CHAPTER 91: Transition
Voiceover by Donna Wandrey: “A night of terror on
the great estate of Collinwood in the world of Parallel Time … a world that
Barnabas, Julia, and Angelique all wish madly to leave. But dark forces have conspired to keep them
there … and as agendas arise and evil powers gather their forces for a final
assault, there may be a death at Collinwood … or more than one.”
1
“Where
is she?” Roxanne snarled, as unpleasant now as she had been sickly sweet only a
moment before.
A
spasm of fear flashed over Alexis’s face, and she backed away. “Who are you talking about?” she cried. Her voice sounded lamb-like in Roxanne’s
ears, dreadful and ululating. It seemed
that she was more sensitive than ever these days, that even the sound of water
dripping off a rainspout blocks away from her tiny hovel in Collinsport could
send her into a frenzy.
Roxanne
stepped into the massive foyer of Collinwood and looked around
appraisingly. “You know who I’m talking
about,” she said. “She’s here, I can
feel her.”
“Get
out of here, Roxanne,” Alexis said.
“I’ll call for help. I’ll call
Quentin. He’ll put you out quickly
enough!”
“He,”
Roxanne said pleasantly, and smiled a big smile, “would never make it in time.”
They
stared at each other.
“This
is ridiculous,” Roxanne said eventually.
“We aren’t evenly matched. This
wouldn’t be a fair fight in the slightest.”
“I’m
not interested in fighting you,” Alexis sobbed.
Her eyes were wet and weak looking.
“I don’t understand what you want or why you’re here, but I want you to
leave … now!”
“Yes,
Miss Drew,” Victoria Collins boomed triumphantly from the head of the
staircase. Roxanne’s head whipped up and
her eyes glared narrowly. Tom stood
behind his benefactress, and his face twitched and his eyes glowed. Victoria was smiling. “Why don’t you do as our dear Alexis bids you
and leave?”
Roxanne
said nothing at first. Then she began to
smile.
A
moment later and she had disappeared utterly.
Alexis
uttered a long, quavering scream.
“Shut
her up,” Victoria snapped at Tom, who nodded, loped down the stairs, and took
Alexis by the elbow and tried to lead her in the direction of the drawing room.
“Let
go of me!” Alexis shrieked and jerked away from Tom. “Don’t you touch me, either of you!” Her teeth were bared and her face was wet
with her tears.
“Weak,
weak, weak,” Victoria sighed as she descended the staircase. “Don’t be afraid of little miss Roxanne,
Alexis dear. She’s all talk.”
“She
… she just disappeared!” Alexis gasped.
“I’ve never seen anything like that!”
“Yes,”
Victoria said, “well. That’s Collinwood
for you. Kooks. A lot of kooks.” Tom grinned and shook his head.
“She
isn’t human,” Alexis sniffled.
“So
few people are,” Tom muttered, “these days.”
Victoria
shot him a look; he shrugged and turned away, still grinning. “What did she want?” Victoria asked, turning
her attention back to the wilting woman with the lank blonde hair and
frightened blue eyes.
“She
didn’t say,” Alexis whispered. “Not so
that I could understand, I mean. And
then she … oh, and then she … d-d-disappeared –”
“Yes,
we all saw that,” Victoria snapped. “I
want you to look at me, Alexis. Look
into my eyes … as deeply as you can …”
“No!”
Alexis cried, her face white and horrified.
She tried to run, but Tom shot out an arm and seized her. His long white fingers dug into the meat of
her arm, and she yelped like a terrified rabbit.
“Hold
her,” Victoria said grimly. She glided
across the foyer and stood before Alexis and smiled gently. “You don’t have to be afraid of me, my
dear. I want to help you. I can help you forget. Wouldn’t you like that?”
“Leave
me alone,” Alexis moaned.
“Look
into my eyes,” Victoria said. Her voice
began to echo and rumble. “As deeply as
you can. Look at me, Alexis. Just … look.”
It took a long time –
seconds that, to Victoria, sweat beginning to bloom on her forehead and her
eyes burning with her concentration, felt like forever – but at last Alexis
finally did as she was bade.
2
Carolyn
took her mother’s hand and held it tight, and together they gazed solemnly at
the corpse of Roger Collins.
“Oh,”
Elizabeth said, and pressed her face into her daughter’s shoulder.
“It’s
all right, Mother,” Carolyn said, but it wasn’t all right. Uncle Roger was dead … and worse.
Something
… had been at him.
His
throat was in ribbons; his eyes gazed forward in abject horror, and his mouth
gaped slightly, revealing a gray hint of tongue; his chest had been opened as
if something had exploded from within, leaving behind a black and white and red
opening through which his ribs, broken and cracked, protruded.
“We
have to leave this house,” Elizabeth said.
She lifted her face and wiped away at her tears. “We must take the children and go. Close it.
Quentin will just have to understand.”
“It’s
a beast,” Carolyn whispered. “And a
curse. It will follow us, Mother, don’t
you understand that? It knows us.”
“If
it’s an animal,” Elizabeth said, “then surely it can be destroyed. But no one can seem to find it! Buffie … Maggie … and now … Roger …” She uttered a hoarse sob and turned
away.
“We’ll
die,” Carolyn said dreamily, and took her mother by the hand. “We’ll all die.”
“I’m
going to call the police,” Elizabeth said and reached for the telephone that
had sat, undisturbed the past few months until the recent events that all
seemed centered on this room …
…
and suddenly there wasn’t a telephone there.
There
wasn’t anything there.
Carolyn
and Elizabeth clung to each other and looked around at a room that had been
rendered empty, lined with shadows, and floating with skeins of dust. Only the moon flowing in through the window
offered them any illumination.
“Mother,”
Carolyn whimpered. “Oh Mother, what’s
happened to us? Are we dead?” She seized Elizabeth by the shoulders and
shook her until her head snapped back. “Are we dead?”
But
Elizabeth could only stare at her with wide, frightened eyes.
3
“We
can’t go back to Collinwood,” Julia said, and puffed at her cigarette. She aimed the burning red eye at its end at
Angelique. “They’ll never believe you
are who you say you are. And even if I
could pass for Hoffman, eventually I’d make some sort of slip up. The fact is, none of us know enough about the
people in this time to pass for one of them.”
Her eyes narrowed. “Not even you,
Barnabas,” she said. He said nothing,
but looked down fixedly at his cane as he had done ever since they’d left Eagle
Hill.
“I’m
afraid I haven’t the faintest idea what we should do,” Angelique said. Her eyes were downcast and shadowed; the
three of them stood inside the carriage house which, fortunately, seemed to be
at least temporarily abandoned. Every
inch of it was covered in a thick patina of dust; Julia had briefly considered
dropping an ash onto one of the coverlets in hopes that a spark would catch in
Angelique’s dress, sending the witch – former witch – witch – former witch up
in flames. But no, Julia had sighed and
puffed at her cigarette. That was too
cruel. And Angelique could still prove
helpful.
“We
should go back to Collinwood,” Julia said decisively, “sneak in through the
servant’s entrance, and try to get to the East Wing. We can hole up in one of the rooms until we
have a chance to get to Angelique’s room … and then …”
“And
then what?” Angelique said. “We just
wait? Sitting around, terrified that someone
will discover us?”
“It’s
the only option,” Julia said, her voice growing ever stonier. “We must return to our time at once.”
“And
how do you propose we do that?” Angelique said nastily, and Julia wished madly
for that spark. “I have lost my powers,
Julia.”
“Barnabas
made it here without the benefit of your powers,” she snapped back.
Barnabas
said nothing. He only looked at his
cane.
“We
should find someone in the village,” Angelique suggested, “someone involved in
the occult. That wolfman, whoever he was
– he could help us!”
“Or
betray us to that Roxanne woman,” Julia said.
“She warned us to leave this time as quickly as we could, and I, for
one, think she was right to do so.”
“And
I think you are a fool, Julia
Hoffman!”
That
was it. Julia’s hand had snapped out
almost before she knew it was going to, and Angelique’s head rocked back, there
was a very loud sound, and suddenly Julia’s hand stung with a ferocious and
quite welcome heat.
Angelique
stared at her, gape-mouthed. One hand
rose unsteadily to her cheek and the fingertips grazed the spot, which had
begun to flame. Her wide eyes shimmered
with tears. “You’ll be sorry you did
that,” she snapped, and turned away before either Barnabas or Julia could see
that there were teardrops about to fall.
But
Barnabas only continued to stare at his cane.
Julia
reached out her hand, bit her lip, then drew her hand back. Maybe, she thought uneasily, maybe that was too far.
“Angelique,” she said, and her voice was unsteady. She swallowed, and heard only a dry click.
“Angelique, I’m –”
“Don’t
say it,” Angelique whispered. She
remained where she stood, shoulders hunched and trembling, head bowed, hands
clenched into tight fists. “I don’t want
to hear you tell me that you’re sorry.”
“That
was uncalled for, I’ll admit it,” Julia said.
“Angelique, please. After
everything …” She cast an uneasy eye at
Barnabas, who, disturbingly, seemed as catatonic as he had when they led him
into the carriage house. She flicked her
ash onto the floor and her eyes back at Angelique. “We need to work together more than ever
before. I’ll try … I promise I will.”
Angelique
glanced over her shoulder and snuffled.
“No, Julia,” she said, and Julia blinked. The other woman turned around to face her
head on. Her face was wet and the place
where the flat of Julia’s hand had come in stinging contact with her arrogant
cheekbone stood out in sharp relief against the porcelain of her face. Her eyes were red and glared a stark green
color. Julia swallowed again, and took a
quick drag from her cig. But Angelique
only said, “I’m sorry. I … I have a tendency to lose my temper. As you may have gathered.”
Barnabas
made a small sound, and both women glanced at him. “Barnabas?” Julia said softly, and laid a
firm hand on his shoulder. She didn’t
see how Angelique’s eyes narrowed. “Barnabas,
are you with us?”
“I’m
with you, Julia,” Barnabas said. His
voice was a ghost, dry, a whisper, just a husk.
He laughed once and they winced; it was a dreadful sound, worse than his
whispers. “I just don’t know where I
am.”
“We
will find a way,” Angelique said. The determination
that had been missing only moments ago had come back with a vengeance, and
Julia stared at her. Angelique only
shrugged. “I promise you, Barnabas, we
will find a way back to our own time.”
“Our
own time?” He shook his head. “It isn’t possible. I know where we are. I’ve figured it out.”
They
exchanged more worried glances. “It’s a
parallel world, Barnabas,” Julia said, “just as Eliot –”
“No.” His voice was strong suddenly, vehement. “No, it isn’t. It isn’t a parallel world, another time. And there is no way back.” He looked up for the first time, and his
red-rimmed eyes scanned the face of the two women who loved him. Both felt winded at the sight of those eyes,
so empty were they, so beyond anything resembling even simple despair. There was nothing there. Absolute nothing. “We won’t ever go back. It isn’t possible.” He licked his lips. There was no saliva to moisten them. “Because this is hell, you see. Hell. And
no one ever escapes from hell, not really.”
And he dropped his eyes once again.
4
Her
eyes swallowed Alexis; the pupils expanded until they devoured everything else
in the world and became two swirling black holes. Victoria watched with satisfaction as
Alexis’s own eyes grew wider and wider, as her own pupils expanded to meet
them. “Excellent,” she said, a cobra
swaying before a mouse. “Now tell
me. What brought Roxanne Drew to
Collinwood? What did she want?”
Alexis
opened her mouth, then turned her head away.
A tiny and completely uncharacteristic smile of pleased deviltry danced
across her face. It was entirely too
Angelique for Victoria’s comfort. “I
told you,” Alexis simpered, “I don’t know.”
Victoria
snarled. She raised a pale hand; the
fingertips danced with crackling black sparks.
Alexis merely laughed again. “My
sister was a witch, Victoria,” Alexis sang, “and even if that isn’t what you are – because I’m not entirely
certain what you are – did you really
think that, based on my relationship with her, I wouldn’t protect myself from
witchcraft somehow?” And she fingered a
single delicate bead that hung from a thin chain around her neck. “It’s pure silver,” she said to Tom as he
reached for it, “in case you were wondering.”
“She
knows,” Tom whispered.
“Of
course I know,” Alexis said. “Angelique
and I are twins. We shared everything,
even when we hated each other.” She
closed her eyes and muttered a word neither of the others could understand, and
suddenly Tom was shoved backward as if by an enormous and invisible fist. He struck the wall by the front door and slid
to the floor where he sat, eyes half-lidded, a trickle of blood dribbling
slowly from his right nostril.
“You
don’t have any real power,” Victoria
said. “I can tell. I can feel
you, my dear Alexis.”
“Then
perhaps you’ll be able to feel this as well,” Alexis said pleasantly, and a
moment later Victoria burst into flames.
5
“I
wouldn’t,” Roxanne said, and laid a hand on Quentin’s shoulder. He turned to face her, his eyes wild, his
face a white shock in the darkness outside Collinwood’s front door, and though
he tried to shrug her off, her grip was iron-firm. “Let’s let them play by themselves, what do
you say?”
“Let
go of me,” Quentin said, each word slow and deliberate.
Roxanne
released him, but positioned herself so that she stood between him and the
door. An orange glow flickered through
its crack, and thin purple plumes of smoke began to rise into the air before
them. “Whatever you say,” Roxanne said,
“but I would advise against it.”
“Something
is burning!” Quentin cried.
Roxanne
examined his face carefully, then shook her head. “But that isn’t why you’re in such a mad dash
to make it back inside your ancestral home,” she said, “is it.”
Quentin
opened his mouth, then closed it again.
He blinked, confused. “I … don’t
know,” he admitted. “I heard Cousin
Barnabas … I overheard …” He shook his
head. “But he isn’t Cousin Barnabas at
all. I don’t know what he is.”
“Of
course you do,” Roxanne said. “He’s a
vampire.”
“A
vampire,” Quentin sighed. A sob began to
build in his chest, and he gritted his teeth against it. “Another goddamn vampire. He killed Maggie, didn’t he.” A tear slid effortlessly down the curve of
his cheek.
“No,”
Roxanne said, and Quentin’s eyes opened wide.
“How
do you know?” he said. “I don’t even
know you.”
“You
know me well enough,” she said, and touched his cheek. “Remember, Quentin. The times you would come to me before you
ever met Angelique Stokes … I ordered
you to forget them, my Quentin Blue Eyes, and you did, just as I bade you, you
forgot me … and it should have been forever.”
A shadow passed over her porcelain face.
“But then this town – this accursed house
– called me back, and I had to come. I
couldn’t ignore the call. I never could.” She drew her hand away; Quentin was watching
her warily, confusion and suspicion passing like clouds over his face.
“I
don’t know you,” Quentin said, but he sounded doubtful.
“Remember,”
Roxanne whispered, “remember …”
He
took a shuddering step away from her suddenly, then reached out and crushed her
to him. “Roxanne!” he cried. “Roxanne, it’s you!”
“Yes,”
she purred, and nestled her head against his chest. “It’s your Roxanne. I’ve come back to you.”
“Why
did you make me forget? Why would you do
that to me? God, I love you so much –”
“Because
it isn’t safe for you, Quentin,” Roxanne said.
“I told you, I explained. Because
of who you are – and because of what I am.”
She stepped carefully out of his embrace. “And I’m only allowing you to remember now
because you are in grave danger. You and
the entire family.”
“You
don’t care about my family,” Quentin said.
“You told me that a million times.”
“But
I do care about you. I told you that a
million times as well.”
“True,”
Quentin nodded. “But things are
different now. There are monsters
…” His brow furrowed. “What do you mean, what you are?”
“I
don’t have time to explain to you. There
are evil forces at work at Collinwood, and they will destroy you if you let
them.”
“Then
I won’t let them.”
She
smiled and shook her head. “Oh
Quentin. Always so brave … and so
stupid.”
“Hey
–”
“Don’t
be offended.” She stroked his cheek
again, but tenderly. “You must beware
Angelique, Quentin. She wants you dead.”
His
nostrils flared. “Angelique is dead,” he
said.
“How
I wish I could believe that,” Roxanne said darkly. “The fact of the matter is, she may be dead,
but she is still dangerous. Like the
head of a rattlesnake – separated from its body, it can still bite you, still
infect you with its poison. Angelique
still holds power. You truly are a fool
if you don’t understand that.”
“I’ll
fight her then,” Quentin grinned and tried to slide an arm around Roxanne’s
waist. “With you beside me –”
“You
won’t have me beside you,” Roxanne said, neatly skirting his arm. “I’m sorry, my darling, but that is how it
must be.”
“Don’t
talk like that,” Quentin said. “Please,
Roxanne. I’ve lost so much –”
“And
you will lose more. You are under a
spell, whether you realize it or not.
I’m … I’m not certain whose spell, that’s the problem. But until I figure it out, you won’t be safe
at Collinwood.”
“Cousin
Barnabas?”
“It
isn’t Barnabas,” Roxanne said. “He’s a
victim as much as anyone else in this family.
There is a curse working on you, on all
of you, and it stretches across time and space.
Barnabas Collins may be a vampire, but he is not a threat to you.” Her eyes clouded. “At least, not yet.”
“What
does that mean?”
She
looked back at him and tried to smile.
“Never mind,” she said. “Go into
town. See your son. But stay away from Collinwood, Quentin. You will remember that, even if you have
forgotten everything else.”
“Why
would I forget you? I just found you
again!”
“Because
you must,” Roxanne whispered. There was
something he detected in her voice … a trace of emotion, the barest hint of a
sob …but her eyes were dry. Wide, a dark
blue that was almost lilac, eyes that a man could drown in, and love it while
he did …
Forget, Quentin … forget once again …
“Forget,”
he whispered.
“Stay
away from Collinwood,” Roxanne commanded.
“I
will stay away from Collinwood.” His
lips barely moved. His eyes stared into
hers.
Roxanne
stood on her tiptoes to brush her cold lips against his. “Goodbye, my love,” she whispered. “Forever.”
Quentin
blinked and passed a hand over his face.
“What?” he said. “What?” He glanced around, but he stood by himself
before the front door of Collinwood, where there was no longer any orange glow
(orange glow?) but where a few tendrils of smoke continued to rise lazily.
Why should there be smoke coming from
Collinwood?
He
smiled. It was a daffy smile, completely
lovely and loony, and it made him look boyish and even more handsome. She
loves me to look this way, he thought.
Who?
He
shook his head. Didn’t matter. There was no smoke escaping from
Collinwood. Hallucination – it had to be. Besides, why was he about to go in the
house? He had to visit Daniel – Daniel
was his responsibility. Now that Maggie
was gone, Daniel was his life. That was
how it had to be – the only way it could be now.
So
thinking, Quentin spun around and began to walk back to his car. He paused for only a moment and glanced up at
the sky. There was a name on his lips;
he could taste it, could almost
remember …
Then
it was gone.
Oh
well. He had to get to the
hospital. Daniel was waiting.
6
“We’ll
be all right, darling,” Elizabeth said.
Carolyn continued to cling to her, even as they cracked open the door to
the room that had been Angelique’s and peered out into a hallway that was as
dusty and gloomy as the room they had just inhabited.
“No
we won’t,” Carolyn whispered. She was
trembling uncontrollably, like a little animal.
“Mother, where are we?”
“I
don’t know,” Elizabeth admitted, then, firmly, said, “But it won’t do us any
good to lose our heads.”
“It’s
Angelique,” Carolyn said. “She’s responsible for this. We were in her room –”
“Whether
it’s Angelique or not,” Elizabeth said, “we need to stay calm. We’re still in Collinwood.” Her nose wrinkled. “I think.”
“But
whatever could have happened to it?” Carolyn wailed. “Mother, it looks … abandoned!”
“Time
travel,” Elizabeth said thoughtfully.
“Perhaps we’ve gone somewhere else in time. As preposterous as that sounds –”
“Nothing
sounds preposterous anymore,” Carolyn said.
“Not to me.” Her eyes widened
suddenly. “Mother,” she said and brushed
her fingertips against her throat. Joy
flooded her face and bloomed in her cheeks.
“Mother, they’re gone! They’re
gone!”
“What
are you talking about?” Elizabeth asked.
She had continued a few steps down the hallway toward a door at the end,
and she stopped now and glanced back at her daughter.
“The
marks,” Carolyn said. “The marks on my
throat! They’re gone!”
“What
marks?”
Carolyn
shook her head. “The bite marks,” she said. Her face darkened. “Tom’s
bite marks.”
“Tom!”
“He’s
a vampire, Mother,” Carolyn said. “He did this to me. Made me his slave. He’s a monster. But whatever’s happened – wherever we’ve gone
– it undid whatever hold he had over me.
The marks are gone, and I can think clearly again for the first time in
… oh god, months!”
“Tom
a vampire,” Elizabeth said. “It hardly
seems possible.”
“It
is possible. Mother,” Carolyn said, her face brimming with
exciting, “I just thought of something.
Something Will talked about – something he wanted to write about in his
next book … Mother … have you ever heard of … Parallel Time?”
7
Tom
leaped to his feet, and for a moment Alexis was sure he would throw himself at
Victoria in an attempt to smother the flames so he could save his lady
love. A smirk rose on her face as she
watched his muscles bunch … then relax, as he drew back flat against the
wall. The flames danced in his brown
eyes; his mouth worked, and his face, if possible, grew even paler.
But
Victoria wasn’t finished. Her hands
burst forth from the flames and rose into the air, and for a moment Alexis was
certain that the woman was chanting somehow …
“Damn
it,” she hissed.
The
flames died away, revealing Victoria Collins, unscathed, not even singed.
Her face was a twisted mask of fury and triumph. “That,”
she snapped, “was completely uncalled for.”
“You
had it coming,” Alexis said. “You’ve had
it coming for months. You monster, you beast … thinking you could come in here,
swoop in and take my sister’s husband, her child –”
“And
just what were you planning on doing,
dearest Alexis?” Victoria snarled.
“Surely you haven’t been hanging around Collinwood for the past six
months because you’ve been in mourning for your sister. You hypocrite. You’ve had your eye on Quentin Collins ever
since Angelique’s death, if not before!”
“No,
that isn’t true!” Alexis cried. She
gathered her composure and smoothed the wrinkles in her dress. It was a losing battle. Washing and drying her clothes properly just
hadn’t been a priority ever since …
Alexis
smiled. Well, ever since that special night.
Victoria’s
eyes narrowed. “What are you smiling
about? Certainly you know I can’t allow
you to live. In the parlance of the
horror films, I’m afraid you know too much, my dear.”
“And
what,” Alexis said, examining one gnawed and ragged fingernail, “what makes you
think that I will allow you to live?”
Victoria’s
mouth opened, closed, then opened again.
Then she pealed a burst of wicked, nearly hysterical laughter. “You can’t be serious,” she cackled. “My darling Alexis, you may have some talent,
I’ll grant you that, but to come up against me … against me – do you know who I am?
Do you know what I am?”
“I’m
afraid I don’t care,” Alexis said.
“Things are about to get very interesting, Victoria dear. Very interesting
indeed.” And with incredible
nonchalance, before Victoria and Tom’s widened eyes, Alexis walked steadily,
head held high, to the grand staircase.
She mounted it and walked slowly and calmly up the steps, paused for a moment
at the top, nodded her head at them graciously, and continued through the door
and out of their sight.
8
“I want him.”
“I
know you do.”
“And I will have him.”
“I’ll
bring him back. Just as soon as I
can. I’m in great danger, this very moment. She won’t wait much longer to destroy me.”
“She won’t destroy you.”
“You
don’t know that.”
“I do.
Because I’m going to destroy her first.”
“You
aren’t strong enough.”
“I am.
You have seen to that.” The
voice trembled and wheezed, grated like the wrought iron gates of the mausoleum
at Eagle Hill.
“I’m
afraid.”
“You mustn’t be.”
“I
can’t help it! You didn’t see her face!”
“Did you do what I –”
“Of
course! But it didn’t work. She’s stronger than we thought.”
“She is nothing. She was always nothing. But she doesn’t matter now. You know that.”
“I
know that.”
“Only Quentin matters. Bring him to me, Alexis. If you ever loved me … you’ll bring him to
me.”
“I
will, I swear that I will.”
The
creature tottered into the light and reached out with one rotted, wizened
hand. Alexis wanted to recoil, but she
wouldn’t allow herself the luxury. This
was what she wanted – what she had killed for – for the moment to come, for the
glory that had been promised … the lure of eternal life.
And
even though she was decomposing, even though her flesh clung to her bones in
wet and purple tatters, even though mere strands remained of her once famous
golden mane attached in damp patches to the skull that gleamed in the moonlight,
Angelique Stokes Collins was still alive.
Still
alive.
“I believe you,” she grated. “You
won’t fail me. You never have, sister of
mine.”
Together,
their insane laughter, nearly identical, even now, filled the dusty room in
Collinwood’s deserted West Wing like a flock of maddened crows.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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