CHAPTER 98: Those Who Endure
Voiceover by David Selby: “Julia
Hoffman has returned to the Collinwood her own time, in the year 1968, from her
dreadful adventure in the future. She
has survived the experience … but for how long?
Even now the forces of a darkness greater than any the members of the
Collins family and their friends have ever faced before are aligning against
them … and while some will survive, there are those whose fates are already
sealed.”
1
The
docks were heavy with shadows; that was the first creepy aspect of
Collinsport-by-the-sea Audrey Jones noted, with a shudder and a roll of her
heavily shadowed eyes. She nearly ground
the stuff into her eyelids, but it was a pretty blue, she thought, and it
brought out the chocolate brown of her own eyes. Not that anyone in this deadbeat town had
noticed; the Blue Whale, a smoky hole in the wall from which she had only
moments before emerged, coughing into her palm, was nearly deserted. A limp looking bartender smoked a desultory
stogie while a pretty young woman with dark black hair sipped a small sherry
alone at a table near the door. And that
was it. Audrey had flirted with the idea
of seating herself at the bar, wondered for a moment if there were any other
black folks in the Collinsport town limits, decided she didn’t particularly
want to learn how progressive – or not
– this particular backwater in Maine could be, and with that thought in mind,
she skedaddled.
And
so here she was: huddling in her
fox-fur, without even a pair of gloves to warm her poor frozen hands, irritated
by the unseasonable cold of the early September evening, and wondering at the
darkness that seemed to possess its own peculiar weight. The shadows, she
thought, looked heavy, as if they might weigh her down.
She
was a recent graduate of Boston College and the recipient of her very own newly
minted accounting degree; an aunt in Rockport, her mother’s sister, owned a
small restaurant and was ready to set Audrey up as bookkeeper. But Rockport felt dead to her, and she hadn’t
really dated anybody since she dumped Tom, her on-again, off-again boyfriend
for the past few years (my college
boyfriend, she had told herself primly for the past three years, and so there
was a part of her that had always known he was nowhere near permanent), and so
she thought she might give Collinsport a try.
Which
was why a walk on the wharf after dark had seemed rather appealing, romantic in
a spooky sort of way, with the fog hanging in tattered shreds over the water
and wending its way around her ankles and fashionable blue pumps; but she was
discovering that Collinsport was as dead as Rockport, deader perhaps. The local watering hole deserted, the only
sound the lapping of the water against the wood of the docks, the occasional
cry of a night bird.
“Christ,”
she said aloud, suddenly disgusted with herself and with this entire pisshole
town. The loneliness she felt since that
last night with Tom, allowing him to kiss her, to put his hand on her breast,
one more time, he promised her, cooing into her hungry mouth, just one more
time; that idiotic loneliness rose up to crush her, and she felt a sob
beginning to bloom rottenly in her chest.
“Here,
here,” a man’s voice said behind her, and she straightened up, suddenly
terrified. It was a gentle voice, heavy
with amusement, and she spun to face him, whoever he was. One hand went immediately to her purse. She kept a small knife there, nothing more
than a paring knife really, something you might use to peel potatoes, but she’d
carried it ever since she had been approached by mouthy boys on a salty summer
evening a year or so ago after she insisted that Tom allow her to walk back to
her apartment by herself. Mouthy boys
who called her all sorts of unpleasant names, names she refused to think about. But now she had the knife, and she would
never – never – allow anyone to
threaten her like those boys had again.
The
man before her was handsome, with thick lips split into a toothy white smile,
and curling hair that twined heavily on his head and wound in coils around his
ears. “Here here,” he said again. “That’s no way for a nice girl like you to
talk. Not on a night like this.”
“Helluva
night,” she said, smiling a big smile, feeling spite rise up in her, replacing
the fright, swimming on a tide of adrenaline.
“Helluva foggy night.”
“Indeed,”
the man said. “You’ve never been to
Collinsport before, I gather.”
“Oh,
all the time,” she said airily. “I
practically live here, you know.”
“I’ve
never seen you before.”
Her
smile became acid. “I expect that you’d
recognize me. I stand out, it seems.”
“I
always look out for pretty girls.”
“Flattery.”
“Not
at all.” The idea!
She
lifted her chin and smiled her best, her most coquettish smile. “Perhaps,” she drawled, “perhaps you’d care
to escort a lady back to her hotel.”
“You’re
staying at the Inn?”
“Of
course.”
“Am
I the only friend you’ve met tonight?”
“Oh,
I have tons of friends. A million friends.” Her lower lip trembled, mock pouting. “But I’m lonely.” She stuck out her hand. “I’m Audrey.”
The
man, to her immense surprise, grasped it between both his hands gently, oh so
gently, bowed, and raised it to his lips.
They were icy cold, and she shivered involuntarily. “A beautiful name. And an unusual one.”
“Not
so unusual.”
“I’ve
lived in Collinsport a long, long time.
I’ve never met an Audrey.”
“I,”
she smiled, “could be your first.”
“My
first,” the man said musingly, “my first.
Yes, I suppose you could be, at that.”
She
shivered again. No real reason; he
wasn’t supremely creepy, not like those damned shadows that hung heavy over
everything in this town. But a finger of
disquiet touched her heart, and she couldn’t explain it.
Run, Audrey.
Don’t say another word, never mind polite goodbyes. Just run.
She
thought of Tom. She thought of her
loneliness. She thought of the knife in
her purse.
He
offered her an arm. “Please,” he said.
She
bit her lower lip.
She
took his arm. “Thank you, sir,” she
smiled. They began to walk. Her heels made loud clicking sounds against
the wood of the wharf. He moved
silently, absolutely soundlessly, like a great cat in the gloom. She shivered again.
“Cold?”
he said. “My coat.” And slid out of it seamlessly. He held it out to her.
She
barely hesitated. “Thank you,” she said,
shrugging it on. “Chivalry isn’t dead,
it seems. You’re a knight. A knight in the night. What’s your name, Sir Night Knight?”
The
man’s thick lips split into that smile again.
“You’re funny,” he said, and touched her cheek. She shivered again. His eyes captured her. “My name is Gerard,” the man said. His teeth were very white, and very
straight. He took Audrey’s hand and
squeezed it tight, tight, tight within his own.
And then, “Stiles,” he added.
2
“You
need to rest.”
Julia’s
eyes narrowed over the cup of Oolong Mrs. Johnson, suddenly allowed the run of
her kitchen again, had thrust into Julia’s hands a few minutes ago before
disappearing back into the kitchen’s depths.
“Expect it’ll be overrun with mice,” she had said darkly, and wagged a
finger in Julia’s face, “you mark my words.”
Now Julia said, “I don’t want to rest.”
The
woman sitting in the chair across from her sighed heavily. “You haven’t slept in days.” She thought for a moment. “Exactly how many days did you spend in the
future?”
“Not
even one.”
“Still.” Angelique – or Cassandra; the witch had been
very careful to mention right away, after the room shifted and burped and Julia
Hoffman appeared, very much alive, at their summons, that her name was Cassandra – seemed genuinely
concerned. Julia supposed she was. After all, she didn’t know all the fun facts
about the future Julia did.
She is Cassandra again. That’s the start of it.
And
it had to be stopped.
Because
she was Cassandra in the future as well.
“Change
back,” Julia said suddenly, sharply.
The
blue eyes across from her widened.
“Change back? Into what?”
“You
can’t be Cassandra anymore.” Panic rose
inside her suddenly like a great black bird spreading dark wings.
Cassandra
laughed her irritating laughter. “Why ever
not?”
“Why
do you have to question everything I say?” Julia snapped, sitting up in her bed
and baring her teeth. “Why can’t you
just listen to me?”
“You’ve
been under a great strain,” Cassandra said, as soothingly as she could through
gritted teeth, resisting as much as she could the idea of turning the good
doctor into a doormat or a rutabaga. As
tempting a proposition as that was.
“You
know,” Julia said accusingly. “You
saw! You were there, if only for a
moment. But you saw –”
“I
saw myself,” Cassandra agreed, nodding.
Julia’s mouth closed with a snap.
“I know. I will exist in 2014 as
I am now.”
“Calling
yourself Cassandra.”
“Bitterness
does not become you,” Cassandra purred.
“But yes. I will call myself
Cassandra. It was … necessary when we
encountered Elizabeth unexpectedly outside the house. I have to confess, Julia, it is rather
liberating to have this guise, another identity I can turn to if …” Her voice trailed off.
“You
mustn’t!” Julia’s voice cracked. “Why
won’t you understand? If we can undo
even one piece of what I saw in the future, perhaps we can undo it all. Pull one thread, and the entire cursed
garment falls into nothing.”
“A
beautiful metaphor,” Cassandra sniffed, “but hardly necessary. Julia, you saw it all. You returned to this time alive.
And you reported what you saw.
Already the future has been changed.
We will be on the lookout for this … this Enemy, as you call it.” Her
brow furrowed. “Although, it may very
well be that we have already encountered it … in form or another.”
“What
do you mean?”
Cassandra
shook her thick raven tresses. “Never
mind,” she said with the sweet edge in her voice that never failed to grate on
Julia’s nerves. “What matters is that
you returned, and you returned with knowledge.
We can fight now. And we can make
different choices. I will make a
concerted effort to fight the Enemy if it comes calling with promises to make
Barnabas love me in exchange for your life.”
Her lips trembled on the edge of a smile. “As tempting a scenario as that might be …” Julia’s mouth opened; her eyes flashed;
Cassandra waved a hand and tittered.
“I’m only joking, dear Julia. One
must always keep one’s sense of humor at a time of crisis.”
Julia
crossed her arms and settled back grumpily against her pillows. “It is
a time of crisis,” she muttered in her best sulky tone.
Cassandra
took her hand and squeezed it.
Surprised, Julia gazed into the other woman’s eyes and found … sincerity
there. And compassion. She felt like gaping. Would wonders never cease. “We’ll do our best,” Cassandra said. “To fight.
To endure. That’s what we
do. What we’ve always done.”
Flustered,
Julia could only think to say, “You mustn’t lose your powers.”
Cassandra
tossed her head and uttered an evil chuckle.
“Oh my dear, I have no intention of losing my powers. Not even a little. Don’t worry your pretty red head about that.”
She released the doctor’s hand and, suddenly all business, rose to her
full height. She was, Julia admitted
grudgingly, particularly lovely this evening, clad as she was in an electric
blue skirt with a matching blazer. She
had tied her dark hair back behind her head, revealing to their best advantage
her amazing cheekbones and crystalline eyes.
Damn her, Julia thought; one look at her, and Barnabas will …
…Barnabas will what?
He
couldn’t possibly love Angelique. Not
now. Not after … after everything she
had done.
Could
he?
Perhaps,
a traitor voice whispered in her ear, perhaps it isn’t who Barnabas loves that you should be worried about.
“I
loved Barnabas once,” Cassandra said gently, framed for a moment in the
doorway. Her voice grew harder,
firmer. “But that time is over and
done. Please believe me, Julia. Whatever you saw in the future – whatever
terrible things I did – I will work harder than I ever have to avoid them. I promise you that.”
And
she was gone.
Julia
snuggled into her pillows and closed her eyes.
She was exhausted. She longed for a cigarette.
She
was asleep mere seconds later, and so she didn’t see the air shimmer before her
bed, shimmer with something like great heat, or the eyes that appeared and hung
before her, disembodied, watching her with a blackness in them greater than
hate.
3
The
heat was oppressive, but he endured it.
After all, he thought, bemused, hadn’t Quentin Collins become the king
of endurance? Living through times of
despair, watching those he loved die time and again, knowing with agonizing
certainty that he was sometimes responsible for their deaths? So he would endure the heat in this noxious
little cabin with no windows, with an iron door, with a single table and a
single chair, and why was it so hot in the mountains of Montana anyway? Summer was but a passing fancy at this
elevation; evenings he slept under the stars with only his sleeping bag and
nearly-flattened pillow beneath his head, Quentin was certain he would awaken
sheathed with a rime of frost, but no.
There was only this heat. This
damnable heat.
The
cabin was not easy to locate.
Unsurprising; in a similar position, Quentin would have hidden himself
away with equal intensity. Actually, as
he had told Eliot Stokes in the early days of their friendship, he had behaved similarly. But instead of running across the country,
Quentin had fled high into the Urals, initially questing for a warlock with
knowledge to end the curse, then, finally, the realization that he just wanted
to be alone. Finally, dreadfully alone.
Quentin
closed his eyes now and remembered that night when, bathed by the full light of
that goddamned silvery moon, he stood at the edge of a precipice and spread his
arms, as if he were some great bird. So
easy to do it, he thought at the time; so easy to just … go. To let go.
To let go and fall into that unknown gulf.
End it.
End it for all time.
Only
the sudden doubt that it would really
and truly end held him back from the oblivion he sought. What if the portrait’s influence stretched
this far, reached out with Petofi’s monstrous power and kept him alive, even if
his body became shattered and destroyed by the rocks that Quentin knew must
wait for him at the bottom of the gorge?
What if he lay there, alive in his ruined body, impossibly far from
anyone who would hear his cries or be able to help him, as-good-as-dead in a
body that refused to finally die and allow him the peace he craved so much?
And
so he took a step back from the precipice.
He
never found the warlock. That was in
1919; he returned, instead, to America, where he joined the war effort (the
Great War, they called it, as if it were the last, could ever possibly be the
last; so ridiculous, so laughable), and returned for the briefest of moments to
peer in at his relations at Collinwood.
Edward was dead by then, and Jamison ruled the familial home with the
iron fist Quentin always feared he would wield.
Of Nora there was no sign.
Elizabeth, Jamison’s pride and joy, was a toddler, barely two. Jamison’s wife was a great beauty, as Quentin
might have expected. She was also, it
seemed, miserably unhappy.
“La,
Quentin,” Magda had grinned at him, her spirit shimmering into view as he stood
with his hands cupped to the glass, peering into the drawing room, “you’re too
much of a gentleman to become a peeping tom now. Let them be.
Let them all be.”
When
he turned to face her, she was already gone.
A victim of Petofi, but really his
victim. Dead, like all the others in
that terrible year of 1897. Dead because
of him. And here he was, because he was
Quentin Collins, and he endured.
He
shook way those memories now, and in good time too, it seemed.
The
door to the cabin was opening.
Quentin
stood quickly, suddenly and unaccountably nervous. He had no business coming here, and he knew
it.
I had all the business in the world. He is my great-grandson. I love him.
Christopher
Jennings’ face bore no real expression of surprise as he stood, framed in the
doorway to the cabin. Only a terrible
emptiness.
“Get
out,” he said.
“Is
that any way to greet your granddad?” Quentin said, trying as hard as he could
to make his voice boom, to manufacture good humor.
Chris
didn’t move. “I don’t want to see
you. I don’t want to see any of you. Not ever again.”
Quentin
felt a spear of real anger pierce him.
“Well,” he drawled, “turns out I don’t care what you want.” Chris raised an eyebrow; surprise, Quentin
thought, relieved, surprise is an emotion, or close enough. He isn’t so dead inside after all. “Listen.
I had to find you. I came a long
way. You weren’t,” he said with a rueful
shake of his head, “easy to find.”
“That
was the point.”
“You
made it, then.” Quentin had thought long
and hard about the possible speeches he might make once he finally found Chris,
the impassioned pleas he might make, the words he would cobble together,
rhetoric, obfuscation. Screw it, he thought,
screw it all, and he said instead,
simply, “Come back with me.”
“No,”
Chris said instantly.
“I
want you to.”
“Turns
out,” Chris said, echoing exactly Quentin’s wry tone, “I don’t care what you
want.”
“Don’t
be smart.”
“If
I were smart I would have killed myself.
I would have shot myself with a silver bullet that last night, when I
turned into a million kinds of monster instead of just one and nearly ate Julia
Hoffman’s face.” He was trembling now,
his hands clenched into fists, and his face was deadly pale.
Quentin
forced himself to retain his patience.
“Julia explained that all to me.
She wants to help you, Christopher.
She’s been working on a cure –”
“Excellent!”
Chris roared, whirled, threw his hands above his head, and too late, Quentin,
wincing, realized that he had employed the wrong tactic. “Fantastic!
So she can make me even more of a monster than I was before? Do you think I’m stupid? Does she?”
“No
one thinks you’re –”
“I
never changed like that before.” Chris’
eyes were blazing, and Quentin saw that they had begun to change, to lighten
subtly, gradually, from dark brown to a light green. He was becoming the animal now, under the
sun, the moon hours from rising. “It was
because of her, because of her experiments.” He spat the word. Then his face twisted; his mouth screwed up
and his eyes grew even lighter. “And Joe
is dead because of me. Or Nathan, or whoever he was. I killed him, Quentin. I ate
him.”
“I
know what you’re going through. Don’t
you remember? I went through it all
too.”
“Spare
me.” Chris held up one hand. Quentin, fascinated, saw that the index and
middle finger were exactly the same length.
That was a new and, as they all seemed to be these days, disturbing
development. “This is my life now. There are no people, no one to bother me, no
one for me to kill. I don’t need to go
into any town because I change every night, and that’s what you’re not
understanding, I can see it in your face.
I change every night, and every night I kill.” He grinned, and his teeth were very
long. His face was beginning to ripple
and change, and the timbre of his voice dropped through several registers of
sound. “Every night,” he said, through a
mouthful of fangs, “every night,” and he took a step forward, as, dismayed,
Quentin took a compensatory step backward, “every night I kill.”
4
The
cigarette she lit did not jitter in her fingers; when Alexandra March inhaled,
she dragged the strength of the cigarette and its smoke into her lungs, felt
its soothing strength, its dragon claws inside her lungs; then she exhaled. She even allowed herself a tiny smile.
She
stood beside the statue of Diana in the garden of Collinwood, watching as the
sun sank behind the hills. The dusky
light was blue here, and cast everything into a blue study as well. It matched her mood. She didn’t want to be here; she didn’t want
to interact with these people.
People. That was a laugh. Exactly how many humans had she met
tonight?
Some
of them would die. She would be responsible
for a number of their deaths. And she
hated the thought of it.
“You
needn’t brood, my dear,” a man’s voice said.
Alex stiffened, but it wasn’t a surprise. She exhaled blue smoke and turned to face
him.
“You
shouldn’t let them see you,” she said.
The
little man in the bowler hat and rounded, upturned nose bowed a little. “Not even a ‘Hello, dearest uncle, how are
you?’” he said, then pealed merry laughter.
“My dear, how you disappoint me.”
“That’s
worse than anything,” she remarked. “Worse
than making you angry. To disappoint
you. That
really gets me.”
“Then
you may sleep well. I’m not at all
disappointed in you. I’m rather pleased,
actually, with your progress. You’ve
already met them all, then.”
“I
have.”
“And
you’ve been inside the house.”
Her
smile twisted. “Mrs. Stoddard has
invited me to stay.”
The
little man’s eyebrows rose to near-impossible heights. “Marvelous!” he said, and clapped his hands
together. “My dear, what a wonder you
are.”
“Not
at all. She’s lonely. Someone very near to her just died.” She exhaled another stream of blue
smoke. “As you know.”
“Yes,”
the man admitted. “It’s true. I did know.”
“You
should have told me.”
“That
the Collins governess died?”
“That
she looked exactly like me,” Alex said, trembling. She ground the cigarette onto the flagstones
beneath her heel, then stood up, looking at him with flashing eyes. “You should have told me. Who is she, this girl? Or was. Who was
she?”
“A
mystery woman,” he said, his voice gentle.
“It was better for you never to have met her.”
Darkly,
she said, “You should let me decide that for myself. You always have before.”
“This
woman requires that exceptions be made.”
“Why? What did she do?”
“You’ll
know all in good time, dearest Alexandra, I promise you that.” The little man took both her hands in
his. When he spoke, his voice was
hard. “But I suggest you control
yourself before we speak any further.
You are not in control at this moment, and you know how it vexes me when
you lose yourself like this.”
Alex
pulled away from him, and put both her hands against her face. Her fingertips grazed her eyes, which, she
realized, belatedly, had darkened into a charred obsidian. A sob grew and died in her throat as she
squeezed her eyes shut.
The
little man watched her patiently. He had
seen this before.
At
last she opened them, and they were as they had been before: a chocolate brown, wide, the eyes of an
ingénue.
Only
Alexandra March was no ingénue. They
both knew it.
“I’m
sorry,” she whispered. A tear trembled
in the corner of one eye and ran down her cheek.
He
stopped it with one finger. The tear
balanced there, crystalline, holding the dancing lights of Collinwood within
its depths. He placed his finger into his
mouth, and allowed the tear to burn there against his tongue. “Don’t be sorry, dearest,” he said, brushing
his fingers against her soft, dark fall of hair. “You are, as I said, a marvel. You will do your job, as I have instructed
you, and all will be revealed to you. I
promise you, Alexandra. But for now …”
and his eyes darted to the windows that looked in on the drawing room. Inside, Elizabeth and Carolyn sat across from
Professor Stokes and sipped at the tea Mrs. Johnson had prepared.
Alex
followed his gaze. She watched them as
he watched them. After a moment she
nodded. “Yes,” she said, and moved
toward the drawing room. She turned back
only once, but he was gone, as she knew he would be. “Yes,” she said again, and returned to the
drawing room, warmed by Elizabeth’s exclamations of delight.
5
Gerard snarled; the wound from the tiny pen-knife Audrey stuck into his hand bubbled and spurted smoke. Audrey herself, eyes wide, teeth clamped together, backed away from her attacker. “Son of a bitch,” she said. His eyes fixed on her and widened and then glowed, hot, like twin furnaces, and she took a shuddering step backward. They stood outside the Collinsport Inn, still in the street, and the fog curled and coiled, feline-like, around their ankles.
The
attack had come suddenly, without warning; one moment they walked together down
the deserted streets of the tiny town, Audrey chattering, Gerard seemingly
enjoying her chatter with companionable silence, and suddenly she felt his
fingers clamp down on her arm. They dug
into the flesh like the claws of a vulture, and when she tried to pull away, he
spun her around so she could see his face and the giant grin plastered across
it.
A
grin that was too giant, as it turned
out.
His
mouth stretched as she watched, horrified, pulling like taffy, and it became a
gaping hole studded with too many teeth colored a sickly yellow; his eyes began
to glow a sulfurous orange, and though Audrey screamed, no one appeared in any
windows, no one slammed open a door, and she thought, crazily to herself, You
wondered, didn’t you, you wondered how progressive Collinsport is, and here’s
your answer, you stupid girl, you stupid, stupid –
Then
she remembered the knife.
Gerard
didn’t speak; he merely continued to snarl.
He reached with fingers grown monstrously long and plucked the knife
from his hand and threw it to the sidewalk, where it clattered and disappeared
into the fog.
His
grin reappeared. And grew.
She
wanted to ask him a number of questions before she died – because the
possibility that she would not survive this encounter with … whatever he was
occurred to her – but did she really want to know? What he was?
What he planned to do with her?
She
thought not.
She
turned instead. To run.
Until
one of those dreadful monster hands clamped onto her shoulder and pulled her
back.
Into
the fog.
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