CHAPTER 112: Set the World on Fire
by Nicky
Voiceover by John Karlen: “The
inhabitants of the Collins estate, both those at the great house of Collinwood
and its accompanying Old House, are accustomed to tragedy. But on this beautiful morning, one of their
enemies will show them how truly helpless they are, and how close to tragedy
they will always be.”
1
Nathan
rolled from the bed as the werewolf, roaring, leaped forward, claws extended,
tongue lolling. He cried out miserably
as he struck the hard-wood floor of Josette’s room, the wound he’d sustained at
Seaview reopening upon impact. Even
though he’d lost a fairly significant amount of blood since his encounter with
Tom Jennings, he could still feel a hot wetness seeping through the bandages
Julia had reapplied.
“Nowhere
to hide,” the white wolf said as it crouched on the bed and peered down at him
with amber eyes.
“Chris
wouldn’t want you to do this!” Nathan cried.
Terror made his voice childlike and tremulous. Not exactly convincing.
The
wolf cocked its head. “Oh?” it
said. It sounded almost friendly. “Do you think that’s true? Hasn’t he killed you himself at least once
before?”
“He
didn’t mean to,” Nathan whined. “It
wasn’t Christopher, it was the animal!
You’re doing this deliberately!”
“Indeed
I am,” the white wolf said. It seemed to
be grinning at him, in that way that nearly all canines possess. “To keep him safe. Or am I really way off base, and you weren’t
just admitting to Dr. Hoffman that you willfully tried to become a vampire so
you could vampirize Chris too?”
Nathan
opened his mouth. No words came
out. He closed it.
“I
thought as much,” the white wolf said.
Nathan could almost believe it was sad.
“If it’s any comfort to you,” it said, leaning down now, for the kill,
Nathan supposed, “I don’t plan on enjoying this. I’m not going to eat you, actually; my plan
is to tear off your head and then bury it and the rest of you somewhere in the
woods. From what Mr. Collins tells me,
you’ll have lots of company out there.”
Nathan
closed his eyes.
And
opened them a moment later. If my eyes
continue to open, he thought, that must mean my head is still attached.
He
felt at his neck with his fingertips.
They met unruptured flesh. His
head continued to sit in its accustomed spot atop his spine.
Then: he frowned.
He sniffed at the air, unaware that, above him, the werewolf was making
the same movement, snuffling. “Do you
smell smoke?” Nathan said.
The
windows of Josette’s room blew inward, pushed and shattered by an enormous
cloud of flame and thick black smoke that soon filled the room.
2
“Barnabas,
Barnabas!” Julia cried, but he was in the death-like coma that passed over him
every morning; from the coffin where she hovered, she noted, once again, how
pale and wax-like his sleeping visage was.
It was hard to believe he wasn’t dead.
You’ll both be dead in a few minutes if you
don’t do something!
Smoke
from the fire upstairs had already filled the drawing room, driving her down
into the cellar. There were secret
chambers and passages farther below the house, she remembered Barnabas telling
her about them, but, belatedly, she realized he hadn’t told her exactly how to
access them.
In
the coffin beside him, Audrey likewise slumbered, her face glowing a dark, rich
gold as it had every night since her transformation, far removed from the pale
of the other vampires Julia had encountered.
And
where was Willie? If he were here, he
could …
He
could what, Julia? she nattered at herself.
Help you drag the coffins up the stairs just in time for all four of you
to fry to death?
And how had the fire started exactly?
Didn’t
matter. She had to act, and quickly.
“Hey,”
Audrey said, yawning, and Julia spun, wide-eyed, to find the baby vampire
sitting up in her coffin, “did you know that this place is on fire?”
Julia
wanted to cry, How are you awake? Barnabas told her that, come sunrise, he was
as good as a corpse; unaware, so deeply asleep he appeared to be dead. Also, he claimed, he was un-wakeable. So why isn’t she sleeping? Julia nearly
wondered aloud. Instead, she decided not
to waste time with stupid questions. “We
have to get Barnabas out of here!” she said firmly.
“We
can’t go outside,” Audrey said, already out of the coffin. “The sun – we’ll both go up in flames.”
“We
don’t have a choice,” Julia snapped. “We
stay, and we’ll both die down here.”
Upstairs,
a woman began to scream.
3
“Get
out of here,” Angelique cried, her voice trembling. She hated how she sounded now: a human, mewling, mealy-mouthed, and, god, so
young. But I’m not, she thought despairingly, I’m
hundreds – hundreds – of years old;
I’m not that same dewy-eyed little girl who came to Collinwood with Ma’amselle
that dreary day in 1795, so why do I look this way, why?
The
creature before her, she figured, could supply an answer.
She
didn’t want to hear it.
The
glowing, glistening woman standing before her looked just like her. Her hair was silver now; her face like
porcelain, and her skin sparkled with glowing spheres of white-like, like
jewels made of stars. That’s probably
exactly what they are, Angelique thought; she’s made of liquid light, of
energy, of magic. She was living radiance.
“I’m
not going anywhere.” The other
Angelique’s voice echoed musically, as if a crystal goblet had been struck
lightly, oh so lightly, with the edge of a spoon. Her eyes flashed, blue-green-gray like the
human before her, but more than that, a color so rich and so ethereal that it
hurt to gaze upon them for too long.
Smoke
hung in the air; the rooms upstairs were burning, driving Angelique down from
her bedroom, coughing, eyes burning, her screams garnering absolutely no
response. Of course, she had thought as
she nearly tripped down the staircase, Julia went straight to Barnabas. She tried to ignore the spear of jealousy
this initiated. She was successful only
because her doppelganger stood before the front door, facing her, beautiful in
a long white robe, her arms folded across her breasts. The screams were out of her mouth before she
could stop them; I’ll be embarrassed later, she thought, and took a step
backward from her own image.
Now
the doppelganger touched her lips gently with the tip of one finger, smirking
as she did, and silver sparks fell as she did it. “You poor thing,” she simpered. “You’ll burn to death if I allow it, won’t
you.”
Angelique
bared her teeth and clenched her fists.
Which was, considering that was all that she could do for a retort, deeply
unsatisfying. “What do you want?” she
said at last.
The
other raised a silver eyebrow. “To save
you, of course! Why else would I be
here?”
“I
don’t know,” Angelique said bitterly. “I
don’t even know what you are, not
really.”
“Why,
I am you!” the other said. “We are the
same, you and I. I know you, just as you
know me. Intimately.”
“You’re
wrong.” She shook her head and backed
away from the … the thing. “Why are you burning this house down?”
“Foolish
child,” the other Angelique said and shook her head. “Why would I burn down the Old House? I’m going to destroy everything; why would I take the worlds apart one house at a time?”
Angelique’s
eyes grew wider. “The … the worlds?”
The
other grinned. Her teeth were blindingly
white. Angelique was forced to shield
her eyes. “Of course. I tire of mortals and all their tiny
troubles. I would be rid of them. Until then, however …” And she shrugged, and her face twisted
up. “Until then, it turns out I continue
to have …” And she shuddered. “…feelings. For Barnabas, particularly. And for you, as it turns out.” She beamed.
“Actually, you know what? I’ll
save him and I’ll save you. If you’re nice to me. I’ll consider
it, anyway.”
“Thanks,”
Angelique said dryly, then added, “Wait.
If the Enemy wants to destroy all the worlds, and you want to destroy all the worlds … why doesn’t it just let you
destroy all the worlds?”
“The
Enemy believes it will continue to exist after it has wrought all its
destruction. Whether this is true or
not, I do not know. At any rate, it
doesn’t matter. I’m going to destroy it.”
“What
about you? Will you exist?”
“I
am the universe,” the other said, her
face dimpling. “I will always exist,
whether useless matter does or not.”
That
can’t be true, Angelique thought; the other laughed. “Of course,” she said, “think what you
want.” Then, briskly. “Shall we save our friends, my dear?”
4
Barnabas
opened his eyes. “This isn’t possible,”
he croaked. Smoke was filling the
basement room, his eyes were bleary and red, but they were open, and Julia, her
own eyes filling with tears of gratitude, seized his hand and pulled him from
the coffin.
“Possible
is a meaningless term now, Barnabas,” she said, and, back muscles screaming,
thought, I’ll be feeling that tomorrow … if there is a tomorrow. “We have to get you out of here.”
“But
… the sun,” he said, and blinked … and suddenly they were standing in the
drawing room.
And
one of the Angeliques was smiling.
“Barnabas,”
she purred, her voice echoing supernaturally, the dulcet tone of a crystal
goblet lightly tapped, “darling.” She
was, Barnabas thought, gazing at her in awe, composed entirely of light, every
molecule, light made flesh.
The
other Angelique, the mortal, murmured his name and rushed to him. Her face was ashen with her panic. “What are you doing out of the coffin?” she
cried. “Barnabas, the sun –”
“The
sun,” the other Angelique scoffed. “As
if I would allow our precious Barnabas to be harmed by something so minute, so insignificant
as a simple star.” Sparks fell from her eyes and sizzled
balefully on the carpet. “He is
protected by my power, as even the most obdurate of you –“ and her eyes
flickered to a hyperventilating Willie, and then to Audrey, who rolled her
eyes and scowled, “ – can see.”
A
ray of sunlight fell through the drawing room window directly across Barnabas’
face. He recoiled out of habit, opening
his mouth to cry out, but there was no withering of flesh, no sizzle, no flash
of fire.
Then
he blinked with his good eye, examined his hands, and blinked again.
“What
have you done?” he whispered.
“Saved
you,” the creature said, lips dimpled, then added wickedly, “for the time
being. Your house is burning away a mile
a minute around you, and without me, you’d already be destroyed.” Her nose wrinkled, and she glared at
Audrey. “You and your little friend. I’m not exactly sure why I’m protecting
her. You’re welcome.”
Flames
belched from two of the bedroom doors upstairs; the carpet singed; the bannister
glowed an unpleasant rose.
“If,”
Julia said with as much snarkiness as she could muster, “if you’re so powerful, super-goddess, then why don’t you put out the fire?”
“Oh,”
the uber-Angelique said, and nibbled at the end of one glowing fingertip. “I suppose I could, couldn’t I.”
And.
There
was no fire.
The
carpet was not singed.
The
bannister did not glow.
The
windows were whole, intact.
They
looked at each other.
“Well,”
Julia said after a moment, “um.
Yes. Thank you. I guess.”
The
uber-Angelique nodded its silvery head.
“Don’t mention it,” she purred.
They
looked at each other again. “I don’t know
what you are,” Angelique said, her teeth gritted with her fury, “but I want
this undone.”
“Angelique,”
Julia growled and allowed her fingernails to dig into the soft meat of the
other woman’s arm.
Angelique
ignored her and, instead, faced off against her doppelganger. “Whatever that … that creature did to me,” Angelique snarled, “I want you to undo
it. I know you can do it.” She took a deep breath; her eyes flashed
green and gray and a bottomless blue and she said,
“Put…us…back…together...again. NOW.”
“And
why on this earth or any other would I want to do that?” the uber-Angelique
said. Her lips shimmered as they quirked
into the devious smile everyone in the room recognized by now, including the
human Angelique. “I’m free,
darling. For the first time. Unbound.
Unrestricted … by your curious morality, by the soul that continues to
plague you, moral compass, skewed as it is – whatever you want to call it. It’s gone
now – I am free.” She was, they realized, hovering nearly a
foot above the now-unburned carpet. She
whirled around in increasingly dizzying circles until she stopped suddenly
facing them, and her eyes were enormous spinning silver discs. “Free. And I like
it.”
Laughing
her wild laugh, the creature rose to the ceiling in a shower of sparks, faded
away, and was gone.
“Oh
god,” Barnabas whispered. Smoke was
beginning to rise from his hands, from his face, from his forehead. His good eye darkened until it was a fiery,
miserable crimson.
Beside
him, Audrey’s hair burst into flames.
“WILLIE!”
Julia screamed, and threw her coat over Audrey’s head while, at the same time,
she shoved Barnabas in the direction of the cellar. “HELP ME!”
“I’m
comin’, Barnabas!” Willie cried, pelting forward, as …
…
above them, Nathan Forbes, white-faced and running, appeared at the head of the
stairs, and without pausing, bounded down them.
Behind him, an eight-foot tall wolf-thing covered in white hair bounded
after him.
Nathan
stopped in his tracks, directly in the center of the drawing room. “Um,” he said, glanced over his shoulder, and
then, pleading, back at his potential saviors, “please don’t let him eat me.”
5
“Fine,”
Sebastian said sulkily, hours later, arms folded over his chest. He lowered his head until his chin rested on
his chest, the part revealed from beneath one of Barnabas’ silver smoking
jackets he wore like a robe. “If you
insist, Dr. Hoffman, I will refrain from eating the good Lieutenant here.”
“Don’t
do me no favors,” Nathan said under his breath.
“What
was that?” Sebastian growled.
Nathan,
scowling, looked away.
It
was nearly dusk, and they sat in the drawing room, now curiously unscorched (as
was the second story of the Old House, Nathan had pointed out helpfully soon
after his rescue at the hands of his unwitting rescuers), and looked at each
other: Willie and Angelique and Julia
and Sebastian and Nathan. The absolute
lack of a trace of the fire that exploded the windows (including the
un-exploded windows themselves) wasn’t exceptionally mysterious; “She did it,” Angelique said with unusual
moroseness after Barnabas and Audrey were ushered to their coffins and tucked
in for the day. “She fixed
everything. Like it never happened.”
“The
remaining mystery, of course,” Julia said suddenly, breaking the uncomfortable
silence, “is who set the fire.”
“Petofi,”
Angelique said instantly.
“Stiles,”
said Audrey, following.
“Act
of God?” Willie asked, then retreated back into silence when they all turned to
him, glaring.
“It
could be any one of our enemies, Julia,” Angelique said after a moment. “Roxanne is the most likely suspect, and with
loaded guns like Petofi or Edith Collins at her disposal, I’ll bet she decided
to destroy the Old House – and us – because of the destruction of Seaview. Tit for tat.”
“But
Stiles could want us dead too,” Audrey said.
“It
doesn’t scan,” Julia said with a shake of her titian head. Her shaggy hair caught the breeze and tickled
her eyebrows. How she longed for an hour
– a half hour! – with dear Pepe down at the Collinsport Clip ‘n Snip! “Stiles needed Barnabas in the future because
the Enemy needed him.”
“Because
he became the Enemy’s instrument,” Angelique said.
Julia
nodded. “He created what Quentin
referred to as ‘nightspawn.’ An army of
werewolves and vampires and werewolf-vampire-hybrid …” She gestured furiously
in the air. “…things that served him.
And, by extension, the Enemy.
They kept Carolyn and Cassandra at bay and the rest of the town in a
state of perpetual fear.”
“But
we don’t know if the Enemy has the same plans now,” Angelique said
argumentatively. Julia rolled her
eyes. Angelique frowned. “Since you’ve returned, hasn’t it occurred to
you that it may have revised whatever it has planned?”
“I
don’t think it can,” Julia said. “It
needs the Collins family. It needs
Barnabas. Whether it needs him to
transform into the … the creature I saw in the future, of that I’m not
sure. But I believe the rest of us are
fairly expendable. Which leads me to
believe that it was not Gerard Stiles
or the Enemy who caused today’s
conflagration.”
“You’re
only guessing,” Angelique snapped. “Does
it matter if it was Roxanne or the Enemy?”
“I
think it does,” Julia said quietly. “For
one very good reason.”
“And
what’s that?”
“Because,”
Julia said, “I believe that neither Roxanne nor Petofi nor the Enemy nor any of
the other colorful characters we’ve seen in the past few weeks is
responsible. And if I’m right, then the
person – the thing – responsible may
be more dangerous than I ever imagined.”
“Then
who is it?” Audrey asked.
“Me,”
a voice said from the doorway.
They
turned.
Julia
made a small sound in the back of her throat.
David
Collins was framed in the open doorway.
His hands were extended; at the tip of each finger, a tiny white flame
glowed brightly. His mouth was wreathed
in an angelic smile. And his eyes glowed
with the same points of white fire.
When
he spoke, his voice was not that of a little boy.
“Laura,”
Julia moaned.
“Indeed,”
said the Phoenix.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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