Shadows on the Wall
CHAPTER
94: Jiggedy Jig
by Nicky
(Voiceover by Grayson Hall): “The last night in Parallel Time, that
dimension so like and yet unlike our own, a world that shouldn’t exist: Barnabas, Julia, and Angelique, trapped in a
burning room with lycanthrope Sebastian Shaw, face death again, this time at the
hands of an insane Quentin Collins. But
Angelique has discovered a solution that may bring them back to their own world
– but even if they do manage to return safely, what new horrors await them? What new terror will reach out for them with
wizened hands to destroy them all?”
1
Chanting.
Words, rhythmic, and heat
or imagined
only imagined
no heat, not possible, no flesh, no
bones, heat
to feel
is impossible.
But the chanting –
“Emperor Lucifer, master of all
the revolted spirits, I entreat thee to favor me in the adjuration which I
address to thee …”
No no no no no no no not again
no no no no no
heat heat heat heat, oh, such heat, there had never been heat like this –
“I beg thee, O Prince
Beelzebub, to protect me in my undertaking. O Count Astaroth! Be propitious to me, and grant me the powers
I require –”
the heat and the chanting
the chanting –
2
“So
hot,” Julia Hoffman groaned, “so, so hot –”
She was burning; she could feel the flames dancing and bubbling her
skin, inside her skin. She would never be cool again. People were talking somewhere but she
couldn’t understand them. Where was
Quentin? she wondered; where was the torch?
Had he struck her with it? Was
she already dead? Was this really –
finally – hell? Her body twisted and
writhed, and someone held it tightly against themselves.
Julia.
That
voice – she knew that voice.
Julia, come back to me.
The
heat was beginning to fade. It had, she
decided, never really existed to begin with.
She
opened her eyes.
“Barnabas,”
she said, and smiled. She reached a hand
up, trembling, barely trembling, like a feather, and touched his cold, cold
cheek. “You found me.”
“Always,”
he said, smiling back.
“Are
we dead?”
A
shadow flickered across his face. “Not …
you,” he managed, and dropped his gaze.
Julia
lifted her head and groaned. She touched
the back of her skull, but there was nothing – no holes, no missing hair,
nothing, god help her, charred. She tried to sit up, but a wave of dizziness
nearly overcame her. Nevertheless, she
forced herself out of Barnabas’ arms.
She planted her hands on the floor, squinting, and saw that there was no
longer any carpet, that the bare floorboards sinking chunks of grit and skeins
of cobweb into and over her palms belonged to the Parallel Time room – the one
at Collinwood – the one of her own time.
Relief
and panic struck her simultaneously, and she scrabbled to her feet. “We have to get out of this room,” she
bleated at the same moment she saw Angelique cradling a naked and very human
Sebastian Shaw and glaring at her.
“Before it changes,” Julia added, “before it takes us back to that …
place.”
“We
are safe,” Angelique said steadily.
Julia’s brow creased, her mouth opened to bark out a protest, when
Angelique added, smooth as silk, “For the moment only.” She stood up, then glanced down at
Sebastian. A line appeared briefly
between her eyebrows, and she held out a hand to him. “Sebastian,” she said, “we have to leave this
place. Julia is right. It could take us back to that other world at
any moment.”
His
lips curled, then twisted, revealing his teeth.
“No,” he said with some effort.
“Not – never – again. I won’t –” He groaned.
“I won’t go back there.”
“Then
take my hand. You must.”
He
glared up at her and then, with a great grimace and gritting his teeth,
extended her his hand. She hauled him to
his feet; he moved away from her quickly, shaking his head. “Christopher,” he moaned, “Christopher, oh.”
Julia’s
head throbbed as a particularly wicked spike of pain sliced through her skull,
and, nearly blinded, she stumbled toward the door that led from the Parallel
Time room back out into the East Wing.
“Hurry,” she croaked. She opened
the door, gesturing wildly, and Sebastian went first, then Angelique, then
Barnabas.
Barnabas
paused once outside the door. “Julia?”
he asked quietly. “Julia, are you
--?” His eyes widened.
“What
is it?” Julia asked. Her eyes
widened. Barnabas’s nostrils were
flaring, and she could see, through his lips, his fangs were protruding at the
same moment she felt a winding, serpentine trickle of hot liquid wend its way
from her nostril.
She
touched it gingerly, then looked down. A
brownish-red streak glittered up at her from her fingertips.
“My
nose –” she began –
– and the room gave a great hitch –
“JULIA!”
she heard Barnabas roar –
– but she was falling and flying at the same
time, and she could no longer hear him, could no longer feel –
3
His
bedroom at the Old House was uncomfortably small, and of course the lack of
electricity made him crazy. How could he
play his radio without electricity? It
didn’t use batteries and Aunt Elizabeth wouldn’t let him go to the village, not
even to Brewster’s, to pick up a wireless radio; now all David Collins had to
chase the shadows away was the candle that flickered in the window overlooking
the portico and the front lawn.
The
candle …
He
found that he was drawn to it again, as he always seemed to be, even though the
nights as summer began its slow advance were warm. Still, it held him, fascinated him.
He
ran his hand over its surface and smiled.
His skin blackened, but it was only soot. He was unharmed. He hadn’t even felt the slightest spear of
pain.
His
smile became a grin. He wasn’t likely to
be disturbed now. Aunt Elizabeth was in
her room where she spent most of her time these days; Carolyn was downstairs
doing something weird, but he hadn’t
asked for any details; Cousin Quentin was … well, who knew?
And Amy is dead. And Vicki is dead. And Father is dead.
His
smile vanished. Only a month had passed
since the events of that terrible night, but the pain, the pain he eluded as he
played his stupid games with the candle, that other pain, which was some more
real and more painful than any physical pain he had ever felt – that pain had returned.
His
eyes burned as they had with more or less regularity over the past thirty days,
and, snuffling, he wiped them away with the cuff of his pajama shirt and turned
away from the candle and the window and began to plod toward bed.
Roger
Collins had never been a model father, but he was the only one David knew, and
he missed him. And he missed Amy and he
… yes, he even missed Vicki. He
understood more than the grownups gave him credit, and he knew that, whatever
had happened to Vicki at the end, she wasn’t herself. The real Vicki – the one he had known for a
year, since she came to Collinwood last June to be his governess, that Vicki would never have said the
horrible things the monster in the drawing room said that night, nor would she
had hurt anybody, certainly not Roger, certainly not David.
He
was crying again, like a big baby. Well,
that was okay. There was no one around
to see him or hear him. He would crawl
under the covers and pull them over his head and cry for his father and for his
friend and for Vicki.
He
stopped suddenly, half-way between the window and bed. Something in the air – some scent – something
familiar, yes? Yes, familiar …
“Mother?”
he said for no reason at all, and looked around the room eagerly.
He
was alone.
His
mother did not appear. He knew that she
would not.
A
sob trembled in his chest, and David Collins drew in a great draught of air and
aimed it all at the candle.
The
flame took it, flickered, and died.
Crying
furious tears, David flung himself onto his bed and pulled the covers up
tightly over his head, shielding his face from the foreign room that was not
his own, muffling his angry sobs, and so it was that he didn’t notice the
candle across the room, never saw how the air before it rippled once, as with great heat, the exhalation of a dragon
perhaps, and how, unseen, the candle flickered back into life.
It
burned all the rest of that night, steadily.
4
“We have to find her,”
Barnabas snarled; his fangs were protruding, he could feel them, and when he
glanced down at his hands, he found they had begun to gnarl and twist into the
claws of an animal. His eyes widened
with shock; this was a completely new manifestation of the curse; embarrassed,
unsure, he swung his arms behind his back and clasped his horrible new monster
hands together, twining them tightly so that Angelique and Sebastian, who had
rejoined him in the Parallel Time room, could see.
Angelique’s reply was
waspish. “That may prove to be rather
difficult,” she said, “seeing as we haven’t the first clue as to how she
disappeared, her new whereabouts not withstanding.”
“I
suggest we leave this room at once,” Sebastian said, and they both turn to look
at him, glaring. He returned their
glares, his eyes a frosty blue. “If Dr.
Hoffman was pulled back into my … into that other time, there isn’t much we can
do for her now.”
“How
dare you –” Barnabas roared, but Angelique laid a cool hand on his shoulder –
he could feel the ice emanating off her in waves, even through the thick cloth
of his coat – and said quietly, “Sebastian is right, Barnabas. We’ll make a plan, I promise you that, but
for now … none of us are safe in this room.”
He
glanced around, his features pained, then finally nodded. Julia, he thought, dear friend, old, dear
friend, and said, “You’re … you’re right, of course. I apologize, Mr. Shaw, for my outburst.” And, trembling, he stepped out of the
Parallel Time room and into the corridor.
As Sebastian followed, Barnabas, struck by a sudden wry amusement, said,
“We’ll have to do something about securing some trousers for you. Perhaps Mrs. Johnson can –”
But
whatever he was about to say next was drowned out by the monstrous shriek that
fell from Angelique’s lips as she crossed the threshold of the room; the force
of the sound, amplified to an ear-splitting level, blew both vampire and
werewolf backward against the far wall.
Barnabas, dazed, shook his head and looked up.
Angelique
continued to scream, but Barnabas couldn’t determine whether the sound was one
of pain or ecstasy, or both. As he
watched, blackness fell over her like an inky shadow, darkening her hair into
instant obsidian, coloring her eyes until they glistened like pools of oil, and
spreading like branches of veins across her face, only the veins were the same
mystical symbols they had observed covering her skin before, when she had first
donned the Mask of Ba’al. Black lightning
crackled between her fingers; her skin was white as salt.
“Make
… her … stop!” Sebastian roared, but his voice was almost completely lost in
the depths of that inhuman wail.
But
Barnabas couldn’t answer. He found that
his vision was blurring, and there was hot wetness streaming down his
cheeks. The scalding liquid twined into
the corner of his mouth and bloomed there, hot and salty, on his tongue, and he
knew with sudden horror that he was weeping tears of blood.
The
screaming stopped as suddenly as it had begun, and Angelique sagged against the
wall, supporting herself with one chalky white hand. Her coal-black eyelashes fluttered against
her coal-black eyes. Her darkened lips
pursed, and she whispered, “B-Barnabas?”
The dark magic sparkled and crackled against her teeth, on her tongue,
far back in the cavern of her throat.
She was suffused with it, and the carpet scorched beneath her feet.
“Your
powers,” he managed, “your powers have returned.”
“So
they have,” she gasped, then curled her terrible black mouth into a smile of
satisfaction. She made an arcane gesture
with her right hand, and suddenly Sebastian was fully clothed in a gray flannel
suit.
He
glowered and shook his head.
“Squaresville,” he said dourly.
“You
can use them to find Julia,” Barnabas said.
“Quickly, Angelique!”
“She
is nowhere on this plane of existence,” Angelique said instantly.
“How
do you –”
Her
eyes snapped. “You always underestimate
me, Barnabas. My powers are stronger
than ever before, can’t you understand that?
I could feel Julia if she were
here, and she is not.” Her brow furrowed;
her voice, somehow, softened. “But I
don’t know where she is, either.”
“Can’t
you find her?”
She
narrowed her inhuman eyes. “I can try.”
She raised her arms to the ceiling, spreading her fingers, and uttered a
quick, guttural stream of words that Barnabas had never heard before, but that
raised goosebumps all over his skin. Slowly
– slowly – she began to rise off the floor; her toes dragged against the dirty
wooden boards, scraping like nails across slate, then even those left the earth
and she continued to rise, and her entire body glowed with alternating pulses
of dark and light, dark and light.
She
opened her eyes.
Barnabas
gasped.
They
were blue-gray-green, shards of crystal, nary a spot of blackness or crackle of
dark within them.
And
she settled back to earth.
And
said, “I’m sorry, Barnabas. Julia
Hoffman … Julia Hoffman is gone. She’s just … gone.”
5
“Maintain.” His voice was stern but not unkind, a
teacher’s voice. Comforting. “Maintain.
Allow the warmth to spread from the crystal into yourself. Through the web of skin at your fingertips,
into the nest of veins beneath, and through the veins into your blood. And beyond.”
The
crystal’s point – poised on the table top beneath her, a shard nearly the size
of her lower arm, and when she saw it the first time she had, well, there was
no other word for it; she had gawped
– barely brushed the tips of her fingers, outstretched, the hands together,
arms at length. She breathed steadily,
as he had instructed her to do, in through the nose, hold for a moment, out
through the mouth, then repeat and repeat and repeat. Clear your mind, he told her, clear your
mind; let everything go.
Let everything go.
Oh,
if only it were that simple –
scream red cut blood
He
sensed her sudden distress. “Maintain,”
he said again, his voice only the slightest bit sharper with the force of his
command.
Her
breath caught.
But
only for that moment.
In
through the nose, hold; out through the mouth, in through the nose; hold; out
through the mouth …
She
was doing it; she was maintaining. The memories
Tony’s face, his sweet sweet face, blood
running from his mouth his ears his eyes
were fading … fading …
Gone.
She
was breathing; she could feel the warmth of the crystal in her fingertips; she
could feel it begin its song again. The
warmth spread up through her, just as he had told her it would, through her
fingers, into her blood, warming her bones.
And beyond. Yes, there was still
a beyond for the crystal to warm. She
was smiling, she knew suddenly, involuntarily, but she was smiling.
“Allow
the warmth to touch your mind. The
barest feather against your thoughts, the conscious ones that lie on the
surface.” A hesitation. “Can you feel it?”
“Yes.” She could; it was easy now. Her breathing came naturally, as though she
were sleeping. Her chest rose and
fell.
“Your
thoughts are a river. There is a tide
that pulls you along. The crystal is
your anchor; it will hold you so that you do not become lost. Do you believe that?”
“Yes.”
“You
are not bound by your body. You are not
bound by this room, or by this house or by this earth. Do you believe that?”
“Oh,
yes.”
“Find
the tide. Ride along. Where does it take you?”
The
images that flashed before her were different now, not at all from that time of her life, the year she had
spent in thrall to … to a beast. There
was no other word for it.
Didn’t
matter now. She was in control. For the first time in her life, truly, she
was in control.
The
tide pulled her along (and she felt the crystal at her fingertips, safe and
warm and solid), and she felt
something inside her, something terrible and tight, suddenly turn and break, and she opened her arms and
soared, she was free, she was in the tide, she was the tide, and she flew and she flew, and she saw –
“A
meadow,” she said. “There’s a
meadow. There is no house, there is no
one there. Only waves and waves of
grass, and flowers, yellow and blue, and a small brook. Oh, it’s beautiful. It’s so peaceful.”
“Do
you know where this meadow lies?”
“No
–” She felt herself frowning, couldn’t
seem to stop. “But it’s familiar. It all seems so familiar, so real.”
“Find
the when. Try to find the when.”
She
was the tide, she was the tide.
“Ago,”
she said instantly. “Long ago. I can smell the sea; I can hear it, the waves crashing against the
shore –” Amazement turned her mouth into
a perfect O. “There’s Widow’s Hill! I can see Widow’s Hill!”
“Maintain!”
She
relaxed back against the table; before her, the scene spread out gloriously: the endless expanse of green, the woods
beginning like a giant dark belt of shifting emeralds and browns encircling the
meadow, the happy gurgling of the brook, and, rising higher, the cruel gray of
the ocean and its serrated teeth that gnashed against the stones at the base of
Widow’s Hill. “It’s Collinwood,” she
said. “Or … or where Collinwood will
stand, someday.”
“Amazing.”
“There’s
… there’s a woman.”
“Indeed?”
“She’s
young. Dark hair. Dark eyes.
Oh, she’s beautiful. She’s kneeling
by the brook. Her hands are in the
water; she’s tasting the water. Her
clothes are ragged, but she doesn’t seem unhappy. It’s such a gorgeous day; how could anyone be
unhappy on a day like that?”
“And
there is no one else with her?”
“Not
that I can see. Oh … oh, wait. There’s a … a shadow. It fell over her just now. There’s a shadow
over everything. She’s looking up – she’s terrified, not just
startled, but terrified – it’s a man,
a man she knows, a man who scares her –”
“Can
you see him?”
“No
… no …” But couldn’t she? She was the tide; she was in control. “Yes!”
Terror flooded her, both her own and the long ago girl. “Yes, I see him!” Her stomach twisted; bile rose into her
throat and burned there. “His eyes … oh
god, his eyes – his face –” Her voice rose into a scream and she drew her
hands back from the crystal, which had begun to glow and pulse with a crimson
light. “I DON’T KNOW HIM!” she shrieked. She rose to her feet; her eyes flew open, but
they didn’t see the drawing room of the Old House where they had practiced
during these sessions for the past few days, nor did they see the shocked older
man before her. “I DON’T KNOW HIM, I
DON’T, I SEE HIM BUT I DON’T –”
“Carolyn!”
Professor Stokes cried, and at that moment the doors to the Old House were
forced inward, and Carolyn sank back into her chair with a moan.
Stokes
turned furiously, his face working, to face the intruders – then he
gasped. “Barnabas!” he cried. “Barnabas, you’ve returned!”
6
She’s coming around. She’s alive.
She’s coming around.
Julia
groaned. Was this really happening
again, she wondered; was this her life now, to be knocked unconscious as she
transferred from world to world or time to time, suffering great thundering
pains in her head that walked and that talked, only to come around dazedly
while people above her calmly discussed her health and level of consciousness?
“Julia?”
Someone
who knew her, then. That didn’t
necessarily make her feel any better; if she had returned to Parallel Time, she
might open her eyes to find Angelique Stokes Collins glaring down at her, her
face a burned horror but still and maddeningly alive, or Quentin Collins,
cheerfully insane, ready to throttle the life from her.
But
the voice was familiar.
“Julia,
please! Please wake up!”
Damn
it, she thought grudgingly, and opened her eyes.
The
face above hers was blurry, so she blinked, but it remained blurry still.
Or
… not blurry. Perhaps it wasn’t blurry
at all.
The
woman above her was Carolyn Stoddard – but a very changed woman from the last
time Julia had seen her. Like laying
underwater, Julia thought, and gazing up into a face above you, a face looking
down at you from outside the water. The
ripples will do that, the ripples will make you look … so different –
“Oh Julia, I thought I’d never
see you again!” said the woman Julia knew and did not know, the woman with
silver hair cut just below her earlobes, a woman with a throat thinned and
mottled by age, a woman with deep lines across her forehead and beside her eyes
and cruelly creasing her mouth.
“Carolyn,”
Julia groaned, and sat up, looking around; she was in the drawing room at
Collinwood, but even that had changed; where was the hideous green couch
Elizabeth favored? What was that
enormous screened device in the
corner, by the French windows?
“Carolyn,” Julia said again, “Carolyn, what’s happened to –”
“You
disappeared,” Carolyn said, her voice trembling and weaving, “you disappeared
when everyone else came back from … from that other time, and no one ever knew
what became of you. We thought we’d
never see you again! And then … just now
… you … you simply appeared! From
nowhere!”
“Help
me up,” Julia said. “My head is
pounding.”
“You
have to tell me what’s happened to you,” Carolyn said. “Julia –”
“Barnabas!”
Julia said suddenly. “What’s happened to
Barnabas?”
“Julia
–”
“Is
he here? Is he all right?” She broke free from the other woman and ran
as quickly as her numbed legs would allow her, threw open the drawing room
doors, and called into the shadows that lay beyond in the great house,
“Barnabas? Barnabas?”
“Barnabas
isn’t here,” Carolyn said from behind her.
“Julia, you have to understand –”
“What’s
happened to you?” Julia cried, spinning around.
“Why do you look the way you do?
Where is Barnabas? Where is anybody?”
“Julia,
you have to understand,” Carolyn said firmly.
“You must listen to me. You never
came back, and we thought you were dead.
We never dreamed that you –”
“That
I what?” Julia demanded. Terror crawled
and capered inside her throat, and she drew her hands up to her breasts,
wishing for the millionth time that endless day that she had a cigarette, just
one, just one simple cigarette. “That I what?”
“That
you time travelled,” Carolyn whispered.
“Julia, this isn’t 1968. This
isn’t even the twentieth century.”
She
felt the color fall from her face. “Dear
god,” she whispered. “What do you mean?”
“Julia,”
Carolyn said steadily, “Julia … this year …
“You’ve
been gone …
“… gone for forty-six
years. Forty-six years, Julia.
“You’re
at Collinwood in the year 2014.”
TO BE CONTINUED ...
Collinwood 2014 now that a shocker for Julia.
ReplyDelete