Chapter 53 - Red in the Morning
By Nancybe
Voiceover (Grayson Hall): As a new day reluctantly
dawns on Collinwood, the
dark clouds gathering on the horizon hold the promise
of a stormy day. And as
the residents of Collinwood will discover, the storms
will extend far beyond
the wind and rain that will soon batter the walls of
the cursed mansions in
which they live.
There was no escape from the raging wall of flames
that engulfed her, and
Miranda felt her skin begin to melt like tallow. She
screamed in agony and in
rage that she had been bested by Trask, an ancient and
until now weak enemy.
And now she was going to be sent back to her Master in
shame and defeat just
when all of her plans had been coming to fruition….
Miranda closed her eyes, resigned to her fate. Laura
Collins had been quite
right two centuries before – fire was her deadliest
foe, and with her tongue
stilled by the maddeningly powerful Reverend Trask
(did the man have a * first
* name? she wondered absurdly), she could not call on
the Powers of Darkness to
save her. The scent of roasting meat swelled in her
nostrils. * That’s me *,
she realized with sickening dread, *roasting just like
a pig on a spit.* There
were definite disadvantages to taking on human form,
but of course, it was too
late to worry about that.
Just when she felt she could endure the heat, the
brilliance, the stench no
more, Miranda felt the fire abruptly lose a vast
degree of its intensity. She
opened her wide gray eyes and gasped in surprise.
Another ghostly figure had
appeared in the room, and the Trasks’ attention had
been diverted to this new
arrival.
“Reverend Trask, we meet again.” The voice was
surprisingly strong and bore a
thick English accent. It belonged to a tall young
woman with auburn hair who
punctuated her statement with an ironic curtsy. Her
wholesome looks were marred
only by the whiteness of her face and the dark purple
bruises that ringed the
ivory skin of her delicate neck – and by the rough
hewn noose that she wore
around her neck like a necklace.
Miranda watched as fear blossomed on the doubled face
of the Trasks before her,
and he/they recoiled from the ghoulish woman in shock.
At the same time, the
fiery prison that had encased her had dwindled
further, and the heat of its
flames was growing colder.
“Who are you, girl? What business have you here?”
he/they demanded.
“Ah, did you ‘ang so many as witches that you no
longer remember all of our
names, ye bastard? Felicity Higgins, maid to the
Spencer’s, at your service
*sir*.” The ghost’s sarcastic smile curled into a
sneer of hatred. “You picked
me out to be your sacrificial lamb in Derry, ye did!
And me no more than a few
months off the boat. I was innocent, but you ‘anged me
just the same!”
“I did not destroy any who did not warrant
destruction, only those who had sold
their wretched souls to the devil!” The tone was
self-righteous, but it was
laced with underlying fear.
“Liar!” the woman screamed as she advanced on the
self-proclaimed Right Hand of
God. “Liar, liar, liar,” she intoned in an endless
chant.
There seemed to be only one Trask now, the Trask that
Felicity Higgins sought,
and he retreated from her with terror stamped on his
face. “If you are not a
witch, then you have no power over me! Be gone,
wench!” he screamed.
“'Tis true that I ‘ave not the powers of a witch
because I am not one nor ‘ave
I ever been one, ye charlatan. But I do ‘ave the
powers of the unjustly
accused. As you said to this lovey ‘ere,” she said
indicating Miranda, “ ‘I
‘ave grown powerful over the years.’ I ‘ave waited a
long time for vengeance,
Reverend Trask!” This last was said in almost a growl
that came from low in her
throat.
Extending a spectral hand toward him, the girl began
her own incantation. “I
call on all that is Right and Just and ‘oly. I call on
all who weep for those
who have died in vain. Send this man to his due
*reward*!”
Trask screamed as tendrils of acrid black smoke
responded to her command,
rising from the floor and twining around his legs like
snakes climbing one atop
the other. The smoke thickened and continued to
envelop him until all that was
visible was the cruel peak of black hair that adorned
his forehead. His
terrified shrieks echoed hollowly off the walls for a
long moment after his
form had vanished along with the carnivorous smoke.
It took a minute for Miranda to realize that she was
alone in the room – no
Trasks, no servant girl – and no longer any fire.
Putting her hands on her
shapely hips, she began to peel her distinctively
shrill laughter. How ironic
it all was – saved from a Trask by an innocent girl
who had called upon the
Powers of Light, of all things. She rocked back and
forth on the balls of her
feet, filling the tiny chamber with a sound that
threatened to shatter the
glass of the dingy mirror that hung above the scarred
dresser.
Oh yes, it had been a very satisfactory day indeed.
Miranda glanced out of the room’s tiny window and
noticed that dawn had begun
to bloom in shades of pink and scarlet.
“Red in the morning…” she whispered absently.
*******
“Red at night, sailor’s delight.
Red in the morning, sailor take warning.”
The familiar rhyme echoed unbidden through her head.
Sleep had not come easily
to Beth Chavez the night before – worry for Quentin
and the discomfort of her
beating from Jenny had limited her to just a few
uneasy hours of slumber. She
turned her head wearily to watch as daylight began to
serenade the sky with
streaks of pink and rose.
And the little rhyme she had just recited always
seemed to prove true, too.
“Red in the morning.” It was going to be a stormy day,
and from the dread that
lay like a rock in the pit of her stomach, Beth felt
that storms were going to
extend beyond just the weather. She had a bad feeling
about this day as she
watched the dawn deepen into hues of fuchsia and
crimson, the horizon now a
cascade of vermilion.
Beth dressed quickly in the damp and chilly cubicle
that passed for her bedroom
and headed to Quentin’s room. She was drawn there as a
moth to a flame. Perhaps
she could find a clue as to his whereabouts. And if
nothing else, she felt
closer to him there.
Her heart leapt as she noticed that the door to his
room was slightly ajar. She
tentatively pushed it open, softly calling out his
name.
“Quentin?”
No answer.
The light inside was dim, but the now scarlet sunrise
bathed the room in a red
glow almost as if a thin sheen of blood covered
everything. The first thing
that hit Beth was the smell – an animal smell, wild
and untamed and dirty like
a wet dog. And there was also another underlying
smell, something thick and
fetid and heavy as if the red dawn had not only
painted the room in blood but
had also given off the * scent * of blood.
Her eyes began to adjust to the gloom, and Beth
finally understood that the
room was in complete disarray. It looked like a wild
animal had been let loose
in there. The bedding was ripped and torn from the
bed, strewn about other
furnishings. Curtains hung in strips on their rods,
tables had been tipped
over, and lamps lay in jagged pieces on the floor.
The floor.
Huddled on the floor was a shape, somehow human and
inhuman at the same time.
Beth moved closer to it, slowly marking each step.
“Quentin?” she asked again.
The figure on the floor answered her question, but not
in the way she had
expected. For instead of a word or even a moan, Beth
heard a *whine*.
A whine. Like the noise an animal might make.
The lady’s maid felt the hair at the base of her neck
prickle and a queer
sensation almost like that of an electrical shock
travel through her body. She
was nearly paralyzed with fear, and she realized after
a moment that she had
been tightly holding her breath. Summoning all of her
courage, she moved
another step closer to the figure (animal) on the
floor.
What she saw caused her to jam two white-knuckled
fists into her gaping mouth.
A scream rose and then died in her throat. For what
lay on Quentin’s floor was
a * beast *.
A beast whose thick animal smell filled her nose and
throat and made her
stomach roil. A beast whose long snout and coarse hair
was matted with streaks
and clumps of drying blood, the color of which was
deepened by the reddish glow
in the room. A beast that wore the torn remains of
human clothing. And Beth
thought she recognized the ripped and tattered shirt
from which huge hairy paws
emerged.
For a quick moment, she was convinced that this animal
had devoured Quentin.
And in a way, she was right.
Her first instinct was flight, pure instinctive,
self-preserving flight. But
she had to know for sure if this…this creature
(animal, beast…wolf?) had killed
Quentin. As deadly as it obviously was, it also looked
hurt, and Beth dared to
move even closer to it although her shoes now seemed
to be made of lead. What
she now saw made her blink her eyes once, twice, three
times – for where there
had been paws just a moment before (she would have
sworn that on a thousand
Bibles) there were now hands. And the matted fur was
now fading, slowly,
slowly, more, more, leaving human skin in its stead.
The clothing, though still
ripped to shreds, no longer strained to contain a body
too big and too thick
for its size.
Beth’s amazed eyes swept the *beast* from head to toe.
And the beast was now Quentin Collins.
*******
Barnabas closed the heavy coffin lid over his head
with a sigh. He had delayed
his “rest” as long as possible, and the image of the
first red light of dawn
was still imprinted on his eyes.
“Storms,” the sailor in him thought absentmindedly.
“The day will bring
storms.”
He let himself drift off, but he had so much on his
mind that he began to dream
immediately. Visions began to float through his
subconscious – images of
Elizabeth/Judith, Roger/Edward, Carolyn/Charity,
David/Jamison. Quentin. And of
course, Victoria. His family in this century; his
family in the century to
come.
The images whirled and merged until one face emerged
from the swirling mist:
Julia.
The twentieth century woman stepped forward, and now
he could see her clearly.
“Barnabas, you must listen to me.”
He hadn’t seen her since that day at Stokes’ cottage.
It seemed a century ago
when in reality, it was still almost a century in the
future. His memory of her
had begun to dim a little, and he assumed that was
because, in truth, she had
not even been born yet. But his memory of their strong
bond had not faltered,
and her appearance, even if only in his dreams, was a
comfort to him. That was
until he saw the very grave expression on her face. It
was Julia’s “all
business” face, and it sent ripples of alarm through
his mind.
“What is it, Julia? What’s wrong?” The questions
resonated in his head. Hadn’t
he asked her these same things before? More than once?
“There is a great evil coming, Barnabas, a great evil
that will result in
terror for your family. There will be much blood, so
much blood. You must stand
watch and be ready for it to appear. And you must
fight.”
Barnabas’ heart would have stilled in his chest had it
been a living, beating
organ. “Julia, you must tell me more!” he demanded
desperately.
But the redheaded doctor’s image had already begun to
be swallowed in the
thickening gray haze. Her voice, fainter now, only
repeated her doomsday
message. “So much blood. Stand watch, Barnabas. Stand
watch.”
“Julia!” he bellowed uselessly. His dear friend was
already gone, replaced once
again by the faces of his family – faces that were now
tinted red.
His family in this century; his family in the century
to come. His family –
always poised at the dawn of a new century, always
covered in a veil of blood.
It seemed that the day would indeed bring storms.
“Red in the morning,” he thought he heard a woman say.
*******
“Ow!” Quentin Collins yelped, batting away the hand
that dabbed cool water on
his face. He now lay sprawled in a chair in his room,
his long legs splayed out
in front of him.
“Quentin, I’m sorry,” Beth said in a tremulous voice.
“Your face is scratched;
I need to clean up the blood.” But it was all too
clear to Beth Chavez that
most of the blood on Quentin’s face was not his own.
She repressed a shudder
and pushed the thought quickly away.
“And you know *why* I’m covered in blood!” he shouted,
jumping violently to his
feet and turning his back to her. “You saw what I was,
Beth – the monster I
changed into last night! I don’t even know what
happened to me, where I went,
what I did-”
“Quentin, I’m sure you didn’t do anything-”
He whirled back to face her, throwing off the gentle
hand she had laid on his
shoulder. “You don’t know that! And you don’t know
…the things I see in my
head… the memories of last night.” His eyes blazed at
her, wild with fear but
full of incredible sadness as well. “Beth, oh *God*,
Beth,” he moaned, sinking
back heavily into the chair. “The things I see…the
moon burning red above the
trees, the howl of dogs...a girl torn apart, an arm
here, a leg there, her body
nothing but a pile of rags. And blood, I smell blood,
Beth, and it’s on *me*.”
He buried his dark head in shaking hands and sobbed
pitifully and utterly
without hope. The sound made Beth’s blood run cold
with fear.
“Quentin.” Her voice was tender as she fell to her
knees in front of him and
pulled his hands from his tear-stained face. “It was
all just a dream. I’m sure
it was.”
“How can you say that?” he shrieked at her. “ You
*saw* me. I was…I don’t know
what…a beast, an animal. It was Magda. *She* did it to
me.” He paused and added
in a miserable voice, “No, *I* did it to me.”
“What are you talking about? What did Magda do to
you?”
Quentin once more rose from the chair and began pacing
the disheveled room.
“What happened to me after Jenny ki-… stabbed me is a
long story. But once I
was back here, that crazy gypsy came to me, determined
to avenge Jenny’s death.
She put a * curse * on me, Beth!”
Beth Chavez had spent enough time caring for a young
gypsy woman to be alarmed
when the word “curse” was spoken. She hurried to
Quentin and squeezed his arms
forcefully enough to elicit a wince from him. “A
curse? Quentin, exactly what
did she say? Can you remember?” she demanded as she
anxiously looked up into
his intensely blue eyes.
“Her words are seared into my brain, Beth. I will
never forget them. ‘The demon
inside of you I have brought to the surface; the demon
inside of you I have
given form and substance; the demon inside of you will
infect them all, all
your first born sons. As I will it, so shall it be.
For all eternity.’ Quite a
fate, isn’t it?” he laughed, but there no humor in the
sound. “Well, at least
I’ve robbed the old witch of some satisfaction. I
*have* no sons to *infect*.
And I'll see to it that I never do-”
He broke off when he saw the look on Beth’s face. Her
skin had gone beyond pale
and with her hand at her throat, she was a parody of a
woman gasping for air.
“Beth?” Quentin yelled at her in alarm. “Beth, what in
hell is wrong?!”
“Quentin,” she finally managed to utter with a
trembling sob. “Oh, God, Quentin
– you do…Miss Judith took them from her…She’d gone mad
by then, and you were
gone and-”
The handsome Collins grabbed hold of the nearly
hysterical woman and shook her,
a horrified understanding beginning to dawn on his
battered face. He remembered
Beth saying something to Jenny that he hadn’t
understood at the time: *They’re
crying, Jenny. They need you.*
“Beth, what are you saying? Judith took who?” He shook
her until her teeth
rattled in her head. “Judith took *who*?”
“Oh, Quentin, Jenny had twins while you were away! And
one of them was a * boy
*!”
Quentin Collins, the man with the beast within,
collapsed to the littered
floor, tearing at his thick hair and howling his
grief. His tortured cries,
however, were almost drowned out by the sheets of
driving rain that now began
to beat against the weathered walls of Collinwood. The
storm had begun.
Red in the morning.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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