CHAPTER 93: Destruction
(Voiceover by David Selby): “The last night in Parallel Time, and Barnabas,
Julia, and Angelique find themselves at the mercy of a mad man … a mad man who
wears the face of someone they know and love … and whom they may have to
destroy if they are ever to return to their own world.”
1
Roxanne
was dead. Sebastian didn’t feel the
relief he expected; his snout wrinkled back and his yellow eyes, glaring in the
shadows of the trees where he stood, unexposed, reflected back the
moonlight. If anyone looked in this
direction – like Quentin Collins, who seemed to have gone insane – they would
see only those eyes, hanging in space like glowing yellow coins.
And
Quentin had a sword that he was even now slashing through the air. Sebastian growled quietly, a purring sound
like a thread giving way. I could bound
out there now, he thought, already gauging the distance, tackle Quentin, knock
the sword from his hand –
“Don’t
do it,” Christopher whispered beside him.
Sebastian
froze, became a perfect white statue in the shadows, then turned to stare at
Christopher with his blazing yellow eyes.
Then he dropped his eyes and turned his head back to the action
unfolding before Collinwood’s front door.
“Go home,” he said. His voice was
toneless.
“No,”
Chris said instantly. “I want to
help. Or at least see that you aren’t
killed.”
“I
won’t get killed,” Sebastian snapped.
“Unless I do, saving you.”
Chris
smiled tightly. “Your imitation of an
asshole isn’t going to send me scurrying home with my tail between my
legs.” He flashed Sebastian his real
smile, and tweaked Sebastian’s actual tail, which was lashing the air angrily.
“Quit
it,” Sebastian growled. “You’re not
cute.”
“Sure
I am.”
“Quentin
has gone insane. He killed Roxanne.”
Chris
hesitated for just a second. “Good,” he
said, then, more steadily, “Good. Now she
doesn’t have power over us. We can do
what we can, we can –”
“I
don’t know if it is such a good thing.
Actually. And she wasn’t a bad person, Christopher, she just –”
“She
threatened to hurt me. Us, actually. That puts her in the bad person column in my
book.”
Sebastian
sighed heavily. “It isn’t that simple.”
“Maybe
not. Doesn’t matter. I want to help.”
Sebastian
thought for a moment. “You really want
to help?”
Chris
nodded.
“Go
home,” Sebastian said, and darted
from the bushes.
Christopher
glared after him. “Not on your life,” he
said after a moment, and began to edge his way through the tree line toward the
house.
2
“Poor
Roxanne,” Quentin clucked. He glanced
down to look for a moment at Roxanne’s body, which had begun to shrivel and
wither almost immediately. The fluid
that lay thick and black against the flagstones had already begun to
congeal. Her eyes, as Barnabas watched,
faded, turned white, then fell in completely.
“I guess there wasn’t much magic left in her portrait after all.”
Barnabas
lifted his eyes to those of the master of Collinwood. He wanted to moan; he had seen instantly that
Quentin was gone. He had observed enough
victims of sorcery over the past two hundred years to recognize someone deep in
the grip of a spell. He would have to
deal carefully with Quentin, but on the other hand, the feeling of doom, the
pressure to act and to act now, pressed down all around him. He caught a glimpse of Angelique out of the
corner of his eye; her eyes were still black, but were there threads of blue
flickering in and out of the dark shadows that had consumed her? He thought that a very good possibility.
Must act now.
“Give
me the sword, Quentin,” Barnabas said in as reasonable tone as he could muster,
and held out one hand.
Quentin
chuckled. “I don’t think so,” he
said. “You are clever, vampire. Actually, you’re not, terribly. Why would Quentin do something like that, so
against my will and what I’ve bidden him to do?”
Barnabas’s
eyes narrowed. “Who are you?” he
growled.
Quentin
shrugged. “Quentin’s body,” he
said. “Quentin’s hands. Quentin’s sword.” It hissed through the air. “Beyond that … who’s to say?” He laid a finger aside his mouth for a moment
and gazed upward. The effect was both
childlike and chilling. “I know! Why don’t you kill him? I
won’t suffer at all –” and as if to prove its point, the thing that spoke from
Quentin’s mouth drew the sword across the palm of his hand, and a wound opened
like a lipless mouth and began to ooze blood “—but he will. Your friend
Quentin.”
“Stop
it!” Barnabas roared.
“You
need to get inside the house, don’t you, Barnabas. Well that’s fine. That’s marvelous.” Quentin stepped aside and gestured at the
front door gallantly with a tiny bow. “Be my guest.
It is my house, after all … again.
At last.”
Barnabas
looked at his former host suspiciously.
“Why do you want us inside Collinwood?”
“For
the same reason that Victoria does,” Quentin said. “There is a power in the Collins family. I knew it long before I was killed, when I
strove to gather the entire family into this house. I could use you still, Barnabas Collins, and
perhaps, even –” It laid its eyes on Angelique
and they widened for a fraction of a second, then grew dark and hooded
again. “—even the others in your
company,” it finished lamely. “So for
the moment our purposes mesh. Go ahead,
Mr. Collins. Enter Collinwood. Come home.”
Quentin uttered a spate of laughter that caused Barnabas, Julia, and
Angelique to recoil, but especially Angelique.
For
the laughter was her own.
“We
will end this, Quentin,” Barnabas swore, and put a hand on the other man’s
shoulder. “If you’re in there at all, if
there is any way you can hear me, I promise you – we will end this.”
“End
away, Mr. Collins,” Quentin said and laughed that bone-chilling spate of
laughter again. “Be my guest.”
The
laughter echoed in their ears even after they were inside the house and closed
the door behind them.
“My
god, Barnabas,” Julia said, “what did he mean … ‘for the same reason that
Victoria does’?”
“I
don’t know,” Barnabas said miserably.
“But we must find her, Julia.”
“No,”
Angelique said instantly. Her eyes
snapped with her fury. “No,
Barnabas. We will not find Victoria Winters or Victoria Collins or whoever she is in
this time. Haven’t you learned that
lesson yet? These are not the people we know in our time. The spirit runs counter in almost every case,
which means –”
“—which
means that she could possibly be saved,” Barnabas snarled. “I have to give her a chance, Angelique. I have to save Quentin if I can, and Daniel,
and the rest of the family, and I have to save Victoria as well.”
“I’m
not going to argue with you,” Angelique said.
“We have very little time, and every second that we waste arguing I lose
more of the magic I’ve been able to gather.
It will take everything I have to make the room change, Barnabas. And,” she declared, drawing herself up to her
full height, “if we lose our chance – if we become trapped in this time forever
– then I will never forgive you. Never.”
“Angelique
is right,” Julia whispered.
“Julia!”
Barnabas cried.
“She
is,” Julia said. She looked up at
Barnabas with hollow, haunted eyes. Her
mouth trembled with exhaustion. “And you
know she is. This isn’t our world. These are not our people. You can’t save everyone, Barnabas, even if
you try – and these people will just have to fend for themselves.”
“I
won’t believe that,” Barnabas said. “I
have another chance with Vicki, don’t you see that, either of you? I can save her this time! I can talk to her, make her see reason –”
“She
isn’t the Vicki we knew,” Julia said as gently as she could. “Please, Barnabas, try to see that. For all our sakes.”
Barnabas
opened his mouth to respond when a terrible ululating cry rose from behind the
closed doors of the drawing room.
“Vicki!” he said and made a dash for the doors.
Julia
and Angelique’s eyes met in identical expressions.
Finally
Julia sighed. “After you,” she said, and
together they followed Barnabas through the drawing room doors.
3
“Those
screams,” Elizabeth said. She seemed to
have regained some of her composure since their return to their own time, but
Carolyn could see that her mother was shaken by the experience of traveling between
worlds. She squinted through the dimness
of the hallway that led from the East Wing to the main part of the house. Yes, she could see them now, undeniably. Several strands of her mother’s hair had
turned white. “Oh Carolyn, where are
they coming from?”
“Downstairs,”
she said. “Mother, do you still have the
coin?”
Elizabeth
held up her hand. She had it pinched
between two of her fingers. “I don’t
understand any of this,” she said.
“It
doesn’t matter,” Carolyn said. “We have
to find Barnabas.”
“Why
find Barnabas when you can have me?”
Elizabeth’s
brow furrowed while Carolyn’s eyes widened.
“No,” she whispered.
The
white face that burned in the corner beside them was Tom’s. His red lips split into a demonic grin,
revealing his teeth – all of them.
“Yes,” he said. “Welcome back,
ladies.”
4
It isn’t too late.
“Too
late,” Quentin Collins muttered through numb lips. It was so hard to think. Hadn’t he been with Daniel in the
hospital? He could remember dim flashes,
pictures, a shadowy room, hands that wove and stroked the air, but something
was wrong, terribly wrong with those hands –
You can still save them all.
“Save
them,” he sighed.
And
what about his own hands?
He
was holding something. He squinted at
it.
A
torch. It was a torch. Why was he holding a torch? He thought he almost knew.
It’s good, isn’t it?
That
voice – so familiar –
Good.
The
torch burst into a single, solid sheath of flame.
He
held it up before his face. He began to
grin.
“Good,”
he said, and turned towards the house that rose up against the darkness before
him.
5
Victoria
screamed again as, together, she and Alexis flew across the room. Alexis’s face was transformed; her eyes,
grown wide chillingly blue, were full of flashing shards of insanity, and her
mouth wreathed in a dreadful smile. Her
hands were also encircling Victoria’s throat, and the nails, filed to points,
dug painfully into her flesh.
But
her screams were of anger, fury, cat-like in their intensity, and not at all
afraid.
They
struck the wall as the drawing room doors flew open, but neither woman
noticed. “Let me go!” Victoria hissed,
and swiped her own claws in Alexis’s face.
“Can’t,”
the other woman panted. They hung
suspended in space together, like dancers, like lovers. “We need you, my sister and I. We need you for the end.”
“Angelique
is dead!” Victoria spat.
“Oh?”
Alexis grinned and said, “Obruro,”
and Victoria rocketed across the room again.
“Vicki!”
Barnabas cried.
Both
women turned to look, shocked, at the three people who stood silhouetted in the
doorway. “We can use you too,” Alexis
sang. “Don’t you worry. She has something very special planned for
you three, I promise you that.” Her head
whipped back in Victoria’s direction; she flung out her hand and cried, “Tego!” and Victoria was lifted bodily
with invisible hands and slammed against the wall with bone-shattering force.
“No!”
Barnabas cried and made a dash for Alexis.
“Barnabas,
don’t!” Angelique’s face, despite the
dead black eyes in their center, registered panic, and she held out her own
hands. A green ball of energy glowed
there, and as it grew larger – despite, Julia could see, the effort it took her
to create it; the black was draining from her eyes even as she watched –
Angelique threw her hands forward and the energy flew out in a stream.
“DIE!”
Alexis shrieked. A black bolt flew from
her hands toward Barnabas. The green
magic from Angelique’s fingers intercepted it, shattered it, and it fell away
and faded into nothing.
“You’ll
be sorry you did that,” Alexis hissed.
“I
probably will,” Angelique panted. Her
eyes were blue again, and wide with terror.
They met Julia’s. “I have no more
power, Julia,” she whispered. “Oh my
god, what are we going to do? What?”
But
Victoria, who had been gathering her own powers, ignored them all. She strode over to Alexis and seized her by
the hair, dragging her to her feet.
Barnabas saw her face and blanched.
It was white as a bone, and her eyes were completely, unremittingly
black. She was grinning, and her teeth
were triangular, serrated, the teeth of a great white shark. She said nothing, but even as Alexis squalled
with fury, Victoria held up one finger so that the other woman – and Barnabas –
could see how long her nailed had grown.
“Don’t!”
Barnabas cried.
Too
late.
Victoria
drew the finger across Alexis’s throat and screamed with laughter as blood
erupted in a fierce spray and shot across the room, darkening the carpet with
black streaks and spots. Alexis’s eyes
rolled up in her head, and as Victoria released her, her body struck the
drawing room floor with a dull thump.
For
a moment there was utter silence.
“Victoria,”
Barnabas whispered. It was too much –
too similar to what he had endured in his own time only a few weeks before, too
similar to watching his own beloved Vicki Winters destroy Sky Rumson, Roger
Collins, and try to destroy David, Quentin, and even him. “Vicki, please.”
“Don’t
call me that,” Victoria said, and drew herself up proudly. “My name is Victoria.” She held up her hands; they had begun to
crackle and pop with dark energy. “And
you – you will be nothing.”
“I
want to help you –”
“Help
me?” She cocked her head curiously,
horribly. “With what?” She laughed.
“You want to destroy me.”
“No,
please, listen. I can save you –”
“Or
stop me, at the very least. Save
me? I don’t need saving, dear Barnabas,
foolish, idiotic Barnabas. But I can use
you. Don’t you know about this house,
‘cousin’ Barnabas? It needs us – the Collins
family. It needs us as much as we need
it. There’s a power in that equation,
and I have figured out how to use it!”
“She’s
mad,” Angelique moaned.
Victoria’s
eyes narrowed. “Why, you look just like
her! I suppose your name is Angelique
too.”
Angelique
said nothing.
“Doesn’t
matter,” Victoria said, shrugged. “When
I destroy you, you’ll be nothing too.
But perhaps I can still use your power.
This doesn’t have to be a complete waste of my time.”
Barnabas
wanted to scream. It was all too much
like the last time, and everything was slipping, slipping, slipping out of his
hands –
“I
grow wary of all of you,” Victoria said, and raised her hand. They glowed; her eyes glowed. “Now.”
6
“Don’t
struggle,” Tom said; his hands gripped Carolyn’s head even as Elizabeth
hammered blow after blow upon his back and shoulders. She was a gnat for all the good she did;
Tom’s mouth widened, revealing his terrible fangs, and he drew his head back –
“Let
her go.”
Tom
froze, then lifted his head. His grin
widened. “Baby brother!” he crowed.
Chris
was staring at him, his face a grue of horror, fear, and a terrible, aching
sadness. “Tom,” he said unsteadily. “You don’t want to do this thing.”
“Of
course I want to do this thing,” he said.
“I was made to do this thing.”
Carolyn’s
terrified eyes darted from brother to brother.
“Help
her, Chris!” Elizabeth cried. “Oh
please, help her!”
“He
can’t help her,” Tom spat. “And why
should he? Let’s all be vampires! It’s about time, don’t you think? We’ll all live forever, here in the house on
the hill, live forever, live forever, live –”
“Who
did this to you?” Chris moaned.
“A
goddess,” Tom said dreamily. “Or someone
who might as well be a goddess. She
freed me, brother, just like she’ll free the rest of us. She’s powerful. She made me powerful. She’ll make you powerful too.”
“You’re
a monster,” Chris said, choking, “a nightmare –”
Tom’s
face darkened, and he flung Carolyn to the side. She struck Elizabeth, and the two women fell
to the floor of the hallway in a tangle of limbs.
And
the coin fell from Elizabeth’s hands and disappeared into the shadows. No one noticed.
“Come
to me, brother,” Tom said, and held out his arms. His hands were long and white, dreadful
fingers, and beckoned, flickering in the dimness of the hall. “Please.”
His teeth were long and sharp.
“We’ll rest together, I promise you.
And then you can be strong like me.”
Chris’s
eyes grew wide and distant. He took one
shuddering step forward –
—and
Tom screamed like a wildcat. His mouth
juddered open and he shrieked and shrieked as blood flew from his gaping jaws
in freshets.
The
stake that burst from his chest glistened black with gore. A moment later it vanished.
Chris’s
eyes widened; he grimaced and fell backward, his hands out in a warding off
gesture.
“Christopher,”
Tom croaked. He reached for his brother
just as he began to dissolve, to decompose.
The skin on his face withered and grayed; the hair began to fall out in
clumps; the eyes fell backward into the skull, and as he collapsed to the
floor, still twitching and shivering, his hands began nothing but bones encased
in gray dust.
Sebastian
stood behind him, his wolf’s face grim.
He still held the stake he had used to impale the vampire in one paw.
“No!”
Chris cried. He ran by Elizabeth and
Carolyn, huddled against the wall, clinging to each other, and began to rain
blow upon blow on the shaggy creature that stood over him. And Sebastian let him do it. Finally he held out his arms, and Chris fell
against him, allowed himself to be enfolded, sobbing still. Sebastian’s terrible eyes fell on Elizabeth
and Carolyn. “Go,” he growled. “Run.”
Scrambling
to their feet, they did as they were told.
“I’m
sorry,” Sebastian whispered, stroking Chris’s hair, but gently, so as not to
scratch him, “baby, I’m sorry, I’m so –”
Chris
looked up at him with a tear-stained face.
“Why?” he whispered. “Why did you
do it … like th-that? Why?”
“He
was going to kill you,” Sebastian said.
“He has killed others. He was a
monster, Christopher, as you said. He
wasn’t your brother anymore.”
“He
was,” Chris sobbed, “oh god, but he was!”
“A
vampire isn’t really a person anymore,” Sebastian said soothingly. “And even if there was something left of your
brother in there, he was going to kill you, make you like he was. I couldn’t let that happen. I love you too much.”
Chris
searched his face. Then he bowed his
head and stepped out of Sebastian’s arms.
He wiped his face with the back of his hand. “I’m sorry,” he said, and knelt beside Tom’s
shrunken body, which was curled into a comma on its side. “Tom,” he whispered, and touched the thing
that looked as if it had been burnt for hours in the sun.
He
frowned suddenly, and reached over Tom’s body into the shadows that lay beside
it.
“What
is that?” Sebastian asked.
Chris
held it up into the light. “A coin, I
guess,” he said. “It looks weird,
though.”
Sebastian
took it. He held it up into the
hallway’s dim light and squinted. “Funny
symbols,” he said. He sniffed it, then
grimaced. His black lips drew back from
his teeth. “Phew. Smells like magic. Dark magic. I wonder what it –”
His
eyes widened.
“No,”
he moaned.
Christopher’s
face was white, whiter than it had ever been.
He was frozen, utterly unable to move, because he was held in the grip
of something unspeakable.
The
corpse of Angelique Stokes Collins was still recognizable, Sebastian thought
dimly, though it was naked, covered in purple skin that threatened to slough
off, and where it had already sloughed off giant white patches of bone
glowed. The most prominent of these lay
on the side of her head, where none of her dank blonde curls could conceal it.
“Let
him go,” Sebastian snarled. Panic ran
wild inside him, but he couldn’t let it out.
Not now.
The
Angelique-thing was trying to smile.
“Sebastian?”
Chris whispered.
Sebastian roared, leapt
forward, claws extended –
With
the swiftness of a serpent, Angelique’s head dipped down, and her wicked little
teeth dug into the flesh of Christopher Collins’ throat and tore away his
carotid artery. It gave way with the
smallest of sounds, but that was lost under Sebastian’s howl of anguish and
rage.
He
couldn’t touch her. She was surrounded
by some kind of force field – magic, he thought bitterly, goddamn magic – and
so he was forced to watch as she lapped the blood from the giant hole she had
made in his lover’s throat.
Christopher’s
head lolled back bonelessly on his neck; his eyes stared blindly, terrified, into
nothing.
“No,”
Sebastian whispered, “no, no, NO!” He
slammed one paw against the wall of the East Wing and shattered a hole through
the paper and plaster.
“Doesn’t matter,” Angelique said, and to
Sebastian’s horror, he saw that she was a little more restored, that the bald
patch on her head was covered now, that the skin did not sag so much on her
bones, that the purple tinge was less purple, more like flesh –
He
wanted to vomit. He wanted to tear her
throat out.
“Doesn’t matter at all,” she said
again. “It’s almost over. The
destruction of the Collins family is at hand, just as I foresaw – just as I
wanted.”
“I’m
going to kill you,” he snarled.
“You won’t.
I am eternal. You will see.” It laughed its wicked laughter. “Oh,
but you’ll see –”
And
as Sebastian Shaw put his face in his paws, the door to the East Wing began to
swing open.
7
Julia
was staring death in the face for the thousandth time this year, and she knew
it. She had been a fool to assume that
she had escaped from Vicki’s wrath, for here it was again, just as it had been
the last time: those same empty black
eyes, the dark energy crackling, her teeth sharp and serrated –
— and Angelique was desperately chanting to no
avail –
—
and the magic was flying, was free, was going to strike them both and
obliterate them; I don’t want to die here, Julia thought madly and closed her
eyes, I wanted to hold him one more time –
Julia
opened her eyes.
She
wasn’t dead.
Angelique
wasn’t dead.
How
are we not dead? she asked herself.
Barnabas
was making a sound. It was a dreadful
sound, something between a moan and a howl, and as Julia forced herself to look
at him, she saw why.
“Oh,
Barnabas,” Angelique whispered. She took
Julia’s hand and squeezed it. Julia let
her.
Barnabas
knelt on the floor, cradling the body of Victoria Collins in his arms. Her eyes, dark brown, human, glared forward
sightlessly. Her head hung at a terrible
angle. Her neck was broken. She was dead.
“Keening,”
Julia thought remotely, the physician part of her, the part she hated sometimes
most of all; the word for the noise Barnabas is making is called “keening.”
“Barnabas,”
Angelique said gently, and touched his head.
He looked up at her, his face stained with tears. “Barnabas, thank you. Thank you.
You saved us. Julia and me. You saved us both.”
“I
killed her,” he said hollowly.
“Again. I killed her again. All my fault, all my fault –”
Julia
looked closely at Angelique. The magic
was gone. How in the hell would they
ever get home now?
Angelique
glared at her and shook her head.
“Barnabas,” she said again in that deceptively gentle tone, “we have to
go. Now.
Can’t you feel it? That sense of
doom, of time running out, my darling, can’t you feel it?”
“Yes,”
he said. He laid the corpse of the woman
who was not his Vicki, had never been his Vicki, on the floor as delicately as
he could. He kissed her once on the
forehead, then rose to his feet. “You
have no magic left, Angelique. You used
it all up saving me, didn’t you.”
“We’ll
find a way,” she said, “I know it. We
just have to get to the room first, we just –”
Whatever
she was about to say next was lost in the sudden roaring sound as Quentin
Collins kicked open the front door of Collinwood and began to ignite whatever
flammable substance he could find with the giant glowing torch he clutched in
one fist. His eyes glowed with
madness. Barnabas uttered a curse. He was still under the spell, then, whatever
force it was that had captured him.
But
Julia had seized his hand and Angelique the other, and, screaming, they dragged
him out of the drawing room, into the foyer, and up the stairs.
“That’s
right!” the Quentin-thing behind them shrieked.
“Run! Run, rabbits, run, if
that’s all you can do – because soon you won’t run anymore!”
And
then he continued on his merry way, and fire followed in his wake.
8
“You
can’t stop me.” Angelique Stokes Collins
spoke in a voice that was almost human; when she grinned at them, flashing her
teeth, they were stained red with gore.
“No one can. The Collins family
will be destroyed, and this house will be mine.”
“Quentin
is burning the house, you fool,” Barnabas snarled. His eyes glowed a dull crimson, and his fangs
hung over his lips. “This house won’t be
yours; it won’t be anyone’s. It will be
nothing but ashes.”
Angelique
clapped her hands together, delighted.
“But that’s perfect! Don’t you
understand? Once this house is gone, I
will rebuild, just me and Quentin. He
will live as I live, for all eternity, just the two of us!”
“Killing,”
Sebastian growled. “You kill to stay
alive. Someone will find out. Someone will destroy you.”
“Will
it be you?” Angelique taunted him. “You
can’t touch me; none of you can touch me.
And I am immortal.”
“The
room, Barnabas!” Angelique Rumson hissed.
“We must get to the room!”
“The
room won’t save you now, my dear,” Angelique Collins retorted. “My, but you are a pretty one. How fascinating to think that I have my own
double in that other world.”
“We
are nothing alike,” Angelique Rumson spat.
“You are not me.”
“We
shall see, my dear,” Angelique Collins tittered. “We shall see.” She threw her head back and laughed the
chilling laughter they had all heard from the throat of Quentin Collins. “Go, then,” she said, and waved a dismissive
hand in their direction. “If you –”
The
fire exploded into the hallway quite suddenly, and in the moment before it did,
Angelique Rumson saw confusion pass over the face of the woman who could have
been her twin. Then she understood. Angelique had lost control of the situation,
had lost control of Quentin; he was never supposed to come up here this
quickly, not with his torch and the fire, and she had dangerously overestimated
her own powers.
“No!”
Angelique Collins screamed a moment before the fire found her, tasted her, and
found her good. She wheeled around the
hallway in circle, waving her arms, and fire exploded from every place that she
touched. The bodies of Tom and
Christopher ignited.
“Come
on!” Julia cried, and led them all toward Angelique’s room. Behind them, the swirling fireball scarecrow
was screaming and screaming, and the fire it caused block the doorway that
would lead them back down the stairs, into the conflagration Quentin had
created on Collinwood’s first floor.
“I
can’t leave him!” Sebastian cried, agonized, but Julia’s grip on his furry arm
was like iron, and so he followed her, and cast only one anguished glance over
his shoulder, but the fire was too bright, and it devoured everything in its path.
They
made a mad dash into Angelique’s room, the four of them, and Barnabas slammed
the doors behind them. “We don’t have
any time,” he said, gasping. “The fire –
it will burn down those doors in minutes, seconds!”
“Ouch!”
Sebastian growled, and dropped the coin that he hadn’t been aware he had
continued to hold in his paw. It struck
the floor, rolled around, caught the light, then fell onto its side. “It burned me,” he said apologetically.
Angelique
knelt beside it and held it up into the light.
She wheeled around and held it up into Sebastian’s face. “Where did you get this?” she demanded.
“I
found it,” he said defensively, “on the floor in the hallway, just now.”
“What
is it?” Julia asked, casting nervous glances at the doors. Smoke was beginning to fill the room from the
cracks under them, and the roaring of the fire was growing louder.
“It’s
a talisman,” Angelique said, “very old.
I’ve seen it before, long ago, when Nicholas Blair first came to see me
on Martinique. It’s used in rituals for
transformation.”
“Transformation?”
Julia said. Her eyes had begun to glow.
“Angelique,”
Barnabas said, “can it help us?”
“I
don’t know,” she said. “It’s been a long
time –”
“Try!”
Julia urged her. “Think hard!”
Angelique
closed her eyes. “I … I think … I –”
“Too
late!” Sebastian roared. The doors to
Angelique’s room were kicked open.
Laughing, laughing, laughing, Quentin stood outside them, brandishing
his torch. His hair was on fire. He seemed not to feel it.
“Barnabas,”
Julia cried, her voice shrill with terror, and clutched onto the vampire at her
side, “oh, Barnabas!”
Angelique’s
eyes flew open, china-blue. She began to
smile.
“Transfero,” she said.
And
the room stood empty.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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