Chapter 82: Vengeance Like A Machine
By Nicky
Voiceover by Alexandra Moltke: "My name is
Victoria Winters. Except that it
isn't. And
everything about my life has been a lie.
Tonight I will define
myself. Tonight
I will become what I was meant to be.
Tonight I accept my
destiny."
1
There was no black garden. She knew this now, knew that it was a place
of
fantasy.
Something that the Leviathans created inside of her. No, Vicki
thought - the woman who had once been Vicki thought -
nothing that simple. I
created it for myself.
A place where I could go, where I could grow ... where
I could become.
Like she was becoming now.
She had watched her son die in front of her. Her beautiful son, her boy, her
child. They
were going to change the world, the two of them. She had promised
him that. They
were going to make everything better, to save, to change,
because that was what Victoria Winters had always
wanted. To learn, the
discover, to help.
None of that mattered anymore, because Jeb was dead.
Victoria Winters was dead.
"And so will you be," Victoria hissed, and
watched as Barnabas' already pale
face blanched. She had plucked him from the air after he vanished; it was easy, too, too easy. And Dr. Hoffman too. She was responsible, she was part of this, and she should be ...
"Dead," she said, and threw back her head and laughed. "Dead!" and she howled.
She was sobbing, and she didn't realize it. Tears streaked her face.
"Vicki -" Julia began, but Barnabas held her
back. A wise move indeed.
"Did you enjoy yourself, Barnabas?" Vicki
asked, polite in her own ears. "Did
it alleviate that guilt you've been carrying around
all these years? Did it
help?"
Barnabas' face was set and drawn. "It had to be done," he said
carefully.
Each word was particularly chosen and controlled. "Jeb was dangerous. To you.
To us. To the
world."
"He was my son," she snarled.
"He was a monster," Barnabas said. She recoiled as if slapped. He nodded
coldly.
"He wasn't your son. Not
really. He was a Leviathan,
Victoria. The
leader of them all.
He was going to destroy the world.
I couldn't - and I'm
sorry, Victoria, I'm sorry to hurt you - but I
couldn't let that happen."
"Vicki," Julia said again, soft and tender,
just like always, good ol' Julia
Hoffman, always coming through with her kindness and
her sedatives, "Vicki,
Barnabas is right.
Jeb tried to hurt me. He would've
killed me, if Professor
Stokes hadn't called upon Laura Collins."
Vicki stared at her without a word, and Julia backed
off. She shot a look at
Barnabas, heavy with concern and worry, but Barnabas
couldn't take his eyes
from Vicki.
She felt the blackness inside her, swirling around,
alive, waiting ... and
patient.
"I love you, Victoria," Barnabas said. "I have always loved you. You are
powerful, and you are strong, and you don't need me to
protect you. But I
think you need my love. I think you need it very much."
For a moment she didn't say anything. She could feel the panic growing inside
Julia, like a small caged animal clawing at her chest
cavity with tiny claws.
"He changed," Vicki said. "Do you get that? Do you understand? Jeb changed,
Barnabas."
"I don't know what you mean," Barnabas said.
Dull fury pulsed behind her eyes, and she closed
them. I am in control, she
thought, and in a forced, level voice, she said,
"He wanted to become human.
He rejected the Leviathans, and their promises, and
their schemes. He rejected
it all, because he knew what it meant to me, and he
wanted to become human
himself. That
is what I mean by 'change'. And he was
going to."
"He may have told you that he did, that he wanted
-"
Vicki threw back her head and barked harsh
laughter. Thunder rumbled
menacingly in the distance. "Do you think he could lie to me? Do you think
anyone could? I
knew Barnabas. I felt it. I could tell.
And I knew it was
true.
"And you killed him. Before he even had a chance. You ended him."
The box in his hand exploded, and Barnabas gave a convulsive
cry. The Shard of
Medusa had been reduced to a small puff of dust that
was torn away by the wind
that constantly whipped around Widow's Hill.
He was shocked, and she was glad to see it. His mouth had dropped open, and
then closed again with a snap. He hadn't considered that, Vicki thought; he
forgot about the powers inside me, and what I
know. I know everything.
"So you see," she said, "it doesn't
matter in the end how much you love me.
Because I blame you for this. For destroying my son. And I will never forgive
you, Barnabas Collins." Her eyes flicked,
serpent-like, and settled on the
woman who quailed beside him. The fool.
"Or you either, Julia Hoffman.
You
are as responsible for Jeb's death as if you'd struck
the blow yourself."
"Vicki, I beg you -"
"Shut up," Vicki hissed. "I don't want to hear anymore. There is nothing you
can say to me that will make this any better."
"We want to help," Julia said, "Vicki,
that's all we want to do -"
Vicki screamed.
It came from inside her, from the deepest pit of herself, from
that place where the black garden had existed.
All we want to do is help.
No more. Never
again.
She closed her eyes as the scream echoed around them,
growing louder instead of
dissipating, and she was dimly aware that there was a
part of her that wailed
at the loss of her particular identity, everything
that made up the woman who
had become Victoria Winters, even as the darkness
opened inside of her,
spreading like a blot of ink. Every door thrown open wide, every bridge
burned, every defense or guard against the dark she
had ever erected blown away
by the wind inside her, the power that bloomed great
and huge as it infused
her.
She felt the moment when the last spark of Victoria
Winters winked out forever.
When she opened her eyes they were black and
empty. She saw herself as she
must look to Barnabas and Julia; the white dress she
wore was regal, as
befitted a queen; her face was white as salt, as white
as the majestic mane of
hair that streamed out behind her. She could feel everything around her; the
worms turning in the earth, the grass growing stunted
towards its own death,
even the rocks that composed the cliff crumbling
slowly beneath them.
"Oh my god," Barnabas Collins said.
The woman before him smiled, and her teeth were long
and sharp as needles.
"Indeed," she said.
2
"We've got to get up there," Sky said, and
his voice was grim. Angelique,
cursing her humanity for the first time since she had
become Charity Trask's
slave, lagged slightly behind him. She stumbled once over a stone and fell to
her hands and knees, and cried out miserably as the
stones that lined the path
leading to Widow's Hill dug into her sensitive
skin. Sky stopped at once, and
turned to help her.
"Oh my poor darling," he said, and kissed at her cheeks,
smoothing away the tears, and she clung to him
greedily.
"We don't have to do this," she
whispered. "Oh Sky, do we? Can't we just go
away? Can't we
just leave them to fight for themselves?"
He looked at her calmly, his eyes wide and kind and
without judgement or
reproof, until she looked away.
"No," she said bitterly, "I suppose
not."
"We could do that," he said, and she looked
up at him, unable to tell herself
that the spark of hope kindled momentarily within her
breast was selfish, a
reminder of the days when she had been the most
powerful witch in this
hemisphere.
"We could leave Barnabas and Julia to fight this battle alone. We
could go back to Little Windward and pack up our bags
and leave forever,
because you know that even Little Windward is too
close. We could leave all
this behind.
Forever. All you have to do is
say the word."
"I know," she said, and more tears balanced
on her eyelids, but she wouldn't
let them fall.
She wouldn't cry anymore. What good
did it do?
"Is that really what you want?"
"Yes," she hissed. He smiled, and she seized his hand. "Of course that's what
I want. I've
been alive for so long that I can't even conceive of death, real
death, now. And
that's what will happen to us if we stay here.
We'll die.
The Leviathans are too strong. Barnabas and Julia don't have a chance."
"No," Sky said. "They don't."
"But the world doesn't either," she
whispered. "If Barnabas falls, then
so
does the world.
And we're in this stupid world, like it or not. And even with
all your powers, you can't stand alone against
them."
He squeezed her hand briefly. "I'm not alone," he said, and
smiled his
beautiful smile.
Angelique sighed gustily, slapped her bruised and
scraped knees, then rose
gracefully to her feet. "So I guess we'll stay. We'll stay here and we'll
fight until the end.
Whatever it turns out to be." She laughed. "I can't
believe I'm saying this. Barnabas told me once that I am incapable of
change,
as incapable of that as I am of human feeling. How very wrong he turned out to
be."
"I love you, Angelique," Sky said, and
cupped her chin in his hand. "All
my
life, I have never felt this way about another human
being."
"Some human being."
"My human being." He kissed her. She was crying again, couldn't stop the
tears, couldn't stop the fear that roared and
whimpered alternately inside her.
Couldn't stop her love for this man and her love -
god, so hard to admit that,
even now - for Barnabas and Julia (her friend, her
first real friend), and for
the entire Collins family.
She wiped the tears away with a brusque and shaking
hand. They were foolish.
"All right," she said, all brisk manner and
trembling resolution. "Let's
go."
3
"Where is she?" David wailed. He paced up and down the drawing room,
raging;
he wept and railed; he ran his hand along the mantle
and lay waste to the
knick-knacks that Mrs.
Johnson had dusted only that morning.
They struck the
floor and shattered, and their pieces lay mutely there
after.
Carolyn watched him helplessly. Julia administered her a shot every morning
after sunrise (but why? was a question she was hard-pressed to ask;
whenever
she opened her mouth, she was assaulted by images,
terrible, disturbing images,
where Tony Trask lay before her with his throat gaping
red and black and white
like a grinning mouth, or her own father gurgled on
the floor while his
lifeblood pumped and gouted all over the drawing room
floor; and her mouth
would close and a dim fog would descend over her), and
they left her feeling
groggy and vaguely helpless. "I'm not sure, David," she said
now, uncertain of
what else there was to say, what was safe.
"She was here, she was here," David
screamed, and a vase that Ivy Collins had
brought to Collinwood in 1865 joined its shattered
cousins on the floor. "I
felt her, and she was here, and now she's gone away
again."
"David, that isn't possible," Carolyn
said. She forced her voice not to
tremble, but her hands wrestled and warred in her
lap. Tony, she thought
obscurely, and sorrow gored her, oh Tony, I'm so, so -
"It is, it is, you shouldn't say that, you
shouldn't!" More glass shattered.
Carolyn wanted to cover her ears, wouldn't allow it.
"Your mother is gone. She isn't coming back." Carolyn had
wondered since
Laura's disappearance about a year ago, after a
mysterious - and thankfully
brief - return to claim ... what?
David? No one was really certain,
but it
was around the time that Roger had married that hellcat
Cassandra, also
regrettably absent.
Laura had been an alcoholic and a gold-digger, but she had
never been a good mother. So if she really had re-appeared ... for what
reason?
"I felt her, Carolyn." David stopped,
panting, and dropped his head for a
moment. Minute
drops of sweat fell from his forehead and pattered soundlessly
to the carpet.
"You don't understand. I
know my mother, and I know when she's
here. She's
back. She's back, and she's come for
me."
Carolyn couldn't think of another thing to say. David was not stable, that was
certain, and she wasn't exactly certain where to place
the blame. Vicki had
certainly been shirking her duties as governess, but
she was going through
something, as Carolyn herself was, as nearly everyone
on the damned estate was,
and who was she to place blame? Not everyone can be a murderess, she thought,
and placed a hand to her forehead as a shivering blade
of pain slid neatly
across her brain.
"David please," she said to quiet her own thoughts. "We
haven't heard from your mother since she -"
"SHE'S HERE!" David roared, and lifted a
heavy vase to heft at her. Carolyn
felt only numbness settle over her like a heavy
mantle, and closed her eyes.
Let him do it, she thought, and felt distant relief;
let him end it.
"David!" The voice of Elizabeth Collins
Stoddard cracked across the room like a
rifle shot, and David froze where he stood. "Put that vase down this instant,"
the matriarch of Collinwood commanded, and strode
across the room, her heels
clicking sensibly against the tiles laid across the
floor. "It's priceless,
and I think you've done just about enough damage this
evening."
"Aunt Elizabeth," David said, and suddenly
he sounded like exactly what he was:
a scared twelve year-old boy.
"Hand it to me," Elizabeth said, and held
out her hand. "Now." Numbly,
with
slow, dream-like movements, he gave her the vase. Satisfied, Elizabeth
returned it to the mantle, then turned to face her
nephew and daughter, both
who watched her with drugged expressions. "Someone tell me what is going on
here."
"My mother has come back," David said, but
now his voice trembled with
uncertainty. He
glanced to Carolyn to confirm this, but she could only shrug.
"Have you seen her?"
David thought for a moment, bit his lip, and then
shook his head.
"Has she called you? Written you?"
Another shake of the head.
"But you know," Elizabeth said. "You ...
sense her."
"Yes," David said. He sounded more certain.
Elizabeth glanced at Carolyn. "Laura was always a woman more in tune
with a
power the rest of us couldn't comprehend," she
said. "Perhaps she's found
another way to communicate with David." She
frowned, and in a low voice added,
"That thought terrifies me."
"She's coming for me," David said from
behind them.
"Where is Victoria?" Elizabeth asked
him. He shrugged, and she turned to
Carolyn.
"I haven't seen her since yesterday," she
said. "She hasn't been ... very
available recently."
"I'm worried about her," Elizabeth said.
"Isn't that touching." The voice was loud,
dry and sarcastic and full of rage,
but mostly it was terrifying, inhumanely loud, and
echoed throughout the room;
behind them, the windows of the drawing room
shattered. "But I'm afraid,"
the
woman that had been Victoria Winters told them,
grinning where she stood in the
doorway, "that it's really too little, too
late."
4
"Get out of here, Julia," Barnabas
commanded, and held one arm up before her
protectively.
The woman that stood before them both was a stranger, someone
Barnabas hadn't ever seen before.
Oh yes you have, he whispered to himself. In 1897, the night that Vicki used
her powers to undo the mind-switch that Petofi
performed on Quentin. It was
only a glimpse - those empty black eyes, those
needle-teeth - but this was her.
This was what she was afraid of rousing all the times
she used her powers,
even when she was helping. This ...
this monster. It had consumed her
now.
Victoria Winters was gone.
But maybe reachable.
Maybe it wasn't too late, even now.
Julia's chin jutted out, and her eyebrows drew
together. "I won't leave you,
Barnabas," she said firmly.
"Dear Julia," the woman said. Her skin and hair were white together, and
seamless somehow; only her eyes, like black pools of
oil, marred that blank
wasteland.
"Dear, sweet, loyal Julia.
Right to the very end." She laughed,
and those awful piranha teeth flashed in the light of
the moon, now waning.
"Always standing by him, right by his side. Never leaving." The humor, never
real to begin with, faded away, and she stared at them
without emotion. "Do
you really think that he'll ever love you? With your medicines and your
potions and your undying devotion? You fool."
"Shut up," Julia hissed; Barnabas took her
hand and squeezed it, and she
squeezed it back gratefully.
"Incompetent fool," Vicki said, and laughed
her empty laugh. "Incompetent
bungler. Chris
Jennings has gone off to lick his wounds because you made him
more of a monster than he ever was before. You couldn't cure Barnabas and you
couldn't make him love you. You're a failure. As a doctor.
As a woman.
Killing you now will be doing you a favor."
Julia's eyes narrowed; her mouth opened, then closed
again.
"Julia, run," Barnabas whispered. His eyes seared hers, she searched his, then
swallowed once.
She bit her lip; her eyes filled with tears, and she nodded.
Her chest hitched.
He squeezed her hand again, then released it. She turned
and bolted away from the cliff.
"Don't go far," Vicki called sweetly. "I'm not finished with you yet."
She
turned back to Barnabas, and cocked her head. It was oddly animalistic. She
was beautiful, but she was a monster as well. Barnabas felt something inside
him begin to break.
He had loved her for so long, and still he was unable to
protect her.
From Petofi. From the
Leviathans. From herself. "Alone at
last," she purred. Her body undulated beneath the white dress
she wore that
hugged her figure so lovingly. Every trace of her pregnancy had vanished.
"Victoria," Barnabas said despairingly,
"Victoria, what's happened to you?"
"I would think that's pretty obvious. I am what you made me. You, Barnabas.
You and your plots.
Was it Professor Stokes?" She grinned. "It was, wasn't
it. A scroll of
some sort, I have no doubt. Or was it a
book? Something he
had conveniently stored away in his library? Something for a rainy day?" The
smile vanished.
"I'll settle him when I'm done with the both of you."
"You have a choice," Barnabas said. His voice was beginning to tremble with
desperation.
"You always have a choice.
You don't have to do this."
"Oh," she said, "I think I really,
really do."
"You don't.
If there's any part of Victoria Winters left inside -"
"There isn't."
"- then you'll listen to me. You have to understand. We were trying to save
the world -"
"You'll forgive me if I can't quite bring myself
to care." She drew herself up.
"Jeb was
my son. My son, Barnabas. All these years I've searched for some
link to my past, and when I finally found something
that was truly mine, that
loved me, that came from me, that would accept me and
grow and learn, you came
and took it away.
You took it away from me, Barnabas.
That is why I can't
forgive you.
Not this time. Not ever
again. This is the end. The end of
everything."
"What have you become? The Leviathans -"
She barked that harsh laughter. "The Leviathans are over. I never cared for
them, or whatever pathetic scheme they wanted to use
me for. They were nothing
compared to me in the end. And now they're gone. There is only me. And
that's enough."
"Victoria, we just want to help -"
"Oh," she said, and her eyes darkened,
"that. Is. It." Vicki threw her hands
in the air, and the sky split open at her silent
command. Lightning shredded
air, rending it open like a bloodless wound, leaving
the electric stench of
ozone in its wake.
When she dropped her arms and faced him, the blackness
inside her crackled in her eyes and in her hair;
Barnabas, sick with horror,
saw the power in the veins on her face and her neck
and her arms. They
throbbed and twitched like dark living things. "Now -" she began, and her
voice rumbled and echoed around the cliffs.
"Victoria ..." Barnabas moaned.
Then her black eyes widened, and she held up her hands
in a warding off
gesture.
"No!" she whimpered.
"Not now ... not here!"
Barnabas blinked; the air before him wavered as tiny
particles drew together,
coalescing into a human form. After a few seconds it became a young woman
with
dark bobbed hair.
Vicki fell backwards and scrabbled backwards like a crab.
The young woman, quivering with intensity, sending out
wave after wave of
nauseating cold, advanced toward her.
"You can't be here," Vicki said. She stumbled to her feet, weaving drunkenly,
and held out one hand.
Black energy crackled between her fingers. "Not now.
You can't do this to me -"
The ghost didn't stop moving, said nothing. It held its hands out imploringly.
"I can make you stop," Vicki moaned,
quivering. "I can make you go away. I
can -"
"Vicki," Barnabas cried, "Vicki, don't
-"
Vicki seemed not to hear him, but the ghost glanced
over her shoulder, and
Barnabas saw at once the resemblance to the former
governess, just as he had
the first time she had appeared to them, on this same
cliff, a year before.
Louise Collins, Vicki's mother, glowered at him, her
face contracting with
anger, then she turned back to her daughter.
"No," Vicki said, sobbing in terror, but
there were no tears. Barnabas
wondered if she would ever cry again. "You don't know, you don't understand,
you don't understand anything. YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO ME!"
But the ghost was implacable.
"You were never there," Vicki said, on her
feet now. She trembled like a tree
in a high wind, but her eyes still glittered like the
eyes of a snake. "You
were never there for me, so how can you know? How can you know me? You have
no idea what I'm going through.
"Don't you get it? Don't you see?
"YOU WERE NEVER THERE FOR ME."
The ghost reached out, and Vicki recoiled. Its fingers, less substantial than
smoke, passed through her daughter's skin. Vicki screamed and thrashed
backwards, her arms twitching and pinwheeling.
"Victoria!" Barnabas cried out; his love for
her crashed against him like an
icy wave of the water below them, searing him,
blinding him, that need to
protect and defend her, and he rushed forward.
"NO!" Vicki roared, and thrust out her
hand. The black energy crackling
between her fingers tore through the spirit, shredding
it, evaporating it;
before it vanished completely, Barnabas saw that
Louise threw her head
backwards and screamed silently.
Then the energy struck him and lifted him high. He saw Vicki's furious face
beneath him, her fanged teeth gnashing, her eyes
blaring darkness at him. He
saw the ocean, gray and hungry, miles away, and the
rocks like jagged teeth
jutting up to him.
"None of you matter," Vicki raged beneath
him. "Not even her. Not even her.
And not you, Barnabas.
The time has come, the time has come, the time has -"
Then she was knocked aside by a bolt of energy, and
Barnabas fell to the
ground. He
groaned, writhing, and curled into a fetal position. The black
fire crackling around him dissipated, leaving him weak,
his muscles throbbing
and screaming. He
lifted his head and blinked blearily, trying to clear his
vision.
Sky Rumson stood over him, but his eyes were locked on
Victoria's - and they
were as black as hers, as black as the sky above them,
as black as the waves
that roared endlessly against the cliffs.
5
Angelique and Sky had nearly reached the crest of the
hill when they found
Julia Hoffman darting down the path towards them. "Barnabas," she gasped.
"Barnabas ..." She was trembling, and her
eyes were too wide in the pallid
moonscape of her face.
Sky placed an arm over her shoulder. "Tell us what happened," he said.
Julia was trembling beneath Sky's arm, and Angelique
struggled valiantly to
quash the jealousy rising inside her. Breathe, she told herself, breathe; end
of the world, end of the world, no time to be jealous,
end of the world.
"Vicki," Julia said. "She's changed. Barnabas destroyed Jeb, knocked him over
Widow's Hill ...
we didn't know." Her eyes filled with tears, and she began to
tremble again.
"Vicki knew. He was going to
change. Going to give up the
Leviathans.
Going to b-become human." She shook her head, unable to continue.
Angelique felt a sinking in her breast. Vicki had access to some very
unpleasant powers, she realized, and if she felt
threatened ... if she thought
that someone was going to harm the people she loved -
Sky's face was grim.
"She's gone, isn't she.
She's embraced the darkness
inside her."
"It's even worse than that," Julia
whispered. "She isn't the Vicki we
knew.
She's different.
Inhuman. It's like there's
nothing there. Nothing we knew.
Vicki's gone.
She's just ... gone."
"If Jeb is dead, then there's nothing to keep her
from the darkness," Sky said.
"Nothing to keep her from plunging over that
edge. Forever."
"Is there anything we can do to bring her
back?" Angelique asked. Doom
pressed
down on her, heavy and oppressive, making it difficult
to breathe; her heart
thundered painfully in her chest. Black spots threatened to swarm before her
eyes, and a voice inside her mind, the voice of the
child she was two hundred
years ago, chanted, Run away, run away, run away, run
away -
"It isn't too late," Sky said. "Someone has to reach her. It won't be easy.
Someone has to go inside to bring her out. Find the real Vicki inside the
darkness. She's
there, I'm sure."
Understanding filled Angelique like icy water. "Sky, no," she cried, and
clutched at him.
She could hear the whining in her voice, and despised it, as
she had always despised those insufferable whining
humans all these years.
"It's too dangerous. There has to be another way. A spell ..
something else
-"
"Perhaps Eliot could find something," Julia
said. "A talisman, or an amulet of
some sort." Her eyes widened. "Sky!
The Mask of Ba'al! If we could
-"
But Sky was already shaking his head. "No," he said. "It's too dangerous,
Julia. Bad news
all around. There's no controlling
it."
"Sky is right, Julia," Angelique said, but
she heard the lack of conviction in
her own voice, and wondered at it. Was it because the idea of reclaiming that
power, now lost for good, was such a tantalizing
one? No limits, she thought,
no being bound to Nicholas or the Dark Spirit .. tempting ...
very tempting
...
"The Mask of Ba'al grants its wearer more power
than anything else in this
universe," Sky said. "But, as far as I know, no one has ever
been strong
enough to wear it and survive. Nicholas Blair was a fool to think he could
control it.
Even with a purpose specific enough - and I doubt that world
domination counts - there's no telling what the mask
might do. But we know for
sure that the power corrupts the wearer. Perhaps irrevocably."
"I just think we should keep our options
open," Julia said. The lines
beneath
her eyes were more pronounced that normal. Angelique wondered, with a pang of
sympathy, when the good doctor last had slept.
"Go to Stokes," Sky told her. "Hit him up for everything he's
got. I'll keep
her busy. Try
to stop her from doing anything to hurt anyone.
Or herself."
"Please, Sky," Angelique whispered. She wanted to cry, to find a release for
the terror roaring inside her, but she felt
frozen. Numb. Helpless, human at
last, she could only clutch onto him. "Come with us. We can find something
together.
Please. Sky. Please."
He only looked at her.
He didn't say nothing. He didn't
touch her.
"Dammit," she hissed, and dropped her
head. "Fine. We'll go." She grabbed the
doctor's arm.
"Come on, Julia." And began to drag her down the path back
towards Collinwood.
"Angelique!" Sky called. She turned to look at him over her
shoulder. He was
smiling. He
lifted his hand and waved. She
smiled. Waved back.
The tears wanted to fall. She bit them back. And bit them back. And bit them
back.
She looked over her shoulder again. Sky was gone.
Julia touched her hand, cautiously, kindly. "Angelique," she said softly.
"We'd better go."
That old familiar steel - cold, like ice - rose up
inside her again. Her eyes
narrowed, and her nostrils flared. "You go on, Julia," she said. "Go to
Stokes. I'll be
all right."
Julia opened her mouth to protest, thought better, and
closed it. She nodded
instead, squeezed Angelique's hand, and took off.
Angelique didn't watch her go. She began to walk back up the hill instead.
6
Roger downed another snifter of whiskey without pause
after his - fourth?
Fifth? Quentin
had lost track. Roger sat calmly on
Quentin's bed while
Quentin himself paced back and forth before the door.
"They're gone," Quentin said. "I mean, you don't feel them anymore, do
you?
Those voices?
Like snakes in your mind?"
Roger considered this, then glanced at his empty
snifter thoughtfully. After a
moment he refilled it.
"No," he said at last, "I do believe they're gone."
He
smiled wearily.
"Silence. At last. At long, long last. Did you know I've
been hearing those damned voices since October? That's a long time, Quentin.
A long, bloody time." He downed the snifter and
poured himself another glass.
"But they're gone now," Quentin said. "I don't hear them either. And that
necklace ... it
just disintegrated. Fell apart into
nothing."
"Yes," Roger said politely. "I imagine it did."
"Where is Vicki?
Something must have happened to Jeb.
The voices stopped
because he's been ...
dealt with. Which means the
Leviathans are gone too.
But if something happened to Jeb - where is
Victoria?"
Roger shrugged.
"Who can say? She's not the
woman we thought she was,
evidently."
"What does that mean?" Quentin snarled.
"That power inside her. Has it consumed her yet,
do you suppose? Because it's
been gnawing at her steadily for months. Who knows for
how long? Since she
saved Dr. Hoffman and me from my dear, departed
ex-wife, at least. Since then
I've been able to feel her. Or the darkness growing
inside her. Whatever it is,
it goes beyond the Leviathans. Beyond her father. Even
beyond Victoria herself,
I'd wager."
Quentin's eyes were wide blue skies. "And you can
feel this?"
"Not anymore," Roger said. "Not anymore than anybody else, that
is. I think
everyone can feel it now, whether they're a regular
person or not. Don't you
think?" Roger chuckled dryly. "Shall we drop the pretense? You're not exactly
a normal man, are you, Quentin."
Quentin opened his mouth to deny his cousin's - his
grand-nephew's -
accusation, but no words would come. He dropped his shaggy head, then shook
it.
"I thought not," Roger said. "Well, it doesn't matter in the
end. We
Collinses have always been a long way from ordinary. So I suppose it doesn't
really matter what you are. You can feel her. It's a tugging, I think, here
-" And he tapped his heart and his forehead. "- and here. A little pull.
It's almost like she needs us now. Like maybe she's draining a little of us to
maintain her powers." His hand trembled minutely
as he filled his glass again.
"And whatever she needs those powers for ... well, I shudder to think."
"I have to find her," Quentin said. "She needs me. I have to be with her, to
fight or to stand, or just to grieve ... god, I don't know, but I have to find
her. I have to
-"
The floorboards beneath them squealed, as if in pain,
and a tremor knocked them
both to the ground.
Below them, glass shattered in what sounded like every
room of the house.
"I think," Roger said, and looked with one
raised eyebrow at the shattered
snifter and the whiskey soaking into the carpet before
him, "you won't have to
look very far after all."
7
"I think you need to back down," Sky said as
Victoria bared her fangs and
hissed at him like a scalded cat, "just back down
for a second and think."
"About what?" Vicki laughed. "About how good it's going to feel to
finally do
the world a favor and destroy Barnabas Collins? He's a vampire, Sky. He's
evil. Not as
evil as me, granted, and maybe someone's going to try to take me
down, and it'll be funny when they do, but for now -
it's just me and Barnabas.
We have a score to settle. Which means you -" and her black eyes
glowed again
as she thrust out her hands - "need to butt
out."
The energy that flew from her hands was black, but Sky
raised a hand and calmly
said, "Solutum." The energy dissipated, fell
apart, disintegrated.
Vicki stared at him, open-mouthed for a moment, but
only a moment. Then she
began to smile.
The effect, with her black lips and the jagged teeth that lay
smoothly over them, was horrific. "I see you've embraced the dark arts
once
again," she said.
"That can't be good for your poor tortured soul, Sky."
"Maybe," Sky said. His eyes had returned to their ordinary
blue. "Vicki, I
want to help you."
"Thanks," Vicki said, "but I think I
can destroy the Collins family and one
reluctant vampire all by myself."
"Maybe," Sky said again, "but Vicki
... is this really what you want?"
She blinked, placed one black-tipped finger to her
mouth, then smiled and
nodded brightly.
"Oh yes," she said, "I really, really think it is."
"They've hurt you, I know. I can feel your pain. Your rage.
It isn't fair,
and you're right.
But this isn't the way."
"Then what is?
Sitting back? Taking it? I've tried that, Mr.
High-and-Mighty Magnate Guy. Didn't work so well. The sad fact about being a
doormat is that, pretty soon, you get tired of people
walking all over you.
Someone said that the meek shall inherit the
earth. I'm about to prove them
wrong."
"These powers will destroy you," Sky
said. "Believe me, I know."
For a moment Vicki hesitated, and it was that moment
that Angelique came over
the hill. Her
heart stopped for a moment in her chest when she laid eyes on
the transformed thing that had once upon a time been
the milquetoast governess
for bratty David Collins. Angelique could remember the night about a
year ago
when, still in incorporeal spirit form, she had lured
David to the graveyard to
complete the witch's circle and the ceremony that
would raise her from the dead
and give her new life as Cassandra Collins. That had been her first real
glimpse of Victoria Winters. How different she had been back then. Pretty,
not beautiful by any stretch of the imagination, but
the same dark eyes, the
same dark hair and fair skin as that ninny cow,
Ma'amoiselle Josette.
Angelique had hated her on sight. And now she feared her as well. The very
air around her writhed and crackled with black veins
of electricity.
"Nothing can hurt me now," Vicki said,
composure regained. Behind her,
Barnabas groaned and sat up, blinking and rubbing his
head. "You just don't
get it, do you.
Not even the Leviathans could stop me, and they were the ones
that gave me this power to begin with!" She shook
her fall of gorgeous white
hair. "No,
that isn't entirely correct. These
powers come from me."
"Or do they come from Petofi?"
Her face darkened.
"Petofi was a fool. A weak,
simpering fool with designs
grander than his capabilities would allow him to
achieve. All that power in
one hand.
Easily severed." Her grin widened, impossibly. "I am the power."
"You're strong," Sky said, "no one
denies that. But are you strong enough
to
stop? To use
your powers for the right purpose?"
She laughed at him scornfully. "And what purpose is that? To save the
Collinses ...
again? Now why on this earth
would I want to do that?"
"Because you're a good person," he said
quietly. "Or at least, Victoria
Winters is a good person."
"Victoria has left the building," she
said. "And you're beginning to bore
me.
Blah blah, you're a good person, blah blah. Like a broken record. All of
you."
Angelique felt terror stab her heart. She wanted to cry out a warning, but
there were no words.
They stuck in her throat like trapped black birds. She
was frozen in place, utterly unable to move.
"Vicki -" Sky began, and he sounded just the
least bit alarmed.
Vicki's black lips twitched. She took a step closer to him.
"All that power," she said,
and shook her head, "all the potential, and
you're not maximizing it, Sky.
It's sad really." She looked into his eyes with
her empty black orbs, and
reached out her hand.
"Here," she said, and pressed it against his chest,
"lemme help with that."
Sky Rumson began to scream. Streams of red and green and gold magic
crackled
around him; in his eyes, in his hair, in his hands,
even in his ears; it pulsed
and throbbed and began to stream out of him as Vicki
threw back her head and
screamed in ecstasy.
The energy began to turn black as she absorbed it into
her body.
Angelique could only watch - helpless, silent, and
damningly, frustratingly
mortal - as Victoria Winters killed the man she
loved. She watched as his hair
turned white, thinned, and fell from his scalp in
drifts; as his eyes rolled
back in his head and then fell into sockets which
began to grow and expand; as
the skin withered and wrinkled and then turned completely
to dust; as his
clothes shuddered, unraveled, fell into nothing; and
then only his skeleton
danced before the monster draining him, and the bones
twisted and writhed and
turned like soft plastic until there was nothing left,
and Vicki fell
backwards, still alive with the black magic sparking
and crackling around her,
and she opened her mouth and screamed her diseased
laughter. And all Angelique
could do was watch.
She couldn't move.
Couldn't cry. There was fire
inside her - it flared up
brightly for a moment - but then the ice came, and it
was so familiar, a
blessed relief, and it quenched the fire, dowsing it
to ashes, and then she was
all over cold and numb. She felt nothing. It was better that way.
Vicki hadn't seen her yet. And that was good. Better.
Easier.
Angelique turned, slowly, with great precision, and
began to walk, very
carefully and with deliberate, calm strides, back down
the hill.
8
"Oh.
My. God," Vicki exhaled,
turning to Barnabas, who had risen to his feet,
and held his cane out before him as if it could save
him. "Oh Barnabas, what a
feeling. What a
feeling. A total rush. You have no idea. I'd recommend a
trip like this to Carolyn if I wasn't about to kill
the bitch."
Vicki's face was gaunter now, the cheekbones hollow,
those black eyes glaring
madly from darkened sockets. Her hair, it seemed, thrived on the dark
power
inside her; it had become a full and lustrous white
mane, and it blew all
around her skeletal face. Her hands had become long, twisted claws, and
electricity crackled continuously around her
fingertips.
"You can't understand this feeling,
Barnabas," Vicki told him.
"It's really
quite.
Mmm. Spectacular. Wow.
If I'd known Sky Rumson tasted so yummy, I
would've sucked him dry weeks ago."
Barnabas could say nothing. He was numb with horror and rage and
loss. He
hadn't known Sky Rumson particularly well, but he knew
that Angelique had loved
him. This would
destroy her. But Sky had overcome the
darkness inside him,
had risen above it, and had proved to them all that he
was a good man. And he
had just paid the price.
"Don't mourn him too much," Vicki said, her
cracked lips puckering in a moue of
distaste.
"For all his goody-goody intentions now, Sky really had a long list
of sins to account for. Just think of me as the auditor. Or the collection
service come knocking."
Barnabas couldn't speak. He willed his mind to be blank, and began to
concentrate.
This situation had spun dangerously out of control; Vicki was
probably lost forever, and he was worried about Julia.
Vicki cocked her head like a curious mongrel. "What's the matter?" she purred.
"Cat got your tongue?"
One, Barnabas thought, two ... three ...
And then he disappeared.
Vicki's eyes widened, and her face twisted into a black
grimace of hate. "No!"
she shrieked.
"Not fair! Not fair, not
fair, not fair, not fair! Come back,
come back!" But he had gone. Vicki threw back her head and roared, and a
part
of the cliff began to crumble away. After a moment she stopped. It didn't
matter. He
couldn't hide from her forever, she supposed.
If she really wanted
to, she could find him right now, and slap him out of
the air like a bug.
Squish him like one too.
But she had other fish to fry. Or flay.
Or gut. Or dismember.
"So many Collinses," she purred, "so
little time."
With a satisfied grin leering on her face, Vicki began
to make her way down the
hill and back towards Collinwood.
9
Stokes held up the Mask of Ba'al; it glinted gold in
the light of the fire in
the grate, and Julia reached out to touch it, but the
Professor pulled it back.
"Be careful, Julia," he said, and she saw
for the first time that he wore
gloves. He set
the mask delicately back in the lead box where he'd taken it
from a few moments ago, then closed the lid. "It isn't safe to touch it for
long, even wearing these."
Julia itched for a cigarette, but remembered what Dave
had told her the last
time she'd seen him, and settled for gnawing on her
thumbnail instead. "Can't
you think of anything, Eliot? Besides that Mask of Ba'al, I mean. Anything at
all?"
Stokes shook his head.
"We learned how to stop the Leviathans from the scroll
I found, but we're not dealing with the Leviathans
anymore, Julia. What we're
facing now is someone - something - far more
potent." He stroked his chin
thoughtfully.
"Perhaps the Mask is our only option after all."
"I don't understand," Julia said wearily,
and laughed. "That's what Vicki
used
to say. That
she didn't understand."
"That was a long time ago," Stokes said
reproachfully, and Julia sank into his
easy chair and drummed her fingernails impatiently
along its arm. "Miss
Winters has grown a lot since her arrival here last
summer. Perhaps," he said
sadly, "too much.
She is nowhere near the idiotic ingenue people once believed
her to be."
"I'd trade her in a heartbeat," Julia
said. "You've only caught a glimpse
of
her before, Eliot, but this ... this is worse than any nightmare. She's ...
she's feral now.
Out of control. And she means to
destroy the Collins
family."
"Others have tried and failed."
"No one had this much power before. Not even Petofi."
"Do you think she may still be reachable?"
Julia hesitated.
"I don't know," she admitted.
"I'd like to think so. She
hasn't done anything irrevocable yet ... nothing that we know about."
"Do you still feel ... it?" Stokes asked, and tapped his
forehead. Julia
nodded.
"So do I. Which means that
Rumson is still facing her. She remains
undefeated."
"I hope that's all it means," Julia said
bleakly. "Otherwise -"
But the words died in her throat as Barnabas
materialized before them. His
face was even paler and more drawn than she'd ever
seen it before, and his eyes
were haunted.
"She's gone to Collinwood," Barnabas said, and the words
emerged
thinly, almost a keening, like the wind through
denuded trees. "She's killed
Sky Rumson.
Took his power. Now she's going
to Collinwood."
"Oh my god," Julia said through numb
lips. "We have to go there now,
Eliot.
They're dead if we don't."
"There's no time," Stokes said. "She's probably there by now. Don't you see?
There is simply no time."
Julia leaped to her feet, outrage in every angle and
plane of her face and in
the snapping of her eyes. "We can't just sit around while -"
"A binding spell," Stokes said. "It may be our one chance left. If I contain
Vicki and her powers in a binding field, we may be
able to reach her before she
-"
Every light in the house went out as the lightbulbs
burst, one by one.
The door to Stokes' cottage slammed open, and
Angelique walked in. Her face
was calm and serene, and she walked briskly and with
purpose.
"Angelique," Julia whispered, surprised, and
rather gratified, to find that her
heart ached for the other woman. Who would tell her how?
Then she looked into Angelique's eyes - those wide,
deceptively placid blue
seas - and realized that such a question was
unnecessary now.
Angelique already knew.
"I'm so sorry," Barnabas whispered. "Angelique, please believe me. If I
could've done anything to stop her -"
She said nothing.
She merely moved forward, and Julia wondered if she wasn't
in shock. She
crossed the room in that efficient and yet strangely dreamlike
manner. Her
eyes seemed to focus for a moment, and settled on Stokes.
He opened his mouth, then closed it again. He knew what she had come for.
"No," he managed to croak.
She smiled a little, and held out her hands. "Give me the Mask," she said.
"Give me the Mask of Ba'al."
10
Elizabeth's face was blanched white, and her fingers
clutched nervously at the
pearls around her neck. She swallowed once, convulsively, and said,
"V-Victoria?"
"Once upon a time," Vicki said, and grinned
her piranha-grin. "That's what
your sister named me.
After my father." Elizabeth gasped; Vicki trilled gay
laughter. David
and Carolyn exchanged confused glances.
"But Louise is dead,
and so is Victor Fenn-Gibbon. I'm the only one that matters now,
Elizabeth."
She sneered.
"Elizabeth Collins Stoddard, so mighty, so proud. Doesn't really
matter that, once upon a time, you were a common
murderess, but thanks to me
you don't have to worry about that any longer. And what thanks do I get? What
thanks do I ever get?"
"I don't know what you're talking about,"
Liz said, "but Vicki - please - can't
we just sit down for a moment and talk this
over?"
"What exactly do you want to talk about?"
Vicki asked. "Could it be your
disgusting decision to hand me over to an
orphanage? Or no, wait, it must be
your idiotic insistence on hiring me back to work as a
governess - to work as
hired help, as slave labor - to my own cousin. Yes, that must be it. How you
brought me back but kept me from knowing my own
family. How you lied to me for
a year, even after I saved all your sorry asses!"
She was shrieking now, and
her voice had taken on that unholy reverberation
again; around them, every
window on the ground level blew out, coughing their
glass onto the lawn. Black
energy began to crackle between Vicki's fingers. "No one's here to save you
now," she said in a low, throaty purr. "Just me, and I think my days as hired
help are over."
"Vicki please," Liz said. "We love you. We all love you."
"Oh please," Vicki said, disgust flashing in
her inhuman eyes. "You love me so
much you paid me to work for you. What consideration! Now that's the sort of
familial loving I lacked all those years I spent in
the orphanage. Golly, I'm
sorry I missed out!"
"I did what I had to do," Liz said, and
behind her, Carolyn sucked in her
breath. Vicki
glared at her. "I'm sorry you feel
this way, Victoria, and I'm
sorry for whatever part I may have played in hurting
you, but you have to
understand, I did it -"
"- for my own good," Vicki sneered. "I've heard that one before. It couldn't
possibly be because you were embarrassed, oh no, heaven
forbid! It simply
wouldn't do to have the Collins name dragged through
the mud, because we all
know how that never happens! No one's ever been cursed to become a
vampire, or
a werewolf, or married their own grandmother, or
killed their wife, or stole,
or cheated, or ...
should I go on? Because I think
that might take awhile."
"What happened to you?" Liz whispered. "Where's the Vicki that I love?"
"This is getting excruciatingly dull," Vicki
said. She seemed taller and
thinner than ever; a gaunt, starving scarecrow with
ivory skin and black,
bulging eyes.
Her teeth jutted from her mouth like knitting needles. Her eyes ranged over the three
frightened sheep before her. "Eeny meeny miney mo," she incanted, lobbing
her index finger, tipped with a
wicked bony claw, back and forth, back and forth. After a moment she threw up
both her hands, and said, "Ah, dammit, why waste
my time. I'll start with the
littlest bastard. C'mere,
Davie. Vicki's got a present for
you."
David back up into Carolyn, who held him firmly by the
shoulders. "Leave me
alone!" he cried, his voice frightened but
defiant. "You're not Vicki, you're
not! You're
not!"
For a moment, the Vicki-thing faltered, then she
smiled and cooed, "Of course I
am. I'm
everything Victoria Winters was, and more.
Much, much more. This is
a great privilege for you, boy, a great privilege
indeed. It's a shame you
won't have more time to bask in my greatness before I
kill you, because
honestly -"
"Vicki," Quentin Collins said from the
doorway, and Vicki froze, then turned
slowly to face him.
"Darling," she purred. "How nice. My little party is just beginning."
Quentin stared at her, then shook his head sadly. "Oh Vicki," he whispered.
"What's happened to you?"
"A radical makeover," she laughed. "Darling, can't you tell? Surely you of
all people should be able to feel my power. It's coursing through me; I feel
more alive than I ever have in all my life. Because now I finally understand.
I know why I'm here.
I know what I've got to do. I
saved this miserable
family time and time again, but I was just
waiting. Biding my time until I was
strong enough.
And now I am. Powerful enough to
destroy you all myself." The
energy shot from her fingers before the words were out
of her mouth, and it
struck Quentin and knocked him up against the
wall. He sank down it, blinking
blearily, and then tried to stand up. Behind him, Roger froze, paralyzed, the
snifter still in his hand.
"Please don't hurt us," Carolyn whimpered.
"The Collins family has spent generations of
their time destroying the lives of
other people," Vicki said. "This is payback, and it's a bitch."
"He was my son too," Quentin said through
what felt like a mouth full of blood.
Vicki looked
back at him, and he saw - or thought he saw - a flash of
uncertainty and desperate unhappiness. Then it was gone, if it had ever really
been there, and Vicki was staring at him with those
incurious shark's eyes.
"Jeb was my son too, Vicki. Do you think I didn't want to love him? I can't
help it. I'm
his father."
Those terrible black eyes narrowed, and she spat,
"You have no idea what I'm
feeling, Quentin.
He wasn't a part of you. He
didn't grow inside of you. He
didn't need you to survive. He was all I really had in this world. He was a
part of me, so don't you dare try to sell me your
platitudes. Don't give me
your bullshit anymore, Quentin Collins. Not ever again." Her mouth trembled
like a little girl's, and she said in a small voice
far less impressive than
the demonic warble that had been issuing from her
mouth since her
transformation, "He was all I had."
"That isn't true," Quentin said, and shook
his shaggy head. "You had me."
"Did I?" Vicki purred with deliberate
sweetness. The little girl was gone in
the blink of an eye.
"Did I really? What about
Jenny? Or Beth? Or even
Angelique?
You've used women for over a century Quentin, and then spit them
out in the morning.
How was I supposed to know that you wouldn't grow tired of
me one day and throw me aside like every other girl
ever?" She shook her long
white tresses with disgust. "You're still a little boy, after all
these years.
You haven't changed.
You're just like the rest of the Collinses." She beamed.
"But don't worry.
I'll let you watch while I kill them all. Just so you can
have an idea - just an idea, now - of what I'm going
to do to you. And to
Barnabas. And
to Julia. And to Angelique. And to anyone else that dares to
get in my way." She turned back to David, and her
hands contorted. The black
energy crackled and sang. "Just like this little whelp," she
hissed, and
lifted her hands -
"STOP!" Quentin roared; the energy
dissipated, and Vicki turned to face him
furiously.
"You can't save him," Vicki said. "He's doomed. They're all doomed. The
future of the Collins family rests with David
Collins. Once he's gone, the
line will be ended.
The curse on this place will be lifted.
And then I can
ascend to a higher plane." Her eyelids closed,
blessedly hiding those mad black
orbs for just a moment as she smiled
beatifically. "The black
garden," she
sighed, "where I am the queen." She opened
her eyes, and they glowed with that
hellish black light, then she turned back to David,
opened her hands, the black
power crackled, Quentin opened his mouth to scream -
And even as it flew it began to fade away, and what
little remain bounced off
David harmlessly.
Vicki stared open-mouthed, then whipped around
furiously to glare at Quentin.
His mouth was agape with shock and disbelief, just
like the others. "I don't
know how you did that," she hissed, her voice
cheated and accusing and buzzing
furiously like a wasp, "but it doesn't
matter. You can't stop me for long.
And just for trying -" She threw out her hands
again, and Quentin ducked, but
he needn't have minded. The crackling death that flew through the air
wasn't
for him.
It enveloped Roger Collins instead.
Roger had a moment to contemplate the snifter as it
exploded in his hands. A
breath later and he joined it. David, Carolyn, Elizabeth, Quentin; staring,
mouths agape; pain and horror and sorrow; and a wound
opened, bleeding despair,
that would never close; as they watched the flesh blow
back from his bones,
leaving the skeleton, which dissolved under the onslaught
of Vicki's dark power.
After a second nothing earthly remained of Roger
Collins.
For a moment no one said a word. Even Vicki seemed startled. They remained in
their little tableau, frozen, for nearly three seconds
before anyone moved.
And then:
"Vicki," Quentin said, and covered his face
with his hands. "Oh god. Oh
Vicki."
11
The Dark Spirit had been whispering to her since she
left Widow's Hill, for the
first time since she had become a vampire, almost a
year ago. She had caught
only a glimpse of him through the shades of bleeding
red that had enveloped the
world in the aftermath of Sky's destruction, but she
recognized him. A flash
of horn; a glint of one enormous orange eye. "Oh my angel," he purred in her
ear, "oh my darling one, I'm so sorry you had to
see that, sorry, sorry my
darling one, but now you know."
She didn't respond.
Her mouth felt iced over. Her
fingers dangled limply from
her hands.
"Now you know what the human world is like. You had to learn; that's why
Nicholas made you human. At my command. Why else would I allow it? You
needed to appreciate your powers, angel of mine. And now I believe that you
truly do."
She remembered how, in 1897, she had craved the magic,
desired it more than any
mortal desired any number of inane and impotent drugs;
and the magic, as she
had always been taught, came from the Dark One.
The source of my power is me.
Nicholas had laughed at her when she'd told him
that. The Dark One too. He
had sustained her existence, allowed her to return
from death ... but didn't
she give him form, ultimately? Without her will, without her imagination, he
was nothing but a harmless irritant, a gnat.
The source of my power
"You need me, angel. Let me help you. Let me help you avenge him."
is me.
She felt it begin to glow inside herself, hot, burning
in the pit of her
stomach and the folds of her sex; blazing in her
fingertips, roiling in her
blood; she felt the moment when her eyes begin to
darken. The moment that the
air around her froze and crystallized.
And she felt something inside the Dark Spirit. Something she'd never felt
before.
Fear.
"Get away from here," she said, and her
voice was toneless and dead. "Leave
me
alone."
"Angel, I -"
"Can you bring him back?"
"You know the spells -"
"Can you bring him back the way that he was? Without some terrible price? Can
he come back and not be a zombie or a vampire or a
werewolf? Can Sky come back
to me the way -" She felt the emotion begin to
bubble to the surface, and she
quashed it immediately. Emotion, as Nicholas had once told her, was
useless.
A true witch felt nothing.
"You know that I cannot."
"Then it is done."
"Angel -"
"IT IS DONE!" she roared, and the power
flared up inside her, and the Dark
Spirit screamed as it was assailed by a power alien to
itself, screamed as it
was rent and shredded and driven, not destroyed, but
begging, without form or
voice, far away.
When she approached Stokes' cottage, she realized that
the power had faded away
almost entirely, leaving her weak and trembling in the
knees. Nevertheless,
the door to the cottage slammed open of its own
accord, and the lightbulbs in
all the lamps and above the door exploded simultaneously, showering glass over
the others in the room. Angelique didn't see them. She saw only the box on
the table. The
lead-lined box that Stokes had procured to contain the Mask of
Ba'al.
The Mask of Ba'al.
The source of my power is -
Too late for that.
Too late for anything, for any moralizing, for any debate.
Sky was dead.
The only man who had ever truly loved her, without a price,
without any arm-twisting. And now he was dead. And he would never return.
Why shouldn't she be dead too?
It made everything else seem a little less
important. Things like her soul, so
newly acquired, and what would become of it after -
"I'm so sorry," she heard Barnabas
whisper. "Angelique, please believe
me. If
I could've done anything to stop her -"
Didn't matter now.
Not even Barnabas mattered, and hadn't he once been the
center of her universe?
Never again.
She looked at Stokes with her flat, dead eyes, and
said, "Give me the Mask.
Give me the Mask of Ba'al."
Stokes merely shook his head sadly. "You know that I can't," he said.
"Angelique, nothing is worth that. You know what you stand to lose if you don
the Mask. It
will corrupt you. That's what it
does. It gives ... but it
takes away too."
"Please Angelique," Julia said, "you've
come so far -"
She said nothing.
Instead she held out her hand, and felt the last of her own
power spark forward, and Professor Stokes was shoved
out of her way. He
stumbled to the floor with a cry, but she was already
past him.
"Angelique!" Barnabas roared, but even he,
with all his preternatural vampire
abilities, was unable to stop her.
For a heart-stopping moment her fingers paused over
the mask, tracing aimless
patterns in the air.
She held her breath; the world held its breath.
Then her fingers were brushing the icy metal, were
folding around it, were
pulling it out of the box.
She glanced at it - all that power - incuriously.
"Angelique," Barnabas whispered.
And pressed it against her face.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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