Chapter 51: “What Little Girls Are Made Of”
by Luciaphil
Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
From what I've tasted of desire
I hold with those who favor fire.
But if it had to perish twice,
I think I know enough of hate
To say that for destruction ice
Is also great
And would suffice.
--“Fire and Ice”
Robert Frost
* * *
Voiceover (Marie Wallace): In the small hours of the
morning, the inhabitants
of Collinwood are engaged in separate trials: tests of
will and strength
through private worlds of pain, deceit and loneliness.
As expectations and
hopes shatter, one woman, who has traveled back
through the folds of time so
that she may change the future, knows that she will
soon need to stand on this
proving ground herself.
* * *
**Once upon a time, there was a beautiful princess.
She had a complexion like
cream, hair like fire, the body of a goddess and eyes
filled with passion. She
grew up happily enough in the company of people who
she thought loved her,
unaware of who she really was. Then one day, the
voices came.**
“Jenny,” Quentin said for a second time, perhaps
hoping that this wasn’t real.
“Oh, dear God.”
**The voices told her that she didn’t belong with “her
family”. She was a
princess, they said. A *real* princess like in the
gadjo fairytale books. She
had a glorious future, the voices told her, but she
had to do what they said.
What they told her do often only made sense to her,
but she obeyed them without
question. There were times when the voices went away.
But they always came
back**
Quentin’s eyes darted back between his wife and Beth.
“Jenny, thank God. I’ve
missed you so much,” he lied hastily, trying to
stomach his revulsion at the
sight of her.
**One day, long after the princess had run away from
the Romani, she met her
the man of her dreams. He was everything a prince
should be: tall, handsome and
rich. He lived in a castle, they said, or as close to
a castle as could be.**
“Why did you go away?”
“It’s . . . complicated.” Quentin smiled at her. “I
should never have left you,
Jenny. Can you ever forgive me?”
**The princess had been forced to go and work in a
low, common place. She was
above the people who worked in and frequented the
concert halls; they thought
so too, for they called her “duchess”. She was proud
and cold, they said, but
when the prince cast his eye over the girls in the
concert hall, it was her
aloofness that first caught his attention. He pursued
her. The more she ran,
the more he chased, until one day, when he proposed to
her like a proper prince
should, she stopped running. They were wed and lived
happily ever after.**
Jenny swayed back and forth. Her lips moved upward in
what was supposed to be a
coquettish smirk, but instead highlighted every trace
of her insanity.
Quentin swallowed.
**But the princess discovered that “ever after” was
over very soon. The prince
took her back to his castle. There were witches there.
The prince told her they
were her sisters now. They would love her, he
promised. But the princess knew
that this was not to be. They were cruel to her. The
golden-haired crone, the
one who shimmered with fire whenever the princess
looked at her, wanted what
the princess had. Her husband began to drift away. His
brothers and his friends
mocked her. It was very lonely. The queen liked her
well enough, particularly
when she sang, but when the queen fell ill, the
princess had no one. That is,
until the voices came back.**
Beth moaned.
Jenny didn’t pay any attention. She waltzed slowly to
the music, holding the
folds of her rusty black dress in her hands and moved
closer.
Quentin tried to sound calm, but his voice was
cracking, “Jenny, everything is
going to be all right. We’re going to be together,
just like we were--”
“--In the beginning?”
“Yes, just like we were in the beginning,” he assured
her. “But first we need
to get Beth some help. A doctor--”
Jenny stopped dancing. “All right.”
“Thank, God. Now I’m going to call for a doctor and
then we--”
“Kiss me,” the princess commanded.
Quentin steeled himself. It was only for a minute, he
told himself, long enough
to calm her and then he’d have her committed to the
first asylum that would
take her. They must have been keeping her here, he
realized. Another crime that
sister Judith was going to have to answer for. Trying
very hard not to retch,
he closed his eyes and bent down slightly to plant a
chaste kiss on his wife’s
lips.
**The princess wasn’t always sure of the distinction
between reality and
illusion. They took her from her airy bower and moved
her to a tower cell in
the castle. The hag with the black hair, the bitter
one, first took away all of
her pretty dresses and then her children. The princess
wept for her babies
every day. She had to keep her babies safe, the voices
told her. The prince
would come back and he would hurt her children. The
princess couldn’t let that
happen.**
Quentin’s attempt at a peck on the lips was foiled as
his wife pulled him into
a torrid embrace. “That’s enough, Jenny,” he said as
he tried to fight free.
“We can be together later.”
Jenny didn’t seem to hear him. Only after she’d
plunged the knife into his
chest, did she answer. He was startled at first,
staring with shock at the
blood rushing out onto his shirt. In the husky voice
he’d once found so
appealing, she told him, “You must die.”
* * *
It was a scene of the utmost respectability. Dedicated
Tim Shaw pouring over
his employer’s ledgers, his nimble fingers making an
occasional notation or two
on a separate piece of foolscap.
Judith knew no ill of Mr. Shaw. He seemed to be
remarkably competent at his
job. Beth had reported that aside from trying to
befriend her when he’d first
come to Collinwood, he kept to himself. Efficient,
well-behaved, impeccable
manners, an ideal secretary for her brother. Why then,
did she have a feeling
that he wasn’t all he seemed?
As if aware of her thoughts, Tim Shaw glanced up.
“Miss Collins.”
She was supposed to be meeting with Dirk. He would
wonder where she was. He’d
been so difficult since Grandmama had died. Judith
wasn’t anxious to see him.
Their liaison had become tedious and boring a long
time ago.
Tim Shaw rose. “I hope I wasn’t keeping you awake.”
“No, no,” she assured him. “I couldn’t sleep.” Judith
approached the desk.
“Those are the ledgers from the business. Why is
Edward having you look at
those?”
He cleared his throat. “It was my own idea, Miss
Collins. I thought I might be
of some greater use than doing Mr. Edward’s private
correspondence. I have a
few ideas,” he hesitated. Diffidently, he started
again, “If I’ve
overstepped--”
Her suspicions somewhat alleviated, Judith relaxed.
“No . . . I’d . . . I would
like to hear those ideas of yours.”
He smiled at her, smoothly moving from behind the
desk. He pulled a chair next
to his and invited her to sit down. As Mr. Shaw began
to detail his thoughts,
his eyes now and then meeting hers, Judith thought
less and less about her
difficult lover who was surely waiting for her.
* * *
Good little girls, Nora had always been told, sat
quietly, played quietly,
spoke quietly--but only when addressed first. Good
little girls did as they
were bid. It wasn’t as important as it was for Jamison
for her to do well on
her lessons, Father said, because she was supposed to
be pretty and sweet and
one day she would marry and her husband would do the
thinking for her. Without
giving it much consideration--“Mummy was in Egypt;”
Great Grandmama had been
dying and had never given her much thought anyway and
Aunt Judith seldom had
time for her--Nora accepted that. Jamison always took
charge; Nora looked up to
her big, bossy brother. He would take care of her. And
then one day, so would
her husband. That was the way things were.
But she was alone now, in desperate need of help, and
there wasn’t a male in
sight and in her panic, the heretical thought that
none of the ones she knew
would be of much use anyway crossed her mind
“Mummy,” Nora whispered, tears welling in her enormous
brown eyes.
Laura Collins stirred faintly and moaned.
Nora knelt down and stroked her mother’s golden hair
and tried to think what to
do.
“So cold . . . so cold. Nora, you must help me. Help
Mummy. You’re the only
one,” Laura begged.
A low voice called through the door, “Nora, are you
all right? Did you have
another nightmare? Shall I come and sing for you?”
She had screamed, Nora realized, so Miss Trask had
come to see what was wrong.
Miss Trask, who Nora liked, must not come inside. She
wouldn’t know what to do.
Nora stood up and padded to the door. Carefully
opening it a crack, she
pretended to yawn. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to wake
you up.” Nora peered up at
Miss Trask. Her governess looked strange, Nora
thought. Not quite awake herself
and yet alert in some other odd new way. “I’ll be all
right,” Nora told her.
“Good night, Miss Trask,” she said sweetly.
Charity Trask nodded and drifted away.
The good little girl bolted the door behind her. She
was going to have to start
a fire.
* * *
The knife went in and out of his flesh like a needle
into cloth. Quentin
realized he was going to die. Grandfather had said he
would die at the hands of
a woman . . . who would have thought that the old boy
was such a prophet?
Beth fell out of the chair Jenny had placed her in.
She pulled herself into a
sitting position.
He was still conscious enough to realize this and to
hope that Jenny didn’t
turn her attention to Beth as well. He had to do
something.
Her voice sounding like a rasp, Beth addressed her
charge, “They’re crying,
Jenny. They need you.”
“Where? Where are they?”
Beth kept her eyes focused on Jenny. “They need you.
You have to go to them.”
The knife fell to the floor.
Seizing his chance, Quentin reached out and curled his
fingers around the
handle. He didn’t know if he was going to leave this
good earth, but if he was,
then his darling wife was going with him. “Whither I
goest, thou goest,” he
murmured to himself. It took a tremendous amount of
strength, but he got to his
feet.
The last thing Beth saw before she passed out was
Quentin slitting Jenny’s
throat.
* * *
Laura warmed her hands by the fire that her daughter
had lit. Nora, poor thing,
was sitting white-faced in the child’s rocking chair
that the little girl had
almost outgrown. What Nora wanted most was to be
hugged and held and reassured
that Mummy was never going to go away again. Laura
ached to fulfill those needs
and she would, just as soon as she was a little
stronger, but now she needed
the fire. “Did you hear me calling to you?”
Nora nodded. “I knew you were coming back. Jamison
didn’t believe me, but I
*knew* it.”
“Jamison didn’t hear me?”
“No. I showed him the scarab and everything.” Nora
looked down at her hands.
“He took it. We were going to show it to Uncle
Quentin--”
“Quentin?” Laura asked quickly. So he had come back
home. “Why?”
“Jamison wanted to,” Nora informed her mother. “But we
couldn’t find him. I
don’t think Jamison believed me when I told him how I
got it.”
Laura absorbed this. She had thought her link with her
son stronger. There had
been moments when she’d felt something getting in the
way between them. The way
back, she’d believed, would come through Jamison.
Instead it had been little
Nora, who had not wavered once. She felt a pang that
her son had pulled away
from her so, but she would get him and his love back
soon. Meanwhile her little
girl needed her, “Come here, sweetheart. Come to
Mummy.” She held out her arms.
* * *
Edith Collins had never thought much of men. One
manipulated, used, and/or
dominated them. If they became too troublesome, one
eliminated them. Before she
had known any better, she’d endured them. They tended
to be simple creatures,
most of them. Even her former favorite, Quentin, who
thought himself such a
miracle of complication, was when it came down to it,
a greedy little boy.
Women were the ones to watch out for. Trained at
dissimulation in the name of
femininity, they would stab one in the back, looking
terribly demure all the
while. Daphne had been like that, Edith thought, her
lip curling in distaste as
she remembered what a thorn in her side her
sister-in-law had been.
That aside, inhabiting a man’s body was proving to
have some unexpected
benefits. It wasn’t necessary to hide one’s abilities
because men were
respected for strength and intelligence. As Tim Shaw,
when she wished to she
could be as direct as necessary and it was considered
forthrightness. As a man
she could go almost anywhere she wished without having
to explain it or having
to have a proper escort. It was really, when one
thought about it, rather
refreshing.
And of course, there were other advantages. Mr. Shaw
was a handsome man, and
from the ease with which Edith controlled him as well
as from her little
experience with him her first night as Beth, one
evidently accustomed to using
his looks and his body to advancement. All of which
was proving most useful in
her plans for dear Judith. She was almost grateful
really, for her
granddaughter’s lusts. The animal appeal of that
disgusting caretaker had
apparently palled and Judith was ready for something
and someone new.
There was still some residual revulsion at the thought
of lying with her own
granddaughter, but not much. She’d survived Quentin’s
embrace, how was this
worse? She’d been with women before. There might be
some awkwardness in a
mechanical sense of the word; she was still a little
clumsy at times with this
new body, but that could be eliminated by
practice--with that stupid idiot of a
governess perhaps. Or maybe Judith would enjoy “teaching”
her lover. It really
didn’t matter and besides it wouldn’t be for long. Tim
Shaw, if Edith had her
way about it, was going to become a widower soon after
he married.
* * *
The darkness was so alive. Charity wondered why she
had never noticed it
before. Everything had taken on an edge and a reality
that she marveled at. Her
God had done that to her and she was grateful. She
longed for his touch. He
said he would summon her. Charity couldn’t wait for
that to happen again.
Never, not even with Tim, had she ever felt like this
before. Every fiber of
her being vibrated with energy, a fire that she had
never known she had, burned
within her. She was awake for the first time in her
life.
Her little chamber was frigid. The Collinses did not
waste coal for fires in
her room, but Charity hardly noticed.
Charity crawled back into her narrow bed and pulled
the covers over her. She
hesitated and then ran her hands over her body. The
nightdress was a prim,
plain affair, but it did nothing to impede the sensations
she felt. It was a
far cry to being with Him, but it was better than
nothing. She explored her own
flesh and wondered why she’d been so shy about her
body before. This was surely
heaven.
Despite the warmth her fingers drew out of her body,
Charity gradually became
aware that the temperature in the room was turning
Arctic.
“Whore,” came a bodiless whisper.
Charity stilled her hands.
“Slut.”
“Who’s . . . Who’s there?” It wasn’t Him. It sounded
nothing like Him. Charity
swallowed. “Please, who’s there?”
There was laughter, dry, humorless laughter.
And then the sheets were ripped off of her. Charity
pulled her nightdress back
down below her knees and tried to cover herself.
“’Then the eyes of both were opened and they knew that
they were naked.’”
Charity’s eyes widened. “Papa?” No, it wasn’t
possible. He was dead. Oh, so
very dead.
“Have you no shame? First you conspire with that thief
and murderer and then
you rut like a whore--”
“I didn’t conspire with anyone and I didn’t--” Charity
licked her lips
nervously. “I’m not a whore!”
Whoever or whatever was in the room with her slapped
her across the face. “God
will smite you down for your sins,” it whispered to
her.
Charity leapt out of the bed and tried to back away.
“Please, no. Please go
away and leave me alone,” she begged. For a moment
there was silence, but then
she felt the cold that was surely a living thing
advance on her. She watched in
horror as a seam of her nightgown seemingly tore
apart. “No. No, please don’t!”
Not caring now what part of her body was exposed,
Charity did the only thing
she could think of. She ran and she ran blindly.
Unfortunately what she found by the time she slowed
for breath was more
disturbing than what she left behind her.
She was too tired to scream with her mouth. Her mind,
however, had energy
enough.
* * *
Laura hugged her sleeping daughter to her and watched
the flames shoot higher.
Nora’s needs were simple; Laura wished she could say
the same for her own. It
had seemed so clear before she’d returned. Collect her
children, introduce them
to their unique family heritage, and go home--their
real home. It was difficult
only in that the timing was not yet right. She would
be forced to spend some
time in Collinsport, but still it the plan had seemed
straightforward.
Why then, did she feel so confused? Quentin? He was
here. That had not been
part of her agenda. He should be punished for what
he’d done to her; it could
be so very simple. But was it a betrayal when you were
happy with the outcome?
Jamison’s apparent distance from her? Once they were
together, though, she was
confident that he would come around. The fact that
Edward was apparently trying
to replace her? Surely, not. Her children were never
going to have “a new
mother,” however much he might like to think so. As
for his acquiring “a new
wife,” well that was as much a fantasy as the other.
Technically they were
still married; Laura thought that she might enjoy
ruining Edward’s pathetic
little plans. It might be amusing to play at being
mistress of Collinwood now
that the old bat had finally died.
There had been a time when Laura Murdoch had wanted
that more than anything
else. Her relations had never understood such
ambitions. They kept to
themselves, preferring to live in their decaying
enclave on the outskirts of
town, marrying into the same sets of cousins, bound to
their traditions and
customs and the madness that seemed to take most of
them sooner or later. Laura
had decided quite early on that it wasn’t going to
take her.
Nora stirred, but curled up readily enough again. The
child was strong, more
powerful than Laura had thought. She would serve Ra
well.
* * *
He had come just as Charity knew he would. She stared
at the bodies lying
entwined on the floor. Quentin and Beth, she
recognized. The other woman in the
filthy dress and the wild hair, she was a stranger.
“Are they dead?”
Barnabas stood up. “This one isn’t; she’ll recover, I
think,” he said pointing
to Beth’s unconscious body. “Who is she?”
“She’s Miss Collins’ maid,” Charity said blankly. “Her
name is Beth. What about
Quentin and that woman?” She indicated the other
corpse.
“You don’t know who she is?” He saw Charity shake her
head. “They’re both
dead,” his voice cracking with anguish for Quentin.
“Listen to me very
carefully. You are to return to your bedroom and stay
there. You saw nothing.
Heard nothing. I will take care of this.”
Charity didn’t want to disobey him, but the thought of
going back to what
awaited her in her room terrified her. “Please, I
can’t.”
He took her in his arms. “You can and you will. You
must do as I command. I
will come to you when I need you.”
Hadn’t Papa always said that the will of God must be
obeyed? Charity took one
last reluctant look at her savior and disappeared.
Barnabas watched her leave and wondered not for the
first time if he was going
to regret using Miss Trask like this. He had no idea
what he should do now.
Quentin was dead. Had he and Vicki traveled to this
time for nothing? This
couldn’t be. It would change the future inalterably.
“If only there was a way
to bring him back,” he said to himself.
“There is.”
* * *
Judith calmly detached Dirk’s hands from her waist.
“Not here.”
He didn’t like that answer. “Everyone’s asleep,” he
whined. “No one will know.”
“Dirk, please. We have to be careful. I’ve told you
that time and time again.”
“Not anymore,” he said complacently, reaching for her
again.
A nasty portent of scenes to come crawled down her
spine. “What do you mean?”
Dirk nibbled at her neck. “Well, you don’t have to
answer to anyone now. We can
get married.”
She pushed him away so hard he nearly fell onto the
sofa.
“What did you go and do that for?” He steadied himself
and stared at her. “You
know, that’s what we’ve been planning all along. We’ll
get married and we can
be together. Are you worried about your brothers?
Because I can handle anything
Edward or Quentin wants to dish out. It’s going to be
fine, Judith.”
For weeks now, she had dreaded having this discussion.
Despite her wish to end
this sordid affair, Judith did not want to hurt him.
He had been . . .
convenient, and the fact that she had used him made
her uncomfortable. “Dirk, I
like you very much,” she lied gently. “But I think it’s
time we both moved on.”
“Moved on to what?” Dirk demanded.
“Ended this,” she amplified. “You’ve been very kind to
me.” What was she
saying? Kindness had nothing to do with their
relationship. “But I think it’s
best if we stop seeing one another.”
“No.”
“It wouldn’t work. We’re not suited to one another.”
“We are *not* ending this!”
“I’m too old for you.” There, that was true enough.
With another man, she might
have mentioned money, but she decided that was not the
wisest course to pursue
with Dirk.
Dirk opened and closed his mouth half a dozen times,
moving restlessly
throughout the room, running his fingers through his
sandy hair.
She watched him, compassionately at first. When he
actually stamped his foot,
she felt the corners of her mouth twitching.
“How can you just dismiss everything we have
together?”
So much for hoping he would accept the situation
gracefully. “We don’t have
anything together. That’s why we have to stop.”
Dirk paced for a few minutes more and then finally stopped
and put his hands on
her shoulders. “Look, you’re just scared,” he informed
her as if he was
speaking to a small child. “But it’s all right. I’ll
take care of you, Judith.
You’ll see and you’re not too old for me.” He clasped
her to him. “I love you,
don’t you know that?”
It was only thanks to years of trying to keep her
emotions from showing that
Judith managed not to laugh. Had he always been this
dramatic? She wrenched
herself out of his embrace. “No, you don’t. Dirk,
please don’t make this more
difficult than it has to be. You’re a wonderful man
with many fine qualities,”
she said a little desperately. “But what we *had*
wasn’t love. I don’t love
you. I’m sorry if you misunderstood my feelings for
you, but it’s over.”
“Like hell it is!”
“Dirk, please try to be reasonable. Can’t you see that
it wouldn’t be suitable
for us to be together?”
“Because I’m just a servant and you’re one of the
mighty Collinses?”
Judith’s pity and amusement dried up. “Because I don’t
love you,” she repeated
bluntly and sounding very much like her grandmother.
”This is not a matter for
debate,” she said imperiously. “You can accept this or
you can leave. You’ve
been a good caretaker, but if you can’t handle the
reality of the situation,
then perhaps you should find another position
elsewhere.”
Dirk’s face turned bright red. He advanced toward her
and for a moment Judith
was afraid he was going to strike her. He stopped and
then stormed out of the
drawing room and out of the house, slamming the door
behind him.
Hidden in the shadows at the top of the stairs, Tim
Shaw watched the caretaker
exit.
* * *
Barnabas spun around. “You!” His face clouded with
fury and then confusion. Was
he surprised?
Angelique moved forward from the shadows. “Is that any
way to greet your wife?”
She was, in truth, a little disappointed. He’d been so
responsive to her in his
dreams.
“What are you doing here, Angelique?”
“Miranda,” she corrected.
Barnabas blinked.
Angelique sighed. “That is how you must refer to me,”
she said simply. “You are
to call me ‘Miranda.’ Barnabas, my darling, it’s how
it has to be. You must
trust me.”
“Trust you?” he cried incredulously. “How can you even
think of asking me that?
After everything you’ve done to me and to my family!
After all of the things
you’ve done?”
Her blue eyes hardened. Why did he always make it so
difficult? “Do we have to
go through all of that again? If you had not fought
me, none of that would have
been necessary. We belong together. I don’t understand
why you can’t--”
Slowly enlightenment came to him. “It’s you. You have
been trying to control me
through my dreams!”
“No,” she corrected, “Not controlling. You want to be
with me. I simply found a
way for you to for you to do that. Can’t you see how
easy it could be if you
would just let it happen?”
“Get out of here,” he hissed. “Before I destroy you.”
She laughed, a sound that he’d heard in his
nightmares, as well as his
fantasies, for generations. “You tried that once
before,” she told him without
humor. “I’m back and you need me, just as you will
always need me.” Angelique
pointed to Quentin’s corpse. “Didn’t you say you
wanted to bring him back? I
can do that, Barnabas.”
“Then do it.”
“It’s not that simple.”
Barnabas looked at her suspiciously.
“You must promise me something first.”
He looked at what had been Quentin and then at his
wife. “I should have known
that you would try to profit from this. It’s not
enough that you destroyed
everything I ever cared about--”
It was with difficulty that Angelique retained her
composure. She was often
annoyed and enraged by others, but no one ever
frustrated her the way Barnabas
did. After what they shared, she simply could not
comprehend how why he
continually fought her and their destiny at every
turn. “You’re asking me to do
a very complicated spell, Barnabas. I need you to give
me something in return,”
she told him angrily.
“Angelique,” he began menacingly.
“Miranda,” she said again. “You will call me
‘Miranda’,” she said enunciating
every syllable like the thrust of a knife. “You will
keep quiet about me and
who I am. And,” Angelique cried, her voice rising with
excitement, “You will
not interfere with my plans.”
“Which are?”
Angelique’s smile was nearly as angelic as her name. “You
will do this,” she
repeated, “or Quentin Collins dies. I’m not sure why
you’re here or how you
escaped your coffin, but you want this man to live; I
know that.” She paused.
“Well, Barnabas, what is it to be?”
“Do it.”
“You agree to my terms?”
Barnabas nodded, hating himself. He was not ordinarily
given to introspection,
but even he could see that he was caught with her in a
vicious cycle, from
which neither of them seemed to be able to escape.
* * *
It was nearly dawn when Edith heard the knocking at
her door. She was
exhausted. A night’s skulking and some forays into
spell casting had taken its
toll on her hold of her host’s body. It was growing
easier for her to keep
possession, but she was far from her full strength.
Glancing at the clock, she
rolled over. Whoever it was would go away and she
could get her the rest she
required.
“Mr. Shaw,” Judith hissed through the door.
Edith had expected Judith to fall prey to Tim Shaw’s
charms, especially after
Dirk’s dismissal, but never had she dreamed it would
happen so quickly. Tired
as Edith was, she couldn’t afford to ignore an
opportunity like this. Rising
and hastily tying a dressing gown on, she opened the
door. “Miss Collins?”
“Oh, thank God, you’re awake!”
Before Edith had time to paste a charming smile on her
face, let alone to
inwardly and sourly reflect that God had nothing to do
with it, Judith was
dragging her down the hall toward the west wing.
“I went to speak with my brother,” Judith explained
when they reached Quentin’s
room. “I’m sorry to involve, you but I didn’t know who
else to ask. I couldn’t
find Edward and this isn’t something--I know I can
rely on your discretion.”
“You’re shaking,” Edith observed surprised. “What
happened?” Judith looked
slightly nauseous and seemed intent on staying pressed
up against the far side
of the corridor wall. Her granddaughter, for all of
her considerable
shortcomings, was not a coward and Edith didn’t like
what Judith’s atypical
behavior implied. “In there?” After Judith nodded,
Edith went inside and
surveyed the carnage in silence.
“Mr. Shaw?”
She returned to the threshold of the door. “I don’t
want you to worry, Miss
Collins. I’ll take care of everything.” Well, she’d
wished for a crisis to
manage. This wasn’t quite what Edith had in mind, but
it would do quite nicely.
* * *
Oblivious to the fact that his beloved fiancée was
wondering if it would be
physically possible for her to lift the silver epergne
and bring it crashing
down on his skull in order to shut him up, Edward continued
to read aloud from
the morning paper.
On the whole, he was very pleased with Victoria. Their
marriage would make up
for every highly unsatisfactory moment he’d ever had
with Laura Murdoch. If
only he had possessed the sense to marry someone like
Victoria to begin with--a
proper young lady, who knew her place, with the
docility and fragility becoming
to her sex. He set the paper down. “I’m afraid that’s
all this morning,
darling. There’s nothing else suitable for a lady to
hear.”
“Thank you, Edward,” she said tonelessly.
Yes, he thought, Victoria was exactly what he needed.
Besides she was going to
make such a wonderful mother to his children. “Would
you care for some more
tea?”
Victoria smiled weakly.
He rang the bell and waited. After ringing it a second
time, he began to grow
impatient. “Where the blazes is everybody? And where
is Beth?”
Vicki didn’t know and didn’t care. “It’s all right. I
really don’t want any
more tea,” she told him.
“No, it’s not all right. Ever since Judith inherited
Collinwood, this house has
fallen to pieces. Discipline,” Edward told Victoria
heartily, “is what is
needed here. We pay a small fortune to these--”
“*I* pay a small fortune,” Judith corrected as she
stood in the doorway. “And
don’t you forget that.”
Victoria glanced up from her buttered toast. Judith
and Edward’s secretary
walked in and joined them. Neither of them looked like
they had slept well. Her
polite “good morning” was lost as Edward began his
harangue about how the staff
needed to be spoken to.
Time was draining away like the sand in an hourglass
and here she sat stuck
listening to Edward and Judith’s pointless bickering.
Her mother had told her
she had to go back, but hadn’t told her how to change
anything. Vicki sensed
that whatever it was, it was coming soon, but that
wasn’t going to be enough to
help her figure out what she was supposed to do.
She wished quite desperately that she could go back to
being ordinary, plain,
stupid, little Miss Winters. Magda called the Sight a
gift. “You can see what
is gonna happen,” she said. “The old woman, she would
have killed for that. You
should be grateful.”
How could anyone want this? With the Sight, came
dreams--incomprehensible
visions--like bits of broken glass that cut deep when
Victoria tried to make
sense of them. What was she? She could barely remember
some of the things she’d
done; that didn’t make it easier, not having that
recall, not when the events
teased at the edges of her mind.
Something was going to happen soon, but she and
Barnabas were no more nearer to
finding out what they needed to do than they had been
before they’d come here.
Soon, Victoria thought, and still they were crawling
blindly near the brink of
a precipice.
“Beth is my maid,” Judith said sharply, unknowingly
breaking off Victoria’s
reverie. “She isn’t feeling well, so I gave her the
day off. If you’re not
happy with how I run *my* house, you can always go
elsewhere.”
Edward harrumphed, but continued to snipe away about
the servant classes and
the liberties they were taking.
Could you kill someone with a grapefruit spoon? Vicki
wondered. She realized
that Tim Shaw was staring at her shrewdly and she
dropped her gaze. The
secretary made her uncomfortable although she was hard
pressed to say why.
Judith stood up and said something about needing to
borrow Mr. Shaw.
Watching them leave, Victoria recognized her
opportunity to escape. Before
however, she could paste a dimwitted look of love on
her face and plead having
to write letters (which as an excuse seemed painfully
thin to her, although
everyone else always accepted it without a thought),
Nora skipped in.
“Good morning, Father! I have a surprise!”
Edward peered at his offspring. “Nora, where are your
manners? And haven’t you
been told not to run. Proper young ladies do not run.”
Edward, Vicki thought, should be stuffed and used as
an exhibit as to how not
to raise a child.
The little girl squirmed slightly. “I’m sorry, Father.
I won’t do it again.”
She turned to Vicki. “Good morning, Victoria.”
“Now Nora, haven’t I told you before. Victoria is your
new mother. You must
call her so.”
“And how should Nora address me, Edward? Seeing as how
I’m her *only* mother? “
* * *
Judith looked at her maid with distaste. All of this,
she felt, irrationally,
was somehow attributable to Beth. Beth had been given
charge of Jenny. Jenny
had got out. Beth had been told to be discreet with
Quentin. She had not. It
was quite clear to Judith what had happened. Jenny saw
Beth and Quentin
together and the bloodshed was the result. “Where is
Quentin?” she demanded
again.
“I don’t know! I don’t know!” Beth wailed. “How many
times do I have to tell
you that? “
“Don’t lie to me.”
Tim Shaw cleared his throat. “Miss Collins, I don’t
think Beth is lying. Her
story makes sense. It explains how your sister-in-law
could have escaped in the
first place.”
“It doesn’t explain how Jenny could have dragged Beth
all the way to Quentin’s
room.”
“Just look at the bruises, Miss Collins,” Beth said
wearily. “Jenny was very
strong. I have no reason to lie to you about this.”
Judith crossed her arms. “No? Not even to protect my
brother?”
“She did tell us he killed his wife,” Tim reminded
Judith. “Forgive me, but we
have other concerns right now. Who else knew about
Jenny Collins’ whereabouts?”
“Edward,” Judith said after a moment. “Possibly Dirk.
I can handle Edward. Dirk
. . .”
Tim interrupted, “I’ll take care of Dirk.”
Judith hesitated. “All right.”
Beth rubbed her throbbing temples. “What if he’s dead?”
They both looked at her.
“There was so much blood,” Beth told them weakly. “She
stabbed him so many
times. What if he wandered off somewhere and he’s
lying there . . .” she
started to sob.
Judith was brisk. It was something she and Mr. Shaw
had already discussed.
“We’ll worry about that. I’ve told the others that you
aren’t feeling well and
that I gave you a day off. I wouldn’t waste my tears
on Quentin. He wouldn’t
have shed a drop for you.”
* * *
It would be cliché, Vicki thought, to say that
Edward’s face was beet red with
rage, but then everything about Edward was cliché. He
lived for the banal. The
fact that she could recognize that made her long for
the days as a sweet young
thing, and bright-eyed, fresh from school eager and
anxious to find out about
her family, too stupid to know that some things needed
to stay buried.
“Victoria, please take Nora upstairs.”
Laura turned her attention to her replacement, looked
her up and down and then
dismissed her as worthy of notice. “So this is the
famous Miss Winters,” she
purred. “Really, Edward, shouldn’t she stay?”
Vicki, who had absolutely no intention of leaving,
watched Laura curiously.
“After all, she does have a right to know what is
going on. Tell me, Edward,
does she know we’re still legally--”
“--Nora, go upstairs at once!”
The child gazed with equanimity at her father, but
didn’t move.
“Nora,” he threatened again.
“It’s all right, darling,” Laura told her. “I’ll come
upstairs to see you
later.”
“Yes, Mummy,” Nora said obediently.
Edward’s fury increased, but he waited until his
daughter had left the room,
before exploding, “How dare you come back here? After
everything you did--”
Laura walked over to the fire. “I am still your wife,
Edward. Saying that I’m
dead isn’t going to make it so. You never bothered to
divorce me. Nora and
Jamison are still my children and you aren’t going to
change that. Not ever.
They’re mine, Edward.”
* * *
His head pounding from too much cheap gin and
heartbreak, Dirk Wilkins stalked
his way back through the Collinwood property fully
intent on regaining what he
considered to be his, even if it meant he had to throw
Judith over his shoulder
and drag her somewhere so he could make her see sense.
Actually, Dirk decided,
it wasn’t a half bad idea. Away from her family,
Judith might realize he was
right and that they belonged together. It wouldn’t be
hard to do. He would just
have to find a moment when she was alone. She’d be
angry, sure, but eventually
Judith would thank him for it. There were half a dozen
places on the estate he
could bring her.
Changing his course, Dirk tramped through the woods
until he came to one of the
empty cottages that had once housed some old faithful
retainer who had passed
on years ago. Last time he had checked, it was clean
enough. He would give it
the once over and if it was still all right . . .
well, Judith would be his in
no time.
To his surprise the door wasn’t locked, which didn’t
make sense. Dirk made sure
as a matter of course that everything on the estate
was secure. The last thing
the family wanted or needed was some no-account
wandering onto the property and
taking up residence. Cautiously he walked inside to
find Quentin’s bleeding
body stretched out on a kitchen table. “What the?!”
Dirk ran his hands through his hair. Jesus, God, what
had happened? Knowing it
was pointless, but giving it a shot anyway, he felt
for a pulse.
“He’s quite dead.”
Dirk spun around to see a blonde woman in an
old-fashioned brown dress smiling
at him in amusement. “Who are you?”
“That’s not important. Who are you?”
“I’m Dirk Wilkins--the caretaker, and you’re
trespassing.”
The woman trilled with laughter.
“What’s so funny?” Dirk demanded suspiciously. “Look,
I’m going to ask you a
second time. What’s your name and what did you have to
do with Quentin’s
death?”
“My name is Miranda, and I didn’t have anything to do
with Quentin’s ‘death’.”
She set down the candles she’d been carrying and moved
closer to him. “Look at
me,” she commanded.
“I am looking at you.”
“No, no, into my eyes,” Miranda clarified, still
sounding amused. “You cannot
look away,” she told him. “That’s right. Deeper.”
Dirk couldn’t have explained why, but he felt
compelled to do as she bid him.
In a short time he was drowning in a sea of blue.
* * *
Edward having sent a message that he would be detained
for the rest of the
morning, Edith had taken advantage of the situation to
try and get some needed
rest. She would have preferred to do so in Tim’s room,
but the office would
have to do.
She had to be careful not to overtax herself until she
had a stronger hold on
Timothy Shaw’s body. The events of last night had
taken their toll on her. Not
that she hadn’t made the most of the opportunity, but
she was still exhausted
and somewhat disturbed. That dreary maid hadn’t lied
about what had happened;
Edith could read her well enough. Quentin could not
have left, not without
leaving a blood trail and conversely, no one could
have moved his body without
doing the same. So where was the dear boy?
She had drifted off when she felt someone shaking her
awake. Irritably, she
focused Tim’s eyes on the fool who was disturbing her.
“Miss Trask?”
Charity pulled her hands back to her sides. “Tim,
please, I need to talk to
you.”
The girl was really becoming quite bothersome. “I
don’t think that’s a good
idea.”
“Please, it’s important,” Charity begged. “It’s about
. . . it’s about,” she
lowered her voice, “Papa.” She pulled up a chair next
to the desk. “He was in
my room last night.”
Edith tried to reach into her host’s memories. She’d
gathered that Tim had been
engaged to this nit, but obviously there was more. “In
your room?”
“I know, I know. It’s impossible. He’s dead, but I
swear to you, he was there,
Tim.”
Edith suddenly recalled her own nocturnal visitor: the
spirit who had promised
vengeance for his murder. “Calm down. Tell me exactly
what happened.”
She listened while Charity described the events of the
previous night. “Go on,”
she encouraged when Charity finished. “He tore your
nightgown and then what?”
“I ran out of the room.”
“Where did you go?” Edith asked sharply. Had this
creature been running around
while Quentin was solving his marital problems?
Charity turned away. “Nowhere.”
“Have you been back to your room?”
“Oh, yes. I didn’t want to return, but he told me I
had--” she stopped
abruptly.
“Who told you to go back? The ghost?”
“No.”
“Then who?”
Charity refused to say more.
What was the stupid twit hiding? Edith concentrated
and gazed inward trying to
at least draw on her host’s memories: Money. Blood. A
stern man, a clergyman?
Well, that made sense, the apparition had quoted
scripture. Money. Not much
else that seemed comprehensible. If she could only get
some rest, this sort of
thing would be child’s play.
Charity misunderstood the silence. “Tim, please, I
know it’s over between us,
but I don’t know what else to do. This morning when I
was dressing, I . . . I
felt him in the room again. I can’t tell anyone else
about what . . . we . . .
what happened.” She started to cry and flung herself
into Tim’s arms.
Edith rolled her eyes, even as she comforted the girl.
She mechanically reached
around to pat the Charity on the shoulder, her hand
brushing the governess’
neck.
Charity winced and pulled away.
What was wrong now? Edith didn’t know Miss Trask well,
didn’t particularly care
to, but it was clear something was amiss. The creature
was deadly pale,
shaking, and icy cold to the touch.
**“He must never be let out.”**
Edith didn’t waste time. She reached out and pulled
the fabric of Charity’s
dark blue dress away from her neck. There, just like
the accounts she’d read
described, were two puncture marks. The effect that
this measure had on Charity
was electrifying; the girl jumped several feet back.
“Where are you going, Miss
Trask?” Edith inquired pleasantly.
“I can’t--He’ll be--”
**“He must never be let out.”**
“I’m not done with you yet.” She forgot her weariness.
This was more important.
If she could get enough rest tonight, there wouldn’t
be any danger of losing
Timothy Shaw’s body. Edith had enough strength to
hypnotize the girl. Her
agenda was clear: find out what Charity knew, where
the vampire slept, who else
was under his power, then wipe Charity’s memory of the
little tête à tête they
were about to enjoy. Tomorrow Edith would have to see
that the threat was
destroyed once and for all. She had enough power to do
that.
Charity shook her head wildly. “I have to leave.”
“How can you when you can’t even move?” Edith got up
and walked over to
Charity, who stood immobilized. “We haven’t finished
our talk yet.” She turned
Charity’s chin so that the girl was looking at her.
“We can do this the easy
way or we can do this the hard way. Which would you
prefer?”
Charity stared. “You’re not Tim,” she realized in a
moment of horrified
insight.
“No, I’m not,” Edith agreed pleasantly. “Very well, I
rather prefer the hard
way in any case,” she remarked as she gathered up her
will.
* * *
**Nothingness. No hellfire. No brimstone. No angels.
No harps. No Old Testament
biblical God. No horned devil wielding a pitchfork. No
pagan god of the hunt.
No queen of the fairies. Nothing. Vast expanses of
nothing that swallowed him
up unthinkingly as an elephant might a fly. He was
insignificant. Nothing he’d
ever said, done, thought, felt, none of it mattered.
Nothing.**
Quentin sat bolt upright, shaking and sweating. It
took him several minutes
merely to focus. That something smelled foul was his
first sensation. Then he
realized it was him. He fumbled with the buttons of
his shirt and recoiled at
the stickiness of the half-dried blood. The wounds
that Jenny had made were
gone. “Beth?” He glanced around the room. Where the
hell was he? This wasn’t
Collinwood. Then he saw Dirk, or rather what he knew
in an instant was Dirk’s
corpse.
“A life for a life,” came a voice from behind. “No,
stay where you are. You’re
still weak.” She walked to face him. “You are Quentin Collins
and I am Miranda
and I have brought you back from the dead,” she said
simply as if that
explained everything.
Quentin cast an eye on Dirk. “And I thought he never
cared,” he quipped
uneasily, keeping his gaze fixed on the woman in front
of him. She was
beautiful, not in the classical tradition, but lovely
nonetheless.
Miranda wasn’t interested in the former caretaker. “A
sacrifice was needed.”
“And Dirk made it,” Quentin finished. “Who are you?”
She smiled. “I told you. I am Miranda.”
“Out of ‘The Tempest’ by way of Salem?” he suggested.
“Miranda what? Why did
you choose to be my particular savior? How did you get
me out of Collinwood?”
“So many questions,” she laughed. “You must trust me.”
Quentin nodded affably. He had a wide acquaintance
with women and while he was
certain he had never met one anything like the
mysterious Miranda, he was
equally certain that she wasn’t someone to trust.
“You will see,” Miranda promised.
* * *
Victoria sighed and repeated everything she’d said to
Barnabas.
“I’m afraid I don’t understand.”
But that’s my line, she almost said. “Nora and
Jamison’s mother, Laura, is the
same woman as David’s mother. I know it doesn’t make
much sense, but I know it.
Please don’t ask me how. I just do.”
Barnabas hesitated. “Do you think this is what we were
supposed to change?”
Before Vicki could reply, the object of discussion
walked into the room. “I do
hope I’m not interrupting anything.”
Only Victoria heard Barnabas gasp. “Not at all, Mrs.
Collins.”
“Well, it’s refreshing to see that someone grasps the
reality of the situation.
But please, call me Laura. After all, you were almost
married to my husband.”
She turned to Barnabas. “I don’t believe we’ve met.”
Introductions performed, Barnabas quickly made his
apologies and left. Vicki
made to follow.
“Victoria.”
“Yes?”
Laura was pleasant, but brisk. “I think it would be
best if you left
Collinwood. I don’t mean this instant, of course, but
as soon as you can
arrange it. There’s no place for you here.”
“I have never tried to replace you as the children’s
mother,” Vicki said
evenly. “And I never knew you were alive.”
“Oh, I know that and please don’t think there’s
anything personal in this, but
you don’t belong here.”
If only that were true, Vicki thought. She nodded
briefly.
“I’m so glad you understand,” Laura said with a smile.
Vicki was evasive, “If you’ll excuse me. I have a
great deal to do.”
* * *
Victoria found Barnabas in the folly in the garden.
“You recognized her.”
“Yes.”
She waited. It was obviously something that was
causing him a great deal of
pain.
Barnabas paced up and down the few feet the folly
afforded. “She was my
father’s mistress. I only saw her once. I was just a
boy, but I’ve never
forgotten her face.”
“What happened to her?”
“I’m not sure,” he admitted. “It was entirely an
accident that I even learned
who she was. It wasn’t until I was much older that I
understood what her
relationship must have been with my father. My father
and I were never close
and he never discussed the matter with me.” His voice
was distant, “He and my
mother were not . . . it was not the happiest of
unions.”
So much pain, Victoria thought. Why did there always
have to be such misery?
“If she’s a witch, the only way to kill her is to burn
her to death, preferably
at a crossroads.”
“There is a connection with fire,” Vicki said
suddenly. “I don’t know what it
is exactly, but it’s there. We need to find out more
about her. Did you know
her name? Was she married?”
Barnabas considered. “Laura Stockbridge, I think. I
don’t know if she was
married. There were Stockbridges who lived at the edge
of town. I remember
that. There was,” he paused, “there was a fire.”
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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