CHAPTER 88: Doorways
by Nicky
Voiceover by Lara Parker: “Darkness
falls on the great estate of Collinwood, in this world and in the disturbing
world of Parallel Time. In one room on
both estates, small dramas play out, for there has been death and destruction
at this Collinwood and in that other disturbing time. And on this night, two women will attempt to
uncover the door to another world … a door that, once opened, may lead to their
destruction.”
1
Angelique
did not smile, and Julia was grateful for small favors. The witch’s lips were as black as the twin
holes that passed for her eyes. She
moved forward deliberately; she did not blink; the only sound as she came was
the whisper of the leather that lovingly encased her body.
“Angelique
–” Julia choked.
She
did not pause. Julia smelled ozone and
heard a steady crackling sound. It came,
she saw with wide eyes, from the black skeins of energy that writhed constantly
between the witch’s outstretched fingers.
“You
summoned me,” Angelique whispered. “How
dare you.”
“I
… I need your help,” Julia stammered, but wouldn’t allow herself to feint or
dodge or make any kind of movement at all.
Her brow creased instead, her lower lip trembled furiously, and she drew
herself up to her full height.
“Desperately,” she added in her most commanding, most whiskey-voiced
tone.
Angelique
paused. For a moment Julia thought she
almost smiled. But the electricity that
danced at her fingertips continued to crackle and blaze. “Do you honestly think that is what I want to
hear?” she said. “Julia, you are not a
fool. Don’t behave like one, even now.”
“I
am not a fool,” Julia agreed. “Do you think that I didn’t weigh my
options, consider the peril, the danger
that you could place me in simply by being in the same room with me?”
“I
should destroy you,” Angelique said.
“Or
you can help me,” Julia barked.
The
witch did not hesitate. “Why should I?”
“Because
you don’t want Barnabas to die.” It was
a gamble. Julia really didn’t know if
Angelique cared one way or another if Barnabas lived or died. Once upon time that might have been true, but
the witch was different now … very different.
After she had placed the poisoned Mask of Ba’al over her face and
allowed its dark energy to infuse her, body and soul, Julia had no idea what
remnants of her former personality dwelt inside her, if any.
Angelique
said nothing for a moment.
Julia’s
breath caught in her throat.
Then
the other woman dropped her head, and for a moment – and Julia had to squint
and blink and then shake her head to clear it – but for a moment it was as if
the air before Angelique shimmered somehow, and Julia caught a glimpse at the
Angelique she had come to know and, yes, even like over the past few
months.
When
she looked up, her eyes were blue, but her face held that death-like pallor,
and the hair that tumbled over her shoulders was still midnight-black. “Perhaps,” she said, “perhaps I do care about
Barnabas. What do you suppose that
means?”
Julia
allowed herself to relax, fragment by fragment.
She remembered how she had been treated when Angelique posed as
Cassandra – good god, could that have been only a year ago? didn’t seem possible – how the
witch-turned-vampire had abused her with such willing cruelty, both physically
and mentally. But that isn’t the same
Angelique, Julia reminded herself … or was it?
“I don’t know,” she admitted.
Angelique
took a breath. “I don’t either,” she
said at last. She turned away and
examined the room. “This place … it
doesn’t feel … right.”
“It
isn’t right,” Julia said. She remained
cautious. She wouldn’t even allow the
little flower of hope she could feel struggling inside her chest to bloom. “Something happened in this room, Angelique,
something you should know about.”
Angelique
glanced over her shoulder and raised one black eyebrow. “Oh?” she said. Julia couldn’t tell if there was any real
interest in her tones or not. “Why don’t
you tell me all about it, Julia. And
don’t leave anything out. I’ll know if
you do.”
Julia
sucked in a sharp breath, allowed her gaze to dart up to the portrait above the
non-existent mantle, and began. “It
started with Barnabas,” she said, “and the way that the curse returned to him,
and coming up to this room, where he saw something … something none of us could
explain … except for Eliot Stokes …”
2
“I
don’t understand,” little Amy Collins piped in the voice she hated – hated – the one that she thought made
her sound like Minnie Mouse, but she was only ten and thus, she reasoned, there
was nothing to be done. Not until she
grew up. But now, glancing around Angelique’s
room where the blood that had spurted from Maggie Collins’ chest had yet to be
cleaned, she wondered if the fabled land of grown up was a place she would ever
live to reach.
“Of
course you don’t,” Daniel Collins said solemnly. “There’s nothing to understand. Maggie is
dead, that’s all.”
“She
isn’t just dead, Daniel Collins,” Amy snapped.
“She was … she was m-murdered.”
“I
know,” he said, and his voice was quiet.
“I know what it is to be murdered.”
“You
don’t either.”
“All
right,” he said, and glared at her.
“Then I know what it is to feel loss.”
She
hadn’t considered that. She looked up at
the portrait of Angelique and shivered.
Amy had often felt like the only person in the house who didn’t care for
the mistress of Collinwood, not really,
not like the legions of men who mooned over her, like Uncle Will or Mr.
Edwards. Speaking of him, she couldn’t
recall the last time she had seen him.
She was used to his dropping by at all hours, whenever he felt like
it. She knew that Tom didn’t like him, but
Tom didn’t talk to her so much anymore.
She felt depressed suddenly, and looked away from the portrait. “I’m sorry,” she said in a tinier voice than
usual. “I wasn’t thinking.”
“It’s
okay,” Daniel said, and waved a dismissive hand at her. She frowned.
“I didn’t like Maggie very much anyway.”
“You
didn’t really get to know her.”
“That
too.”
The
children gazed at each other, and for a moment Amy wondered if Daniel was about
to cry. Then she could comfort him. She thought she might like that.
Then
he looked away and pulled out a small box from his front trouser pocket. Her eyes widened. It was a pack of cigarettes that had
suffered, she saw, some damage, for it was all smashed and wrinkled. But the cigarette Daniel pulled from the pack
with practiced nonchalance seemed to be in fine shape. As she watched, Daniel produced a lighter
from his other pocket, crammed the cigarette in his lip, and flicked the
lighter nimbly until a tiny tongue of flame appeared and licked at the tip of
the cigarette. After a moment it glowed
a hot and hostile red, and Daniel sucked in, then blew a white stream from his
mouth.
“Why,
Daniel Collins!” she exclaimed.
He
looked at her with eyes like rocks.
“What?” he said. “You gonna tell
on me?”
She
didn’t answer. Her hands clenched into
fists and she felt blood flooding her face.
He was always so mean to her, and honestly, she only meant the
best!
She
thought if she said anything she would squeak, so instead she tossed her auburn
hair and held out her hand.
His
eyebrows jumped up. “What?” he
said. “What do you want?”
“Give
me one,” she said, and her voice did not
squeak. “That’s what I want.”
He
continued to stare at her, then a small smile quirked the corner of his
mouth. “Yeah,” he said. “Okay.”
She
took the cigarette with great dignity, and allowed him to light the tip. She sucked in, but carefully, and though the
smoke burned her lungs she refused to cough, and so held it for a moment under
what she thought must be his admiring gaze, then released the white stream of
smoke as she had seen him do.
They
said nothing; together they smoked.
Then: “Holy crap,” Daniel said.
Amy
whirled around. She felt her skin crawl,
and of course it was then that she
coughed. “Mr. Edwards!” she cried. “What are you doing here?”
Damion
Edwards stood poised in the doorway to Angelique’s room. His face was pale, much paler than Amy
remembered; his hair stood up in tangles and jags like the spikes of a
jackdaw’s nest, and his eyes were wide and somehow vacant. He stood without moving. Amy’s nose wrinkled. She could smell
him, and it wasn’t terribly pleasant either.
The bright Easter-blue and yellow suit he wore was stained with
something that had dried to brown.
“Mr.
Edwards?” Daniel said. His voice
cracked. Amy wanted to smile. “You won’t tell on us, will you? That you saw us smoking up here? Promise you won’t.”
Damion
Edwards took a step into the room.
Amy
felt a sudden stab of fright. “M-Mr.
Edwards?” she quavered.
That
was when his mouth split open and revealed the long, rotten fangs; his eyes
bulged; his hands reached out, pale, gnarled claws; and he began to scream and
scream and scream like a wildcat as he ran at them, and it was his terrible
screams that drowned out Daniel’s and those of Amy, who no longer sounded like
Minnie Mouse at all.
3
“It’s
all so terrible,” Carolyn moaned, and placed a hand to her forehead.
Alexis
nodded solemnly. “I know,” she said, and
her voice was soft and kind.
“Dreadful. I’m sorry you had to
see that.”
“I’m
tired of finding the bodies,” Carolyn said with a trace of the petulance she
had always exhibited, even as the poor little girl to poor Elizabeth Collins
Stoddard, abandoned by her fey-husband when he ran off with Matthew Morgan and
took all her money and her jewels.
“I’ve
never seen anything like that before in my life,” Alexis said. Her face was paler than usual, and her hair
needed washing. Carolyn thought about
this for a moment, then decided to forget it.
She liked Alexis, and she didn’t want to point out that her friend could
use a long shower and, perhaps, a new kind of deodorant. The smell that wafted from Alexis’ thinning
body undisguised by the shapeless blue dress she wore was a dark smell, and
reminded Carolyn of mold and rotten tomatoes.
“Her heart … Maggie’s heart –”
“First
Buffie, now Maggie,” Carolyn said. “And
in this house. None of us is safe!”
“Quentin
went with the police,” Alexis said. “They’ll
be back soon to search the house. Until
then, I’m going to stay with you. Your
mother is with Roger. Trask is standing
guard outside the house. He has a little
pistol.”
“What
about cousin Barnabas?”
A
delicate shadow of a frown flitted across the other woman’s face. “I don’t know where he is,” she
admitted. “Gone with Quentin, I think.”
“He
should stay here,” Carolyn pouted. “He
could protect us.”
“I
can protect us,” Alexis murmured.
Carolyn
let it go. Alexis, she thought, though
of course she would never ever say
something so wicked and cruel out loud,
but Alexis could be broken like a twig.
Something
struck the window outside.
Alexis
was at it in a flash. Carolyn tried to
sit up in bed, but she was struck by a sudden wave of dizziness, and fell back
onto the bed.
Alexis
recoiled, and her face tightened and twisted.
“My god!” she cried. “It’s a
bat!” She cried out again as it thumped
its wings against the window-glass. “It
looks like it wants to get in!”
“Alexis,”
Carolyn said, her voice fluttering.
“Will you make me a cup of tea?
Chamomile, please? It will help
my nerves.”
“Carolyn
– Carolyn the bat –”
“It’s
gone now,” she said. It was. She knew it was.
Alexis
backed away from the window. “You’re …
you’re right,” she said, and placed a hand above her heart. She grimaced.
Carolyn watched this with some interest. “Excuse me, Carolyn. I’ll … I’ll get the tea.” She paused in the doorway. “You won’t be afraid to be alone?”
Carolyn
smiled. “Not at all, dear. Thank you.”
Alexis
nodded, then opened her mouth as if she were about to say something else … then
smiled, slid out the door, and closed it in her wake.
Carolyn
drew a breath, then clambered out of the bed.
The long pink nightgown she wore fell about her feet like foam. Her breasts heaved; her breath came in short
pants. She was terrified, as she was
always terrified these days, but there was a warmth growing in her center and
it had already begun to spread. She
found that she was smiling. “Come in,”
she whispered.
“Carolyn,”
came the voice, his voice, as it
would always come, she prayed, even if she would hate herself tomorrow.
“I
was so afraid before,” she said. Her own
voice was husky, limpid with desire. She
burned. Her knees began to tremble. She licked her lips, and found they were
dry. “I don’t want to be afraid
anymore.”
“You
don’t need to be afraid,” the man in the darkest corner of the room told
her. His eyes burned at her like a
wolf’s, like sullen embers glowing in the fireplace downstairs. “You never have to be afraid with me.”
She
stepped forward and he caught her and held her and pulled her tightly against
him. He was cold – he was always so cold – but he was alive somehow, and he
made her feel alive.
Did
he do it? she wondered as he revealed his teeth, the shiny, silvery fangs; did
he kill Maggie? Did he tear her heart
from her chest?
Then
she found she didn’t care any longer, and succumbed to the embrace, to the kiss
her cousin Tom offered her as he crushed her to him again with the strength
that came naturally to a vampire.
4
“Yes,”
Angelique said, and closed her eyes.
Julia watched her with interest.
She always had been interested, in a clinical sort of way, in
Angelique’s magic. Where did that power
come from? Angelique had told her once,
as they sat together and waited for Sky and Barnabas to return from researching
the best way to destroy Jeb Hawkes, that she used to think the power came from
the devil, or “the Dark Spirit,” as she called him. But, she had confessed over her tea with
tears in her big blue eyes, she wasn’t so sure anymore. “When I was a girl,” she had said, “even
before Nicholas found me on the island and taught me more about … about the
Art, even before all that … I always thought that the power came from me.”
Julia wondered. Now, she supposed, it came from that damned
Mask of Ba’al. Well, she thought, and
wished madly for a cigarette, if it could get Barnabas back from whatever
danger he’d gotten himself into now, it couldn’t be all bad. “Yes,” Angelique
said again. “You’re right. This room … it’s a gateway.”
“I
know,” Julia said tightly. Her patience
was beginning to fray. If Angelique
wasn’t going to destroy her, she should at least get her ass in gear.
Angelique
cracked one eye. “I can hear you, Julia,” she said with a trace
of that old petulance, and Julia smiled.
“Besides, I’m done.”
With what? Julia wondered, but didn’t
ask aloud.
“Dear
Professor Stokes is right. There are
multiple levels of existence. This room
leads to one of them. And somehow
Barnabas has managed to blunder into it.”
“I
know,” Julia said through clenched teeth.
“Can you get him back?”
“I
don’t know,” Angelique said, and laughed at Julia’s gasp of surprise. “Don’t look so shocked, Julia. I’m not omnipotent, you know.”
“But
… but the Mask …”
“The
Mask has increased my powers, it’s true.
But the fabric between worlds is usually unbreachable, just as the doors
to times past has been barred against us all forever. We … we can no longer change the present to
suit ourselves.” And a tiny shadow
passed over her face. “There are powers
greater than me.” She smiled then, and
the shadow disappeared. “For now.”
Julia
thought of Sky, as Angelique must undoubtedly be thinking of him now, and felt
another pang of sympathy for the other woman, but it would have to wait. Barnabas could be on the other end of a
wooden stake right now … if he wasn’t dead already. “Wait a moment,” she said suddenly, and
Angelique looked at her with one raised eyebrow and her lips pursed in a
moue. “Didn’t you say that the fabric
between worlds is usually
unbreachable?”
“Yes,”
Angelique said. “But what does that –”
“Don’t
you see?” Excitement had risen into her
chest and began to glow rosy in her cheeks.
“It isn’t impossible inside this room!
The fabric between worlds is thin here.
You felt it yourself. Angelique …
Angelique, don’t you think that possibly, with your powers –”
“I
could make a tiny tear,” she said thoughtfully.
“Or widen the tear that already exists.”
She began to smile. “It may be
possible, my dear Julia. It may very
well be possible indeed.” She closed her
eyes again, and Julia shivered as the temperature of the room plummeted. Angelique held out her arms; black fire began
to crackle between her fingertips and then glowed a sinister green. “Spirits of time and space,” Angelique
called, “hear me! Filiolus! Patefacio ianua!
Impedimentum distraho! Tribuo nos viscus!”
The
floor trembled beneath their feet. Julia
gasped and reached out for something – anything – to steady her. But there was nothing.
Angelique
was staring at her, and her eyes were black holes. She began to grin.
5
Amy
covered her face, but she was too late to see the creature – whatever it was
that had taken possession of Mr. Edwards’ body – seize Daniel by the shoulders
and hurl him across the room. He struck
the wall with a bone-shuddering crash, and, eyes half-lidded and glazed, he
slid down to the floor. Amy screamed at
the long, maroon streak that he left in his wake as he went.
Mr.
Edwards was gibbering and snarling.
Drool ran in an endless tide from the gaping hole of his mouth. His eyes were red and empty, and he lifted
Daniel again and held him high in the air.
The boy’s head lolled bonelessly.
“Mine, mine mine,” Damion chortled, “mine and … and hers …”
Amy
screamed again as he revealed his saber-fangs and began to lower them towards
Daniel’s throat.
“Put
the boy down!”
Amy
didn’t want to take her fingers away from her face, but there was so much
command in that voice that she had to obey.
“Cousin Barnabas,” she whispered, and so it was. He was such a strange man – his face sallow,
his eyes hollow and somehow filled with pain that seemed to always gleam there
like a handful of stars crushed to powder – and he stood now in the doorway to
Angelique’s room, those pained eyes now flashing with fury.
Damion
Edwards roared like an animal and cast Daniel aside like a handful of
laundry. He struck the floor without
making a sound. Amy screamed again. He was dead, she knew it, he had to be, no one
could live if their head had been crushed like that … like a bug …
“Stop,”
Barnabas thundered, and held up his cane, the one Amy had found so interesting
when she had seen it earlier in the evening.
It was long and black and ended in the head of a snarling wolf with its
fangs bared, cast all in silver. The
light from the chandelier over their heads flashed off that cane now, and Mr.
Edwards cowered away from it as if it were the most deadly poison.
Vampire,
Amy’s trembling mind whispered, and she remembered something she had watched
one night on the late, late show – Tom always let her watch old horror movies,
even though Chris only ever said no, but Chris was gone, wasn’t he, even if he
really lived in town; Chris was always gone now – some old vampire movie, where
the doctor-man with the round glasses had said something about silver, how you
could kill a vampire with silver …
Mr.
Edwards was rushing at Cousin Barnabas now, and Barnabas was swinging the cane,
and it arced and seemed to flare with silver fire as it went, and Mr. Edwards
drew back, screaming again, that dreadful wildcat sound, and then he was gone,
and Barnabas was kneeling beside her, shushing her and petting her hair. “He’s gone,” Barnabas was saying, “he’s gone,
you don’t have to be afraid anymore.”
But
Amy could see Daniel over his shoulder, Daniel with his face the white of a
skeleton’s bone, and she began to cry all over again, because she knew – after
the dreadful events of this night, how she knew – that he was very wrong
indeed.
6
“You’re
going to kill me,” Carolyn croaked from the place where she lay on the
bed. She had barely the strength to lift
her head, and she found now that she didn’t even care. Let me die, she thought, let me be free of all
these people, free of Will and the way my heart has shriveled for him but continues
to whisper his name, just let me be free and let me die.
But
a part of her knew what would happen to her after death, after his kind of death, and she became
afraid.
Tom
Collins loomed over her. His face split,
as it always did, into a razor grin lined with sharp, white teeth. They had been inside her, those teeth, ever
since the night he caught her spying on him as he burned the Old House – Loomis
House, her house – burned it to the
ground. I should have been inside, she
thought, but didn’t – couldn’t – say the words aloud. He caught her watching and so he took her
then, sinking into her, and she loved it, every time she loved it, even as she
knew he was killing her.
She
wanted to rise from the bed and run. She
wanted to get away from him. She could
make it. If she was quick. If she was clever enough.
But
he knew. He always knew what she was
thinking.
“I’m
not going to kill you, dear Cousin Carolyn,” Tom said, and his grinning never
ceased. “Not just yet. You always recover so nicely from each one of
our little … sessions, and it is actually quite convenient to have a handy
little bloodbag like you within easy reach.
Whenever I feel like it, actually.
Saves me quite a lot of trouble, you know.” His face grew dark. “I can’t get away with it every time, you know.”
“That
girl,” Carolyn whispered. “The girl down
by the docks. That entire apartment
house burned down. Eight people died.”
“Yes,”
Tom said, bored. “I expect they did.”
“You’re
a monster.”
“Exactly,”
he said, and smiled. His eyes were
polished stones, like the moon, like the ripples on the water. She desired him and hated him at the same
time. Not for the first time, she
wondered how he had become what he was.
She remembered him as a child; whatever had done this to him, it hadn’t
been that long ago. “We are a house full
of monsters, Carolyn my dear, and don’t you ever forget that. Angelique knew it. I know it.
You know it. We Collinses,
monsters to the end.”
“This
… this house …”
“This
house indeed. It makes monsters of us
all.”
“No. We have a choice. We must!”
She was beginning to whimper again.
Her head throbbed. Blood was
leaking from the wounds; she could feel it trickling and running down between
her breasts. He would lap at them sometimes
until she cried out with the exquisite agony of it all. She burned for his kiss and hated herself for
the burning.
“Perhaps. But I think not. This house is a door; you know that. Someone in this family opened it long ago,
called to the evil, and the evil responded.
Or perhaps it’s the other way around.
Perhaps the evil called to us,
and we are all too weak to turn it back.
That feels right to me somehow.”
“We
aren’t …” It was harder to breathe with
every moment that passed. “We are not monsters.”
“Oh
Carolyn,” Tom sighed and petted her hair lovingly. His fangs glowed in the surreal half-light
that fell from the lamp beside her bed.
“Of course we are.”
She
began to cry.
“Carolyn?”
Her
head jerked up. Tom was gone, and she
cursed at the ache she felt at his loss.
Alexis
Stokes stood framed in the doorway. “I’m
sorry I was so long,” she said. “But
there was a … another disturbance.”
“In
Angelique’s room,” Carolyn whispered.
Alexis
frowned. “Yes. How did you know?”
She
didn’t respond.
Alexis
set the tea at Carolyn’s side. The frown
lines scarred deep on her forehead drew closer together. “I’m not exactly sure what happened. Mr. Collins – Barnabas, that is – found the
children.”
“Found
them?”
“They’re
hurt. Or Daniel is. It was Damion Edwards.”
“Damion
Edwards is gone.”
“He
isn’t.” Alexis’ blue eyes sparked with
fright. “He’s back. He might even be in the house right now. Carolyn, he’s become a vampire.”
Carolyn
said nothing. She wasn’t afraid. She was Tom’s; she belonged to Tom alone; he
would protect her from any other creature that walked the night.
“Did
you hear what I said?” Alexis’ voice had grown shrill, as it always did when
she neared hysteria. Carolyn felt a
headache coming on. “There is another
vampire at Collinwood! You were right
what you said before. None of us is safe
until it has been caught and destroyed!”
“I’m
in no condition for a vampire hunt,” Carolyn said. “I’m very tired.”
“You
may never wake up,” Alexis said sternly, “if Damion Edwards comes to your
room.”
“I’ll
be all right,” Carolyn said. “I’ll lock
the door.”
“I
want to leave this house,” Alexis whispered.
“Why
don’t you then?”
She
looked down at the other woman, perplexed.
“What do you mean?”
“I
mean, why don’t you leave? If that’s
what you want to do. Why don’t you just
do it?” She was too exhausted for
niceties, even if Alexis was her friend.
Sort of.
“I
can’t,” she said. “Not until I find
out.”
“Find
out what?”
“The
truth,” Alexis said. “The truth about
what happened to Angelique.”
“A
stroke,” Carolyn said. “At the
séance. You were there. You saw.”
“I
don’t believe she died of a simple stroke.”
“She
practiced black magic,” Carolyn said wanly.
“I understand that isn’t good for your blood pressure.”
Alexis
paced beside the bed, her face scrawled, her eyes fiery. “You
can make jokes,” she said. “But I miss her.”
“I
don’t know why. You two were never …
close.”
“But
we were! I swear we were!” Her voice fell to a hush. “Or we would have been. She began to confide in me, those days before
the séance. She told me her thoughts …
her plans.”
“What
plans?”
Alexis
didn’t answer her. She stared silently
out the window instead. “The moon,” she
said. “It’s so bright.”
“Alexis,”
Carolyn called, “are you all right?”
“I’m
fine,” Alexis said, and bowed her head.
“I’m just … tired.”
“You’re
always tired.”
“So
are you.” They stared at each other for
a moment, then Alexis laughed. It was
nothing, Carolyn thought, like Angelique’s.
Not even close. “Listen to
us. We’re like schoolgirls. Your mother is going to spend the night with
you. Roger has gone into town, and Trask
is going to stay outside Amy’s room.
I’ll be there with her.”
“It
must have been Damion,” Carolyn said.
She was teetering on the brink of sleep.
She felt a bit better – stronger – but she was so tired! She seemed to hear a snatch of music, a
little bit of a tune. She began to hum
it.
“What
did you say?”
Alexis. Like a tiny gnat. Carolyn hummed her song. “I wanna dance with you,” she whispered,
“wanna dance my cares away …”
“Carolyn!”
Like
a tunnel. Alexis seemed further and
further away. Carolyn let her go. Damion killed Buffie, Carolyn thought
dreamily, and hummed and hummed, and that was the answer. Of course he had. And someone would kill Damion, and then
they’d all be safe and there would be no more worries.
There
is no doorway at Collinwood, she thought before drifting asleep, unaware that
the line in Alexis’ forehead had smoothed out at last. There is, she thought, only us. The Collinses. And that’s enough.
7
“Barnabas
Collins knows about the vampire,” Victoria said. “The other
vampire, I mean.”
“So
what?” Tom said. He ran a hand across
his bare chest. It was, he thought, like
alabaster, like he was perfectly cast in marble. His muscles were hard and sensitive beneath
the skin, and they jumped at his touch.
I don’t know how I ever lived before, he thought, and made a little
face. Not as a human, anyway. What a waste is man. A pitiful waste. He grinned.
Fit only for consumption.
Victoria
frowned. “So he could be dangerous,
that’s what. He didn’t seem at all
surprised to know we had a vampire.” Her
eyes narrowed. “Actually, he seemed more
than not-surprised. It was like … like
he was familiar with them.”
“Maybe
Barnabas Collins is a vampire.” He
chuckled, and ran the tip of his finger over her bare nipple. She drew in a sharp hiss. The sex had been fast and brutal, the way
they both liked it. He was still flushed
from the blood he had taken from Carolyn.
It made him feel hot … alive. He
wanted only to give that life to her, then.
Her service, only hers. “Come on,
Vic. He’s another relative. Just another relative. A Collins, so he’s a weirdo.”
“I
think he’s more than that,” Victoria said.
“I think he could be an enemy.”
“So
I’ll kill him.” Tom bared his
fangs. “I’ll drain him dry.”
“Perhaps,”
she replied. He leaned over and put his
mouth on her nipple. A small sound came
out of her then, and she lay back.
After
they were done – again – she put her head on his chest and listened to the
nothing inside him. It made her feel
cold and, let’s face facts, rather frightened.
“You
shouldn’t be afraid of me.” She
jumped. He couldn’t read thoughts – or
said he couldn’t. But what if he was
lying?
“I’m
not.”
“I
can smell your fear.” He tittered. “Come on, baby doll. You made me what I am. You know about all my powers and stuff.”
“Do
I?”
“Okay,
so maybe you don’t. But I don’t know about
yours. All your hoodoo and voodoo.” He waggled his fingers and ooohed.
“It
isn’t voodoo.”
“Hoodoo
then.”
“It
isn’t that either. I don’t know what I
am.” She was depressed again. Terribly depressed. She’d been feeling this way more and more as
of late, and nothing seemed to help.
“You’re
powerful, baby, that’s what you are.” He
nuzzled her throat playfully. “Full of
dark juice. I could just drink it up.” He made a deep grumbling sound inside his
throat, like a lion.
She
stared at him warily. “You’d better not
even think about it.”
“I
love you, Vic. I told you that. Wanna be with you forever.”
“You
will be.”
More
kissing. She liked that better, better
than talking. Which they still had to
do.
She
broke the kiss and stared at him. “Have
you talked to Chris?” She hated to talk
about herself … about her powers. She
didn’t understand them, didn’t know where they came from, or what they meant,
or what their extent really was. They
frightened her sometimes. And sometimes
they didn’t. Bringing up Tom’s brother,
however, was more than just a distraction.
She needed him at Collinwood.
Angelique needed the same thing, Victoria thought darkly, but she’s
dead, and so I’ll carry on her plan without her.
The Collins family must dwell under this
roof. If the plan is to work, they must
all be gathered.
“He
doesn’t want to come back here. Why do
you want him to, anyway?”
“I’ll
tell you,” she said. “All in good time.”
“You’re
not going to hurt him, are you?”
“Would
that bother you?” Her eyes were
flat. The pupils had begun to expand …
then contract. Expand … then contract.
Tom
recoiled. She knew it bothered him when
that happened. But her eyes reflected
the power in her, and when it rose up like a beast, they turned black as the
still heart of midnight.
“Nah,”
he said too quickly. “I don’t care one
way or another about him. I’m just curious.”
“Angelique
had a theory,” Victoria said. “Did I
ever tell you what it was?”
“Huh
uh.”
“She
was a half-cracked witch at best with no real power to speak of. Certainly she couldn’t call herself back from
the grave as she always said she would.
But she had this theory, and I’ve been thinking about it a lot.”
“What
was it?”
“That
this house has some kind of power. She
never said what kind. But it exerts this
power over us – over all of us. It
called the Collins family to it, and we had to come.”
“Stupid
theory, then. We built this house.”
“Or
maybe it made us build it.”
“Mumbo
jumbo bullshit.”
“Maybe. But I think she might have had
something. The more Collinses that live
here, the more power there is. And I’m
interested in power.”
He
ran his fangs over her breasts lightly but didn’t break the flesh. “You’re powerful,” he said. “You’re amazing.”
She
smiled. “Do you ever regret that I made
you what you are?”
“Never. Not for one single moment.”
“Good,”
she said. She wondered if she meant
it. “Kiss me,” she said, and he opened
her wide once again.
8
Barnabas
remained in Angelique’s room after the paramedics had taken Daniel away. Dr. Reeves had given Amy a sedative and she
was sleeping in her room. Alexis would
join her there soon, she had assured him.
And everyone was given a cross.
Except
for me, Barnabas thought angrily, and glared up at the portrait of
Angelique. “I wish I could say that this
was your fault,” he said. “That you
caused me this curse. But even you are
not responsible. No, in this time, for
once, it was not you.” The anger
dissolved as suddenly as it had come. He
couldn’t even blame the Angelique from his time. Not anymore.
It had been selfish of him to ask her to lift the curse. But dammit, why? His eyes blazed crimson for a moment. Why had it been selfish? Someone
had restored the curse to him in the present day, and he had yet to discover
who. It wasn’t Angelique, he
thought. She wanted to help me. Before Sky, I mean. Before Vicki destroyed her once chance at
happiness … as she destroyed mine.
And
the wheel went round and round. Who was
responsible for what – the blame – it hurt too much to think of it. He had killed Josette as surely as Angelique
had. And Vicki … hadn’t he encouraged
her to open herself to the darkness inside her, for the sake of his family?
But
it was her family too, he reminded himself.
It was all for the greater good …
My
fault, he thought, and glanced down at the wolf’s head cane that he couldn’t
even bring himself to touch. It would
sear my flesh as much as it would that sad, repulsive vampire I drove off from
the children, he thought. Because I am a
foul thing. An evil. A danger to everyone around me. And no matter what pretty lies I tell myself,
Angelique isn’t to blame.
I
am.
Could
he save the Collins family of this time?
Should he interfere at all? Their
secrets were not his, and yet … he
felt drawn to them. They weren’t his
responsibility … and yet, somehow, madly, they were.
Victoria.
He
closed his eyes and placed a hand to his forehead. Unless I’m really thinking of her, he
thought. Unless she has blinded my
reason. Was that at all possible?
He
thought it might be. Strong
possibility.
She’s
different, he reminded himself; if she possesses the powers that the Vicki of
his time did, then surely she had already allowed them to consume her. She was cold, calculating … and miserable,
somehow. He could see the misery in her
eyes, sparkling up and out when she thought no one was looking.
I could help her … I could free her from the
darkness … another chance, god, please, just one more chance …
And
then she could rejoin me in my world, he thought, and looked around the room.
If I can ever get back.
Would
the doorway ever open? Was there a
doorway to begin with?
Perhaps
it’s me, he thought with his usual touch of melancholy. Perhaps I
am the doorway … and all this evil flows from me.
It
was nearly dawn. He had to check on
Hoffman and then secure himself away.
Perhaps
forever.
For
a moment after Barnabas Collins had faded away utterly the room that had once
belonged to Angelique Stokes Collins was silent, still and watchful.
Then
it shivered minutely.
It
trembled.
It
seemed to draw in a deep breath – reality fragmented and curled, turning in on
itself – and then it exhaled with a mighty gasp. The chandelier above swung and tinkled. The portrait of Angelique rattled against the
wall.
The
room was no longer empty, silent, or still.
Two
women stood, blinking at each other, their hair tousled, their eyes wide, their
mouths agape.
Neither
one of them moved for a moment.
Then
they embraced.
The
doorway had opened.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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