CHAPTER 105: All You Need Is Love
by Nicky
Voiceover by Lara Parker: “Though
there is still much to fear on the great estate of Collinwood and in the little
town that lies below it, the denizens of the house on the hill and those who
dwell in Collinsport will forget their fears for this night and seek out those
traces of warmth that will help sustain them … the warmth that burns against
the cold and the terror of the darkness that rushes on and on.”
1
“No,”
Alexandra said; her stomach rose into her throat, burning, and it hurt; her head throbbed as if she’d been
struck, and so she turned away from her uncle, this Best (and god, she thought,
what is his real name? do I know? does he have one? will I ever know?), and put her hands against
her mouth. Oh hell, she thought
miserably, oh hell.
“I’m
afraid it’s true, my dear,” Mr. Best said, and the kindness in his voice only
twisted the knife another savage turn.
“I haven’t been able to tell you until now.”
“No,”
Alex whispered, “no, I imagine you haven’t.”
She looked again at the paintings adorning the walls of this … this …
wherever she was, the work of the late, great Charles Delaware Tate. They were landscapes, mostly, and they
weren’t even very good, like something she might find in a bargain bin at the
local craft store, something a disillusioned housewife might buy to pass lonely
hours as she painted by number. How in
the hell, she thought sourly, how in the hell
did he become so famous?
He was an associate of one Count Andreas
Petofi.
Of
course, she thought, and brushed away dark strands of hair with fingers that
trembled beyond the scope of her control.
Of course. Count Petofi. Of course.
“Where
am I?” she whispered. She was
thirsty. It had been a million years
since last she’d tasted liquid, water, beer, her own goddamn tears, but she was thirsty.
There
was a glass of water in her hand. She
stared at it without surprise.
“You
are in my domain,” Mr. Best said. He sat
on the comfortable bed beside her now. “A way station. A stopping off place. You may drink that water, darling; unlike
certain Greek legends, it won’t wipe away your memories or turn you into a
goat.”
She
smiled at that, but only a tiny, trembling smile, and it disappeared as she
sipped at the water. “What’s a stopping
off place?” she asked, and drank again, greedily. The water was good, it really was. The
best water she had ever tasted. She
sucked at the glass, slurping it. Cold,
she thought, so deliciously cold.
“A
place some people come – some very special people, in most circumstances –
before they pass out of the world.”
Alex
froze, and lifted her eyes in horror from the lip of the drinking glass.
But
Best only smiled his same old gentle smile, the one she had seen millions of
times since she was a little girl, when he had appeared at the orphanage
wearing that same old bowler hat, smiling, and saying those magic words, “I’m
the girl’s uncle; here are my papers; I’ve come to take her home.”
A lie.
All a lie.
“Not
a lie, my darling Alexandra,” Best said.
She sensed, as she could sometimes sense these things, that he wanted to
touch her, lay a hand on her shoulder, comfort her somehow, but he knew better. He knew that she would recoil from his
touch. He was a betrayer. She wanted to shrink away, but she was
afraid. He was reading her thoughts as
she was reading his feelings. “Not a lie
at all. I am your family. After all we’ve been through together, don’t
you agree?”
“You
should have told me.” She wanted to
sound angry, to bark her fury at him, but the words sounded empty and hollow.
“I
couldn’t.”
“Why
not?”
“Because
I need you. The world needs you.”
Her
stomach flip-flopped, and for a moment the water rose up in her like bile and
she thought that she might eject it, vomiting it all over the bed’s beautiful
blue silk duvet. But she held it back
grimly. “The world needs me,” she said
bitterly. “So you’ve been using me. That’s the kind of family we are.”
“If
that’s how you wish to see it.”
“Don’t
patronize me!” she shrieked suddenly, and there
was the anger, there was the pain and
the acrimony that she sensed lay always beneath the surface, and which she was
so terrified would emerge when she least expected it.
Above
their heads, the lightbulb flashed and exploded in a shower of glass like
dust. Alex cried out – though, she
thought, things like this always happen around me, always happen when I’m upset
or excited, always happen, always always always, so why should I be surprised?
– and she recoiled.
Best
held up one finger and the glass dust paused just above their heads, and then
it faded away utterly.
Above
them, a new lightbulb pulsed into existence and shone its warm radiance down
over their faces.
Alex
began to cry. Her face burned with shame,
but she couldn’t help it. Her body still
hurt from her run-in with that vampire bitch, and now this revelation …
It
was too much.
Best
put out an arm then, over her shoulders, and drew her to him tightly. She let him do this. Then she cried for a long time, her face
pressed against his shoulder, her tears darkening his gray jacket.
At
last the wracking sobs lessened, became hiccups, and Alex lifted her face. Best smiled down at her and brushed away
sweat-soaked strands of hair out of her puffy eyes. “There,” he said. “There, my dear, my little bird.”
“I
don’t understand anything.”
“Oh,
you do. I know you do, that you
understand more than you even know. Your
powers … my powers …”
“What
are you?” she whispered.
He
chuckled. “An agent,” he said. “A manifestation.”
“Are
you death?” she sighed.
“I
have brought death to mortals,” he said sadly, and nodded, “when it was
necessary – and, despite popular opinion, it is necessary, very often necessary – but I have also saved
lives. Like yours.”
“You
saved me.” It wasn’t a question. She felt drained … but also curious. Her life had been a cypher for so long –
always she was told to wait, to be patient, that all would be explained to her
– and she had fought for him, killed for him, holding onto the faith that
someday all the doors of her past would be opened to her and she would see so
clearly …
And
that was here. Now. At last.
“I
am a creature of light and darkness,” Best explained, “the best, if you will,
of both of those worlds. I help maintain
a balance between them. Whenever that
balance is disturbed and the world becomes endangered, I am there to restore
it. That has always been my role.”
“And
mine? What is …” She coughed bitterly. “What is my
role?”
“You
are the daughter of Count Petofi, as I have told you already,” he said. “You are one of a set of twins.”
Her
eyes widened. “My sister …”
“You’ve
guessed as much,” Best said, pleased, “good, good. I thought you would.”
“This
… this Victoria Winters. The girl I’m
supposed to look like.”
“You
do look like her, my darling. She is your twin sister.”
Suddenly
forlorn, Alex said, “And she’s dead, isn’t she.”
Best
nodded solemnly.
Pain
twisted inside her again. Cruel, too,
too cruel: to discover that she wasn’t
really alone in the world, that she had a sister, only to lose her immediately. “How?” she said.
Best
thought for a moment. At last, after
what felt like an eternity, he said, “Count Petofi sought to lead the
Leviathans in their quest to overtake humanity and populate the world with
their own kind, demons, fiends. You
remember my lectures concerning the Leviathans?” She nodded impatiently. “Petofi returned to Collinwood during World
War II and seduced the youngest Collins daughter because he sensed their power,
the source of which is rooted in darkness.
Unfortunately, what Petofi did not know was that Louise Collins was not
a Collins at all.”
Alex
frowned. “Louise Collins? My mother?”
“Your
mother,” Best said, nodding. “Adopted by
Jamison Collins. She was young. Too young.
Petofi’s love destroyed her. He
sought to tap into the dark power that lies in the very blood of the Collins family
in order to create offspring that would help him complete his plans. And it wasn’t there, of course. What he could not foresee is that Louise’s
adopted sister would try to kill him, trapping him for a time in the West Wing
of Collinwood and forcing him to become a revenant living off scraps,
compelling Elizabeth to feed him twice a year.”
“Feed
him,” Alex said, and forced herself to say the next word. “Humans, you mean.”
“Exactly. Some of these were Leviathan followers, as
Petofi hoped they would be. He sought to
live again in their ruined corpses.
Unfortunately for him, he was not strong enough. After he possessed Quentin Collins and
decimated the family, his daughter – your sister, Victoria – travelled back to
the year 1897 to undo his evil deeds.
She was successful: in undoing
the damage, in destroying him, but in the process she destroyed herself as
well.”
“How? How was she able to destroy him? And how was he able to return?”
“You
are aware that you possess … special abilities.
So did your sister. The power comes
from Petofi, as you might guess. While I
am not always aware of what the future holds, sometimes I know enough to make …
certain decisions that enable me, as I have already told you, to maintain a
balance between the powers of darkness and light. When Louise Collins gave birth, I swooped in
to take her children away in order that they would be free of Petofi’s
influence. You were the eldest, and I
took you before you even left Louise’s body; no one knew you existed. Not even the Collins doctors were aware that
she was pregnant with twins.”
“How
is that possible?”
Best
shrugged. “You were tiny babies, strong,
but small. And Petofi would not allow
the mother of his children to come too closely to other mortals. They might suspect, you see.
“I
managed to capture you, but I was too late for your sister. She was born into this world screaming her
rage, her eyes as black as the powers she inherited from Petofi, and those
powers were too much for me, even then, and kept me away. She was born, and Elizabeth Collins Stoddard
sent her to a foundling home in Bangor. And
then, eighteen years later, Elizabeth brought her back.”
“But
why? How could she do that to her own
sister’s child?”
“I
haven’t asked her, of course,” Best said dryly, “but my guess is that Elizabeth
was afraid. And guilty. Her fear kept Victoria away from Collinwood
as she grew up, and her guilt finally brought her back to her rightful home. It was a mistake, though, and a grave
one. Victoria saved the family, only to
lose herself to the darkness. She almost
destroyed them all. Only the witch
Angelique was able to stop her.”
“Angelique,”
Alex said. Her eyes widened. “Cassandra!
Cassandra Collins!”
Best
was nodding again. “Is Angelique
Bouchard Collins, herself a malevolent force that has threatened the Collins
family for centuries.”
“And
she killed my sister.”
“An
act of vengeance,” Best agreed, “but in the best interest of the world, as it
turns out. Victoria, unchecked, would
have carried out her father’s scheme after all.
The world would have fallen. But
Angelique destroyed her.”
Alex
let this sink in. She felt confused,
terrified, and, most horrifically of all, angry. Furious, actually. And her fury only continued to grow. She wanted to find Cassandra Collins this
minute and reduce her to an ash.
“That
might prove more difficult than you think, my dear,” Best said. “Cassandra possesses all the powers of the
Mask of Ba’al.”
Alex
blanched. “I thought the Mask was a
myth.”
“Unfortunately,
it is quite real. Or was. In the act of draining its powers, Cassandra
destroyed the Mask. It doesn’t
matter. The Mask merely held the powers
for a time; Cassandra Collins is the
power now.”
“But
why me?” Alex cried. “Why did you take
me? Why have you used me like this,
since I was a little girl?” She was
furious again, and the fury sharpened her words. “I’ve wasted my life because of you!”
“Have
you?” Best asked quietly.
She
stared at him. Her breath was tortured,
her hands clenched into fists.
“I
have loved you all your life,” he said in that same rational, quite voice. “You have been an instrument, that is true,
but you have saved countless lives at my command, innocent lives that would
have been destroyed by dark forces. I
have watched you grow into a strong, courageous hero, a woman I admire, and
someone of whom I have never prouder in all my long, long existence.”
She
watched him carefully.
“Do
you believe me? I can hide many things
from you, darling Alexandra, and so I must ask you to trust me. Do you believe me?”
She
didn’t have to tell him. She did. She believed him.
Relief
blanketed her, and she laid her head against his shoulder.
He
pushed her away then, gently, but with some force, and held her by her own
shoulders, and stared into her eyes.
“What
I ask you now will prove to be, I fear, the most difficult ordeal you have ever
faced.”
“Cassandra
Collins.”
“No,”
he said, his smile only slight now, amusement tempered with … what? Fear?
Caution? “You have met the Collins
family and their friends.”
“Yes,
but –”
“You’ve
even liked some of them. Barnabas. Chris Jennings. Quentin Collins. Even Angelique.”
“Barnabas
Collins is one of the kindest men I’ve ever –”
“Which
is why,” he said, and he was sadder sounding than she had ever heard him, and
he touched her cheek lightly, gently, as he spoke the next horrible words, “which
is why it will be so hard for you to destroy them all.”
2
The
firelight played softly across the planes and angles of Chris Jennings’ face,
and Sebastian thought, amused, I can almost not notice the purple bags beneath
his eyes. They were, he thought,
incredibly sexy purple bags, but purple bags nonetheless. Signs of depression? Exhaustion?
Stress? All of the above?
They
were dining together at The Embers, Collinsport’s only halfway decent
restaurant. In Sebastian’s world, there
had been nothing at all like The Embers; the space there was occupied, Sebastian
recalled, by a burned out shell that used to be an antique store. He felt a momentary stab of depression and,
unexpectedly, homesickness, though he immediately reminded himself that his
world was dying. And silly as it
sounded, the lack of something lovely and romantic like The Embers only proved
what Sebastian had long understood: what
Barnabas and Julia referred to as “Parallel Time” was on its way out.
And if we’re not careful, this world will be
too.
Chris
was smiling at him. “Penny for your
thoughts,” he said in the gentle baritone Sebastian already knew so well.
“I
wish,” Sebastian said, wistful. “I seem
to have left my bank account back in the other
Collinsport Bank.”
“Barnabas
–”
“Barnabas,”
Sebastian intercepted smoothly, “has been exceedingly generous. It helps.”
“He
wants to help.” A shadow flickered
across Chris’ face for a moment, Sebastian noticed. “He always wants to help.”
“They
all do. Which I appreciate. If it weren’t for friends like Quentin and …
well, you,” and Chris smiled again, wider this time, “I’d be dead by now.”
His
smile faded a few notches. Sebastian
hated to see it go. “Your mysterious
assailant. No leads.”
“Not
a one. I’m blaming it on a mysterious
super-ninja. Isn’t Collinsport a
breeding ground for werewolf-hating super-ninjas?”
Chris
sipped at his wine. “Not the last time I
checked.”
“That’s
my only lead. Which is to say, no
lead. Which is to say, I’ve got squat.”
“Professor
Stokes and Carolyn Stoddard revisited the spot where you were attacked a few
days ago. Carolyn couldn’t pick anything
up.”
“On
her psychic antenna?” Sebastian
sighed. “Psychic powers would come in
handy. Unfortunately, I’m just a
werewolf.”
“You
are,” Chris said, unsmiling now. “Like
no werewolf I’ve ever met.”
Sebastian
leaned forward. He knew the firelight
was sparkling in his eyes, making them bigger, making them bluer, turning his
curls a dark russet. “You meet lots of
werewolves?”
“Only
Quentin. And he’s been fur-free for
almost a hundred years.”
“And
so you want to know my secrets? Is that
why we’re here?” He gestured around the
room: the plush, wine-colored carpet,
the dim lighting, the enormous fireplace, the stained glass windows that
overlooked the angry autumn Atlantic.
“Do you always perform your interrogations in such a romantic
atmosphere?”
Chris
was blushing, Sebastian was gratified to see.
The dining room was warm against the vicious chill outside; it was
already mid-October, somehow, with a hint of snow in the air, but here at The
Embers, everything felt lush. They’d
both put away an entire roast chicken between the two of them, garnished with
little red potatoes and a garlic-butter sauce, with baked Alaska for dessert. And two glasses of Merlot later, Sebastian
was feeling very warm indeed. And
comfortable.
Maybe
too comfortable.
This isn’t real.
He
glanced around the dining room, but no one had spoken. No one was even paying the slightest bit of
attention to them.
“Everything
okay?” He whipped his head around, back
to Christopher. “You looked … gosh,
spooked for a second I guess.”
“Nothing,”
Sebastian said, and shrugged.
“Ghosts. Not,” he added swiftly,
“the literal kind.” I hope.
But
that thought – where had it come from?
What wasn’t real?
This isn’t my Christopher.
It
wasn’t … but goddamnit, it was at the
same time, it was!
“I
wish I understood,” Chris said suddenly, miserably, “I wish I knew.”
“Knew?”
“Yeah,”
he sighed. “How to control it. You do, don’t
you?”
Sebastian
considered this for a moment. Then he
said, “There’s nothing to control. Not
really. I mean, it isn’t like the
movies, where you turn when the moon is full or something.”
“Actually,”
Chris said, and he sounded so exhausted that Sebastian’s heart hurt for a moment,
and then he thought, Not, not, not my
Christopher, “actually, it’s just like that. And it’s getting worse.”
“You
mean you turn when the moon is full?”
“Not
anymore.” He bowed his head. “Now it happens anytime.”
Sebastian’s
heart throbbed again, and this time he didn’t analyze the pain, didn’t try to
analyze the differences he continued to spot that differentiated this Chris
Jennings from the Christopher Collins he had known and loved in his own
world. The pain in those enormous eyes
lanced at him, and he reached out without thinking and took the other man’s
hand and squeezed it.
He
smiled, and the lines around his blue eyes crackled. “C’mon,” he said. “Let’s get out of here.” He stood to his full height and rummaged
around in the pocket of the nice slacks Julia had picked out for him and then
threw a handful of Barnabas’ money onto the table.
“Where
are we going?”
“You’ll
see.” Sebastian was grinning, and his
eyes now held more than a hint of gold in their cool blue depths. “I got an idea.”
3
I should learn from my past mistakes,
Cassandra thought as she made yet another ungainly step over yet another
rotting tree that had fallen Hecate knew how many centuries ago and lay where
it had fallen, obscured by the fog that swirled habitually over the grounds of
Eagle Hill Cemetery. I should just
learn, she scolded herself furiously, and invest in a pair of hiking boots and
leave the pumps at Collinwood.
But
they were such gorgeous pumps, and now they were ruined. Some goddess, she thought, even more furious
that tears were pricking her eyes; same old Angelique, she could almost hear
Nicholas Blair whispering in her ear, same foolish Angelique; do you never learn, my dear?
Then
she almost stumbled again, and surely she would have fallen into the fog, not
hurting herself, but certainly ruining her newest green mini from Mary Quant
and the matching gloves Julia had loaned her, maybe even skinning her knees and
bruising her face in the process.
She
would have fallen … but a hand
appeared at her side and gripped her shoulder, not too hard, enough to support
her, and then Barnabas was saying, “You’re all right; I’ve got you; be careful,
my dear, be careful.”
She
looked at him for a moment, frozen, then allowed herself a tight smile. “Thank you,” she said, perhaps more curtly
than she intended, then moved forward without him through the shreds of fog
toward the landmark she sought. He
hesitated, brooding for a moment, his thumb rubbing at the silver wolf’s head
of his cane, then, with a deep sigh, he followed her.
“We’re
very near,” Cassandra called over her shoulder.
Ahead of her, a tiny blue witchlight glowed – but not brightly enough,
she thought sourly; its purpose was not to provide illumination, but to lead
them to the Amulet of Caldys, finally at last
– zipping and dipping through the air like Tinkerbell.
Barnabas
was really behaving in quite a reasonable fashion she decided, considering that
she had told him nearly nothing of her plan:
what they were seeking, why she needed his blood (and Quentin’s, and her
own), and why they pilgrimaging into Eagle Hill in the dead of this crisp autumn
eve. Because he knows, she thought, that
we will need every available weapon that we have, and it’s in his best interest
– everyone’s best interest – if he can maintain his patience.
But he must trust me a little bit. At least a little. Otherwise, why …?
She
stalled that thought in its tracks. It
was a dangerous one at the very least, and self-defeating. That part of my life is over, she thought
firmly, and remembered what Julia had told her of the future.
He will love me. That’s all I want, all I’ve ever wanted. His love.
“No,”
she whispered, her hands clenched into fists, tight tight tight.
“Cassandra?”
Barnabas called from behind him. She
glanced over her shoulder, saw that he was pointing, then followed his finger’s
direction.
She
began to laugh. She couldn’t help it. It was just so funny.
The
tiny blue witchlight she had conjured – and no easy conjuration either, though
she hadn’t told Barnabas that – the tiny blue witchlight had paused in its
journey, and by its light they could both see the familiar hulk of the Collins
family mausoleum rising from the mist like a giant skull, divested of flesh,
the rusty gate its teeth, but filled with a malignant kind of life. They could both feel it, and despite their
mutual, myriad encounters with internal and external darkness, both creatures
of the supernatural shuddered.
“What
we seek,” Barnabas said slowly, “lies within?”
“It
must,” Cassandra agreed, nodding her black hair. Now that they were suddenly so close, she
could feel goosebumps rising all over her body; energy shivered and swirled
over her skin in mini-tornadoes. “In
front of my face all along. All these
years.”
“And
what exactly are we seeking?” Barnabas asked quietly, but she didn’t hear
him. In her delight, in her triumph, she threw up one hand and barked
the word, “REVEAL!” and the little light obeyed; it flew forward through the
gates the yawned open, seemingly of their own accord, and Cassandra ran after
the little orb, and Barnabas followed without hesitation.
They
paused in the main chamber. Barnabas,
she knew, didn’t like to come to this place.
She didn’t blame him. It wasn’t
her influence that caused Joshua and the lummox Ben Stokes to imprison Barnabas
for eternity in the secret room, but now it didn’t seem like such a terrible
idea. It kept him safe, didn’t it? she
thought, and then felt a stab of shame.
He was looking at the nameplates of his father and his mother and his
beloved little sister. She wished he
wouldn’t. She wanted him to be reminded
as little as possible of their deaths, and of the part she played in causing
them.
But
the little witchlight wasn’t done. It
hovered for a moment, casting both their faces in its blue, effervescent glow,
and then it simply … exploded. Both
Barnabas and Cassandra cried out at its little super-nova, but there was no
heat, no repercussions.
Nothing.
Only
… not quite nothing.
“Oh,”
Cassandra whispered.
The
witchlight left in its wake a trace, a hint of its former glow, but that was
enough.
The
lion’s head, the fierce statuary that gripped a stone ring in its stone teeth,
the one Willie Loomis had pulled (and at her own urging, she now recalled) and
released the secret chamber’s long-time denizen: the lion’s head glowed with a fierce blue fire.
Cassandra,
who had never seen the Amulet of Caldys with her own eyes, knew that she had
found it.
“What
is it?” Barnabas whispered.
She
said nothing. She walked forward
instead, slowly, reverently, and carefully, oh so carefully, reached up to the
lion’s head. The glow was centered around
the lion’s right eye, so small … yet, wasn’t there something … something there
…?
She
waved her hand across the lion’s head, and whispered, “Let the barriers break,
let the walls tumble, all wards are extinguished, and the only power here is
mine. It is my will that the Amulet of
Caldys come forth.”
The
blue light vanished.
The
stone eye of the lion’s head widened, if that were at all possible, the mouth
seemed to snarl …
And
a tiny piece of iron fell from the statue’s iris and dropped neatly into
Cassandra’s gloved palm.
Barnabas
dared to approach now, and looked over her shoulder at what she now held. “What is it?” he asked again.
“The
Amulet of Caldys,” Cassandra answered immediately. The Amulet was constructed of iron, a perfect circle quartered by
crossing bands of iron. Simple in
design, but she could feel the power humming inside it. She turned to face him, her face alight with
joy and triumph. “It’s the answer,
Barnabas.”
“To
what?”
She
smiled. “To ending your curse.”
4
The
sex had been fantastic, as Quentin figured it would be. And of course Maggie used the not inconsiderable
amount of powers at her command to heighten all the sensations; magical
lubricant, Quentin thought at one point (while he was still capable of
thought), and found that he was grinning at the memory.
She
was nestled against his bare chest, and when he looked down at him, he found
that her face was set and blank. Her
eyes showed no expression, not a trace of emotion. At least they aren’t pitch black, he thought,
but even that acknowledgment provided little relief. “Maggie?” he said.
“I
don’t feel anything,” she said, unmoving.
She didn’t look to him; she didn’t sound angry or sad or … or
anything. “Isn’t that funny? I thought I would feel something. But I don’t.”
“I’m
… I’m sorry,” Quentin said. Was he? He wasn’t sure.
“You
shouldn’t be,” Maggie sighed. “You don’t
have anything to do with it.”
That hurt. He was surprised at how much.
“I
used to love you so much, you know?” Maggie said, and now she looked up at him.
“I
loved you too.” The words were hard to
say. He was choking on them. Stupid.
He took his arm away from her and sat up. He wished he had one of Julia’s cigarettes to
smoke.
“Not
enough.”
“No. I suppose not.”
She
accepted this with a nod. “I’m not in
love with you, Quentin.”
Another
wound, another slash. He forced his face
to remain without expression. “Oh?” he
said.
“And
you’re not in love with me. I could tell
if you were. Even Nicholas loved me, in
his own sick, twisted fashion. But you …
you don’t. You still love her.”
She said the last word without rancor.
“Vicki
is dead.”
“Not
for you.” Maggie rose naked from the bed
and crossed the room. She folded her
arms over her bare breasts and looked out into the darkness. “I’ll help you,” she said without
turning. “And Barnabas and Julia. And Angelique. I’ll help you all.”
He
wanted to join her. He didn’t. He lay in her bed and felt the cold of the
bedroom pressing down against his bare flesh.
His nipples, he saw, had hardened into tight little knots. There were purple marks beside each one, left
behind in Maggie’s wake. He was reminded
again at the changes in her; when they were together before all the darkness
had come into her life, they had done little more than passionately kiss in the
back of her car. And now … “Thank you,”
he said awkwardly.
She
glanced over shoulder at him. “It isn’t
for you, Quentin,” she said, and smiled.
“If I love anything, it’s me. And this world, because I exist here. So it’s in my best interest to save this
sorry world if I can. But don’t fool
yourself into thinking it’s for you. It’s never, never for you.”
He
rose now and began to pull on his pants.
“Goodbye, Maggie,” he said.
“Goodbye,
Quentin,” she said, but she was looking out the window again. The door to her bedroom swung open of its own
accord and Quentin, who occasionally was capable of taking a hint, moved
through it, his gray turtleneck clenched in one tight fist. The cold outside burned him as he pulled it
over his head. He let it. It was, he thought, the least he could
do. Under the circumstances.
5
Audrey
was still looking at him suspiciously.
Barnabas and Julia were out somewhere else, and they had the Old House
all to themselves, which was, perhaps, the reason they were in Audrey’s room in
the cellar – her own private coffin room – and the reason Willie was in the
midst of removing his shirt. But, it
seemed, he had tangled himself up in it, fairly hopelessly. “Oh Jesus,” Audrey grumbled after a
half-amused moment of watching, and pulled at the sleeves until he was
free. He looked at her sheepishly.
“Thanks,”
he said. “That was embarrassing.”
“I
imagine it still is,” she said with a pert little toss of her head. Her forehead wrinkled. “Willie, why are you shirtless?”
“I
don’t want to get anything on my shirt,” he said immediately.
She
stared at him blankly. “You don’t want
to …” The words trailed off. Understanding filled her instead. Her eyes widened, then she turned away from
him. “Oh Willie, no,” she
whispered. She crossed her arms over her
breasts and walked swiftly across the room, away from him.
“Why
not?” he said from behind her. “No,
seriously, Audrey, why not?”
She
spun to face him. “Because it’s wrong!”
she burst out. “And I could hurt you!”
He
shrugged. “I been hurt before,” he said,
grinning. “So what?”
“All
right,” she growled. “Then I could kill you.”
He
considered this, then, maddeningly, shrugged again. “I suppose,” he drawled. “I suppose. But I think you can control yourself.”
“What
if I can’t?” she said, her voice thick and choked.
“Look,”
he said, and went to her, and put a comforting hand on her shoulder,
“look. I been the victim of a vampire before,
you know. Two, actually, before you.”
“Two?”
she whispered, eyes wide.
“Sure. Barnabas and that … that Tom Jennings.” He shuddered.
“I don’t remember much about that guy.
Besides, he’s dead now.”
“I
know. Julia told me.”
“Anyway,
it don’t matter to me. I … I like you,
Audrey.”
Tears
filled her eyes. “No you don’t,” she
said, but she was unsure. “That’s the …
the spell or whatever. When I bit you
the first time.”
“Nuh
uh,” he said, shaking his sandy hair.
“Nuh uh. Julia’s injections fixed
me up. Look.” And he lifted his chin. The marks – her marks – were gone.
“See? All gone. So is your spell or whatever. This is all me.”
“But
why?” she whispered.
“Like
I said.” He was close to her now. His voice was soft. Gentle.
He put a hand on her shoulder. “I
like you, Audrey. You’re pretty and
you’re smart. And you’re nice. You’re a nice girl.”
“You
don’t know that.”
“Sure,
sure I do. I been watchin you,
y’know. And I know how hungry you
are. So …” and he lifted his chin again,
“… so take it. From me. You did it before.”
“Oh,
Willie …”
“Barnabas
and Julia, they don’t have to know. Just
us. This can be just for us.”
Her
mouth was wet with saliva. And her fangs
had descended. She could feel them,
sharp and deadly, inside her mouth. She
didn’t move away. “I don’t want to hurt
you …”
“You
won’t,” he said soothingly. He closed
his eyes. “Please,” he whispered. “Please, Audrey. Take me.
I want you to.”
She
closed her eyes and swallowed.
“Do it. Just take me.”
She put her mouth on his
throat.
He
took a deep breath.
And
she bit down.
6
“The
origin of the Amulet of Caldys is lost in the mists of time,” Cassandra
explained as they crossed the lawn of the great house, the Amulet itself
clutched tightly in her hand, “but that doesn’t matter. What does
matter is that we found it, that we possess it.”
“And
it will end the curse.” Barnabas sounded
skeptical. She didn’t blame him.
“Oh
yes,” Cassandra said. She found that she
couldn’t stop smiling. “That’s why it
was created, Barnabas. The reason Edith
Collins brought it Collinwood.”
“Edith!”
“Tricky
witch,” Cassandra sneered. “But yes, it
was Edith. I don’t know what her motives
were, but I have no doubt it was her.
When we battled in 1897, I caught a trace of her thoughts, and I knew
that she prided herself on collecting magical, shall we say,
accoutrements?” She tittered. “I stumbled across a reference to dear Edith
when I helped Julia with her research after she returned from the future. After that, all I had to do was find her papers,
which proved no challenge. Your
relatives have always hoarded their journals and diaries and letters, and Edith
was no exception. On the 18th
of December, 1889, Edith wrote to her lawyer, Evan Hanley, and asked him to
procure this particular piece of the arcane for her. I’m not sure why – and I have no desire to
conjure her up to find out – but she never used it, if indeed she ever intended
to.”
“And
this,” Barnabas said slowly, “this is what you’ve been searching for. The reason you needed our blood.”
“Yes. The Amulet of Caldys breaks curses. Even the most powerful.”
“And
you want to use it –”
“To
end your curse.” The triumph vanished
from her voice, the fierce joy she always took in overcoming an enemy’s interference. She looked, Barnabas thought, shy, her eyes
wide and unblinking, unguarded … human.
“You
would do that for me.”
“It’s
all I’ve wanted,” she whispered, “ever since you found me at Little Windward. I know you all think I don’t have feelings,
that I don’t care –”
“I
know that isn’t true.”
“—but
I do, Barnabas.” Tears sparkled in her eyes now. “I thought that donning the Mask would kill
them, all of them, but it didn’t. It
hurts,” and she thumped a fist against her chest, “it hurts as much as it ever
did, as much as it did the night I begged you to kill me. I want to change everything, Barnabas. I want to make things different. Starting …”
She took a deep breath. “Starting
with you.”
“As
if none of this ever happened.”
“Back
to the beginning.”
“The
beginning,” he said musingly, and he was holding her hands somehow, pressing
the amulet almost painfully into the meat of her palm, but she didn’t care, she
didn’t care because –
“Angelique,”
he whispered.
She
didn’t say anything. She let him lean
down, let him brush his lips against hers, then press them, then enfold her in
his arms, and she did feel again,
dangerous, she thought, remembering the Enemy’s promises to the future version
of her, but all those thoughts were fading away, because here she was, right
where she wanted to be, for the first time in two centuries, and it felt so
good, it felt so right –
Love. Barnabas with her, in the shadows of the
house where no one could see them.
Barnabas inside her, heat and delicious friction, heightened by his
powers and by hers. Love, and it was sweet, it was right, love
and love and love –
She
had to leave him. She told him when the
love was over, straightening her clothes, watching him straighten his, both
smiling, but hers was melancholy, and she said, “I have to secure this where no
one will find it,” and she held the Amulet up so he could see it. “And simply having it means nothing. I must unlock its secrets, and I need to be
alone when I do it.”
He
kissed her again, but she backed away. “I
must go now,” she said, and laughed at the distress on his face. “Always so impatient. What a little boy you are, Barnabas.”
“Don’t
be cruel.”
“I
won’t be,” she said. “Not anymore,” and
she was gone.
Barnabas
watched after her as she walked the last few yards to the front door of
Collinwood and disappeared inside. He
felt a tumult of emotions inside him, expected, of course; Angelique had been
his enemy for so long, and now …
What now?
What
did she expect? What did he expect? What were they to each other? And what would happen next?
“Barnabas,”
a dry voice said from his right, and he turned to face Julia Hoffman, watching
him with familiar wide almond eyes, only now they were different. He opened his mouth to welcome her, to bring
her to him, and then he truly saw, and he understood: her eyes were full of broken, shattered
light. Full of pain. Because she knew.
Oh
my god, Barnabas thought.
She
had seen.
“Oh,
Barnabas,” she whispered, and then she turned and ran into the enveloping
darkness of the woods.
He
watched her go, gnawing for a moment at the onyx ring on his finger. Should he follow her? Let her go?
He knew her feelings for him, had known for a long time; how could he
not? And, once again, his feelings for a
woman were complicated. He loved her, he
did … but how did he love her?
“Bastard,”
he spat suddenly. “Barnabas Collins, you
bastard.” His voice was taut and jagged with pain. “You son of a bitch.”
What
do I do now? he wondered, looking at the place in the trees where Julia had
disappeared. What do I do now?
7
And
the night ends with love, as it began, all that love, shadows, fires, burnt out
embers, or ashes:
Alexandra
March thinks, How can I love this man? but Mr. Best watches her with his hawk’s
eyes as he always has, and she knows that she will do what he asks, that she
won’t be able to help herself, because he is the only family she has ever
known, and that bond should be, is
enough, and she is helpless against its power;
and
Chris and Sebastian, naked together now in a field outside town, far from
prying eyes, come together finally like drops of water rolling, rolling side by
side down a pane of glass; and Sebastian’s strong arms are wrapped around
Chris’ chest, and he eases himself inside, and he whispers, “Slowly, slowly,”
but his words become a growl, “Let it go, just let it all go,” and Chris’
response too is a growl; both their eyes have lightened to a beautiful emerald
that glows under the half-moon in the sky above them; and they rock together as
they transform, rocking together, pleasure and pain and then the pain is gone
and there is nothing but pleasure and love love love;
and
Maggie Evans watches outside the window, looking out at the sea, and sadness
and a terrible ache, a desire, come
together and meet inside her, because she lied to Quentin, god or whatever help
her, she lied, she lied, and she won’t sob – she won’t ever sob again, or cry,
not even a little – but it hurts a bit, and so she watches the sea throughout
the night;
and
Quentin Collins sits in his room at Collinwood and thinks about Maggie and
Vicki and Beth and Jenny and he drinks and he drinks until their faces blur
together into one face;
and
Willie Loomis moans as Audrey releases him, smiling down at him, his blood
smearing her mouth and her beautiful fangs, and he smiles back at her because
it was never like this with Barnabas or Tom, and he thinks, I love her, this monster girl, this terrible
monster beast girl, I love her, I do, and so grabs her head, and pulls it
back down, and she enters him again and this time he doesn’t just moan, he screams his pleasure;
and
Cassandra holds the Amulet of Caldys above a single black candle and feels the
power rise inside her, and she thinks of Barnabas, and the power is STRONG, she
is STRONG, and, “Barnabas,” she whispers, and this sustains her;
and
Julia Hoffman pauses in her flight, somewhere in the woods, halfway between
Collinwood and the Old House, and she is gasping, and it hurts to breathe,
everything hurts, because she knew,
didn’t she, she knew all along that something like this would happen, and the
tears burn so badly in her eyes that she lets them out, and whimpers become
sobs, and she doesn’t care that she’s supposed to be strong, she doesn’t,
because who can be strong all the time? she wonders, and she cries until a hand
falls on her shoulder, a hand that burns with cold, so cold that it hurts, and
this hand spins her around so she can look into a face whose familiar lines and
planes fill her with mindless terror.
“Oh
Julia,” he drawls, and she is thrilled against her will, despite her sudden
terror, “oh Julia, my darling, don’t cry.
Why should you cry? I’ll stop
your tears, my darling, and then we’ll dance together.”
“No,”
Julia whimpers, but he draws her to him, and she can smell him now, and he is dead, dead, dead.
“Yes,”
Tom Jennings replies, deliriously happy, he sounds, so happy to have her back
in his arms, and he spins her around, and he grins as he does, “and you will
love me, you will love me, because all you need is love, Julia, all you need,”
and the moonlight glints off his savage and lovely vampire’s fangs.
TO BE CONTINUED ...