Ch. 52: Vengeance Game
by Nicky
(Voiceover by David Selby) “Collinwood in the year
1897 is a troubled estate,
as it was a hundred years in the past and will be a
hundred years in the
future. There is no rest for the wicked, and no one
knows this better than
Quentin Collins, for he has returned from the land of
the dead in perfect
condition ... except for his mind, and now he knows no
peace. For there has
been sacrifice on this estate, and a bargain was
struck with dark, primal
forces ... forces that may demand a payment Quentin
will be unable to provide.”
1
The brandy burned the back of his throat like the acid
he knew would rise in
his stomach when he awakened tomorrow morning (or
afternoon, he mused), but
Quentin found he didn’t care. He sat in a chair that
had once been plush but
was now thinning from years of use with one hand
softly carressing the wine
glass he’d pilfered from Edward’s study. A fire
crackled before him, limning
his face with red, accenting the clever planes and
contours. The victrola
beside him crooned “Shadows of the Night” over and
over, the sweet melody
haunting him now, as it always had.
Other things haunted him as well. The dream he’d just
suffered, for instance,
marring his attempt at sleep on his first night back
in his body. A whole new
world. He wondered how many other men were given his
gift, to swim in the icy
oblivion that was death, only to be snatched back,
poured whole into a body
that had been maimed but miraculously lost the wounds
that had injured it so.
Not many, by his calculation.
“Miranda,” he whispered, and a small smile dappled his
lips. She was a lovely
thing, he’d grant her that ... whatever she was. Not a
human being, surely. She
sacrificed Dirk Wilkins as easily and cold-bloodedly
as if he had been a
chicken needed for dinner, or a fish caught in a net.
Quentin frowned, then his
mouth opened and his eyes widened as he realized,
astounded, that he actually
cared. Not that he liked Wilkins at all, what with the
infatuation he’d once
harbored for Beth, but the man didn’t deserve to die.
Did he?
He saved you, Quentin, a voice whispered in his head.
It was cold and scratchy,
like the crackling on the gramaphone record before the
music began, like claws
drawn down a sheet of tin. He heard this voice often,
and often he listened to
it, but now it perturbed him.
He smiled a little. Perhaps death had changed him
after all.
Someone had to die for you to live, that voice
continued,
scratch-scratch-scratching at his brain. More than one
person, actually.
“Jenny,” he said, and the brandy flooded his throat
and soured his stomach
again. Not my fault, he thought, now a petulant little
boy; she stabbed me, it
was self-defense, she was insane, she had it coming,
she ... she ... she ...
“She loved me,” he said, and his chest hitched. Tears
scalded his eyes, another
first, for Quentin Collins did not cry. Quentin
Collins never cried at
anything. She did love me, though, he thought, even at
the end. She couldn’t
stand the thought of me with another woman, and I slit
her throat so easily.
Vengeance. Petty vengeance, after driving her mad and
leaving her to rot in
this castle when I took off after Laura. My god, but
I’m a son-of-a-bitch. A
bastard. Once, this thought might have induced him to
beam, to smile with
pride, but now he felt small and ugly. He felt
ashamed. I’m a bastard, he
thought, and began to weep.
“That’s right, Quentin,” Magda Rakosi said, and
Quentin looked up at her, his
eyes streaming, his cheeks blazing scarlet with shame.
The Gypsy stood before
him in all her magnifigance, her chin thrust out like
a lance, her black eyes
alive with fire, cold and hard as obsidian. “Weep.
Weep for the one you
murdered. Weep for my poor Jenny.”
“Magda —” Quentin choked, but there was nothing to
say, and then she was gone.
Faded away like a vapor, like smoke, and he dropped
his head into his hands and
sobbed. She was real, all right, he knew, and
vengeance would surely be hers.
Who wasn’t owed a bit of vengeance in this sickening
game they all played?
That would explain the dream, he thought. Magda’s
begun her work already.
Ah, the dream. In the dream he wasn’t Quentin. He
wasn’t a human. He snuffled
and scouted and bayed at the moon. “I see an animal in
you,” someone gloated
nearby, but his inhuman mouth, filled as it was with
sharp angles like knives,
was incapable of answering. Everything around him was
sharp and focused and
alive, and when he saw the young blonde girl, maybe
sixteen, maybe seventeen,
alone in the clearing on the night of the hard white
moon, he pounced and tore
her limb from limb. He awoke screaming, the writhing,
coppery taste of her
blood still in his mouth. He had crawled out of bed
and sat brooding in his
chair before the fire.
A dream, he thought now, and wiped away the tears from
his eyes (coward’s
tears, he thought, bastard’s tears) and rose shakily
to his feet. Only a dream.
The dream of a murderer. I’m a beast, he thought; why
shouldn’t I dream a
beast’s dreams?
He froze, and stiffened. He wasn’t alone. The temperature
in the room had
dropped, and goosebumps rose on his bare chest and
arms. “Who is in this room?”
he called, and looked around. Terror sang silver
inside him.
The air around him shimmered, and seemed to draw
together in a stream of
white-gray light. He was rooted in place as the
disparate streams seemed to
solidify, to form a nearly human figure. It glared at
him angrily with empty
eyesockets and a gaping mouth, then levelled what he
thought must be a bony
finger. “Quentin Collins,” it said, and its very words
polluted the air. The
room reeked of spoiled meat gone old and gray, a
clotted tang that wrenched his
stomach even as the temperature continued to drop and
his teeth began to
chatter uncontrollably. It spoke in the language of
tombs, the language of the
dead, and its voice was the grating of stone upon
stone, issuing from the
deepest fissures of the earth. “Quentin Collins,” it
said again, and it almost
seemed to grin, that formless, skeletal thing. Its
words were a hiss. “You have
not escaped. Death comes for everyone, Quentin
Collins. You have not escaped.”
“Get out of here,” Quentin whispered. His hands were
clenched into tight fists,
and his fingernails began to dig deeply into the palm
of his hand. Dime-sized
droplets of blood pattered to the floor. “Leave me
alone.”
“Death is inevitable,” the specter rasped. “It comes
for everyone. Why should
you escape?” It had continued to materialize, and
seemed the hazy, indistinct
specter of someone drowned and long dead. What might
have been flesh was
withered and lined and purple. Its face was an obscene
mockery of humanity.
“Return,” it said, and beckoned him. “Return. Return.”
“No,” Quentin sobbed, but couldn’t move his hands to
cover his face.
“There must be balance,” the thing intoned, swaying
before him in the air. The
light from the lamp beside his chair glinted off the
shards of frost that hung
in the air around it. “There must be equality. It is
not enough. You must offer
payment or return with me. Return with me, Quentin
Collins,” it said, and held
out one bone-thin hand, warped and gnarled. “Return.
Return. Return ...”
“I said LEAVE ME ALONE!” Quentin shrieked, and flung
the lamp at the thing, and
it winked out like the flame of a candle and was gone.
The lamp shattered
against the far wall, and instantly the air was
redolent with the heavy smell
of oil. Quentin used his robe to smother the flames,
then collapsed into his
chair, shaking and shivering.
Magda? he thought. Is she to blame? Did she send that
thing to me? To torment
me?
“No,” he whispered, and stared at his hands, the long,
sensuous fingers.
“There’s no one to blame but me.”
2
Another day dawned on Collinwood. The sun, for once,
sparkled in the sky like a
rare jewel, and the sky was bright and blue. It was an
exceptionally warm day
for spring in Maine, particularly for the end of
March, and Laura Collins
basked while she could, because later, she knew, it
would rain. She had spent
the previous evening moving all her luggage — the few
meager possessions she
carried with her — into the old caretaker’s cottage,
vacated now after the
strange disappearance of Dirk Wilkins. Edward would
not allow her to remain at
Collinwood, and rather than fight, she had acquiesced.
He was, at this very
moment, in Collinsport, conferring with that bumbler
Evan Hanley, beginning
preparations to have their marriage annuled. No
matter. She wasn’t interested
in becoming the mistress of Collinwood. Not anymore.
Let Sister Judith claw and
scrap with her brothers to retain that position. Laura
had her sights set
considerably higher.
“Great Ra,” she purred, lifting her round face to the
sun. Her blue petticoats
suddenly seemed starch and stifling, and she longed to
shed them, to run naked
under the sun as she had in Egypt.
She frowned. She didn’t like to think of Egypt. It was
disturbing, really, how
few human emotions she still retained, but those
remaining surged in her blood
like fire. Anger. Vengeance. Confusion. And love. Yes,
there was still love.
She loved her children particularly, but she loved
Quentin Collins as well. The
scoundrel. The blackguard. Why did she feel this way?
Why was she hesitating
when she should be annihilating him, burning him to a
cinder, at this very
moment?
Because Laura Murdoch loved him, and the ashes of
Laura Murdoch remained, still
glowing red now and then, somewhere deep inside the
Phoenix that she had become
when Quentin left her with the priests that had flung
her mercilessly on the
funeral pyre.
An endless cycle, and an exhausting one, to be born
again, and again, and
again, never quite remembering the past until the fire
came, and once the
burning time was done there was only one thing she was
interested in. Her
children. The sacrifice. Then the return to Ra and the
waiting, basking in his
light and his warmth until the cycle began all over
again.
Laura Murdoch had married Edward Collins so that she
might become the mistress
of Collinwood, and that was why the idea still held a
grain of appeal. In the
process she had fallen madly in love with his
soon-to-be-estranged,
irreprescible, irascible younger brother, and they had
fled to Egypt together.
Quentin’s appreciation for the occult had awakened
something inside her,
something dormant that she hadn’t been aware of, and
it had blazed to life,
nourished by the hot sun on the Nile. She had insisted
this is where they would
go, and Quentin had only been too eager to follow.
Until he found out what she
really was. Her legacy. The fire. And then he had
betrayed her to the priests,
those who knew her as the wicked Phoenix of the Ages,
and they had burned her.
She could still remember the pain as the flames licked
at her sensitive mortal
flesh, the agony that had consumed her and that never
ended, even as the flesh
fell away and her bones turned black. She was reborn
as the ashes were sifted,
and a new Laura Murdoch Collins had emerged, naked and
shining and golden as
the sun. She had slaughtered the priests with quick
efficiency, and licked
their blood like rubies from her fingertips. Of
Quentin there was no sign.
Perhaps this was a blessing. In her new state she
might have killed him as
easily as she had killed the priests, and now, back at
Collinwood, she found
that a more fitting punishment might be meted out to
her erstwhile lover.
Yes, she thought, and returned to cool shadows of the
caretaker’s cottage, HER
cottage. He shall join me. When the time comes, when I
build my fire and take
my children to my breast, Quentin Collins will join me
in the flames.
3
His eyes, Charity thought as she entered the Old
House, furtively glancing left
and right. All I can see are his eyes, and they’re not
right. Not at all. They
swam before her, great and brown, and when she thought
of them, she heard
laughter, the trilling, malevolent laughter of an old,
old woman. But she had
to obey him, more than she had to obey the man she
loved, even though she still
bore the marks of his kiss on her throat.
She held the stake and hammer in hands firm and
clenched into fists.
Though she had never been into the cellar of the Old
House, she knew where to
look. Just as she knew that Sandor and Magda, the
unpleasant, dark, shifty-eyed
pair she’d only seen fleetingly in the past few weeks,
would be out of the
house, leaving their master alone. Oh, Barnabas, she
thought, and felt tears
spring to her eyes. If only I didn’t have to do this.
If only I could’ve loved
you, and time could’ve stopped forever, so there was
just you and me, dancing
and dancing into eternity.
But she had to do this thing. She had to murder.
Again.
Tears slipped down her cheeks in hot rivers, but she
ignored them. There was
the cellar door, on her left. It was easy — too easy —
to open it, and glide
down the stairs on the pretty slippers her father
never would’ve allowed her to
buy. Too easy.
“He’s using you, you know.” Tim had told her that last
night. There had been
pain — oh, but his eyes were scary, and they hurt her
so — and she had been
forced to tell him everything. It had all come pouring
out in a torrent, and
before she knew it, he knew everything. He knew where
Barnabas slept, and he
knew the things they’d done together, oh the dirty
things, the passionate,
powerful things. Barnabas’ lips on her throat, the
exquisite pleasure as his
teeth sank into her skin, her gasp as the blood bubbled
up, how she had burned
down there, a place only she had touched, and now he
was touching her, and
touching her, and touching her, and Tim knew all about
it. He knew about the
fire, and she knew he was afraid. “He will discard
you. Kill you when he’s done
with you. They’ll find you on the docks with your neck
snapped. Don’t you know
that, foolish girl?” He’d pressed something into her
hands. “Here. Take these.
Use them well, and do not miss. The heart. Do you
understand?”
She did, only too well.
There was the coffin. In the corner, in the shadows,
wrapped in darkness like a
shroud. Her heart turned over, and the tears stopped.
He was dead, then. He was
a dead man, sleeping in a dead man’s coffin. He had
stolen her blood to keep
himself alive. She hated him.
She loved him.
She couldn’t do this thing.
The lid was hard, smooth mahogany, mocking her with
her own reflection. She was
a pale, wasted thing, a silly little girl with her
stick and her hammer. She
screamed her anger as she threw open the lid of the
coffin and stared into his
pallid, sleeping face. His cheeks were sunken and his
lips were smeared with
traces of blood, and his white, dead hands were folded
across his chest that
did not rise or fall. She was trembling, shuddering
with nausea and fear as she
lifted the stake with a trembling hand and placed it
gently, oh so gently, over
his heart.
“Oh Barnabas,” she whispered, and raised the hammer.
And it would’ve fallen too, and considerably changed
the events that were to
follow, but a hand, white as marble and quick as
death, snaked out of the
darkness and seized Charity by the wrist. She
screamed, as shocked as she was
suddenly angry, and the hammer fell to the floor, and
was joined a second later
by the stake.
“Who —?” she stammered. “Who ...?”
The woman in the dragon-green dress with drooping lace
sleeves and high-necked
collar smirked at her diabolically. Her hair was
pulled back at her neck, and a
cascade of ringlets spilled down her back. Her eyes
were blue chips of freezing
ice, and Charity burned under them. “My name is
Miranda,” the woman purred,
calm and collected, “and that is all you need to
know.” She strode forward, and
Charity backed away, her heart slamming in her chest
like a frightened
rabbit’s. “What I’d like to know is who you are ...
and what you’re doing
here.” She laughed, tinkling, maddening laughter, like
shattering glass.
“Actually, that’s fairly obvious, isn’t it. You came
here to kill a vampire,
didn’t you, my brave girl.”
“I didn’t want to,” Charity mumbled.
Miranda raised an eyebrow, perfectly lucked. “Didn’t
‘want’ to?” she said. “Why
wouldn’t you want to? He’s a VAMPIRE, my dear.”
“I know what he is!” Charity snarled, then her eyes
widened and her mouth
closed very tight.
Miranda smirked at her, then before the girl could
move, her fingers flashed
out with that same, eerie speed and dexerity and
plucked at the collar bunched
around her throat. She nodded, satisfied, when she saw
the tiny wounds that had
yet to close up, directly over her jugular. “I thought
as much,” she said, then
her eyes narrowed. “But that still doesn’t explain
what you’re doing here. The
victim of a vampire — particularly this vampire —
should be incapable of
destroying him. Unless ...”
“Don’t hurt me,” the girl whispered breathlessly.
“Please! I didn’t want to do
this ... you don’t understand ... I love him!”
Miranda’s eyes widened, and a sinister smile wreathed
her crimson lips. “Love,
did you say?” She threw her head back and cackled
fiendishly. “Yes of course.
How perfect. How perfect indeed.” Her face hardened.
“That you love him, I have
no doubt. But this was not your decision to destroy
him, was it?” Charity shook
her head, and limp, blonde strands of her hair flew in
her face and were
plastered there, glued to her skin by her tears. “Then
it was sorcery that sent
you here. Only magic could’ve broken his hold over
you. Magic ... or Barnabas’
death. And we both know that didn’t happen, thanks to
me.”
Charity was quaking. “Who are you?” she gasped.
“I am ageless,” Miranda said. “I am the beginning and
the end of the world. I
am the Dark. I dwell in the shadowed places and the
flames of the Underworld. I
have cursed the Collins family with my presence, and I
will haunt them for the
rest of eternity ... and you will help me. You will
bring suffering upon them
... what was your name again?”
“Charity,” she quivered. “Charity Trask.”
“Trask!” Miranda exclaimed, then clapped her hands,
delighted. “Oh, it’s too
perfect. A direct descendent, I’d venture. How
marvelous indeed. Yes, my dear
Charity, you will aid me in my revenge ... and
Barnabas will have no one but
himself to blame. For I vowed long ago that he would
never love another living
soul, and no one may love him.” She advanced on the
girl, who backed away until
her back struck the far wall of the cellar, and she
collapsed to her knees.
“And that means you, dear girl. You must pay. You must
pay for daring to love
such a monster.”
“Don’t hurt me,” Charity sobbed. “Please don’t hurt me
...”
“It won’t hurt much,” Miranda purred, very near to her
ear. “Not after awhile.
And when you awaken, maybe you’ll like me better.” She
drew back, and red
witchfire crackled between her fingers. Charity
screamed, for the woman’s eyes
were coal-black, as smooth and obsidian as the sky at
high midnight, starless
and empty. “Agency of Ineffable Name and Vast
Strength,” she chanted. “Ancient
dark One, thou whose word is as stone; thou ancient
and alone impenetrable One!
Thou old and cunning, supreme in artifice, bringer of
ruin and despair, be
present here and lend thy aid! Be propitious to me in
my undertaking and do my
bidding as I command!”
Charity could only sob as she felt the marks on her
neck begin to throb, and
twin trickles of blood began to run down her neck, and
she was cold, so
dreadfully cold.
And then all the lights went out.
4
Magda Rakosi stood at the grave of her sister, and the
rain drenched her and
jagged shards of cold pierced her to the bone. Her
eyes were dark and stormy,
but not wet with tears. Magda Rakosi never cried. She
couldn’t cry for the
terrible life she was now forced to lead, and she
couldn’t cry for the
miserable death that had awaited her sister.
The tombstone read JANNA ROMANO COLLINS, 1870-1897.
There was no epitaph. She
had been buried in haste. Damn Edward Collins.
She should never have come to this place, Magda
thought sadly, and shook her
great mane of black hair. She followed us here after
she ran away from the
tribe, followed us because she knew HE was here. Her
face drew into a lupine
snarl. That monster. That beast, that Quentin Collins
— that bastard who I
thought was my friend. He ruined her, and I thought it
was for the best that he
ran away with that cold fish with the blue eyes and
the fire in her skin. I
thought it better Jenny learn then what a man she
married, for can a man help
his nature? She should’ve known better. I couldn’t
blame him for that, for his
roving eye. I couldn’t hate him. I could only hope
that my baby would run far
and fast away from this accursed place where her feet
never should’ve tread.
After she disappeared, I thought she was away for
good, safe and far away. I
never suspected she had gone mad. I never knew —
She smothered the sob that struggled to free itself
from her chest.
Sandor, her huge rock of a man at her side, squeezed
her hand. “Is it bad,
Magda?” he asked her roughly, speaking in the old
tongue.
She shook her head, then nodded. “No,” she said. “And
yes and yes and no. I
never saw this coming, Sandor.”
“You can’t blame yourself. You can’t see everything.”
Her lip drew back in a contemptuous sneer: contempt
for herself, contempt for
her “powers”. “I am to blame. I was too busy looking
for those damned jewels,
too busy playing palm reader to Mrs. Collins, that I
stopped looking for Jenny.
I thought she would never come back here. I should’ve
known that she’d never
left.”
“Miss Judith hid her well.”
Magda nodded. “Too well indeed. Hid her away like an
animal in that tower of
theirs. Oh yes, Sandor, I see it all now. Too late,
too late.” She sighed.
“Like an animal ...”
Thunder rumbled menacingly above them, and Sandor cast
an uneasy glance at the
western horizon. “The sun will be setting soon, Magda.
We had better return to
the Old House. Mister Barnabas —”
“I don’t care about Mister Barnabas,” she snarled.
“Today Mister Barnabas can
wait. Today my sister is dead, and I will never see
her again. If he don’t
understand that, then he really is a monster.” Her
face darkened. “All of them.
Monsters. But especially him. That Quentin. My
friend.” She spat the word.
“You’ll settle with Quentin.”
“Have no doubt, Sandor. And with her too.”
“Judith?”
“The new mistress of Collinwood. I’ll see her suffer
as well. She’ll suffer for
my Jenny, just as my Jenny suffered when the knife was
drawn across her throat,
as she suffered in madness, locked away in the tower
room. They think I don’t
know, but Magda sees far when she wants to, oh yes.
They’ll never prove it was
murder, and who would cry for a poor murdered Gypsy
girl? That’s all they see
her as, you know. A Gypsy. No one knew, not even
Edward. Only Quentin knew what
she was, and he didn’t care.” Her voice softened. “My
poor Jenny. Mi tikni ...”
Sandor tugged at her arm. “We’d better go,” he said in
English.
“Yes,” Magda said, and tossed the rose she held onto
her sister’s grave. It
glowed redly at them in the murky twilight. “I’ll
return, Janna. And when I do,
you will be avenged, I promise you. I promise you ...”
They stumbled back to the Old House wordlessly, Sandor
with his eyes fixed on
the earth that was quickly becoming mud, and Magda
with her eyes straight
ahead, blazing with purpose. The shadows grew longer
and longer, and it was
nearly dark before they reached the Old House.
Sandor stopped, and gripped Magda’s arm. “The door,”
he whispered. “The door is
open. Why? We left it closed.”
“I don’t know,” Magda growled, “but we’re going to
find out.” She charged on
ahead, and together they entered the house, which was
brightly lit by the fire
merrily blazing in the fireplace. The woman seated on
the purple plush pouf
turned to look at them coldly, with one eyebrow raised
appraisingly. “Well,
well,” she purred, “don’t you two make a fine pair
indeed. Soaked to the bone
and frightened as rabbits. For yourselves, I wonder, or
for your master?”
“Get out of here,” Magda snarled. “You don’t belong
here, chiovani. Witch! What
you doing here anyway, huh?”
Miranda rose to her full height, and in the emerald
green dress she was
impressive indeed, a dragon waiting to strike. Wrath
flashed in her blue eyes,
but Magda did not back down. “You don’t dare speak to
me like that,” she said
in a calm, threatening voice that did not betray the
anger gathered around her
like the black clouds in the heavens outside.
“Remember your place, Magda, and
remember who has more power here. Do you think it is
you, you with your paltry
charms and cantrips? You, with your palm reading and
tarot cards?” She sneered,
and spat, “You rank, miserable amateur. I could
destroy you this minute, Magda,
blast you to a cinder, and don’t you ever forget
that.”
“Yeah, yeah,” Magda said, and dropped her eyes to the
ground and scuffled her
boot-clad foot. “You said all that already.”
Miranda stared at her expectantly. “I think I want to
hear you say it, Magda,”
she said. Sandor’s eyes darted nervously from one
woman to the other. “Yes, I
think an apology is quite in order.”
“All right!” Magda cried, flinging her hands into the
air. “I’m sorry. Magda is
sorry. Sorry, sorry, sorry! Happy now?”
“No,” Miranda said. “No, I am not. I think it’s a
little late for your concern,
Gypsy, even if you had shown any. I came to this house
this afternoon and found
Charity Trask with a stake over Barnabas’ heart.
Fortunately I put a stop to
that nonsense in time, but only just in time.”
“Charity Trask?” Magda frowned. “The governess at
Collinwood?” Her expression
filled with horror. “My god! She’ll tell! She’ll tell
them all!”
Miranda smirked. “No,” she said, “no she won’t. Miss
Trask belongs to me now,
and she’ll do and say only what I tell her to.”
Magda stared at her suspiciously. “What did you do?”
“You’ll find out soon,” Miranda said enigmatically.
“You’ll also discover how
pleased Barnabas will be when he learns that you were
off duty — that you left
him, alone and helpless, so that anyone could enter
this house and put an end
to him.”
“He’ll understand,” Magda said, and terror made her
whine. “I was visiting my
sister ... my dead sister in the graveyard —”
“I don’t care for your excuses,” Miranda said coldly,
“and neither will
Barnabas. I don’t think he’ll be as sentimental or as
understanding as you’d
like. It is my feeling, Magda, that he will kill you.”
“No!” Sandor cried. “No, he musn’t find out ... he
can’t —”
“He won’t,” Miranda said, silencing him with a glare.
“I won’t tell him, and
neither will you. But you must do me a favor as well,
or you’ll join your
sister in the boneyard.”
Magda squinted her eyes. “And what is that?” she
growled.
“You must not tell Barnabas that I was here in the
house this afternoon,” she
said, “nor will you tell him that you’ve seen me at
all. No, for the moment I
want Barnabas Collins as in the dark as he can
possibly be ...” She laughed
again, wicked, cawing laughter that was utterly
diabolical, and Sandor and
Magda exchanged frightened looks as she faded away
before their eyes
completely.
5
The shadows at Collinwood were long, and the nearly
full moon flitted through
ragged tears in the cloud sheath that covered most of
the sky. Dinner was over,
the children were in bed, Edward was holed up in his
study with his paperwork,
and Victoria Winters was sneaking into an abandoned
room in the East Wing with
a vampire. If only the family knew, she thought, and
half-smiled, but her smile
faded a moment later. If only they knew half the
things that are going on in
this house, she thought, or are going to go on. Things
I — we — have to
discover now, before it’s too late.
Barnabas closed the door of the room behind them. It
was dusty and dark, and
the flickering light from the candle she held didn’t
do much to dispell the
gloom. When he turned to face her, she almost gasped.
His face in the
candlelight was grim and gray, lined and sunken, and
his eyes burned at her
like those of a wolf. “Are you all right, my dear?” he
asked, and his voice
wasn’t human.
“I’m fine,” she said, and thought, Oh lord, what if he
can’t control himself?
What if he attacks me now? She scolded herself a
moment later. You know that
won’t happen, she thought. He was a vampire when you
knew him before, before
his cure, and he never did anything to you then. But
her mind wandered
momentarily, and she remembered the attacks on girls
on the docks, and how
Sabrina Stuart had disappeared, and even though she
knew that it was Elizabeth
who had ultimately caused the girl’s death, it was
Barnabas who had attacked
her and left her for dead. “Just fine,” she said, and
shivered a little.
“You’re cold,” he observed, and she wondered if his
eyes were like a bat’s,
capable of piercing the darkness, and decided it was
safer not to ask.
“A little,” she admitted. “This part of the house
isn’t heated. No one comes
here anymore.”
“Just as no one will come to the West Wing in decades
to come,” Barnabas said.
“I wonder that no one ever thought how strange it was
to abandon two whole
wings of a house as great as Collinwood.”
“No one thinks at all, it seems,” Vicki said with only
a trace of bitterness.
“So many secrets, Barnabas, so many things that go
unsaid ... unseen ...
unheard ...”
He took her hand for a second, and it was cold, the
grip of a dead man, but she
smiled and let him squeeze it before he released her.
“You mustn’t worry about
that now,” he said. “Has there been no word about the
governess?”
“Miss Trask?” Vicki asked, then frowned. “None at all.
She’s disappeared
without a word. But she left behind all her clothes
and her other personal
objects.”
“Perhaps she’s met someone in town,” Barnabas said,
more to himself, and Vicki
knew then that he knew something about Charity Trask.
He wasn’t sure where she
was, but he knew that something wasn’t right. What do
you know, Barnabas? she
wondered. What aren’t you telling me? And why? But
again, she decided it was
safer not to press.
“What exactly are we planning to do here, Barnabas?”
she asked, and glanced
around again at their surroundings. “I’ve no doubt
that no one will find us
here, but still ...”
He rummaged in the folds of his cloak, and when his
hands re-emerged they held
a small portrait that he handed to her wordlessly. She
stared at it, and
gasped. “It’s her, isn’t it,” she said. “It’s Laura
Collins.”
“Yes,” he nodded. “Laura Collins. My father’s
mistress, and Edward’s wife. But
look at the date on the portrait.” She held it up to
the candlelight and
squinted, and when she looked at him again, her eyes
were wide and wondering.
“That can’t be,” she whispered, knowing full well it
could. “The date says
1692. Two hundred years ago.”
“And three hundred years from the time you knew her in
1967,” Barnabas said.
“Laura Collins has plagued this family for three
centuries all told, maybe
more. I found this in the attic of the Old House
earlier this evening. I’d
forgotten about it, though I can remember reading
about her now, when I ...
when I was alive.” He blinked. “Laura Pendleton
Collins was married to Amadeus
Collins, my great-grandfather, in the town of Bedford,
Massachussetts, in 1692.
She was burned as a witch later that year, and
Amadeus, one of the greatest
witch-hunters of the time, was burned with her.”
“Fire again,” Vicki said, and her brow furrowed.
“Always fire.”
“Yes,” Barnabas said. “And always that name. ‘Laura’.
No matter who she is, no
matter what family she’s born into, always the same
face, and always the same
name. The Laura Stockbridge I knew as my father’s
mistress died mysteriously,
on this estate, just before I became a vampire. I
never knew how. As I said, I
only saw her once.”
“And you want me to ...” Vicki shrugged. “What?
Contact Laura Stockbridge? I
don’t know what you mean, Barnabas.”
He frowned. “I’m not sure I do either. I don’t know
what we’re dealing with,
Victoria. Laura Collins could be a witch, but that
doesn’t feel right to me.”
“No. Me either.”
“I brought you this picture for a reason. Magda is
convinced that you’re what
she calls a ‘Seer’.”
Vicki sighed. “Right,” she said. “That I ‘see’ things.
Maybe I do and maybe I
don’t, but Barnabas, it isn’t a talent that I can
control. Sometimes things
come to me in dreams, but I can never really remember
them, and they don’t ever
make sense when I can.”
Barnabas laid a comforting hand on her shoulder, and
it was all she could do
not to shudder. He didn’t seem to notice. “It’s all
right, Victoria,” he said.
“All we can do is try. This will be an experiment. I
have a feeling that we
must learn as much about Laura Collins as we can. She
may be an enemy.”
“You’re right,” Vicki said. “I’ll — I’ll try my best.”
“Good girl.” He handed her the portrait again, and she
held it in her hands and
stroked its texured, bumpy surface with her fingers.
She could feel the whorls
and and ridges in the ancient oil that the painter’s
brush had left in its
wake, swirls and rigid lines. She closed her eyes.
There was darkness for only a moment, and then she
gasped and stiffened as a
cold breeze washed over her. She thought she heard
Barnabas calling her name,
but he sounded far away, and his voice faded into the
dim shrieking of the gale
that surrounded her.
Before she could see, she could hear, and a woman was
shrieking, “She murdered
my husband! You all can see, can’t you? This woman is
a beast! A murderess!”
Then the darkness parted, and Vicki could see that she
was standing in a
crowded square, and all the people were dressed
strangely, like Pilgrims from
Thanksgiving dioramas she had constructed at the
Foundling Home. There was a
woman at their epicenter, and she was tied to a stake.
Her blonde hair was all
but hidden behind a cap, and her sea-green eyes
scanned the crowd with what
seemed to Vicki to be bored disdain. Then Vicki
recognized her. She was the
woman she had come to know in 1967 as Laura Collins,
David’s mother.
“Burn her!” the crowd roared. “Burn her!”
“Burn me,” Laura intoned, and the scene shifted, and
suddenly Vicki was in a
jail cell, standing beside Laura, who obviously
couldn’t see her. Another
blonde woman stood without the cell. Her arms were
crossed over the blue,
starched fabric of her dress, and her bonnet did
nothing to discourage the
gorgeous golden ringlets that hung near her shoulders.
Her eyes were icy blue,
and they laughed maliciously. “Aye, but you’re a fair
one this morn,” the woman
cackled, and Vicki recognized her as well. It’s
Cassandra Collins, Vicki
thought, amazed. If her hair were black as a raven’s
wing, then that’s who
she’d be. This is no vague resemblance, like Carolyn’s
to Millicent Collins,
when we held up that portrait of her we found in the
attic last summer. This
woman is Cassandra Collins.
The woman in the cell said nothing, and the woman
Vicki knew as Cassandra
placed her hands on her hips and cackled her infernal
laughter. “What’s the
matter, Laura Collins?” she purred. “Does the cat have
thy tongue?”
“Begone from this place, Miranda DuVal,” Laura said,
and her voice was flat and
dead. “I have no use for thy taunts.”
“To be certain,” Miranda DuVal said, beaming. “Thy
husband is dead, art thou
aware of that? They burned him this morning at dawn. I
was there, watching.”
“Enjoying thy triumph?” Laura hissed, and real emotion
entered her voice for
the first time.
“Aye,” Miranda said simply. “And why shouldn’t I?
After all the old bastard did
to me —”
“Thou art a fool,” Laura said coldly. “Thou hast thy
revenge now. Why destroy
me as well?”
“For that ‘tis the frosting on the cake,” Miranda
said, and her eyes sparkled.
“I wanted old Amadeus to die knowing that thou wouldst
follow him shortly
thereafter, and that there was nothing on this earth
he could do. After he
plundered my virtue, forced himself upon me ... why,
this was the least I could
do!”
“Fool,” Laura repeated, and shook her filthy head.
“Can it be that thou knowest
nothing of what I be? Of what my fate be? I am doomed
to the fire, idiot child.
It craves me, and I it. Thou must be only a paltry
witch at best if thou can
sense that not.”
Miranda’s face darkened. “Thou had best keep thy
tongue, Laura Collins,” she
said in a low, terrible voice. “For I will see thy
destruction.”
“Thou wilt see more than that,” Laura vowed, and rose
from the rickety bench to
face her rival outside the bars. “Thou wilt see my
face again, Miranda DuVal,
so mark it well, my sister, mark it well.”
“I am no sister of thine.”
“But thou art. Save where I crave fire, it repells
thee.” Her mouth trembled on
the brink of a smile, and she added mockingly, “Witch.
I will mark that as
well, and wilt not forget so easily.”
“I sent Amadeus to his death with my testimony, just
as I will do for thee ...
‘sister’.” Miranda’s voice trembled with hate, and her
face was red and spotty
with rage. “And then my vengeance towards the Collins
family will be complete.”
“Thy revenge will never be complete,” Laura said.
“That is my curse upon thee.
Thou wilt be as bound to the Collins family as be I.
This I promise thee.” Her
eyes bulged from her head, and she screamed, “Now get
out, get out, get out!”
The words shrilled in Vicki’s ears as she was plunged
out of the scene, and she
drew back, gasping, unable to force enough air into
her lungs, and she was
aware that Barnabas held her by the shoulders and was
shaking her, shaking her,
shaking her, and suddenly she was thrust back into her
own body, and she drew
away from him, shuddering. “No, I’m all right,” she
gasped, and brushed
sweat-soaked strands of hair out of her eyes. “Just
... just give me a moment.”
He watched her respectfully until she had gathered her
wits back, and then she
told him everything. “But that woman I saw,” Vicki
said, “that Miranda DuVal
... she was Cassandra Collins, Barnabas, I know it. I
recognized her
immediately.”
“Except for her blonde hair,” Barnabas said, and Vicki
nodded. “You are quite
right, Victoria. The woman you saw in your vision is
Cassandra, although I knew
her as Angelique.”
“The woman who made you a ... a ...”
“A vampire,” Barnabas said, and smiled thinly. “She
was a witch, Victoria,
powerful, cunning, and deadly. Obviously she is much
older than I suspected,
but I can’t say that I’m surprised. She is immortal,
it seems, and has tortured
this family for generations.” He swallowed, and stared
into the shadows
surrounding them. “She’s here now, Victoria. Under the
same guise of Miranda
DuVal. She has a particular sense of humor, you see.”
Vicki’s eyes widened. “Here? How? How is that
possible?” She shook her head
bitterly. “But I should know better than to ask that
question, shouldn’t I.”
“From what I can gather,” Barnabas said, “she was
always a part of this time,
though you and I weren’t. Our being in this time
didn’t affect her appearance,
though I have no doubt it will affect her actions. I
told you that Quentin
suffered an accident, but that he was fine now. I
didn’t tell you that
Angelique was responsible for raising him from the
dead.”
“But why, Barnabas? Why would she help you?”
“She has always demanded a price in the past. For this
feat she requested my
silence, and for me not to interfere in her plans.”
“But Barnabas,” Vicki said, “if we didn’t change the
way that Jenny killed
Quentin, then wouldn’t Angelique have had to resurrect
him originally?”
“I thought of that,” Barnabas said, “and I think you’re
right. But Angelique
doesn’t know how the future has played out. She isn’t
aware that we come from
1967, and I think it would be safer for both of us if
she didn’t find out.”
“She might be able to help us, though,” Vicki said
thoughtfully. “She and Laura
have been bitter enemies since 1692. We don’t know
what Laura’s plans are, but
odds are Angelique will interfere.”
“We must watch and see,” Barnabas said, and held the
portrait of Laura before
him. His eyes darted to Vicki’s, and he smiled. “You
have performed your part
excellently, my dear. Now allow me a try.” Vicki
watched wordlessly as he
closed his eyes and clutched the portrait tightly.
“Spirts of time,” he
intoned, “spirits of the past, of death and darkness,
I conjure thee now. Hear
my voice, and obey my commands. I summon a spirit lost
to the past, a woman who
lived on this estate a hundred years ago. Let her hear
my voice ... bring her
to me as I call to her ...” He opened his eyes, and
they glowed redly. Vicki
shrank back. The air around them began to pulse, and
she thought she could hear
the calling and cackling of strange beings that she
couldn’t see and could only
half-perceive. “Laura Stockbridge Collins!” Barnabas
called. “I summon you!
Eternal shade of Laura Stockbridge Collins ... wherever
you are ... in whatever
form you now dwell ... come to me ... now ... now ...
now!”
Vicki smothered a scream. The air shimmered before
them, and a form began to
waver into a view. It was a woman, dressed in a full,
heavy blue dress of the
eighteenth century. Her face was regal, aristocratic;
her blonde hair fell
about her shoulders in gentle ringlets; her eyes were
a delicate, sea-foam
green. She flickered like a moth in a flame. When she
spoke, her voice was
strange and unearthly, and echoed about the room. “You
have disturbed me,” she
said.
“I have summoned you,” Barnabas said. “Tell me your
name.”
“I am Laura Stockbridge Collins,” she said.
“Do you know me?”
“I do know you,” the spirit said, “We met only once.
You are the son of Joshua
Collins. And yet you live.”
“I do not live,” Barnabas growled, “and I do not die,
and apparently neither do
you.”
“You speak in riddles.”
Barnabas ignored her. “Are you the same Laura Collins
that lives here now?”
She smiled enigmatically. “I am Laura Stockbridge
Collins.”
“You died in a fire,” Barnabas said. “How was the fire
started?”
“I am the immortal Phoenix,” the spirit said with a
haughty toss of its golden
head. “I am eternal, fool. The fire sustains me. It
does not destroy me.”
“The Phoenix!” Barnabas gasped, his face suffused with
recognition. “Spirit of
Laura Collins, tell me why you have returned to
Collinwood!”
Horribly, it laughed, a shrieking, inhuman cackle like
the screaming of a giant
bird. “The children will yet be mine,” it said, and
spat its laughter at them.
Vicki screamed, “Barnabas, the fire! The fire!” Flames
had sprung up around the
laughing entity, consuming it even as it continued
shrieked wicked laughter.
Barnabas sprang forward and covered Vicki with his
cloak, but the flames had
already begun to fade away, and they took the ghost of
Laura Stockbridge
Collins with them. After a moment she was utterly
gone.
“The children,” Vicki cried, “oh Barnabas, the
children! She’s going to take
them away with her!”
Barnabas’ face was set and grim. “It is worse than
that, Victoria,” he said.
“I’ve read of these creatures. A Phoenix is a mortal
who has sold itself to the
Egyptian god Ra in exchange for immortality. Ra will
grant this request, but in
return, the Phoenix must sacrifice itself over and
over, only to return to
earth again, fully restored. But this is not the only
sacrifice it must make.”
Vicki stared at him, horrified. “The children?” she
whispered.
“Yes,” Barnabas said. “The Phoenix is compelled to sacrifice
its offspring to
Ra. It takes them into the flames, and they die
together. But only the Phoenix
itself rises from the flames unharmed. That is how it
sustains its own
immortality.”
Vicki buried her face in her hands. “Disgusting,” she
whispered. She lifted her
eyes back to him, and he was relieved to see they were
filled with fierce
determination. “We have to stop her, Barnabas. She
can’t go through with this
... this insane plan.”
“We will, Victoria,” Barnabas said. “Have no doubt of
that ...”
6
The whispy, empty-eyed horror reached for him again
with its bony, blackened
fingers, and Quentin recoiled in horror. “No!” he
screamed, fear tearing his
drunken reverie to shreds, and sobered him in an
instant. He had just awakened
from another dream, a dream of howling and ripping and
death and blood, rich
hot blood, and had poured himself another shot of
whiskey, when the ... the
thing had appeared again, reaching for him, trying to
draw him back into the
grave. “No!” he screamed again. “No, I won’t go with
you!”
“You have no choice, Quentin Collins,” the thing said
in its choked, bubbling
voice, and leered at him with it’s death’s head grin.
“You must come with me,
with me, with me —”
“Get away from me,” he sobbed miserably, and turned
away from its awful,
staring face. Beneath the thin, purple skin he had
caught a glimpse of
something moving, like a nest of worms beneath its
surface. His stomach roiled
uneasily.
“You must offer payment,” the thing said. “Tribute. A
die for a die is not
enough. There must be more payment, Quentin Collins,
more payment. No one
escapes death. No one. Pay me, and I will go away.
Appease me, and I will go
away.” Its bony fingers traced his skin, leaving
behind burning welts in their
wake, and he screamed, the high, animal wail of the
damned.
But when he looked, it was gone, and he was alone,
gasping and sweating with
his face streaked with his coward’s tears.
“Such a baby you are, Quentin,” the rasping voice of
Magda Rakosi said behind
him, and he spun around.
“Is it really you,” he asked wearily, “or another
ghost to torment me?”
Magda stared at him blackly, and laughed. “Would that
I were a ghost,” she
said, “and torture would be too good for the likes of
you.”
“Get out of here, Madam Gypsy,” Quentin said. “Leave
me alone.”
She stood facing him defiantly, her hands behind her
back. “I will never leave
you alone,” she said. “Not after what you’ve done to
Jenny.”
“Jenny,” Quentin whispered, and stared into the flames
of the fireplace. “Is
that what you’ve done, Magda? Is that why you sent
that ... that thing to
torment me? Revenge?”
“I don’t know what you talking about, Quentin,” Magda
said. “You must be crazy.
The look on your face says you are crazy as a loon.”
“You’d like to think so, wouldn’t you,” he snarled.
“That’s what you’d like to
do ... to drive me to insanity. But it won’t work, I
tell you, it won’t work!”
“I ain’t drivin’ you nowhere,” Magda said. “I come to
warn you, Quentin. You
gonna be sorry for the thing you done.”
“I am already sorry, Magda,” Quentin said. “You have
no idea how sorry I am.”
“Pathetic,” Magda spat. “What you got to be sorry
‘bout, huh? At least you got
your miserable, rotten life. What has my Jenny got,
huh? Nothing but darkness.
She feeds the worms now, and why? All because of you,
Quentin. You sorry
bastard.”
“I am a sorry bastard,” Quentin said, and his laughter
was jagged and cutting,
like shards of glass. “And as for my life ... I
wouldn’t say that I even have
that. No, Magda my dear, I would say your assesment is
most inaccurate.”
Magda glared at him. “What are you talking about?”
He glanced at her morosely, and she saw with a shock
how dead his eyes were.
“Jenny killed me,” he said simply. “She stabbed me a
few times with the butcher
knife sister Judith left around. Hell, she probably
put her up to it for all I
know.”
“Jenny killed you,” Magda said, her voice rife with
disbelief.
“Oh, I was dead all right.”
“Then how did my Jenny die?”
“I killed her before I went,” Quentin said. “Why
should I lie to you now? I’m
damned, aren’t I?”
“Are you?”
“You’d know if you’d seen the thing I have,” he said,
and shuddered. “I don’t
know what it is, or why it’s here. I thought you
called it up, but maybe it has
something to do with her.”
“Her? My Jenny?”
“Not your Jenny,” Quentin growled. “Miranda. Whatever
she is, whoever she is —
she brought me back to life. I’m not even sure how she
did it, or why she did
it. I don’t know what her stake in all this is.”
“I wouldn’t trust her as far as I could throw her,”
Magda said, and tossed her
head.
“I don’t think I came back alone,” Quentin said, and
turned his white,
frightened face to his sister-in-law. He was pale, and
his eyes were circled
and haunted. He swallowed convulsively. “Don’t you see,
Magda? This thing ...
it’s been haunting me for the past two nights. I’ve
had visions — dreams —
things I don’t understand. It has something to do with
Dirk Wilkins, but I
don’t know what.” He dragged his hands through his
tangled hair, and then
peered at Magda from between the bars of his fingers.
“I see an animal in you,”
he whispered. “That’s what she told me.”
“An animal, huh,” Magda grunted. “Quentin, what you
been jabbering about? What
have you seen? What thing are you talking about?”
“It’s dead,” Quentin said, “and it wants me to come
back with it, back to the
Land of the Dead. It says I have a price to pay. I owe
a debt.”
“A debt,” Magda said, and in the dimness of the room
Quentin couldn’t quite see
how her face had curled into a smirk.
“It told me that I had to pay tribute.”
That same devious smile played on Magda’s face as she
stepped closer to him.
“Tribute?” she purred. “Sounds good to me.”
“Magda, what have you got behind your back?” he asked.
Fear lanced at him
suddenly, and he found that he was frozen in place.
The atmosphere pressed down
against him oppresively, as if the air were full of
thunder about to break, but
he was cold again, deathly cold.
“La, Quentin,” Magda said, and held out the tiny
earthen jar she carried. It
was old, ancient even, and carved with tiny runic
symbols and figures. The
liquid inside of it was thick and black, and looked
like animal’s blood, or
something worse. “I think I have the answer to your
problem.”
He swallowed. “What is that?”
“This?” She examined it critically. “It is old. Very
old. Held by my people for
generations and generations. But rarely used, and only
for very special
reasons. It’s Egyptian, you know. The Vessel of
Anubis. I stole it years ago,
and have been keeping it for just such an occasion.”
“What occasion? What are you talking about?”
“There’s an animal in you?” Magda whispered into his
ear. “So be it.” She
thrust out the jar, and the thick black contents
splashed out and spattered
across his bare chest. He threw back his head and
screamed. It was hot and cold
at the same time, and foul, incredibly foul, running
down his skin like living
fingers, clutching him and stroking him, and burning
him as well. “Ave adencia
carate,” Magda intoned, and thrust out her spell-casting
hand. “As within, so
without.”
A rush of cold air screamed around him, whipping his
hair and frosting his
skin. The air rippled, and that deathly figure stepped
into reality, still
grinning at him. Blue and white energy swirled between
its bony, purple hands,
and its eyes were black and bottomless, and crackled
with the same blue energy.
“Yaa ru indihabii!” it chanted in a high, warbling
voice. “Yaa Nafs indihabii!
Yaa shaytann, inna nafsak Laa ta’ut bac ba’ad! Yaa
Ruufukayl al-Azim!”
“No!” Quentin screamed, and as he was consumed by the
white-blue fire the
demon-spirit wielded, he could hear Magda’s high, evil
laughter echoing around
him like the screaming of a crow. He sank to his knees
in agony, because he
could stand on his own two feet no longer; and he
stretched out his hands to
support him, and he no longer had hands. His eyes,
through a crimson haze, saw
huge hairy paws descend and spread out before him, and
when he opened his mouth
to speak, only a hoarse, gutteral growling would
emerge.
“I am appeased,” the spirit said. “The price has been
paid.” And it faded back
into the darkness.
“This curse I place on you,” Magda spat at the monster
before it, “and all the
men who follow in your line. 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.” Then she was gone, and
the beast, the wolf,
Quentin Collins, threw back its head and howled its
rage and its loneliness.
7
Edith Collins was pleased. As she closed the door on
her grandaughter, she
smothered a wicked laugh that would’ve been quite
inappropriate emerging from
the throat of the wholesome Mr. Shaw. “Goodnight ...
Tim,” Judith had said, as
breathlessly as a woman rapidly approaching middle-age
could sound, and had
waved a little at him. “You’ve been so kind,” she
continued, “so understanding.
I want you to know my deep appreciation.”
Oh, I’ll know it all right, Edith thought as she
returned to Tim’s room. Her
grip on this body had tightened, and she was loathe to
let it go. Not when she
was preparing such marvelous and devious plans. I
should’ve become a man years
ago, she thought, and allowed herself a wicked witch —
that is, wicked
warlock’s cackle as she entered Tim’s room and closed
the door behind her. Yes,
she thought, rubbing Tim’s palms together, soon Judith
would succumb to Tim’s
advances, completely convinced it was her idea all
along; marriage would
follow; Tim would become a widower soon after that;
dear Edward would find
himself at the bottom of Widow’s Hill, and that
cow-eyed, simpering fiancee
with him; and with Jamison and Nora safely disposed
of, Edith would rule
Collinwood once again. A new dynasty. A new chance.
Oh, the power she would
accrue, the power —
“Counting your chickens before they’re hatcheted,” a
mocking voice said from
the shadows in the corner of the room, “is that it?
You’ll have to forgive me.
I’ve never been good with popular phrases.”
“Who dares —?” Edith snarled, and whirled around.
A green witchlight illuminated the room, and a woman
with blonde curls
bouncing, clad in a dress the color of a serpent’s
hide, emerged, hips swaying
seductively. Edith glared at her, completely
confounded. She’d never seen her
before in her life; perhaps she was one of Tim’s
conquests? “Get out of here,”
she snarled, “whoever you are. You are breaking and
entering.”
“I doubt that very much,” the woman said. “Considering
that I’ll be part of the
family very, very soon.”
“Who are you?”
The woman sighed. “Such a tiresome question,” she
said. “You wouldn’t believe
how many people have asked me that in the last
twenty-four hours.” She smiled
with false congeniality. “You may call me Miranda if
it suits you. Or Master. I
think I prefer the latter. It’s quite amusing.”
Edith snorted laughter. “Now you amuse me,” she said.
“I don’t think you know
who you’re dealing with.”
“I know much more than you think,” the woman said,
still wearing that enigmatic
smile. “You are Edith Collins, otherwise known to your
multitude of rebellious
grandchildren as ‘Grandmama’.” Edith’s mouth dropped
open and her eyes bulged
in shock and horror and utter disbelief. “Oh, but I
love to see that expression
of shock on your face. Except it really isn’t your
face, is it dear? Not
really. I believe it belongs to a Mr. Timothy Shaw.
Don’t you suppose you
should be returning it to him shortly?”
“I don’t know who you are,” Edith said furiously, and
began to wave her hands
in the air, “but you’re going to regret your boldness
in approaching me, I
swear to you.” Red waves of magic hung in the air in
the wake of each pass of
her hand.
Miranda trilled mocking laughter, and held out one
hand, and Edith found that
she couldn’t move. The crimson energy dissipated as
quickly as she had summoned
it. “You are not as powerful as you thought,” Miranda
said, “and a good deal
weaker than you were in life, I’d reckon. I stopped
you with an easy spell; a
novice could’ve done better against me than you.”
“Who are you?” Edith cried out in frustration.
“Your better,” she said, and her smile dropped. “Your
superior, actually. And
your most deadly enemy.”
“Why?” Edith said. “We have never met.”
“Not face to face,” Miranda said, “but I’ve been
keeping my eye on you for a
long, long time, my dear. You were quite lovely in
your day. Your power grew
like a poisonous black pearl, but what did you
accomplish? You became a fat,
bitter old woman, bound to your bed and waited upon by
your selfish
grandchildren, even as they waited for you to die. And
still you couldn’t let
go of your hold on this earth. Well, I cannot fault
you for that.” Her eyes
grew wintery. “But I can fault you this. If Charity
Trask had succeeded in the
task you appointed her, you would be dead this moment,
you and the body you
have stolen.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Edith
growled.
“You needn’t pretend with me,” Miranda said. “When you
tried to have Barnabas
Collins murdered this afternoon, you made a great
mistake, and thus I have
become your most mortal enemy, Edith Collins.”
“Kill me then,” Edith laughed, “and have done with it.
If you can.”
Miranda’s lips twitched in a smile most gruesome. “Oh,
I’m not going to kill
you,” she purred. “No, my dear. The punishment I have
in mind for you is much
more fitting, I promise you.” She stepped back, and
another woman emerged
soundlessly from the shadows. Edith gasped despite
herself. It was Charity
Trask, but how changed. Her face was porcelain white,
and her eyes glared red,
like fiery rubies, from the sunken pits of her eyes.
Her hair hung lank and
blonde in her face, and her lips drew back from her
terrible teeth, and Edith
saw how long and sharp they had become, like the teeth
of King, her loyal
German Shepherd, dead these many years.
“No!” Edith cried as Charity stepped foward, and held
out her white, white
hands imploringly. “What have you done to her?”
“Isn’t it obvious?” Miranda tittered. “She’s my
masterpiece, though I really
should give most of the credit to Barnabas. All I had
to do was open the wounds
on her throat, and she bled to death. Simple, really.”
Her eyes sparkled. “I
hid her body away in a lighthouse on the coast, and
she came to me when she
rose, about a half hour after sunset. She is my
complete and utter slave, Edith
Collins ... just as you will be.” Her voice became
cold again. “I can afford no
interference in my plans, not even yours.”
“No!” Edith cried, but it was Tim Shaw’s voice that
emerged, cracked and
terrified, and Tim Shaw’s hands she held out in a
warding off gesture that did
no good. The hungry, newly-minted vampire prowled
forward, growling a little
like a great cat, and her tongue slipped out of her
mouth and licked her wicked
little teeth. Edith tried to dislodge herself from the
body that now felt
clumsly and helpless, a prison of flesh far more
constricting than any cell,
but found, too late, that her magic had worked only
too well. Miranda laughed
and laughed as Edith screamed “No!” over and over until
at last her voice gave
out, and then there was only a weak gasping ... and
the sucking sounds.
8
Miranda was quite pleased with herself. After the
vampire’s disgusting repast
was at an end (how awful it must be, she thought for a
moment, to be such a
vile creature; I don’t know how on earth Barnabas does
it), she levelled a
finger at the snarling, inhuman thing, and said coldly
and firmly, “Go back to
your coffin, Charity Trask. Back to the lighthouse,
where you will wait for me
until I summon you again.”
Charity had said nothing intelligible until now, and
in a slobbering, wheedling
voice she growled, “More. Want ... more.”
Miranda eyed the unconscious man on the bed with a
critical eye. “You very
nearly drained him tonight,” she said, “and that would
be a mistake. We don’t
want Mr. Shaw dead, my dear. Just under my control.”
She tittered. “Him and the
parasite inside him.”
“More,” Charity panted. “Need more.”
Miranda nodded sagely. “And you will have more, have
no doubt of that. But not
tonight. Go. Return to your coffin, and let no one see
you, or you will face
the daylight when the sun rises.”
The vampire showed her teeth in a cheated hiss, but
her body became misty and
indistinct, and a few seconds later had faded away
entirely. Miranda beamed.
This couldn’t be going more smoothly. The potential
threat of Edith Collins had
been neutralized, Barnabas Collins was helpless before
her, she had a pet
vampire to play with, and Quentin Collins, already
intrigued by her tantalizing
promises of dark power, would soon be completely under
her thrall.
All in all, she decided, a very satisfactory day.
*You will never leave this room.*
Miranda froze. The air around her suddenly shivered
with cold, and her eyes
darted back and forth frantically in her skull. It was
a voice she almost
recognized, but a spirit’s voice was always difficult
to identify completely
until it materialized. Too late she remembered the
ghost of Jeremiah Collins,
and how it had foisted its will upon her, how it had
carried her off on the
night of her wedding to Barnabas and buried her in the
grave that still held
its rotted, fetid corpse. She remembered how she had
stared, panic-stricken as
she was now, into the one visible eyeball in its
rotting skull, glazed and full
of horror, as the ghost above her shoveled handful
after handful of dirt over
her, until the black, rotten mud filled her mouth and
choked off her screams.
That won’t happen now, she vowed. You were young and
stupid back then, and knew
nothing. You are powerful now, much more powerful. No
ghost can threaten me.
“Who are you, alien spirit?” Miranda called, her voice
sharp with challenge.
“Appear to me, in the name of Charon and all the
spirits of hell. Appear to me
... identify yourself, lowly shade!”
Mocking laughter followed this, and her hands clenched
into fists of
frustration.
*Witch. Sorceress. You have the spirit of evil within
you.*
“You don’t know me,” Miranda said. “Appear to me, I
command you, in the name of
Beelzebub —”
*He has now power over me.*
“He will,” she swore, “just as I will.”
*No. You have deprived me of my lawful prey, those who
are rightfully mine to
punish. I shall mete out my own justice to you now.*
She forced herself to laugh. “You dare to threaten me?
Don’t you know what I
can do to you? I can sentence you to walk the earth in
agony for the rest of —”
*I will show you my powers. I will show you our
powers.*
Before Miranda’s horrified eyes a figure began to
materialize. “I know you,”
she whispered. “You’re like him ... but you’re not.”
The ghost with the
spectacles and the gray mutton chops smirked at her,
and the smile coiled on
his face like a serpent. “You’re a Trask!” she cried.
“You must be!”
“I am Gregory Trask,” the ghost boomed, “and you have
taken my murdering,
treacherous daughter from me. Mine was the right to
destroy her. I shall have
satisfaction.”
“As shall I.” Another ghost materialized, and stood
beside the first, and
Miranda moaned in terror. The resemblance between them
was uncanny, but this
man’s face was drawn and pale, and his black hair
peaked in a vicious spike
above his wide, domed forehead. His blazing eyes were
not sane. It had been a
hundred years since she had last seen him when, as a
terrified servant girl,
the Reverend Trask had accused her of witchery, and
Angelique had been forced
to destroy him in a cleansing burst of flame.
“This is not possible,” she said, but gathered her
powers. She felt the energy
begin hum inside her, and trills of power ran up and
down her arms like skeins
of electricity. “But I shall deal with you both as
easily as I could’ve with
one.”
“Not so easy,” the Reverend Trask smirked, and Miranda
screamed as a firebrand
appeared in his hand, crackling gleefully. “I’m going
to destroy you now as I
should have a century ago. You were able to overcome
me then, but I have grown
powerful over the years, and I know now what your
weakness is. The same element
that you used to destroy me will destroy you as well!”
Miranda opened her mouth
to begin an incantation, but Trask thrust out his free
hand, and she clutched
her throat, gasping. “You are mute,” he grinned. “You
cannot speak. Isn’t that
what you said to me, Angelique Bouchard, before you
condemned me to an
agonizing death?” The two spirits had merged now, and
flickered before her, so
that she couldn’t tell which was which, and when they
spoke, they spoke in two
voices.
*My daughter and her lover, the fools —
— the flames of hell will feed off your flesh as —
— thought they rid themselves of me, but I —
— they fed off mine —
— came back, and you robbed me of my prize —
— and you’ll —
— pay, you’ll —
— pay —
— witch —
— witch! —
— WITCH! — *
Miranda threw back her head to scream as the Trask
ghost hurled the torch at
her, and the flames began to lick and paw eagerly at
the crisp fabric of her
dress. Within seconds she was consumed inside a white
wall of righteous fire.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
No comments:
Post a Comment