CHAPTER
99: All the Pretty Little Horses
by Nicky
Voiceover by Marie Wallace: “Collinwood,
in the fall of 1968 … a time when an ancient evil begins to manifest … and the
curse that has haunted the Collins family for centuries battens down, not only on
everyone who lives in the great house … but on even those who dare to visit the
town of Collinsport itself.”
1
I’m going to die. I’m going to die.
Audrey
Jones was not a native citizen of Collinsport, Maine. This was, in fact, her first night in the
tiny town she had already written off as boring beyond all measure, a place
long dead, peopled by zombies. She meant
this criticism to be metaphorical, of course.
And
of course she was wrong.
The
thing that called itself Gerard Stiles roared like a lion, his talons digging
painfully into the soft meat of her shoulders, before he threw her bodily to
the ground. She cried out as she struck
the concrete sidewalk and skidded, losing several inches of her own skin as she
went.
She
didn’t want to die. She didn’t want to
be a statistic. She didn’t want to lose
out now, not after all the fights her mother and grandmother had endured to
overcome segregation, racism, hatred, so that Audrey wouldn’t have to fight
quite so hard as they.
And
she especially didn’t want to die at the hands of this white bastard monster.
He
was chuckling above her. He had become
merely a silhouette with sunken, glowing eyes, looming above her in the
fog. His laughter was the grinding of
earthen plates, an inhuman rumble.
He
would take her soon, and then he would –
Oh,
and then he would –
The knife!
She
had forgotten the knife!
“Nice
girl,” he cooed above her in his monster’s voice, chortling, bubbling, inhuman,
“nice girl, nice nice girl –”
She
fumbled for it, rolling over, but the strands of mist were so thick and they
obscured enormous chunks of the sidewalk so that she couldn’t see –
“Nice
girl,” cooing, and he was leaning down now, “nice girl, so nice –”
The
fog, the fog, the goddamned fog –
His
fingers danced against her face and she screamed her disgust and frustration –
And
then her fingers closed over the knife.
Which
she promptly seized, despite the cuts she was inflicting to her own fingers,
found the handle, ignored the canine panting of the beast above her, and struck
out with the knife. No time to aim, she
thought, just have to pray to Mama’s god that my aim is true –
And
then Stiles was backing away again, spitting and coughing. And she saw quite clearly that the knife
protruded from his throat. Black spurts
of something more like gruel than blood exploded from the wound and spattered
against the sidewalk at her side.
“Son
of a bitch,” she said again.
Then
he backhanded her.
She
had heard the expression “I saw stars” before, but she never realized until now
how truly literal that could be. Bright
white fireworks exploded in her vision; her face struck the concrete and blood
exploded from her nose. She could hear
Stiles’ inhuman snarling, but it was far away, distant. Her head felt wrapped in cotton. I am going to die after all, she thought, but
it was a distant thought, unimportant.
She thought she would fall asleep.
It would happen then, and maybe she wouldn’t notice. Maybe it wouldn’t hurt.
Please god, don’t let it hurt.
Something
was happening.
She
tried to sit up, coughing, and spat blood onto the sidewalk. There was a sound now, more snarling, but a
different kind, a different variety.
Someone else there?
She
squinted through the fog. There was someone else, someone dark, with
burning eyes, swinging something heavy through the air, something that
connected solidly with Gerard Stiles’ face, something that hurt him so that he backed away, screaming like a wildcat –
Her
savior glanced down at her, and she saw that he was human after all, a tall,
handsome man with dark hair and burning eyes.
He held a cane that ended in some kind of animal’s head in his hand, and
then he turned away from her and swung the cane again. She saw it connect with Stiles’ face this
time, ripping it open, sending black strings of gruel flying; Stiles was whimpering
now, not snarling, and he fell backward, into the fog; his body twisted –
And
he was gone. As if the fog had swallowed
him up.
Or as if he’d become the fog itself.
Audrey
touched her head. It throbbed. She groaned, and when she brought her hand
away, it was slick and dark with her own blood.
“Let
me help you, my dear,” the man above her said, her mystery savior. He was holding out a hand. A ring with a dark onyx stone encircled one
finger.
She
wanted to speak, but no words would come.
Instead, she held out her own hand.
He took it, and pulled her to her feet where she stood, trembling like a
tree in a high wind.
“You’re
quite safe now,” he said. His eyes saw
the blood, widened; his nostrils flared and, confused, she watched as his
tongue flashed out and moistened, momentarily, his lips. Then he glanced away, as if ashamed. “How are you feeling, my dear?”
“My
head,” she said. Her voice sounded
thick. “Hurts. And I’m thirsty.”
“Thirsty,”
he repeated.
“That
man.” She glanced around, sudden terror
spiking through the thick, numbing shield surrounding her. “He was going to hurt me. Where did he go?”
“He’s
gone now.”
“You
stopped him.”
“I
did.” That flash of guilt again.
She
held out a hand, despite the ridiculousness of this situation, despite the
terror. “You saved my life. I’m Audrey.”
He
took her hand. His was icy cold. She shivered, and he removed it, that look of
desperate unhappiness flashing over him again.
“My name is Barnabas Collins.”
And he began to walk away.
“Wait!”
she cried, and rushed to him. A wave of
dizziness passed over her, and she stumbled.
He turned just in time to catch her.
“My head,” she said again. “I
don’t feel so good.”
He
didn’t pause. “You need a doctor. A hospital.”
She
looked up at him with wide eyes. His had
captured her again, and all fear, all her terror, felt far away,
unimportant. “Will you help me?”
He
hesitated.
“Please,”
she said, and nestled against him. She
pressed her face against his cloak.
“Please,” she said again.
When
his mouth settled on her throat and his teeth slid effortlessly into her
throat, she didn’t scream. She
surrendered instead, as if what was happening – as if what was going to happen
to her – was inevitable, as if this were the best possible end to her life.
2
Stupid, stupid, stupid.
He
hadn’t brought a weapon. Well, Quentin
asked himself, why would I? There’s no
moon yet; the sun is still shining brightly, isn’t scheduled to set for another
hour or two …
The
creature before him bared its saber teeth and snarled.
…
and your great-great-grandson is going to
tear throat out.
“Christopher,”
Quentin said, and held out his big, blameless hands, “Christopher, you don’t
want to hurt me –”
An
idiotic thing to say. Everything about Chris
Jennings in this form was designed to hurt.
To
kill.
And who made him that way?
It
was too easy to blame Julia Hoffman.
It’s me.
It’s always been me.
“I
want to help you,” Quentin said.
The
thing snarled again – and then it changed.
The fur that had sprouted in dark brown hanks all over its face receded
with an audible slithering sound, only to be replaced by a sheath of dark
greenish-gray reptilian armor that
covered his entire body, shredding his clothing as it went and sending them to the
floor of the cabin in tattered rags. Its
mouth gaped widely and exploded with teeth like eight inch darning
needles. It raised its hands, and as
Quentin watched, horrified, the fingers fused into a single chitinous digit,
like the claw of a lobster. These it
snapped menacingly, cutting the air in front of his face and making snapping
sounds, like castanets.
“Offer
not accepted, I guess,” Quentin said gloomily.
“Hell.”
3
Cassandra
Blair Collins – she was still working toward accepting that identity again,
trying to convince herself that it was real, that she was real, that, possibly, none of those months with Sky had
actually happened – stood amidst the tombstones in Eagle Hill Cemetery. It wasn’t her favorite place in the world,
obviously, and she wasn’t here by choice,
but there was work to be done. There
was, she thought wearily, always work to be done.
I have to find it.
The
moonlight glanced off the tombstones and created pools of shadows throughout
the deserted graveyard. Had she been
mortal, Cassandra figured she might be deeply unsettled, perhaps even
frightened. Perhaps even terrified. But she wasn’t a mortal any longer, was she.
Never again.
There
was a certain melancholy attached to that thought, as there was melancholy she
felt – and felt deeply – at even standing in this place again. I knew too many of its residents, she
thought, and knelt beside the first tombstone to her right. She instantly recoiled with a furious,
cheated cry.
JOSETTE
COLLINS, it read. BORN 1774. DIED 1796.
No designs or patterns, no engravings of cherubs or angels. Just those words, nearly faded to gray
nothing by two hundred years of rain and snow.
Tears
stung Cassandra’s eyes suddenly, and she bared her teeth. It wasn’t fair that she should feel this way
now, not after imbuing herself with the power of the Mask of Ba’al. She should feel nothing, dammit.
Only
that wasn’t true. Or possible, apparently.
The
tombstone stared at her mutely.
“I’m
sorry,” she whispered suddenly, surprising herself. But the words continued anyway. “Is that what you want me to say? I’ll say it then. I’m sorry that you died.”
An
owl called somewhere in the woods.
Cassandra’s
brow furrowed. “Fine,” she snarled. “I’m
sorry about my part in your death. I’m
sorry that I …” She drew in a deep
breath. “… k-killed you. I’m sorry.”
No
sound, not even the owl. Just the autumn
wind sighing through the branches of trees that were beginning to denude
themselves of their fall splendor.
No,
it certainly wasn’t fair that she should be kneeling beside this tombstone now
and actually crying real tears. Nicholas would chide her, deriding her for
her deep human feeling. But in the wake following
her embrace of her powers again and the transformations she had undergone after
leaving her life and her identity as Angelique Rumson behind her, she was
deeply startled to find that she did retain the trappings of humanity, human
feeling, emotion: all elements she
associated with the soul. And she had
just assumed that she would lose her soul again once she placed the accursed
Mask against her own face.
Apparently
she was wrong.
“There
is no such thing as the soul, you know,” a sardonic voice spoke clearly behind
her, and she stiffened and rose, her hands curling into fists.
The
spirit of Josette Collins faced her, what Cassandra thought was probably a
smile cracking across her ruined face.
One eyeball jutted forward, perched precariously at the end of a cone of
flesh, the other glared from a shadowed cavern.
The teeth, set in that smile, were black and shattered. “And I don’t accept your apology,” the thing
said, and crossed its arms.
“You
aren’t Josette,” Cassandra said carefully.
The
thing shook its russet curls that sopped with filthy water and seaweed. “I suppose you’re right,” it sighed. “What gave it away?”
“We’ve
met before.”
It
lifted a hand to its gaping mouth in mock-shock. “We have?”
it exclaimed.
“You
appeared to me,” Cassandra said, and tried to suppress her growing fury, “a
year ago. You showed yourself as Joshua
Collins, as Josette, and as …” She drew
a ragged breath, and tasted thick, rotten earth in her mouth. “… and as Jeremiah Collins.”
“I
rather liked that one,” the thing said, and shifted. It showed itself now as Angelique herself, as
she had appeared in that terrible winter of 1795. She wore the simple white servant’s dress,
speckled with blue flowers, and her hair was twisted into a thousand golden
ringlets with a mop cap perched on top. A
hand-me-down from Ma’amselle. Eventually
she had burned it – incinerated it by hand, in the fireplace of the Old House,
the morning after she and Barnabas were married. “But he wasn’t nearly as affecting as appearing like this. How does it make you
feel to see yourself like this, Angelique?
Or is it Cassandra now? Miranda,
perhaps? It’s always so hard to keep
up.”
“You
are the Enemy,” Cassandra said.
“I
suppose you’re right. I am an enemy,” and it smirked at her with
her own face. “But there will be
more. There are always more, my dear,
you know that. An endless army. Chop the head off the hydra, and what do you
have?”
“I,”
Cassandra declared, with more surety than she really felt, “am going to destroy
you.”
“Oh,
I don’t think you will. In this form I
am not a tangible entity. Or,” and it
chuckled, “not always.”
“Stop
looking like that.”
“Does
it disturb you? I am sorry. I assumed you would have bolstered your self
esteem by now.” It idly toyed with one
of its ringlets. “What with your being
one of the most powerful entities in the universe. Or the
most powerful entity.”
Her
smile grew wintery. “Flattery,” she
said, “will get you nowhere.”
“And
yet your self esteem continues to decline.”
It clucked its tongue at her.
“Poor, misunderstood Cassandra.
Don’t you know that you will always be this pathetic, drab girl you see
before you? A servant, mud-spattered,
lowly? You can marry all the Collinses
you want, all the millionaires you can find, and you will always be nothing but
a maid.”
Cassandra
thrust forward her right hand which flared suddenly with electric blue
witchfire. “Avaunt,” she spat, and threw it.
But
the mocking laughter of the Enemy – her own laughter, shattering, chiming,
wicked – echoed in her ears even after it faded and was gone.
The
witch stood, panting, her head bowed. A
few blue sparks continued to dance against her fingertips, then fell into the
night-black grass and vanished.
A
sob grew in her chest. After a moment it
faded away, unvoiced.
She
lifted her head. Her eyes were icy, blue
and clear. Her teeth were bared in a
snarl. “You have not won,” she said
through gritted teeth. “Whatever you
are. Enemy, creature, beast. And you will fail. Hear me, and hear me well. You will –”
Movement
out of the corner of her eye froze the words in her mouth. She whirled around, and her eyes widened.
“You!”
she gasped.
4
Julia
sat in the drawing room of the Old House, glancing up every few moments when a
distant warning rumble of thunder met her ears, but otherwise she remained
totally engrossed in the book she had finally discovered, after hours of
searching, in the attic. It was dusty,
both the covers hung in flaps unless she pressed the book carefully, and some of the pages were torn and others were missing
completely. But it was, she was certain,
the book she was looking for.
THE
DIARY OF FLORA COLLINS, the book proclaimed on the first page, NOVELIST AND
HISTORIAN. Oh yes, she thought at the
time; when she was just Julia Hoffman, on a sabbatical from her practice at
Windcliff to write a history of the Collins family, Elizabeth told her that one
of her ancestors had been a “lady novelist” sometime in the mid-nineteenth
century. Turns out, Julia had just
discovered, Flora was particularly active from 1830-1840, at which point she
had come to live at Collinwood for a time.
And
brought with her two people. At least
one of them was essential to Julia’s quest.
Flora,
Julia was learning, had been a self-proclaimed mystic, a woman deeply engaged
in the occult, an attendee of séances and sabbats (when she could find
them). The woman she brought with her
was a psychic and dance-hall performer named Leticia Faye. The man was also a psychic, but he was no
performer.
His
name was Gerard Stiles.
Even
the man’s name sent literal chills down Julia’s spine. She could still remember the smell of him,
sour, like curdled milk, but dark
too, as if something moldered and decayed into soft blackness just beneath his
perfect skin. She closed her eyes now
and let the sound of the thunder roll over her, and tried not to recall the way
his fingers had pressed into her throat, crushing her windpipe and trachea,
pressing … pressing …
“No,”
she whispered, and rose too quickly from the chair. A wave of darkness passed over her and the
book fell to the floor with a clatter.
Gerard Stiles.
He
was here somewhere; she felt it was true.
And he was dead. He’d been dead
for a long time. “But he’s still a tool
of the Enemy,” she said aloud.
Willie
Loomis entered the room with a feather duster.
“You say something, Julia?” he asked as he ran the feathers over the
bookcase.
“No,
Willie,” she replied, then uttered a papery, unconvincing little chuckle. She knelt down and retrieved the book. “I just dropped this.”
“You
should oughtta be careful with them books,” Willie said, and shook a finger at
her. “Barnabas won’t like it if you hurt
‘em.”
“I’ll
be careful. I promise.” She wanted to laugh, but she knew it would
hurt his feelings. Willie took his job
as caretaker of the Old House – and unofficial caretaker of Barnabas Collins –
very seriously, especially since Barnabas had returned from Parallel Time. Willie had publicly declared that he wasn’t
letting Barnabas out of his sight again.
So where was he right now?
Julia’s
eyes squinted. That was a very good
question. She had thought that he was
upstairs, packing up the last of Angelique’s belongings out of Josette’s room,
but she realized suddenly that the witch herself had swept by her an hour or so
ago and left the house without a word.
And Julia had been so engrossed in her research that she hadn’t paid
much attention, much less taken any offense.
So where
is Barnabas?
“Willie,”
Julia said carefully. “Have you seen
much of Barnabas since he … since he came back?”
Willie
stopped dusting and put one hand on his hip.
“That’s a good question.” She
watched him thinking as hard as he could, eyes lifted heavenward, teeth firmly
planted in his lower lip. She again
resisted the urge to laugh. “Jeez,” he
said at last, “I guess I ain’t sure.” He
frowned, and his tone became heavy with concern. “Why, Julia?
You think he’s …” His tongue ran
out and flashed across his lips. “You
think he’s going back to the way he used to be?
Even with them injections?”
The
injections weren’t having any real effect, as far as she could tell. And there was also the problem of Chris
Jennings, who had registered a quite extreme side effect as a result of her
treatment for his lycanthropy. She
didn’t want that to happen to Barnabas.
But
if the thing she observed in the future, the thing Barnabas had become … if
that was any indication of her treatments …
“I
… don’t know,” she admitted. “I’m
worried about him.”
“Yeah,”
Willie said quietly. “Me too.”
Which
was, of course, when the doors of the Old House flew open. Barnabas had kicked them because his arms
were full. And what they were full of
was a girl, a beautiful young woman they had never seen before with her head
flung back and her neck running red with blood that flowed from the two
familiar puncture wounds.
Barnabas’
face was a mask of misery.
And
guilt. Oh, the guilt. She recognized that expression all too well.
“Oh,
Barnabas,” Willie said, shaking his head.
“Help
me, Julia,” Barnabas said, voice breaking.
“Help her.”
5
The
werewolf – not that there was anything particular lupine about the monstrosity
attacking him, not anything Quentin could observe – threw him to the ground and
proceeded to mount him, its mouth snapping at his throat. Quentin threw his arms up in an immediate
warding-off gesture, but the strength of the thing was such that he knew he
couldn’t hold it off for long.
“Christopher,”
Quentin managed to grunt, but he knew that his great-grandson was beyond
understanding. “Christopher, for god’s
sake –”
If
he’d been thinking, Quentin thought desultorily, he would have brought along
Barnabas’ silver-headed cane. Then he
remembered what Julia told him: the
werewolf-creature Christopher was evolving into exhibited not an iota of fear
when confronted with silver. Music, he
remembered; Josette’s music box soothed him the last time.
He
didn’t have any music now.
Quentin
brought his knee up with savage strength, and grunted as it connected solidly
with the jaw of the beast. It roared its
fury, but rolled off him. Quentin took
the opportunity to leap to his feet. He
wiped the sheen of sweat that collected on his forehead off with the back of
his arm, then squared off against the beast, watching it warily. “Christopher,” he said, as softly as he could
manage, “hey, come on. It’s me.”
A
smaller mouth, absurdly, attached to some kind of dark green stalk, emerged from the gaping hole in
the monster’s face, lined with tiny, serrated fangs, and snapped at the air,
squealing like a tiny pig as it did.
“You
have got to be kidding me,” Quentin groaned.
The
beast prepared to leap again …
…
and the air between them shimmered.
Hushabye, don’t you cry, go to sleep my
little baby …
The
air was alive with dancing crystals, what Quentin remembered seeing in the air
on particularly chilly mornings as a boy.
A
shape was taking form.
The
werewolfthing paused; the wee fanged mouth retreated inside its real mouth.
… when you wake, you will find …
“Jenny?”
Quentin whispered.
She appeared then, and it was his dear,
dead wife, recently returned from the dead, and then summarily brought back to
that mysterious land by her hag-sister Magda.
She was beautiful now, corporeal, Jenny Rakosi Collins, or so it seemed;
her titian flame-hair was pulled back and tamed behind her head; her eyes
glowed with motherly warmth. “… all the
pretty little horses,” she sang softly.
The
werebeast whimpered and shrank back. The
lizard-plate retreated, but not completely;
coils of hair like clocksprings sprang from between the cracks; its eyes were
yellow and slitted like a cat’s.
“Jenny,”
Quentin said. “Oh, Jenny.”
“This
is witchcraft,” the ghost of Jenny Collins said softly, sanely. She shook her head and clucked her
tongue. “Witchcraft. Dark magic.
Wicked and bad.”
“Help
him,” Quentin said. “Please, Jenny.”
But
she wouldn’t look at him; perhaps she didn’t see him; perhaps she couldn’t. She was beautiful though, and wore a pink
dress he remembered buying her in a Collinsport storefront before everything
went so terribly wrong.
She
only had eyes for Christopher. Her
great-grandson as well, Quentin realize belatedly.
“What
are you wearing, sweet thing?” Jenny sang to the creature cowering before
her. “What is this? What is this?”
“Be
careful –” Quentin started.
She
ignored him. One hand reached out and
stroked the beast behind its misshapen ears, naked and a white-pink, like a
pig’s. The slitted eyes looked up at her
with – adoration? Shame? Fear?
Love?
“Hushabye,”
she crooned, “don’t you cry, go to sleep my little baby …”
The
creature’s eyes grew heavier – heavier –
“When
you wake, you will find …”
…
closed …
“All
the pretty little horses.” Jenny stopped
singing. Chris Jennings lay before her,
shuddering, his body curled into a comma, covered in a sheen of sweat. “My darling, my poor darling,” she whispered,
then straightened, and turned to Quentin.
Her expression was terrible:
pity, compassion, and a righteousness that was nearly impossible to
behold. Quentin could not bring himself
to look away. “He will not transform
again,” Jenny said. “Not like that.”
“Thank
god,” Quentin whispered.
“But
he will kill again. And again.” Jenny’s eyes flashed. “Unless you help him. Take him back to Collinwood. Collinwood is the only place where he will be
safe. Take him to Collinwood. Take him to Collinwood.” She was fading, an optical illusion, here and
then gone, her body as substantial as smoke.
Pain
cut at him and he reached for her before he could stop himself. “No!” he cried as his fingers passed through
her. She smiled at him, stroked his
cheek with a finger he could not feel.
“No, don’t go! Don’t leave
me! Not again! Not again!”
Collinwood, Quentin. That is where he will be safe. Where you will both be safe.
And
she was gone.
Quentin
closed his eyes. “Jenny,” he
whispered. “Oh, my Jenny.” His eyes stung. He wanted to sink to his knees and let it out,
just weep until he sobbed and lost himself in the wave of the past.
Christopher
made a sound; his hand reached up and brushed at Quentin’s pants cuff. Quentin turned to him. The younger man’s eyes were open,
golden-brown, human.
He is alive, Quentin. He
is alive.
Quentin
knelt beside him.
And
enclosed him in his arms.
6
“I
beg your pardon?” The young woman,
modern, chic with her pixie-clipped flaming hair and dark blue Mary Quant coat
with the smart buttons, lifted her hand from the tombstone she had been
examining and turned to face Cassandra.
Her face was pale; her eyes flashed.
Her teeth were white and perfect.
“Do we know each other?”
Cassandra
froze. Her mind raced as she attempted
to analyze the situation and make the best decision how to move forward. She had met the woman before her in Parallel
Time only a week or so ago, watching her die as the Quentin of that world
thrust a sword through her heart, and yet, here she was: Roxanne Drew, exactly as Angelique knew her
from that other place. Her eyes were the
same, cold and incurious. She was
entirely self-possessed. And very much
alive.
“No,”
Cassandra said at last. “No, I don’t
suppose that we do.”
Roxanne
drew herself up and pressed her hands into the pockets of her coat. The wind whistled around them, the chill of
autumn in its breath, and, somewhere, thunder rumbled nearby. “And yet,” Roxanne said coldly, “you look at
me so strangely. Your eyes –”
“I
am sorry,” Cassandra said, as swiftly as she could. “My name is Cassandra Collins.” She extended a hand. The other woman hesitated, then took it. Cassandra winced. The grip was strong … and cold.
A
seed of suspicion took root immediately in her mind.
“Roxanne
Drew,” she said, and released Cassandra’s hand.
“I’m … new to Collinsport.”
Cassandra
offered her own, most wintery smile.
“And you begin your exploration here?
At Eagle Hill?”
“I
have family here,” Roxanne replied steadily.
“Dating back several generations.”
“Oh? Here?”
And she moved swiftly to the tombstone Roxanne stood before, causing the
woman to move unexpectedly out of her way.
The flash of – could it be panic?
yes, she thought it might be – some expression that crossed Roxanne’s
face was not lost on Cassandra.
“You
shouldn’t –” Roxanne said, but Cassandra already trained her eyes on the
engraving on the stone, weathered, as Josette’s had been, by over a century of
storms.
GERARD
STILES, the stone said. 1811-1841. IN DARKNESS HE DID LIVE AND DIE.
“Curious,”
Cassandra said, and straightened, wiping her hands on her own coat. “Was he a relative?”
“No,”
Roxanne said. “I’m … not sure who he
was. I was just struck by that
inscription.”
“Strange.”
“Very.”
“What
brings you to Collinsport, Miss Drew?”
“I’m
an historian, Miss Collins.”
“Missus.”
“Pardon
me. Mrs. Collins. I’m researching the history of Collinsport
for a journal. I’m a freelance writer,
you see.”
She’s lying.
Of
course she was. The Roxanne of Parallel
Time must have had a counterpart in this world, Cassandra thought, and that Roxanne had become immortal during
the time she lived: in 1840.
Cassandra
cast another glance at Gerard’s tombstone.
“What a fascinating job,” she said.
“It
pays the bills.” Roxanne shrugged again. “Now, if you’ll excuse me, Mrs. Collins –”
“Please,”
she said, mustering as much girlish enthusiasm as she could, “call me
Cassandra. I hope we shall be friends,
Miss Drew.”
“I
hope so too.”
“You
must come up to Collinwood. We have an
extensive library that dates back to the founding of Collinsport in 1692.”
Roxanne
raised her eyebrows. “You seem to know a
lot about this town.”
Cassandra
batted her long lashes. “Not
really. But when you marry into the
family who founded an entire area …” She
laughed delicately. “I pick things up.”
“Perhaps
I’ll take you up on your offer.”
“Tomorrow
afternoon?”
Something
flickered again in Roxanne’s eyes. “I’m
afraid I can’t tomorrow, Cassandra. I
have … an appointment.”
“Some
other time, then.” There was something
about Roxanne’s eyes, Cassandra thought, something that separated her from her
Parallel Time counterpart. She almost
knew what it was …
I can’t look away.
She
dragged her eyes away from Roxanne’s and forced herself to smile. “Very nice to have met you, Roxanne.”
“Good
night, Cassandra.”
Had
Cassandra remained in the cemetery, she would have seen the pleasant, polite
smile faded from Roxanne’s face, to be replaced instead by an expression that
was nearly vulpine, predatory. Her lips
parted, and her perfect teeth glistened in the moonlight just before the
stormclouds moved in and sheathed Eagle Hill Cemetery in darkness.
Roxanne
moved away from Gerard’s tombstone, a moue of disdain crossing her face like a
shadow. She turned her back on it, then
raised both her arms into the air. Her
voice rang across the cemetery, strong and clear. “I call upon a spirit from the darkness
beyond. My voice will pierce the veil,
and my powers will draw you forth like a writhing mist from the pit of
forgotten shadows.” A wind rose,
protesting, whining, ruffling her short red hair. Her eyes narrowed; her teeth gnashed together
with the force of her will. “Return to
this world which has known you – return, for there is an Enemy in our midst, and
only your power is strong enough to combat it!”
Showers of golden leaves fell from the trees above her head; thunder
cracked nearby, and the earth heaved beneath her feet. Roxanne stood her ground; the forces she
battled, though, took their toll. Her
jaw clenched; her skin twisted over the muscles as her veins pulsed and bulged; still, she stood her
ground. “You will return this night,”
she commanded, and her voice rose over the shriek of the spectral wind. “You will return as I have commanded that you
do!”
Her
eyes stung like mad. She knew that blood
trickled from all four corners of her eyes and was even now staining her
cheeks. Her head throbbed, but that was
part of it. The summoning. To draw back into this world a force so
great, so terrible, she had made many
sacrifices, dreadful, unspeakable. The
pain she felt, lancing her brain, impaling her heart, was nothing beside those
sacrifices.
“Return!”
she cried, and thunder drowned out her words, “In the name of the seven
plagues, and of the false prophet, and of the beast – in the name of every evil
spirit, and obedient only to you – I evoke you – appear to me! Now!
Return, return, return!”
And
the earth quaked, cracking, and Roxanne’s eyes blazed with power, purpose, and
glory; the earth cracked, belched a
stream of white-hot steam into the autumnal air, released a sulfurous odor …
…
and a figure.
Thick. Slumped.
The skin running like tallow … slippery … but now solidifying, growing
stronger –
It
made a sound. It lifted its shaggy head.
“You
have returned,” Roxanne breathed.
The
figure, shivering, watched her, unblinking.
It
raised one hand.
“Wait!”
she cried. “Before you destroy me, allow
me to show you the totem that I bear!”
It
froze, said nothing, but continued to watch her, enormous eyes glaring
balefully.
She opened her palm and
revealed a gaudy piece of jewelry that glittered and flashed with inner fire.
Slowly … slowly … it
lowered its hand.
Roxanne Drew began to
smile.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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