You – even you, daemon –” And the red eyes widened at this
pejorative. “—won’t see me coming. I am more than the most powerful being in the
universe.” It smiled again, that
humorless flexing of it simulated lips.
“I am the universe now.”
It
shimmered and vanished, leaving behind only its voice, as if to mock the Enemy
and the dog at its side.
“ALL
WILL DIE,” the Angelique-thing’s voice promised. “ALL WILL DIE. ALL.
ALL WILL DIE.
“AND
YOUR PLAN WILL BE FOR NOTHING.”
She
– it – was gone.
Stiles
and the Enemy turned to regard each other.
Stiles
flew across the room again, as if struck by a great invisible force.
The
Enemy’s voice, panting now, was weaker.
“You fool,” it said. “Daring
to banter with these creatures when you should have killed them
immediately. I should kill you now.”
“Please,
master,” Stiles whined, writhing before nothing, “please, no … not yet … not
until the time …”
“If I didn’t need you,” the thing’s voice
said petulantly, “I would, have no doubt
of that. We must speed up our plans,
Stiles. The alignment must happen. Our pieces must be moved more quickly along
the board; white and black have come together; the bonding time is now.
“The Collins family must be joined.
“I will know their power.
“I will taste of it.
“And I will be free.” It chuckled with sudden, monstrous good
humor. “After three hundred years, I will finally be free.
“And then … yes, and then … I will
destroy this Angelique myself.”
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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