Chapter 72: Falling down, falling down .. my fair lady...
by Gothick
WARNING: This chapter contains adult content.
Voiceover by Grayson Hall: Collinwood, in the year
1968 ... truly a year of
insanity for the Collins family and their
friends... and in the present day,
the shadows of a force of evil till now unknown will
threaten the lives and
sanity of all who live at the Great House. On this night, horror of a
magnitude beyond even their comprehension has brought
a witch and a woman of
science together in a strange alliance. And, as the powers of darkness wax
towards their fulness, these women will seek help for
the living from an as yet
undiscovered ally ...
one who is beyond the grave ...
1
"A seance?"
"Now, Julia, let's not waste time on any of your
tiresome skepticism,"
Angelique snapped.
"At this point in the proceedings, you of all people can't
afford the luxury of the so-called scientific
method."
An outraged glare was quickly succeeded by a
thoughtful frown. "You think
that, even without your powers, we have a chance of
contacting someone who
could help?
Someone who could ... who could
actually make Barnabas listen?"
"My dear Julia," said her blonde once-rival
softly, "I'm afraid that the only
people Barnabas is really aware of now are the
dead. To him the living are ...
literally ... nothing
more than fodder."
With a shiver, Julia gave her a mute nod. "I still don't see why we have to
have it here," the Doctor commented with a barely
suppressed shudder, as she
studied the dim light of the candles flickering
mournfully over the scarred,
blistered stone walls, the worn stones mutely holding
the secrets of the
desecrations, the madness, the eldritch nightmares
that had been wrought within
their blank sight.
With a bitter smile, Angelique said: "The secret
room at Eagle Hill Cemetery?
I can't think of a better place to summon up the
unquiet dead. And this is one
place that has a link with Barnabas and those among
the Collins family of the
past who may be able to help."
"But will they be willing?"Julia asked,
worriedly. "Angelique, what if
someone
materializes who holds a grudge against you? I hope I'm not being tactless in
reminding you that there are those buried here who
regard you as ... as ..."
"An enemy?" the witch inquired, with a dry
grimace. "Well, we'll just have to
face that challenge when it comes, won't we? Now, there's an old saying about
the four principles of magic: to know, to will, to
dare, to keep silent. We
know our mission now; we have the will to succeed; we
must dare to face the
obstacles; and now, if we are to proceed, we must sit
for a time and listen ...
to the silence."
Her voice ceased, but even immured in the massive
stone walls, both women felt
they could hear the mournful howling of the icy winter
wind, chafing the outer
battlements of the tomb in which they sat, holding
hands at a small table,
surrounded by darkness, only the barest candlelight
holding a margin against
the sundering oblivion of the dead.
2
"My dear boy," Stokes beamed, his monocle
catching the blaze of a passing car's
tail lights with a shocking scarlet flash, like a
splotch of newly spattered
blood.
"Won't you come in?"
"Thanks," Chris said, carefully kicking the
snow off the heels of his boots
before stepping into the cozy little foyer. As he was getting out of his bulky
winter coat and removing his long grey scarf, the
Professor regarded the young
man who had come in answer to his phone call. Julia, exhausted over the latest
events with Barnabas, and worn out with all her other
responsibilities, had
asked Stokes if he would be willing to break the news
to Chris about Joe
Haskell. He'd
always liked Chris; perhaps more than liked, he thought with a
wistful twinge as he caught a glimpse of the strong
young body hugged by the
worn cardigan Chris was wearing. And he found himself hating having to be the
one to tell Chris this latest horror. It felt like a betrayal of the one
decent, good thing Chris had going in his life.
Chris sat by the fire, warming his hands over the
blaze, and turned his liquid,
sombre brown eyes, that held wells of unfathomable
sadness within them, towards
his host.
"Thanks for the invitation, Professor--"
"Eliot, please...
if you don't mind," Stokes rasped, wincing inwardly at the
hoarseness of his own voice--God, the thought
staggered through his brain,
when the Hell did I become so old? But he was
rewarded with a surprisingly
sweet, relieved smile from the lad.
"Thanks, Eliot," Chris amended a bit
awkwardly. "I--I've been having
kind of a
rough time of it lately--I guess Julia might have
filled you in about some of
that--"
"She's been kind enough to consult my opinion
about your treatment," Stokes
said.
"And, I'd say that you're doing very well, and showing tremendous
courage. I
admire you for that, more than I can say.
But come, would you like
some sherry and some English biscuits? And some cheese! I like to have a
little cheese at this time of the evening."
Chris looked at the professor a little sadly for a
moment, then said, "That's
all very nice.
Could I please just have a cup of tea?
It's a chilly night."
"Tea," Eliot murmured absently. "Of course." Raising an eyebrow
inwardly at
this strangely unworldly young man, he busied himself
with the tea things in
the kitchen.
When he returned to the living room, he found Chris with furrowed
brow looking over the Montague Summers book on
Lycanthropy. Setting the tray
down and forcing himself to keep a light tone, he
commented, "I doubt whether
you'll find THAT a terribly relevant tome. It's part of my folklore
collection--nothing of scientific value."
"Folklore," Chris murmured. "Fairy tales. How I wish I could agree with you,
Professor. But
you and I both know that there's a reality behind it all much
more terrifying than the doctored-up versions of the
stories we learned as
kids. When your
Mom read Little Red Riding Hood to you, I'm sure there was no
mention of what it smelled like when the wolf woke up
the next morning with
bits of a little old lady's guts splattered all over
himself."
"Chris--"
"And the werewolves in the folk tales--as people
they were cruel, degenerate,
ruthless; mockeries of the human race. No mention of them getting broken down
by all the killing, the maiming--the bloodshed,
brutality--no mention of how
they dealt with the guilt--the pain--the--the
horror--" Unable to go on, he
broke into a sob, and with one shuddering hand covered
the eyes that welled
with hot tears he longed not to shed. Instinctively, Eliot drew Chris into his
arms and held him as the fit finally broke. His shoulder grew damp as the
young man cried his heart out, but he simply tightened
his hold as they both
rocked with the force of Chris' agony. As soothingly as possible, he stroked
the young man's damp brown hair, marveling at the
beauty of it in the
firelight.
After a while, Chris' sobs quietened, and the two of
them simply sat, in
silence. Eliot
handed Chris a cup of tea, now grown lukewarm, and the young
man sipped it in silence.
Finally, Chris looked up and said, in a soft voice,
"I guess the real reason
for your call is that Julia's realized that... that there's no hope for me.
That I'm doomed to become this... this BEAST for all eternity. That my
choices, at this point, are pretty much narrowed down
to one silver bullet
through the heart."
"No, Chris!" Eliot exclaimed. "No, that's not it at all. It's--it's about Joe
Haskell."
"Joe?" Chris burst of laughter was cracked,
brittle. "You've asked me here to
talk about Joe." Chris shook his head. "Seems to me you and Joe Haskell don't
even belong in the same sentence--much less the same
room. He's a real piece
of work."
"Chris, let me show you something." Eliot
brought over the framed portrait of
Alexis and her fiance.
Chris held it, frowning.
"It's Joe and--it looks just like Cassandra
Collins, only with blonde hair."
"My daughter, Alexis," Stokes told him,
adding, as a correction, "my late
daughter. And
her fiance."
"Joe? And
your daughter?" Chris sighed. "I
always said Joe was the
straightest straight arrow on the planet." He
frowned again. "Wait a
minute—you said your LATE daughter."
"An automobile accident," Stokes said
solemnly. "They were both
killed. It
happened ...
over a year ago."
"Eliot...
what are you trying to tell me?" Chris' eyes were wide, his face
blanched; a shudder rippled through his body.
"Joe Haskell--the thing you know as Joe--is not
what he seems to be." Eliot
paused. "I
don't know how else to put this, my dear boy-—but you've been
sharing your bed with ... one of the living dead."
3
"The dead are all around us." Angelique's
voice broke the pall of silence that
had surrounded them.
Julia tensed, knowing that the séance was now beginning
in earnest.
"Their thoughts, their suffering, their tears
vibrate in the air, without and
within," the witch incanted softly. "We reach out to them now… joining our
thoughts to theirs … our hearts to their hearts.
"Spirits of the Dead! Hear me!" Her voice boomed echoingly in
the massive
stone chamber.
"Heed my call! For there is
one trapped between the worlds,
fixed forever between this world of the living, and
your world of the dead! I
would have one among you who stands in the shadows
come forward, knowing that
you can aid him!
"I seek help for the one known as Barnabas
Collins. I implore you, spirits,
heed my call!
Heed my call!"
Breathlessly, she stopped, and slumped a little in her
chair, her breath
heaving from the effort she had made. Into the resounding silence that
followed came the distorted echo of a blast on a
flute. The two women stared
at one another.
Another discordant note, and another followed. Eventually
Julia realized that it was a familiar tune, but very
badly played, as though by
a small child not quite familiar with the scales of
music.
London bridge is falling down, falling down, falling
down … The words drifted
through Julia’s mind as she listened to the fragment
of melody repeated again
and again.
"Spirit!" Angelique breathed when the music
came to an abrupt halt. "Do you
have help for Barnabas Collins? Can you aid us to aid him? We need your help,
spirit, for he is almost beyond the call of any who
dwell in the mortal realm."
As she fell silent again and fixed an earnest gaze
into the darkness
surrounding them, Julia’s lips twitched as she
struggled to swallow a smile.
"Well, I’ll hand this to the old bag," she
thought to herself. "She’s good at
what she does."
"Mummy says it’s not nice to call people
old."
Julia and Angelique stared at one another in
disbelief. Neither of them had
spoken, and certainly neither had ever heard the other
use anything remotely
resembling the childish, slightly lisping tone of
voice, that sounded just like
a 9 year old girl complaining that she really felt she
deserved another piece
of chocolate cake.
"Spirit!
If you will, tell us your name!" Angelique pleaded.
"You want to know about Barn'bas, don’t you? He’s been very, very bad. Mummy
says he’s going to have to go to bed without his supper
tonight."
Julia rolled her eyes.
It figured that when Angelique tried to conjure up a
spirit, they’d wind up stuck with Little Miss
Manners. Exasperated, she
demanded: "Is there any hope for Barnabas? Can you help us?"
"There is hope … but you have to keep
trying. YOU, Julia Hoffman. You are the
key. You must
work together, though, with HER. You
both have to talk to
Barn’bas. You
have to tell him—-you have to remind him that he has to be a
good boy."
"We have tried," said Angelique miserably. "He’s hardly human anymore!"
"Josette’s music box," the ghost child
babbled. "He always loved it so
much.
No matter how far away he drifted, it always seemed to
bring him back. "
"Josette?" Angelique’s voice rose on a high,
angry, petulant note. "What’s
she got to do with any of this?"
"Angelique!" Julia whispered urgently. "It could be a clue!"
"Josette’s music box?" the one and only Mrs.
Barnabas Collins hissed back,
outraged.
"I don’t think so!
Besides, I always hated that insipid,
lifeless, lackluster, puling excuse for—"
"ANG’LIQUE BOUCHARD!" the childish lisp was
a booming shriek with surprising
depth and volume.
"Heed me now! I give you
warning. Out of the forgotten
past… she is stalking you! She will come for you! Beware!"
"Now what you are nattering about, you silly
child?" Angelique demanded
angrily.
"Who is coming for me?
She’ll be sorry she ever trifled with me …
and I’m starting to think the same about you!"
"Angelique!" Julia urged. "Don’t antagonize her. What she says could be
important."
"I tried to warn you," the ghostly imp
wailed. "Tried to save you! But now it
is too … late …"
The voice faded away, and with it, both women felt a
lifting of pressure, as if
a tightening of the atmosphere had been released. "Well!" Angelique snapped,
as she lifted the candelabrum and moved to open the
secret door, "so much for
that great experiment." There was a grating
noise as the heavy door swung
open and a blast of chilly winter air swept into the
stuffy room. "I’ve not
heard such a load of rubbish in many long years, I
puh-romise you, Julia!" She
lifted her chin high, obviously preparing to exit the
room, the very image of
wounded virtue.
Julia stifled a guffaw and put out a hand. "Angelique… wait," she pleaded, as
the witch turned to give her an irritated look. "I think we should talk about
this. There
might have been something in what the spirit said. We should at
least consider the possibility."
Angelique set the heavy candelabrum down with a resounding
thump. "Listen,
Julia," she said bluntly. "If you want to try following Barnabas
around with
that ... that
tiresome music-box in your hand, listening as it rattles on and
ON in the same tuneless excuse for music ever heard,
on the off chance that
it’ll get through to him, that’s your affair."
She lifted her chin again. "I
prefer to consider … other methods."
"What?" Julia demanded. "What do you have in mind that you
haven’t told me
about already?"
"Wait and see, my dear," said the witch with
relish. "I may no longer have all
my powers, but I’m not entirely without means. The Candles of the Seven
Secrets, for one.
Meet me at the Old House tomorrow morning and I will show
you." She tossed her head. "I should have known better than to turn
to the
dead members of the Collins family for help," she
sniffed. "Even when they
were alive, they were never much use." On that
pronouncement, she swept out of
the room.
With a sigh, Julia walked slowly out of the Secret
Room, then pulled the ring
in the lion’s mouth to close the door. She shivered, and drew her coat more
tightly around her neck with one gloved hand. With an anxious sigh, her other
hand flew to her mouth. If what the spirit had said were true, it was
dangerous for Angelique to be alone at the moment…
very dangerous. What on
Earth would she do with a hostile Barnabas and an
Angelique under attack? With
an irritated shake of her head at the arrogant
presumption of her new ally,
Julia hurried out into the night, hoping she could catch
up with the woman
she’d always thought of as "the Witch
Bitch," but whose help she now
desperately needed.
4
"Chrissy!" Joe’s smile was wide. "Baby, I just knew you’d see the
light."
Chris slammed the door shut with a bang. "Cut the crap," he said roughly,
shoving Joe away and walking irritably in the other
direction as his would-be
boyfriend fell into the sofa with a startled mew. "Listen … whoever you are
…Why don’t we just stop playing games?"
Growing pale, Joe stood up and confronted him. "What do you mean?" he
whispered.
"You heard me!" Chris barked. "I’m onto you, buster. You may look like Joe
Haskell, but I know now that you aren’t. Who sent you here to torment me? Was
it Cassandra Collins?
Or that sleazy brother of hers, Nicholas Blair? Tell
me!"
"Well, well, well," Joe crooned, walking
towards Chris with a lewd leer
plastered across his hips, which swayed with
deliberate provocation as he
approached his glaring antagonist. "Someone’s been telling tales out of
school, haven’t they?
I guess I should’ve known better than to trust a louse
like Nicholas Blair.
I could tell he was no good from the start."
Chris stared at him.
"So, you admit it? You
really aren’t Joe Haskell?
You’ve just been … using me as a pawn in some
diabolical game Nicholas and
Cassandra are playing with Barnabas?"
"We-ell.." Not-Joe teased with that grin
that Chris always found so damned
sexy.
"Yes, and no. Y’see, honey
bun, whatever my name, I’ve got the body you
crave… living…warm… firm to the touch … and ready for
your lovin’." He was
right up against Chris now, who stared, shocked,
appalled, yet fascinated
against his will, at this alluring creature that had
dominated his life in and
out of bed for the past four months.
Moving firmly aside, Chris glared at the shameless
minx and demanded, "Why
don’t you just tell me who you really are?"
"I am who I’ve always claimed to be," said
Not-Joe with sudden seriousness.
"Someone who’s waited his whole life for
you. And who loves you very much."
"Well, in my book the words love and lies don’t
go together, however close they
may be to one another in the dictionary," Chris
said angrily. "You say you
love me. If
that’s the case, tell me one real reason why.
A little honesty
would go a long way."
"Honesty," Not-Joe repeated. "The boy says he wants honesty. Well, baby, just
for you, I’m gonna tell you a story. Let’s go back, way back. 100 years?
No,
further back than that. Let’s remember the Summer of 1795 and a sweet
lad who
looked just like you.
In fact, he WAS you, back then--or maybe I should say,
YOU were HIM.
Ever hear of reincarnation? It’s
quite a trip, baby. Your name
was Todd, but I liked to call you Toddy. And I was Nathan. Yeah, Nathan
Forbes, and I was a Lieutenant in the United States
Navy. You liked the cut of
my jib, Todd baby.
You liked the rigging of my mainsail.
And I really dug
you, even if you were just a landlubber." He
paused, standing with his body so
near to Chris, he could feel Joe’s body heat radiating
that warmth he so
desperately craved.
He found himself unable to resist as Joe (Not) leaned in
and touched his full, ripe lips to those of the
semi-hypnotised Chris, who just
stared at him, mesmerized.
“Nicholas brought me back ... one of his crazy schemes against Barnabas
Collins,” Joe...
not Joe ... NATHAN murmured, his
breath hot against Chris’
ear, one meaty leg pushed panderingly between both of
Chris’ thighs. The heat
made Chris throw his head back in lust and despair,
and Not-Joe/Nathan
wolfishly licked Chris’ exposed neck, sucking briefly
and eagerly on his adam’s
apple, which made Chris moan. “Nicholas pulled me back into this far-out
scene
from the darkness where I’d been sleeping,” Joe
continued relentlessly.
“Y’know, I have to wonder what it is about Barnabas
that gets Nicky-baby’s
goat. Maybe
they oughta try some of THIS action instead of wasting all that
time fussing and fighting.” Not-Joe/Nathan greedily
licked Chris’ ear, and
lapped at the throbbing vein in his neck, leading to
more moans and a betrayal
of more than just a few throbs from Chris’ nether
regions. He groaned,
instinctively, wondering somewhere, in what was left
of his mind, what it was
about Not-Joe/Nathan that he found so impossible to
resist.
"Y’see, baby, we can work it out,"
Not-Joe/Nathan crooned seductively; and,
miserably, Chris felt his erection pressing fiercely
into his treacherous
lover’s own rock-hard crotch. "You don’t really care who I am, or how
this
came to be. All
that matters is Now. All that means
anything is Us." He
paused, and his mouth plundered Chris’, his tongue,
always so aggressive,
always able to push Chris over the edge in a flash,
rolled and twirled and
licked at Chris’ tongue, round and round his teeth,
and then Nathan was biting
his lips hard making the blood come, and, oh God, it
felt SO good, and Nathan
was ripping off his shirt and blazing a stubbled trail
across his upper chest
to bite at his nipples, and Chris threw back his head,
and the room was
spinning, and eager hands were grabbing at his belt,
and peeling off his pants,
and he felt as if he was gonna EXPLODE, and he began
growling fiercely in the
back of his throat as Nathan plunged down to take him,
swallowing him whole in
that greedy mouth he could never get enough of, and
then strangely Joe let out
a strangled scream that held more in it of terror than
passion as the iron
claws that had sprouted over hairy paws where Chris'
hands used to be swiped
and dug a large chunk of hair and flesh out of the
back of Nathan's head, and
Chris heard screams and howls from some far off place
to which he had spun
down, down, inexorably down, before the darkness
overwhelmed him and he was
spared witnessing the horror being enacted in what had
once been his refuge,
the apple of his eye, his love nest...
5
Thoroughly ill-tempered, Angelique stamped briskly
through the clinging mists
of a Maine February.
Branches caught at her cloak, dead leaves rustled eerily
in her train, owls hooted with sinister foreboding,
and a chill breeze clawed
meanly at her cheeks, but she simply scowled at all of
it. Despite the frigid
temperature, her thoughts were boiling, and running
along a track that anyone
who knew her would have found tiresomely
familiar. I'll show her, was the
refrain that ranted through her brain, as she glared
unseeing at the fog
closing in ahead of her. I'll show that high and mighty Mamselle
Josette du
Pres what REAL power is. I'll see her humbled in the dirt for what she
did to
me ... I'll
laugh as she squirms in the mud ... I'll
rip that finery right
off her skinny shoulders ... I'll ...
I'll ... I'll-
She found herself coming to a halt both in mind and
body. She'd managed to
tramp right to the precipice of Widow's Hill; what in
the name of all that was
unholy was she doing here?
Mist swirled ominously around her, and suddenly the
air was filled with
tinkling, derisive laughter, like the sound of
crystalline chimes shattering
into icy shards, like the mockery of the demons who
had laughed at her when she
had been sent back to the fiery Pit for her
disobedience, like the mocking
laughter of her Arch Enemy, Nicholas Blair... only, Nicholas never laughed in
such a venomously feminine manner. The laughter reminded her of something
... of
someone. Someone was playing her own
favorite trick upon her; mocking
her with unseen laughter! This could not be tolerated, and she drew
herself up
to her full height, eyes blazing.
"Who is there?" she demanded, in what she
fondly believed was her most
commanding tone of voice. "I order you to show yourself! And stop laughing at
me!"
"Oh, but there is so much to laugh at ... Miranda," came a coy voice invisibly
beside her ear.
She whirled, glaring, but there was no one... nothing.
"Who dares to address
me by that name?
My name is Angelique!"
"Ah, but old habits die hard," the voice
sighed breathlessly into her ear.
"You of all people should know that, Miranda
.. dearie."
Angelique struggled with her own mounting terror. Don't give way to it, she
begged herself, her thoughts suddenly far more focused
and lucid than they had
been in quite some time. Be who you are. Be mistress of yourself. Again,
that damned cacchinating laughter came at her, like a
cascade of tiny spikes
raking her spine with distaste and disgust.
"Poor Miranda," cooed that revolting
voice. "You never really were more
than
second-rate, were you?
Gave yourself credit for far more skill at handling
sticky situations than you ever really had. Left all sorts of unfinished
business behind you...
never dreaming that some day it might come back and ...
bite you in the ass." A sharp, agonizing nip to
her throat, and she screamed.
She threw her hands up over her neck, and began
laughing, insanely. There's no
one there... no
one there ... her thoughts raced, as her
eyes rolled madly
side to side.
"Oh God," she moaned.
"Oh dear God."
And then Charity Trask materialized, blonde curls
cascading in a shining fall
around her bared ivory shoulders, eyes gleaming an
arctic blue in the wintry
moonlight, gleaming blue with sheer unbridled HATE, a
grinning Tim Shaw by her
side, teeth sharp and gleaming lustfully. "Why, Miranda," Charity cooed,
through a mouth filled with tiny, bristling fangs,
"a religious conversion!
And in our honor!
I really didn't know you cared."
Instinctively, Angelique struggled to throw herself
off the precipice, to seek
any death but the one that stared her now in the face,
with pitiless glee, but
she was caught and held in a grip of steel. "This is what you will become, my
dear," Charity giggled, as Tim sank his fangs
into her neck, and she began to
feel herself ebbing far, far away. "You no longer have any will of your
own,
you see," Charity added, licking her lips. "And from tonight, my dear Miranda
... YOU will be
MY SLAVE!"
Angelique tried and failed to scream as a second pair
of fangs sank into her
throat. A
whirling vortex of pain, humiliation, and sickening horror engulfed
her... and
then, in the only mercy left to her, she knew no more.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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