CHAPTER 87: Homecoming
by Nicky
(Voiceover by Nancy Barrett): “A
dangerous night on the great estate of Collinwood in the strange and disturbing
world of parallel time. Barnabas Collins
has come home … but not the home he knew in his own time. For this world is peopled by strangers with
faces he knows and loves, though the personalities behind them are
different. But the monster inside him
may destroy them nevertheless. And on
this night, Barnabas will learn just how dangerous this world can be …”
1
Sunset.
“Is
Elizabeth Collins Stoddard in?”
Carolyn
could only stare. She felt drug-addled,
true, as she normally did, and she only saw the world through a hint of mauve,
a splash of blue-gray, but that voice … that voice …
I’m going to tell his story, Carolyn. Barnabas Collins is the reason that this town
is even still here, rotting and disgusting though it may be on the surface, but
because of him, Collinsport is one of the up-and-coming towns on the east
coast. We’ll make a mint, baby, a mint!
That
had been Will. And he’d written the book
– The Life and Death of Barnabas Collins
– but there had been no mint, because no one bought it. And why should they? Who the hell was Barnabas Collins? And further, where the hell was Collinsport,
Maine? It hadn’t been up-and-coming, had
never been up-and-coming; it really was
rotting and disgusting and so were the idiots who still lived here.
So
no one bought the book.
And
now Will was gone.
And
here she was.
And
now … here he was.
“Elizabeth
… Collins Stoddard,” Carolyn whispered.
“Is my mother.”
“Is
that a fact?” Polite. Eyes that burned into her, making her a
liquid, a puddle … just like his
eyes.
They’re the same.
Fear
leaped up in her throat.
His
eyes burned … they blazed. They captured and held her.
The
fear disappeared, faded like mist under the rays of the sun.
“Won’t
you come in?” she whispered.
“Thank
you.” He stepped over the threshold and
followed her into the foyer. “You may
tell her that her cousin Barnabas –”
“I
know who you are,” Carolyn blurted before she could stop herself.
He
raised an eyebrow; in the light, she thought, he doesn’t look so strange, so
pale, so ghostly –
So much like him.
“You
do?” he said politely.
“My
husband – my ex-husband, I’m sorry – Will, that is, William Loomis wrote a
b-book about you. Him.” She flushed.
“Him, I mean. Your ancestor?”
“That’s
right,” and he smiled, still so polite, “my ancestor.”
“He
wrote a book about him.”
“I
have read it.”
“You
have!” She felt delighted. “How wonderful.” She swayed unsteadily, and then felt her hand
taken. His was like ice, and he held it
tightly and helped her steady herself.
“Thank you. I’m sorry, I haven’t
been well.”
“Perfectly
all right.”
“Why
do you want to see my mother?”
“She
is mistress of Collinwood, is she not?”
Carolyn
laughed before she could help herself.
“Mistress of Collinwood! Who on
earth told you that?”
He
frowned and his lips grew thin and pale.
The laughter died in her throat as quickly as it had come. “I must be mistaken. Forgive me.”
“Quentin
is master of Collinwood. Which makes his
new bride –” and her mouth twisted sourly – “the mistress of Collinwood.”
“Maggie,”
Barnabas whispered.
“Yes,”
Carolyn said. “How did you know that?”
“Yes,”
a woman’s voice boomed from the top of the stairs, “how curious. How curious indeed.” Carolyn’s face fell while Barnabas’ lit
up. Victoria Collins, wrapped in a long
green robe decorated with dancing purple butterflies and that revealed nothing
about her body, flowed down the stairs, and her dark eyes never left Barnabas’
face. “Mr. Collins,” she said, and
extended one hand. “I’m Victoria
Collins.”
“Charmed,”
he said, and brushed his lips against her outstretched hand.
She
shivered. “Your lips,” she said.
“It
is a chilly evening.” Thunder crashed in
that next second.
“So
it is,” Victoria agreed. Her eyes
flicked to Carolyn and narrowed.
“Carolyn. Why don’t you be a love
and find Quentin and Maggie. I’m sure
they’re dying to meet the newest addition to the Collins family.”
Carolyn
said nothing, but held her head high and flounced away.
Victoria
smiled. “Nice girl,” she said. “But so tragic. Seems she can’t keep a husband. Surprising, wouldn’t you agree? Let me apologize for her behavior.”
“You
needn’t worry,” Barnabas said. His eyes
never left Victoria’s face. “I
understand there has been tragedy here as of late, yes?”
“I
suppose that depends,” Victoria purred, “on your definition of tragic. Quentin’s first wife died ages and ages ago –
a stroke, unexpected, and rather silly, if you ask me – but the rest of us have
just …” She shrugged. “…carried on.”
Barnabas
looked taken aback. Victoria would not
allow her eyes to narrow. Suspicion
would be a weakness, she determined in that moment, and so smiled instead. “I’m very forward, Mr. Collins,” she said,
“I’m afraid to say. I’ve often been told
that.”
Barnabas
seemed to rally. He smiled too. “A virtue,” he said. “I can appreciate a woman who speaks her mind.”
“Yes,”
Victoria purred. “I imagine that you
can.”
2
The
meeting with the rest of the family was a disaster.
Quentin
descended the staircase, his face a mass of thunderclouds, just ahead of a
soaking dishrag of a woman who, Barnabas saw with a start, could have been
Angelique, if Angelique never looked in a mirror or touched a hairbrush. “I don’t understand where she could be,”
Quentin growled. “Why run off now?”
“I
can’t imagine,” said the woman who must be Alexis, Barnabas reasoned, the twin
sister Hoffman had described to him. Her
hands met and dueled and parted, then met and dueled and parted, and she gnawed
at her lower lip until Barnabas was certain it would bleed. He could actually smell the blood below the
surface, and felt his stomach twist with guilt and hunger. He thought for a moment of Hoffman, her eyes
glassy, her face absolutely devoid of color, unconscious still in the secret
room where he had left her, and pain stabbed at him again.
“Quentin,”
Victoria called, “oh Quentin, you simply must
meet –”
But
Quentin had stopped short three steps from the bottom, so abruptly that Alexis
had no time to recover and ran into him.
It might have been comical if the expression on Quentin’s face hadn’t
been so thunderstruck. “Not possible,”
he whispered.
“It
is, though,” Barnabas said. He forced
his voice to be silky-smooth and stepped forward, extending his hand. “I am your cousin, Barnabas Collins, from
South America.” If Hoffman didn’t lie
about that as well, he thought darkly, and the guilt lifted for a moment.
“We
have no cousins in South America,” Quentin said. He was still stunned, still frozen on the
steps.
“But
we do,” Carolyn said from behind them.
“Or we could. Didn’t you read
Will’s book, Quentin?”
“I
skimmed it,” Quentin said. He stepped
into the foyer and took Barnabas’ extended hand. “Quentin Collins.”
“I
know who you are,” Barnabas said. “It
has long been my dream to meet the Collinses of Maine. My esteemed relatives. I’m only sorry it took me so long to make it
this far north.”
“I’m
sorry for the outburst,” Quentin said.
“My wife has gone missing, you see.
We had a fight –”
“We
don’t need to discuss this now,” Alexis said.
Her voice quavered, and those big blue eyes that had terrified Barnabas
for so long were wet and harmless. “I’m
sure Mr. Collins isn’t interested in our .. domestic disputes.”
“Perhaps,”
Barnabas said smoothly, “I should call another time.”
“Nonsense,”
Quentin said. “If she’s going to behave
like a child, I will treat her like one.
I refuse to run after her every time she has a tantrum.”
“That
isn’t fair, Quentin,” Alexis said softly.
“I’m sure she’s just upset.”
“Yes,”
Victoria, but no one heard her but Barnabas.
“I’m sure that’s it.”
3
The
woman was dead.
Tom
looked at her appraisingly, then rolled his eyes. He should have known when he took her from
her place in the shadows at the wharf that she had no real stamina. He
grinned. So few women could handle his
affections. Victoria was one, but
Victoria was different … special. After
all, he thought, and grinned, she made me the man I am today.
The
woman’s eyes were glassy, wide with terror.
Her mouth gaped.
The
rest of her was destroyed.
He
glanced around her apartment. Dark. Dingy.
He hated it. It reminded him of
the hovel where he had spent the rest of his teens and early twenties after he
and Chris were ejected so unceremoniously from Collinwood, and where he had …
well, “lived” wasn’t the proper word.
“Hunkered” was better. Yes, where
he had hunkered … until Victoria came
along and freed him.
He
wouldn’t leave Collinwood again. Not
ever.
Certainly
not for a place like – and his nose wrinkled – this.
He
couldn’t help that he was a killer. That
was the price he must pay for being Victoria Collins’ beloved. And it didn’t really bother him anymore, most
days. Not really.
He
sighed and turned away from the shredded corpse. He picked up the phone and dialed. “Christopher,” he said. “Hate to interrupt. Give my best to Sebastian.” He frowned. “Brother, brother, please. I’m trying
here. Really. I just wanted to see if you’d thought about
my suggestion.”
Chris
said something unpleasant. Chris said
something horrifically
unpleasant. It made Tom want to snarl
and raven. Instead he smiled. He liked to smile. Smiling made him feel powerful. So he smiled and he said, “You’ll come
around, brother, I promise you.” And he
hung up.
Then
he doused the apartment with gasoline, stepped outside, and tossed a lit match. He was gone before the flames roared up and
began to consume the entire building.
Later,
he enjoyed the wind as it rushed against his face. He thought of Victoria. Everything was easier when he thought of
Victoria. He closed his eyes and let the
darkness wash over him. And that was how
he liked it.
4
“It
was Tom again,” Chris sighed, and turned to the window. “Your timing is incredible, by the by. Why couldn’t you have come up five minutes
ago? I wouldn’t have answered the phone
if you’d been here sooner.”
The
creature poised in the window was covered from head to toe in white fur. Its eyes were amber, and its snout curled
back revealing black lips above yellow, slavering fangs. It seemed to be laughing.
“Not
really funny,” Chris said. “Get in here
before someone sees you.”
The
animal dropped on all fours to the floor then rose to its full height, just
over seven feet. Its body was lithe,
roped with muscle beneath the snowy fur.
It was panting, out of breath from its exertions. It shook itself, and water from the rain
still pouring outside flew in a spray.
Chris
laughed despite himself. “You’re
adorable. Come here.”
The
creature came and transformed as it did.
The fur melted away, its body began to dwindle, the eyes shifted from
yellow to blue, and by the time it reached him, the animal had become Sebastian
Shaw again. He was smiling as he wrapped
both his arms around his boyfriend and pressed him close against him.
“You’re
naked,” Chris said. His voice was
muffled against Sebastian’s chest.
“You
noticed.” Sebastian chuckled. His voice was still deep, still raspy with
the tones of the animal, the way it roared and bayed at the moon.
“That
was Tom,” he said. “He’s still on this
‘move into Collinwood’ kick.”
“So?”
Sebastian said. “Let’s do it, babe. Why not?”
“Because
I don’t want to,” Chris said, and turned away.
“There’s something wrong with Collinwood. I’ve told you that before.”
“Hey,”
Sebastian said, and looped his long arms around Chris’ neck, gently turning him
back so they stood face to face. “You’ve
got me. I can protect you, you know I
can. Look
at me.” He laughed. “Werewolf boyfriend. What more do you need?”
“To
not live at Collinwood,” Chris said.
Sebastian
rolled his eyes. “You take everything
too seriously. I’m sorry, babe, but you
do. If there’s magic there, even bad
juju, who better to face it than someone else made of magic? Curses were meant to be broken.”
“Not
by you,” Chris said, “and not by me. We
are not getting within a thousand feet of that house.” He took Sebastian’s hand. “Promise me.
Promise me.”
Sebastian
heaved a dramatic sigh. “I promise, I
promise. Hey.” He sank to his knees and grinned up at
Chris. “Here’s something else I promised
you.”
5
Roger
Collins was crying. Not where anyone
could see him, of course; that would never do.
Never show a weakness, that was his motto. Leaving Collinwood had been weak; attempting
to settle with that vicious hellcat Laura Stockbridge had been weak; giving up
the child he should have had the balls to stand by and raise himself was weak.
But
I came back here, didn’t I? he thought. He looked up
at Angelique’s portrait and said, “Didn’t I, my darling? That was something, wasn’t it? That was brave, wasn’t it?”
She
said nothing. Of course she didn’t. He thought of the time when Alexis first came
back after Angelique’s death at the ridiculous séance, came back and snuck up
behind him as he held forth before the portrait of her sister, raising his
glass and sloshing the champagne over its side and camping it up
ludicrously. “She won’t come back,”
Alexis had said, and it had been liked needles in his ear, like broken glass
shoved inside him, the way her voice shivered and quavered. She
was the weak one, with her eyes so wide and terrified, the way her hands
trembled and chased each other like frightened animals. “Angelique is dead,” she had declared. She was as close to hysteria as he had ever
heard anyone else dwelling within the walls of Collinwood, and he would have
rolled his eyes at her if he hadn’t still reeled from the shock of her intrusion. “She is dead,
why does everyone insist that she’s coming back?”
“Because
she has to,” Roger said now, and looked up into her cerulean eyes. He could drown in them, and he would,
willingly, throw himself into the sea if it would just bring her back. “You will return. I’ve prepared the way.” More tears fell in freshets from his
eyes. “And we can be together … at
last.”
Weak.
“I’m
looking for Maggie,” Carolyn said from behind him, and he whirled to face
her. His face was still wet, and he
wiped the tears away hastily, but he knew that she had seen them. The disgust on her face told him that she
had. “Have you seen her?”
“No,”
Roger said. His voice sounded like a
foghorn. How humiliating. “Why would she be
in this room? She doesn’t even belong in
this house.”
“I’m
not here to argue with you, Uncle Roger,” Carolyn said. Her voice was dead and flat as it had been
since her precious Will had left her behind.
Never mind that precious Will had been sticking it to half the hussies
in Collinsport for years. Roger wouldn’t
allow himself to admit that Angelique had been one of those hussies. “Maggie and Quentin had a fight, and now no
one knows where she is. And we have a
visitor, and Quentin wants her to meet him.”
“A
visitor?” A him? Roger wiped his nose
with the back of his sleeve.
Carolyn
shook her head. “Barnabas Collins,” she
said. “He’s a cousin from South
America.” She smiled nastily. “He says.”
“Why
would he lie?”
She
shrugged. “No reason he should. He looks just like his ancestor. The man Will’s book was about. But I don’t suppose you read it, did you.”
“Of
course I didn’t.” He drew himself up to
his full stature. He sneered. He was good at sneering. Sneering made him feel powerful. He sneered at his niece. “Why would I?
Will has no talent. He never
did.”
Carolyn’s
face crumpled, but she turned away from him and held herself perfectly
still. “You can stay here, for all I
care,” she said. “Crouch here before
your beloved Angelique. She’s the only
one who ever listened to you anyway. Why
should that have changed?” And she was
gone.
Roger’s
sneer faded. His eyes drifted back up to
the portrait. “She’s right, you know,”
he said. “But everything is going to be
different now. All the birds have come
home to roost, so to speak … you’ll see.
You really, really will.”
6
Barnabas
had grown distinctly uncomfortable; his skin itched and he felt the urge to
simply dematerialize, rematerialize in Angelique’s room, and just … wait for
the room to change. He couldn’t stand
this anymore; it was maddening. It
wasn’t at all like when he had ventured to 1897 to help Vicki save the modern
day family by changing time; those were his relatives, his descendants, his
flesh and blood. They were essential to
the well-being of the Collins family he had come to love in 1968, and so he had
helped to save them. These people … it
was unnerving, and more than that. They
looked like his friends and loved ones in his own time, but … they just weren’t.
They
were all … all so different.
Victoria continued to
stare at him openly, not with curiosity, as he had first surmised, but with
something … darker. She isn’t my Vicki,
he thought, but another part of him – the part that saw Josette in her to begin
with, he supposed – that part rose up and snarled, You don’t know that, you haven’t had time to tell, you don’t know!
But
he thought about her eyes, how cold they were, and the things, the dreadful,
terrible things she had said when he met her only an hour ago.
Could
she be a monster in this time as well?
But
that would be too cruel.
“You’ll
have to stay at Collinwood,” Quentin was saying. “I’m sure that Maggie would offer herself –”
“Quentin,”
Alexis said reprovingly.
“Of
course,” Barnabas said without thinking.
Then he straightened up. How
could he explain why he wasn’t staying at Collinwood, why no one saw him during
the day? The Old House was gone; he
couldn’t stay there. His mind
raced. “That is,” he said, “I will, and soon. I have … independent quarters at the moment.”
“Wherever
at?” Victoria said. Her brown eyes
danced. “You don’t know anyone in town …
do you?”
“I
am staying at the Collinsport Inn,” Barnabas said. His hand tightened on his cane. Julia had once pointed out to him how amazing
it was that he hadn’t rubbed all the polish off that silly wolf’s head. He missed her suddenly, surprisingly. He thought of Hoffman again, unconscious in
the secret room, and gritted his teeth.
“That’s
ridiculous,” Quentin said. “You are a
Collins! You can move in tomorrow
morning.”
“Thank
you, cousin,” Barnabas said, “but I’m afraid –”
Carolyn’s
drilling shrieks filled the drawing room.
Quentin’s face narrowed with irritation; Alexis looked up, an alarmed
rabbit; Daniel rolled his eyes; Elizabeth frowned and opened her mouth;
Barnabas leaped to his feet.
Carolyn
was poised in the doorway, swaying unsteadily.
Her eyes were wide and glassy with shock, and all the color had drained
from her face. “Angelique’s room,” she
whispered. “Angelique …”
Then
she dropped to the floor in a heap.
“Carolyn!”
Elizabeth cried, and rushed to her daughter’s side, but the other woman was
unconscious.
“Quentin,”
Alexis whimpered, “what do you suppose she meant?”
“There’s
only one way to find out,” he said darkly, and strode out of the drawing room
and up the staircase. Barnabas and
Alexis followed.
They
heard his howl of anguish before they caught up with him. Alexis peered over his shoulder, frozen in
the doorway to Angelique’s bedroom, then shrieked, pulled at her face with her
long fingers, and shrieked again.
Barnabas
was paralyzed, utterly unable to move.
The
room was a shambles. Blood soaked the
tangerine curtains, the blue canopy on the bed, the pale cream carpet. Blood had splashed onto the lined
wallpaper. It dripped down the lips of
the image of Angelique, rendering her smile crimson and malicious.
Quentin
howled again, but seemed powerless to enter the room. Alexis did, dropped to her knees, and looked
for signs of life.
But
there were none. Barnabas already
knew. The body on the floor before them
was quite dead. How could it live? The heart … the heart was …
He
wanted to weep. Somehow, he thought, and
wanted to look away but couldn’t, somehow this is all my fault.
And
the dead eyes of Maggie Evans Collins stared – and would continue to stare,
until someone mercifully closed them – upward in horrified, frozen
fascination.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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