CHAPTER 97:
Come Around Again
by Nicky
Voiceover by Alexandra Moltke: “Time
is fractured at Collinwood. For one
woman has been thrust forward in time, while the others, those she left behind,
struggle desperately to summon her back to the life she has known. And meanwhile, faces from the past emerge
again, bringing with them the possibility of more terror and more evil than the
Collins family has ever known.”
1
1968: Somewhere in the Rocky Mountains
The
underbrush on this particular mountain trail was thicker than Quentin Collins
was prepared to handle, but, grinning with sudden dark humor, he reminded
himself that he had vowed to tear through whatever impediments resolved themselves
before him with his teeth, if necessary.
He
held up a machete. It was duller than it
had been when he had purchased it in Missoula a few days ago, but still sharp
enough to allow him to continue carving his way through the branches and grasses
and weeds that sought relentlessly to prevent him from reaching his
destination. He had searched for nearly
two months now; as June bled seamlessly into July and then August and finally
became, only a day ago, September, he felt more resolve than ever to continue
his quest.
He
was far from home, but he had been far from home before. He had never called Montana home, but it
wasn’t a personal thing. It was a
beautiful state, he had to concede, thick and green now at the height of
summer, that fabled sky as big as he’d ever heard, the entire state, as they
said, high, wide, and indeed, handsome.
But
the vegetation here sought to keep him from his purpose, and, beauty aside,
that was unacceptable. He had a duty.
He
thought for a moment, as he did several times a day at least, of Vicki. Not the way she was on that last day, not the
stretched, bleached monstrosity with the white shag of hag hair blooming on the
top of her head and her teeth like knitting needles, her eyes black globules of
oil, but Victoria Winters – Victoria Collins,
he amended; she really was a Collins, even at the end – as he had known her a
year and a century ago. The mysterious
young girl, an ingénue really, with the fall of dark hair that allowed him to
bury his hands up to the knuckles, the wide brown eyes that captured him –
Jamison’s granddaughter. Your great-grandniece.
He
remembered something Roger had said once, a slip of the tongue, something like,
“My incestors … ha, my ancestors –”
and Quentin had rolled his eyes and they had laughed together.
But
it was true, wasn’t it.
He
stopped slashing at the underbrush and allowed the machete to fall from his
hands. He put them, instead, over his
face. His heart shuddered in his chest;
his forehead was soaked with sweat.
He
was disgusting.
And Vicki is dead.
It
really was his fault; he knew that, accepted it as fact. He allowed her to use those powers whenever
Julia or Stokes or Barnabas insisted, “for the good of us all,” oh, how he
remembered that excuse, and it didn’t
matter to them that those same powers that would save them all had nearly
destroyed them, had sure as hell destroyed Vicki, and he let it happen. Had stood back – literally – and allowed the
woman he loved to become swallowed by the darkness inside her.
This
was no good. He sighed, wiped away the
sweat, ignored the hum of the mosquitoes around him, and picked up the
machete. His hands throbbed, but that
was good; it meant that he was alive, that he was real, that he wasn’t dreaming
this quest, the drive to Boston, the flights, first to Colorado, then Montana,
the questioning, the driving. Always,
always moving on.
And
she haunted him anyway. He woke up to
her face; her face was the last image he saw when he bedded down and slept at
night.
Jenny. Laura. Beth. Maggie. Victoria.
Women
he loved were undone by him; he knew that was true. They always died, didn’t they. Because of him. Because he was a coward. A bastard.
And weak, oh yes, don’t forget that:
weak, weak, weak.
He
would have welcomed the voice of Magda now, hell-hag-sister-in-law, something
dreadful and inappropriate but true, her tone raucous, but there was
nothing. He was alone in the deep heart
of the mountain woods.
He
sighed. No good indeed, this dwelling on
the past.
And Vicki is dead.
His
fingers wrapped around the haft of the machete, and Quentin began to hack and
hack and hack again at the endless trees and grasses and weeds around him.
2
1968: On the grounds of Collinwood
“You
aren’t the first person I’ve confused today,” the young woman said, and
extended a hand, and Elizabeth couldn’t help it, she had to flinch back. A shadow passed over the young woman’s face,
then she rallied, dropped her hand, and smiled.
“My name is Alexandra March. I’m sorry
if I startled you.”
“Alex
– Alexandra?” Elizabeth realized that
stammering made her sound weak, but she thought that the momentary surge of
emotions she had felt at the sight of this astonishing young woman, a very
confusing mélange of terror, exhilaration, hope, and wrenching fury, was a
perfectly understandable excuse for her truly rude behavior. And stammering.
“Alex,”
the woman said and smiled again, “please.”
Elizabeth thought she seemed unsure as well. “People call me Alex. It sounds less hoity toity, I think.” Her smile widened, became more sure.
“You
must forgive me, Miss March,”
Elizabeth said, and reached out her own hand.
The young woman – Miss March – Alex
– smiled and took it. “I am Elizabeth
Collins Stoddard. This is my house. My family’s house, I suppose. Collinwood.”
Alex
looked up at the imposing structure before them. “Big,” she said. “And it has a name.” She whistled a
little, impressed. “I’ve never been to a
house with a name before. Do you live
there by yourself?”
“No,”
Elizabeth said. “There’s my daughter
Carolyn, my cousin Quentin, our friend, Dr. Julia Hoffman, my nephew, David,
and my brother Roger –” She broke off
and felt that familiar misery settle over her again, that serpentine wave of
pain that slithered down and down and down into its accustomed place in the pit
of her stomach. “I’m sorry,” she said;
surely the young woman had noticed the hesitation, the spasm of pain. “We’ve had a … a tragedy here recently. My brother passed away unexpectedly.”
“My
condolences,” Alex said softly.
Elizabeth would not allow her eyes to narrow in suspicion, but had she –
this woman who could be the very twin of Victoria Winters, herself the image of
Elizabeth’s own sister Louise – but had she sounded … unsurprised? Was that at all possible? “I didn’t mean to trespass, Mrs. Stoddard,”
she continued. “I saw the house from
town as I was checking into my room at the Inn.
I didn’t think anyone lived here.
The windows were all dark, and …”
She shrugged. “It’s so old looking. You can tell that from far away, even.”
“It
is an old house,” Elizabeth said, nodding.
“This is the first time I’ve been back in, oh, weeks. After the accident,” and she was proud of
herself that she didn’t stutter or hesitate, “after the accident, we decided to
stay at our family’s original home in America.
It’s a smaller house on the estate, but it’s more than a century older
than Collinwood.”
“It
must have been something terrible,” Alex said.
She added, suddenly, as if she didn’t wish to remind Elizabeth of recent
events, “At any rate, I am sorry for showing up unannounced. I have an interest in old houses. And Collinsport has a reputation for being …” She hesitated. “… perhaps not as ordinary as other towns.”
Elizabeth
felt her spine straighten, and her voice grew decidedly frosty, as it tended to
whenever the town, which was her namesake, after all, or the namesake of her
people, and that was really the same thing, wasn’t it, whenever the town or her
family were criticized. “I suppose that
it isn’t,” she said.
Alex
must have noticed the chill in the older woman’s voice, for she lowered her
head and seemed to stare at the ground.
“I don’t have any family,” she said in that same soft, almost musing
tone, “I never did, not really. I’m so
used to being by myself. I have this …
oh, it sounds crazy, I suppose … this urge,
this desire to know all about other
people’s pasts, their histories. Old
families – old houses – sometimes occupied, sometimes not – they fascinate
me. So I’ll ask you again, Mrs.
Stoddard: please forgive me.”
Elizabeth
felt herself begin to thaw after a moment of token resistance. Perhaps it was because this girl looked so
very much like Vicki, or perhaps because she seemed so genuine.
She is Vicki.
That
was insanity.
She wasn’t like other people. Certainly not at the end.
Maybe she never really died.
“Mrs.
Stoddard?” The young woman with the dark
hair cocked her head; a worried expression danced across her face.
“Woolgathering,”
Elizabeth said, “you must pay no attention.”
Then, after a hesitation, “Would you … would you like to see the
interior of the house, Miss March?”
“Please,
call me Alex,” she said. “And … I think
I’d like that very much.”
3
2014: In the Woods
“You
are one lucky bastard,” Quentin said, and struck Gerard Stiles with a tightly
clenched fist across his fleshy lips.
The man went down again, and this time he stayed down.
Quentin
wasted no time with him. He knelt beside
Julia, who was sitting up and clutching her throat. “Oh, Quentin,” she moaned, “oh thank you,
thank god you were here, thank god you were in time.”
“I
almost wasn’t,” Quentin said grimly.
“Julia, are you sure you’re all right?”
“I
am … now,” she said. She coughed, a
ragged, retching sound, and stared blankly at the spatters of blood dotting her
fist. Her enormous almond eyes flicked
up to him. Her skin was pale,
papery. She licked away the blood that
flecked her lips. “He would’ve killed
me. He almost did.”
“Who
is he?”
“I
don’t know.” She glanced over at the
fallen man beside her and shivered.
“I’ve never seen him before.”
Quentin
glared at his unconscious face. “I
should kill him,” he growled.
Julia
put a hand over his. “No, Quentin,” she
said. “Get me out of here. Take me someplace safe. Please.”
“Which
also begs the question,” Quentin said, helping Julia to her feet, “and please
don’t think I’m not glad to see you, but Julia … what are you doing here? And how did you get here?”
“You
know as much as I do.”
“You’re
not a ghost.”
“Not
… not now. Thanks to you.” She smiled wanly as they moved together
through the woods. “Where are we going?”
“The
Old House.” His voice was terse as he
hurried her along. “We have to move
quickly. They’ll be back soon, and the Old House won’t be much of a fortress
for long if we’re not careful.”
“A
fortress,” Julia said through numb lips.
“Against Barnabas.”
“Among
other … things.” Quentin sounded
tired. “But yes, Barnabas is part of
it. Julia, how are you here? I haven’t seen you in almost forty years, and
yet –”
“I
look just the same as you do,” she said dryly.
“Because I come from that time – from 1968.” Quentin grunted. He sounded, Julia thought, unsurprised. “I joined Barnabas in Parallel Time a few
weeks after you left, but something went wrong.
We came back to our own time, and the others left the room, but I was
slower than they were, I suppose. And
something happened. I can’t describe
it. A sudden shock, pain, like ice, like
intense heat, like I was being pulled out of my body and compacted at the same
time; when I opened my eyes, I was at Collinwood, now, in 2014, and Carolyn was
standing over me. Carolyn, but older.”
“Carolyn,”
Quentin said, and passed a hand over his face.
“What’s
happened here, Quentin?” Julia asked.
Her voice held traces of that old familiar steel, and he was glad to
hear it. “To Barnabas, to Collinwood, to
the town?”
“Why,
we’ve all gone to hell!” Quentin boomed.
He laughed, but to Julia, the sound was suspiciously like a sob. She looked closely at his face, but his eyes
were shadowed. He swept out one long arm
and said, “We’re here.” They came out of
the woods and into the glen, and there was the Old House, a huge, gleaming
skeletal structure, white like bones under the moon. Casting glances over both his shoulders,
hurrying, hurrying, hurrying her along, he drove them both up the steps and
through the door, slamming it quickly behind him. As Julia watched, gaping, he raised both his
arms, extended his fingers, and chanted, “Obex
est sanus. Obex est validus. Obex est ferrum. Nusquam malum crux crucis obex!” He collapsed, breathing heavily, and wiped a
trembling hand across his brow. “There,”
he said. “That should hold, for awhile
anyway.”
“You
were saying,” Julia said, dragging her eyes forcibly away from the door; she
resisted wiping at her dry lips with her own trembling hand, “that we have all
gone to hell.”
“I
wish it were a metaphor,” Quentin said.
He crossed the room quickly with his long scissor legs and began to
light a fire in the fireplace. Glancing
around the room, Julia could see that no one in the past forty-five years had
managed to wire the place with electricity.
And the portrait of Barnabas Collins, painted in 1967 by Sam Evans before
his untimely death and hung by Barnabas himself above the mantel, was nowhere
to be seen. And nothing hung in its place. “But no, Julia, I’m afraid I’m being quite
literal. The forces of darkness we’ve
been trying to beat back all these years finally rose up. And they’ve destroyed almost everything I
hold dear.”
Now
she licked her dry lips. “And Barnabas
is a part of it.”
“Yes.” Quentin bit the word. “He gave in.
I suppose there’s a part of him that’s always wanted to. He fought against it for so long, and with
you gone –” He flushed. “I’m sorry.
I didn’t mean to imply that you were in any way –”
“Never
mind,” she said quickly. “What in god’s
name happened?”
“If
you’ve seen Carolyn, then you’ve seen Angelique.”
“She’s
calling herself Cassandra again.”
“Yes. A rose by any other name, etc., etc. Only with thorns instead of a sweet
scent. They told you of the Enemy?”
“A
little bit.”
He
grunted again. “And they blamed me for
part of this madness.”
“Not
in so many words. But Angelique said –”
“Angelique
referred to them as my children or something, I suppose.”
“Something
like that. Nightspawn.”
“A
good a name as any. There.” He stood up, rubbing his hands before the
crackling flames, then flashed his sharp white grin in Julia’s direction. “I’m good for something, I guess.”
“Nightspawn,
Quentin?” Her voice was sharper than she
intended, but despite her reprieve from … from whatever the man in the woods
had attempted to do to her, she was overwhelmed with the feeling that time was
running out.
“My
children,” he said, and laughed. It was
a bitter, scraping sound, mirthless. “I
suppose in a way they are. I told you
things have been terrible here.
“Barnabas. He took my blood.” He raised the sleeves of the black leather
jacket he wore and exposed his wrists.
She leaned forward, squinting, and could barely see the thin white lines
that straggled up and down both his arms.
“Due to the beneficence of Count Petofi, Petofi and his damned portrait,
this is the worst you can see. He bled
me, Julia, for his own savage purposes. Strung
me up, slashed open my wrists, and drained the blood into buckets.” He was trembling, Julia saw. “For days,
Julia.”
“To
create more werewolves,” she murmured.
“An
army. They aren’t human. Not anymore, not even remotely. They never change back. He
controls them. Him and his master.”
“The
Enemy?”
“The
Enemy.” He sighed. “A shapeshifting creature of some sort. Or a ghost.
I don’t know. It comes and goes,
whenever and wherever it feels. And it
becomes whoever – whatever – it wants.”
“Which
makes it even more dangerous.”
“Indeed. It controls Barnabas.”
“How? How did he allow this to happen?”
“Because
the Enemy promised him the one thing none of us could offer him.” He closed his eyes for a moment and
whispered, “Peace. He feels nothing. It took away all his emotions, his despair …
his guilt. His soul, you might say. He is pure creature, pure evil. A devil’s bargain.”
“What
does it want?” Julia cried. Her
frustration drove her to her feet, across the room, and to the mantel, where
she slammed her fist against the marble, ignoring the shards of pain that
through her hand. “This Enemy? Why is it playing with us this way?”
“We’ve
never been able to find out,” Quentin said.
“It wants us alive. Most of us,
anyway. Roger died, as you know. And Elizabeth. But Carolyn … David … Barnabas … even me – it
keeps us alive. It won’t …” He glanced at his wrists again, the
silver-thin scars there, and his voice became thick. “It won’t allow us to die.”
“Oh
Quentin,” Julia said. Her eyes burned
with tears of fear, exhaustion, and deep, burning sadness. She fell against him, and he wrapped his arms
around her and held her for a long moment.
Finally,
when they broke apart, she said, “We have to go to Collinwood. Right this minute.”
“That
would be a death sentence.”
“Don’t
be a coward,” she snapped, “not now.”
“I
am not a coward,” he said, his voice rising, “I just know when the deck is
stacked. They’ll kill us, Julia. Or you.
The Enemy wants you dead.”
Her
chin thrust forward; her lower lip trembled.
“That is a chance I’m willing to take.
Carolyn and Angelique were in terrible danger when I left them. Angelique said you could help them, that you
were the only person who could.”
“They
won’t harm me,” he said desolately. “They
never harm me.”
“Then
we’ll go,” she said, and her hand on his was like iron. “Now.”
And
Quentin knew that she would not be denied.
4
1968 – Collinwood
The
Master was displeased with him.
That
wasn’t surprising though; the shade that had, once upon a time, preferred to
call itself “Nicholas Blair” (though of course he had been known by many other
names in many other places), had felt the Master’s displeasure before. But he was also a favorite of the Master, and
so found himself rewarded with more chances than the average devil. Occasionally the Master would amuse himself
with petty tortures, like the years near the end of the nineteenth century when
Nicholas had lived for a time as a lawyer named Evan Hanley, with his memories
of all past incarnations wiped clean, forced to suffer the indignities heaped
on him by a blonde witch named Miranda DuVal (though that wasn’t really her
name either).
He
had suffered death again, but it wasn’t Miranda – or Cassandra – or Angelique,
whatever she called herself now, who had dealt him such a hand.
It
was a woman – and oh, how this grated – a woman he thought he had loved.
Love
was, of course, anathema to the Dark Ones Nicholas served.
And
so he found himself in hell.
Or
a hell; there were, after all, so
many.
This
one, though, he was familiar with.
Collinwood.
He
was trapped at Collinwood. Locked in the
wood and stone and glass of the great house, allowed to watch, allowed to
listen, but not free to move or manifest.
Angelique
suffered the same fate for nearly two centuries. And he knew that the Master was well aware of
this, which was all part of the joke, of course.
And
Angelique …
The Mask.
The Mask of Ba’al.
What
he’d searched for all his lives.
She
destroyed it. Or used it up. Or whatever; it didn’t matter; the Mask – or
mask, diminutive – was useless now. Its
powers tapped.
She was the power now.
Nicholas
had missed that little showdown, consigned to the flames as he was by his
one-time paramour, the beautiful and deadly Maggie Evans. Angelique versus virginal Vicki Winters, for
all the cookies. Only Miss Winters proved
that she was multi-faceted, to say the least.
She had trumped the Leviathans, trumped her own godforsaken father, and
risen higher in the echelon of evil than even Nicholas himself could
aspire. She was pure power, pure
darkness, a destructive, wild, untamed force.
Ah,
but Angelique …
The
one-time witch cum mortal had donned the dreaded Mask of Ba’al and thus
absorbed all its mystical power. She
was, one might imagine, the most powerful being in the universe; or, possibly,
all the universes.
The
thought would make Nicholas’ mouth dry, if he actually possessed a mouth.
Angelique
had dispatched Miss Winters with cool efficiency, and the earth – the very
house itself – had swallowed her whole.
She’s back.
That
was impossible. Even Nicholas, cut off
as he was from the Dark Ones, knew that, wherever Miss Winters was now,
wherever Angelique had sent her once and for all, there was no coming
back. Victoria Winters was more than
dead. She had been destroyed.
And
yet, here she was.
Or
someone who looked very much like her.
Nicholas,
who could watch from the glass window eyes of Collinwood, saw her far below
him, chatting with the mistress of Collinwood, another woman who had drawn his
eye. Didn’t matter now. She could never be his; instead, dear Lizzie
was even now chatting gaily away with the very image of the defunct Miss
Winters who would, now and then, gaze up to the windows of Collinwood as if she
saw him.
Like
she was doing now.
He
withdrew his spectral gaze quickly, almost guiltily.
She saw me.
Not
possible. There was nothing to see.
Nevertheless, she did see me.
Who
was she, this dark-haired mystery woman?
Was it Victoria Winters, returned from the grave? A visitor from a parallel world? A shapeshifter?
Can’t … reach her!
He
would contact her, though, if she came into the house. He’d reach out to her and attempt to analyze
her powers, if indeed she possessed any.
Find out who – or what – she really was.
He
grinned with his empty, non-existent mouth.
Miss Winters … oh Miss Winters …
And
while the very powerless ghost of Nicholas Blair attempted to summon a woman he
thought was just as dead as he, other familiar faces came out of the woods and
approached the house, all freezing in their places as they came. And saw.
5
1968: On the
grounds of Collinwood
“I’m
not who you think I am,” Alexandra March said to the wall of very white faces
that gaped at her. “I know I look like this person, whoever she is –”
“Vicki,”
Barnabas whispered, his face ashen. “Oh
my god.”
“I’m
not,” Alex pleaded. Her voice rose slightly into the range of
hysteria; as she heard the tone, she clapped her hands together and held them
tightly against the chic khaki coat she wore.
“I promise you I’m not.”
“Jeb
Hawkes,” Elizabeth breathed, then her eyes skittered to Angelique and
widened. “And Cassandra!” They narrowed ferociously. “How dare you return to this house after all
the things you’ve done. How dare you—”
“Mrs.
Stoddard,” Angelique – Cassandra now, for better or for worse – said in a voice
like the smoothest silk, and slid gracefully to the side of the Collinwood
matriarch. She clasped one of
Elizabeth’s hands in hers, and before anyone could protest (Stokes and
Barnabas, who had more reason than anyone else in that moment), her eyes fixed
on the other woman’s; in that instant, both widened. “I am sorry for just appearing like this,
after everything that’s happened. But
you should know how sorry I was to hear about your brother – my darling Roger
–” Elizabeth, whose eyes had grown dazed
and seemed to gaze into some distant horizon, could only nod “— and I wanted to
tell you how grateful I am to see you after all this time … almost a year,” and she accented this word
deliberately, and watched, pleased, as Elizabeth silently mouthed the word
after her, “that you would invite me to spend a few weeks at Collinwood with
you.”
“Spend
a few weeks,” Elizabeth murmured.
“Cassandra
–” Barnabas growled, but the witch didn’t break her gaze with her victim.
“This,”
Cassandra said carefully, “this is the first time you’ve seen me since I left
Collinwood last autumn.”
“The
first time,” Elizabeth agreed, her voice level and somnolent.
“And
you want me to stay.”
“I
do.”
The
dark-haired woman beside them narrowed her eyes.
“And
you bear me no ill will.”
“None
at all.”
“Excellent,”
Cassandra said, released Elizabeth’s hands, and stepped backward. Elizabeth staggered for a moment, and Alex
thrust out an arm to catch her.
“You
must excuse me,” Elizabeth said in her own voice. “I don’t know what’s come over me. I feel faint, I suppose.”
“Are
you all right, Mrs. Stoddard?” Alex asked.
She cast a worried, complicated glance at Barnabas, then allowed her
eyes to skitter to Stokes. “I don’t know
who you all think I am, but I’m not that person, I promise. Mrs. Stoddard and I were having a simple
conversation –”
“I’m
fine,” Elizabeth said firmly. Her lips
pursed. “Barnabas, you mustn’t think
these things. Vicki is … Vicki is gone. This is Miss March.”
“Alexandra,”
she said, and offered him her hand.
“Alex.”
Barnabas,
eyes wide and mouth tightly closed, hesitated only a moment. Then he took her hand in his.
Alex
pulled it away almost immediately.
“Cold,” she said. She tilted her
head curiously. “Very cold.”
“Mr.
Collins has circulation problems,” Stokes said, smiling hugely. “Allow me to introduce my friends. Miss March, this is Barnabas Collins, Mrs.
Stoddard’s cousin. Carolyn Stoddard, her
daughter. Sebastian Shaw, a … a friend
of Mr. Collins’. And Cassandra Collins,
wife of Mrs. Stoddard’s late brother.”
“It’s
nice to meet all of you,” Alex said, though her brow was furrowed, and stayed
furrowed. She withdrew, clasping her
hands again, and stood a little ways apart from them. “I’m only visiting Collinsport for a little
while. I may be meeting family here. An uncle.
I don’t know anyone, and I thought I’d see what I could of the town –”
“You
are welcome to visit Collinwood,” Elizabeth said warmly. “When it is ready to be welcoming, I
suppose.” Her eyes lighted on Barnabas,
and her eyebrows shot up. “Is that time
now, Barnabas? Now that you have …
returned?”
“That
depends,” Barnabas said nervously, but Cassandra, smiling sweetly, overrode
him. “We can find out right this moment,
can’t we, Barnabas?” Her eyes widened, her lips tightened, and her nostrils
flared with the secret urgency in her voice.
“Right … this … moment.”
“Yes,”
Stokes boomed with faux good cheer. “I
think we really should get inside, Elizabeth.
Collinwood is quite safe now.”
Elizabeth
started to say, “But you told me –”
But
they were already making their way into the house. Sebastian stopped for a moment to shake her
hand, muttering his thanks for her hospitality, and then he followed the
others. Perplexed, Elizabeth turned to
the stranger who still stood beside her, and smiled apologetically. “Our lives are far from common, Miss March,
as you’ll find out inevitably.”
“Inevitably,”
Alex said. A small smile dimpled her
lips.
“Would
you care to come inside?”
Alex
hesitated for only a moment. That small
smile remained on her lips. “I believe I
would, Mrs. Stoddard. I believe I would
like that very much.”
6
2014: The grounds of Collinwood
They
stood outside the house, gazing up at the darkened windows, barred against the
darkness. But the darkness had come creeping
regardless, and now it ruled the great house.
Julia
wondered if anyone inside was still alive.
“It’s
so quiet,” Quentin whispered.
“I
wonder what that means.”
He
slid his hand into hers. “We don’t need
to do this, Julia.”
She
stared at him silently, expressionlessly in the growing gloom swelling around
them, then pulled her hand from his.
“Damn
it,” he growled, and glanced away.
“Something
is pulling me back to Collinwood. I
can’t explain it. I should run a million
miles away from this house. But I
can’t.”
“It’s
your death, Julia. A quick reprieve,
that’s all I offered you. You’ve come
back here to die.”
“I
don’t think so,” she murmured. “I think
I can save them.”
“Even
if they’re –”
Her
eyes had begun to shine with a look of purpose that Quentin had seen
before. He knew what it meant. “I don’t belong in this time. Even if I died here, I would have gone back
to 1968, appearing just when I left.
Cassandra knew that in this
time; so did the Enemy. I’m being pulled
back there, Quentin.”
“How
will you get back?”
“That
room,” she said. “I have to get to that
goddamned room.”
He
sighed. “Might not be as easy as you
think.” He nodded in the direction of
Collinwood. She followed his gaze.
Barnabas
Collins stood in the doorway. He was
grinning; he spread his arms, and they saw he wore no cape, but a thin, black
membrane grew from his arms and made them wings, and each one was tipped with a
hideous, chitinous claw. He opened his
mouth and released a dreadful shriek, inhuman, the sound of sheets of metal
rending.
“That
isn’t Barnabas,” Julia said firmly.
“It
isn’t anything anymore,” Quentin agreed.
“But it will kill us if we try to get into the house. If we – damn it, woman!” he roared, but Julia
was already stomping in the vampire’s direction.
“Barnabas,”
she called. The thing in the doorway
cocked its monstrous head; its long, pointed ears twitched, one, then the
other. One … then the other. But she came on and on, never slowing. “Barnabas, it’s me. Julia.
You remember me, don’t you? It’s
Julia!”
It
growled, a quiet, purring sound, a seam released, a thread pulled.
“Julia!”
Quentin cried from behind her. “For
god’s sake, get away from him!”
But
she moved forward relentlessly. “Let me
inside. You must. You don’t want to hurt me.”
“I’m
afraid he does.” The air shimmered
beside her, and Barnabas Collins appeared.
Handsome, human looking, his face flushed, his eyes dark and wet with
his sadness. The other, monstrous
Barnabas recoiled for a moment, then chuckled dark laughter at the sight of its
doppelganger. The doppelganger – the
Enemy, Julia knew – didn’t spare a moment to look in its direction. All of his – its – attention was focused on her.
“I don’t know how you survived, my dear Julia, but I’m afraid I can’t
allow you to continue your rather pathetic, if not persistent, existence. We’re going to kill you, Barnabas and I. Then you will return to your time, a spirit
bearing my message, as you are destined to do.”
“You
aren’t Barnabas,” Julia said coldly. She
leveled a long, pale finger at the slavering beast before her. He stood only inches away now, glaring at her
with eyes like globules of blood. “He is. And I love him. And he knows it.”
The
doppelganger-Barnabas threw back his head and laughed. “Rich,” he said. “Oh, Julia, Julia, Julia, that is –”
She
lifted a leg and, in the most unladylike gesture of her life, aimed a kick at
the thing masquerading as the man she loved, and impaled it with the heel of
her shoe.
There
was a moment of resistance, a feeling of sinking into thick, wet air, a rush of
heat, substance but not –
Snarling,
hissing like a great cat, the Barnabas-thing beside her gnashed its shining teeth
and faded away.
She
was panting. Undignified, she thought to
herself; really, Julia.
She
found, amazingly, that she was smiling.
“Barnabas,”
she whispered tenderly to the monstrous thing blocking the door. She reached a hand out. “Oh, Barnabas –”
The
crimson eyes softened.
They
looked at her.
Into
her.
Her
breath caught; she held it, tremulously.
The
eyes widened. It was Barnabas, this
creature, this thing. It was.
Her Barnabas.
Then
it lunged forward, roaring.
7
1968: Collinwood, the Parallel Time Room
“Obex est absentis. Posterus est
laxo. Nostrum universitas fio universus.”
Anxious
faces, pale in the darkness, hands clutched tightly.
“Addo nos nostrum diligo unus. Addo
suus ex alius universitas. Addo nos nostrum diligo unus sic is ago.”
Julia Hoffman … Julia Hoffman …
…they
chant under their collective breaths …
Julia, Julia Hoffman …
“The
way opens, the veils fade away, obstacles melt – spirits, reach your wizened
hands into a time yet-to-come – bring back one who is lost to us – guide her
back to those who love her and who need her to live – show me your power,
spirits, loa, ghosts, ancestors and those who are as of yet unborn – show me –”
8
2014: Collinwood
There
was blood. A great deal of blood,
actually. It writhed in her mouth, and
she coughed, choking, and spat it onto the ground.
Barnabas
was roaring. His hands worked, those
claws worked –
Julia
sobbed. It wasn’t her blood coppery on
her tongue and in a slime across her teeth.
It
was Quentin’s.
His
eyes were still open. They saw her, even
as he stuttered to his knees. A black
stream continued to gout from the enormous wound that opened and closed and
opened and closed again like a gaping mouth in his throat.
As
she watched, Barnabas licked the blood from his claws and uttered a feline,
purring sound of contentment.
“No!” There was another Quentin beside the dying
one, whole and unscathed, but his face worked and became wolfen, a snout
pressed wetly from his mouth and, “No!” he howled, “Not allowed, not allowed –”
Quentin
made a horrible gargling sound. He
thrust out his hand. He was gesturing;
he was pushing her forward. “Juuuu,” he
said. “Ruh. Ruh.”
“You
fool!” the faux Quentin raged, and struck out at the Barnabas monster, but he
merely roared his laughter. “You fool,
you fool, you idiot, you can’t do
that, you can’t –”
Barnabas
laughed and laughed.
The
Quentin doppelganger faded like smoke and was gone.
Julia.
Run. Run.
The
Barnabas-monster, growling, stalked toward her, grinning. Black ichor fouled its saber-fangs. She opened her mouth to scream.
Quentin
launched himself at Barnabas. Blood flew
in thick ropes and spattered against the vampire’s wings. He stopped, surprised, and his eyes widened.
Julia.
Run. Run.
Barnabas
growled questioningly. He was torn,
Julia suddenly understood, between his desire to tear open her throat and the
bloodbath already at his disposal, at his very feet, as Quentin, eyes dimming,
groped for him with trembling, paper-white hands.
Hunger
won out.
Barnabas
dived at Quentin. His mouth became a
snout, furry, jostling with fangs. It
latched onto the hole in Quentin’s throat and shredded it. Bone snapped;
the flesh tore away, and Julia heard the wet sounds of Barnabas inhaling
Quentin’s blood as his heart pumped it up and out of the hole in his neck where
his jugular and carotid once lay.
Julia.
Run. Run.
Quentin’s
blue eyes, wide, locked on her own. He
was trying to smile. Barnabas grunted.
The
light in his eyes was extinguished suddenly.
Old age followed rapidly, dissolution, utter, complete, a moment after
that. Barnabas held a suit in his hands,
and dust ran in gray clouds from the neck and sleeves. He snarled questioningly, then furiously.
He
turned to her. His eyes were crimson,
bloody globules in the bestial landscape of his face.
Julia
ran.
9
The
foyer was not empty. “Oh no,” she
whimpered, but did not allow herself to stop.
Despite the fact that Carolyn Stoddard lay before her, her head twisted
at an obscene angle, her eyes blue and as glazed as Quentin’s were, Julia
Hoffman did not allow herself to stop.
She launched herself onto the stairs and pounded up the steps, turned,
slammed through the door that led into the depths of the house.
… chanting, somewhere, a voice, pulling at
her, tugging, guiding her …
“I’m
coming,” Julia said through gritted teeth, “I hear you, I’m coming.” She wasn’t aware that she had spoken.
A
door opened. A nightmare stood
inside. David Collins – it had to be,
she recognized him; even though he was a man in his early fifties, she could
see the boy he had been in his face, swimming up like a ghost through murky
water. He stared with eyes that were
dimming, groped for her with hands stained with blood and chunks of flesh. His throat was mottled, torn. In the room behind him, werewolves growled
and snapped. “Help … me,” he managed to
wheeze. Julia screamed and screamed
again as a furry hand-paw reached from the darkness behind the man and pulled
him back into the room. The door
slammed.
Carolyn
stood before her, perfect, impeccable.
She was trying to smile. “So I’m
not perfect,” she lisped, “so I’m not a good little girl.” Her eyes were vacant and blue. “I’ve lost, Julia Hoffman, and you are
responsible. They’re all dead.”
… Julia, Julia Hoffman …
Carolyn
stepped toward her, reaching. Her face
became a death’s head. “And so are you,” she grated.
Sobbing,
Julia ran.
10
Why
would the Enemy allow Carolyn and David to die?
The question occurred to her as she forced herself under control, forced
the tears to stop, to freeze in her eyes.
It wanted the Collins family, had gathered and controlled them for
years, only to allow three of the last remaining members to die now, like this?
It didn’t make any sense.
That’s
why it needs you, a voice inside her mind answered her, dryly, grimly. That’s why it needs you dead, Julia. It
wants to change things as well. It wants you to help it, to guide the
family so that Carolyn and Quentin and David live … until it needs them to die.
It
lost control of Barnabas and his nightspawn.
It makes mistakes. It miscalculates.
Good
to know.
She
ran through the darkness of the house as if drawn toward a light that she
couldn’t see, but that she could sense.
Where
was Angelique? Had she fallen, been
destroyed by Barnabas or by the werewolves?
Doesn’t
matter, she told herself; run, woman!
Julia.
Julia Hoffman.
…pulled…
The
room – the room in the East Wing – it was before her now, the door slightly
ajar. A silver light pulsed from the
crack. She could feel its coldness
against her face.
The
air shimmered; Cassandra Collins stepped into existence. Her eyes were cold and blue; her arms, long
and bare, were the alabaster of marble.
“I can’t let you go in there, Julia,” the witch said sadly. “I’m sorry that you’ve come all this way, but
I can’t let you.”
“Get
out of my way, Angelique,” Julia said.
She was fed up. She had survived
god knows how many cycles or loops or whatever her mysterious savior had called
them, coming to the future, dying, returning to the present as a ghost, over
and over and over, to lose it all to her former enemy now … not when she was so close.
“I
made a bargain,” Cassandra said softly, reasonably. “The Enemy and I had … a long talk.”
“Really.” Surprise, Julia thought wearily, surprise.
“Yes. We … made a deal.”
“You’re
insane.”
“Possibly,”
the other woman admitted.
“Possibly. The Enemy will spare
Barnabas – return him to the way he was – if …”
The words faded, and Cassandra bit her crimson lip. Her eyes were wide, her cheeks high with
color. It has her, Julia realized; it
has her in some way. It holds her.
And she has allowed it to do this.
Julia’s
face hardened. “If you kill me,” she
said. “That was the deal, wasn’t it.”
Cassandra
said nothing.
“I
won’t let you,” Julia said, and thrust out her chin. “Barnabas will know, and he’ll hate you.”
“He
will love me,” Cassandra whispered.
“That’s all I want, all I’ve ever wanted. His love.”
“Not
this way.”
“This way. I know him.
I know his heart.”
“You
don’t know him well enough, not now, not ever.”
Cassandra’s
face hardened. She raised her
hands. Dark magic swirled and sparkled
between her fingertips. “We have been
friends in the past. I will be your
friend now. I will kill you quickly.”
With
a sudden primal scream, Julia launched herself at the witch, hands hooked into
claws, and these claws pinwheeled across the startled face of the other woman
and drew long lines that quickly filled with blood.
Cassandra
stuttered down to one knee, then looked up at Julia who stood over her,
panting. “You’ll be sorry you did that,”
she declared.
Julia
opened her mouth, wanted to say, “Go back to hell,” but she never had the
chance.
A
sudden wind raced down the hall, knocking Cassandra backward off her feet. She opened her mouth to shriek her fury … and
found herself facing …
…herself.
What
appeared to be the ghost of Cassandra Collins flickered like a candle flame in
the hallway. Her eyes were black, empty
holes. Her long hair flew about her head
in that spectral wind.
NO,
her voice boomed.
“This
cannot be!” the very physical Cassandra shrieked, and held up one hand. “I charge thee, corrupt spirit,” she began,
“by the judge of the quick and the dead –”
NO,
the Cassandra of the past boomed again, and made her own gesture.
Her
future counterpart burst into flames.
“Oh,
this is a nightmare,” Julia muttered.
Shrieking,
the flaming Cassandra rag-doll lurched to her feet, ran immediately into a
wall, rebounded, struck the wall again and, sobbing, began to pound and beat at
the flames.
The
Cassandra-ghost-thing turned to Julia with those terrible monster’s eyes.
YOU
HAVEN’T ANY TIME. GO NOW.
Julia
did as she was told.
She
threw open the door to the Parallel Time room.
That cold silver glow enfolded her, and she held up a hand to shield her
eyes.
The
light pulsed as if it were alive.
“One
step,” Julia murmured.
And
took it.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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