CHAPTER 104: Admissions
Voiceover by Alexandra Moltke: “The dark shadows that haunt the great estate
of Collinwood grow ever thicker … and the shadows conceal secrets, as they have
always done … but as, one by one, the shadows part and the secrets are
revealed, will Barnabas Collins, his friends, and his family find strength …or
at the mercy of their enemies?”
1
“Don’t you know me?” the Petofi-thing implored. “My
darling, my daughter, don’t you know me?”
Alex
froze, the stake still piercing the air.
“What?” she whispered. “What did
you call me?”
The
basement room of the house by the sea stank of gore, black rot, death. A coffin gaped open in the far corner; a
terrified young man hung suspended by invisible hands a good five feet off the
air, and two wounds on his neck leaked copious, unchecked amounts of blood; the
creature that had once called itself Count Petofi, leader of the Leviathans,
dispatched first by Victoria Winters and again by the witch Angelique, now
tried to collect itself, but found it a challenging prospect at best; and,
against the wall, the vampire Roxanne Drew dragged herself, trembling
uncontrollably, to her feet. And
Alexandra March, who could be the very twin of that same Victoria Winters who
so terrified the Count, stood before them with a stake in her hand and an
expression of utter astonishment on her face.
“You are my daughter,” Petofi
croaked. “You have come back to me, just as I knew you would. I can taste your power, my dear, as I always
could before. Why don’t you recognize
me?”
“Impossible,”
Alex whispered. “You can’t be my father
… I don’t … you … you thing, you can’t possibly –”
Roxanne,
having existed happily as a vampire since one dark night in 1840, was no
fool. She saw her opportunity and she
took it, springing forward with her claws drawn. She shrieked, the ear-rending sound of an
enormous bat. Her tactic worked. Alex was shaken, off her guard, and so took
the full weight of the undead woman as Roxanne slammed into her with the force
of a mack truck. Both struck the ground
hard, then rolled together. The stake
Alexandra clutched flew out of her hand and disappeared into the shadows.
Roxanne
grinned, showing her terrible fangs. She
had clambered atop her enemy and now held her down, her hands, with fingers
grown long and freakish, wrapped around Alex’s throat. She bore down, and Alex’s eyes popped.
“Wait!” Petofi cried.
Roxanne
paused, and glared at him over her shoulder.
“Don’t interfere,” she snarled.
“This bitch was going to kill me.”
“She is my daughter. You must let her live.”
Alex’s
tongue was protruding from her lips, which began to lighten to an unpleasant
blue.
“She’ll
try to kill me again,” Roxanne said, and leaned forward so that her weight
drove her thumbs deeper into the meat of Alex’s throat. “No dice.”
“Unless you let her go,” Petofi
thundered, “I will not help you.” Roxanne froze. “And
you need my help, don’t you. You can’t
bring this new one back alone.”
Alex’s
eyes had rolled up to their whites. She
began to gurgle.
“Can you.” His voice grated, impossible to ignore. His eyes burned.
Roxanne
glared back at him, and for a moment they were both checked. Then, “Dammit,” she spat, and leaped off of
Alexandra March. Human in appearance,
she dusted herself off and strode over to the Count. “You owe me your life, ‘Excellency,’” she
said mockingly. “Remember that.”
“We mustn’t bicker, my dear Roxanne. You have indeed brought me back from the dark
borderline of death, and you have helped restore me as much as you could. But you still require the services of
this.” And he held aloft his Hand, which
glowed with spectral energy.
Roxanne
bared her teeth. “You win, Petofi,” she
said. “We must work together. I’ve explained my reasons. You’ve agreed. We cannot afford to bicker over …” And she glanced over at the unconscious woman
behind them. “… mortal animals.”
“Whatever else she is, that girl is hardly
mortal.”
“I
believe you. She knocked me across the
room with no effort at all. What is
she?”
The
Petofi-thing grinned. “The daughter of Petofi, who else?”
“I
think you’re wrong about that. Isn’t
Victoria Winters dead?”
“This is not Victoria Winters.”
Roxanne
raised an eyebrow.
“You will see in time, my dear. All secrets will be revealed to you, I
promise.”
“We
are on the same side,” Roxanne said carefully, “are we not?”
Petofi’s
chuckle was monstrous. “For now, my dear Roxanne. For now.
But there are many sides. Always,
so many sides. Remember that. Remember it well.”
2
Cassandra
collapsed to the foyer floor, screaming as the fire consumed her. This is not possible, the part of her that
was still capable of thinking told her; you are all-powerful, you contain all
the magic of the Mask of Ba’al, you are a god, you you you –
But
she could smell herself burning. The
polyester from the Mary Quant, her hair sizzling, her flesh frying –
Elizabeth
Collins Stoddard stood over her, smiling crazily. “Burn witch,” she said. “Burn, burn, burn!”
Because
I never grow tired of hearing that,
Cassandra thought wearily, then brightened for a moment, realizing that she
could still think at all. Which meant
she wasn’t beaten, no matter what Nicholas said, or what the Enemy – for surely
it had to be the Enemy behind this momentary setback – no matter what the Enemy
thought.
She
reached inside herself and found that old familiar spark, her powers, but now
so heightened after the treatment administered her by the Mask of Ba’al. She smiled, even though her lips were burned
away, because she was a god, and the
Enemy would feel the taste of her wrath soon enough.
Her
smile froze.
Nothing
happened. Her skin did not rejuvenate,
her hair did not return, and her clothes continued to stink and smolder. She faltered, and for the first time in a
long time, felt an icy spear of real fright pierce her heart. This isn’t possible, she thought, not possible …
“A
bientot, my dear,” Nicholas whispered in her ear, which had already dissolved
under the onslaught of Elizabeth’s fire so that it was now nothing but a hole
in the rapidly dwindling skin and muscle tissue surrounding her skull. “Maybe I’ll see you in hell after all. Perhaps you’ll keep – dare I say? – a seat
warm for me.” And he laughed, and that
was when Cassandra began to scream.
The
front doors of Collinwood flew open at that moment. “Mother!” Carolyn Stoddard shrieked. “My god, what are you doing?”
“Stay
out of this, darling,” Elizabeth said grimly.
Her eyes still danced with mad points of light, and her smile was grim
and sharp. “She’s had this coming for a
long time, believe me.”
“Cassandra,”
Carolyn whispered, then dropped beside the woman who screamed like a rabbit in
a snare, even as the flames consuming her grew ever brighter, ever hotter.
“Stay
away from her,” Elizabeth commanded, but Carolyn ignored her, and held out both
her hands over the blazing witch before her.
“I
don’t know what I’m doing,” she whispered, suddenly frightened, and pulled her
hands away. But Cassandra looked up at
her in that moment, her eyes still enormous and blue, the only part of her
untouched by the flames, and they were full of fear and despair. Carolyn, hesitating, was overcome by a sudden
rush of images – Angelique, her face a
mask of passion and hatred, blood leaking from a wound in her chest, thrust out
a hand at the man who murdered her, and her mouth writhed as she uttered the
curse that would damn them all; Miranda, draining the lifeforce from little
Jamison Collins to sustain herself, giggling as she did so like a madwoman;
Angelique, her hair black as pitch, her eyes empty holes, summoning the tide of
power that destroyed Victoria Winters before their eyes – but she forced
them back. I can do this, she thought;
everyone deserves a second chance; and held out her hands.
Take my power, she thought, praying that
Cassandra would hear her somehow. Take it.
I don’t have much, but there should be enough to help you. Enough to beat this thing back. Go ahead.
Take it.
Cassandra’s
big blue eyes grew even wider, and in that moment Carolyn felt an invisible
hand – no, not a hand; what invaded her was too big, too inhuman to be any kind of hand – thrust inside her chest and seize her heart. She reared backwards and screamed, unable to
help herself, as she felt energy begin to run out of her, a hideous draining
sensation, as if the life were pouring out of her.
“No!”
Elizabeth screamed, and beside her, the figure of Jamison Collins, glaring
balefully, flickered into existence, and screamed, “No!” alongside his
daughter.
Because
the flames were disappearing. They
shrank back, growing smaller, and as they faded, Cassandra’s flesh began to
reknit itself, her hair grew back into a midnight helmet, even her beautiful
red dress reclaimed its existence.
Finally she drew back, and Carolyn collapsed beside her, gasping like a
fish. Her face was pale and her eyes
were bulging.
Cassandra
leaped to her feet, and spun back.
“That,” she snarled, “was absolutely uncalled for.”
Jamison’s
mouth twisted and writhed. You’ll be sorry yet, it said silently,
already fading away, each one of you,
you’ll be sorry, I promise you that …
But
it was gone, and Elizabeth uttered one tortured scream, then dropped to her
knees, fell over onto her side, and sank into unconsciousness.
Cassandra
stood over her, shaking her head. “I
thought she had more gumption in her than that,” she said.
Carolyn
moaned behind her, and Cassandra spun around.
The
young blonde woman looked up into Cassandra’s impassive face, her own twisted
with pain and fear. “Cassandra?” she
whispered.
Then
Cassandra extended her hand again, and Carolyn was flooded with a sense of power, and she rose into the air
unaided. The feeling was nearly
indescribable: joy, warmth, safety, like
nothing she’d felt since before Tony died, when he would hold her tightly after
they finished making love. For the first
time since her freedom from the Danielle-thing, the thought of Tony didn’t
bring a spike of nearly unbearable pain.
Perhaps it was whatever Cassandra was doing to her, but Carolyn thought
better. She thought that she was
healing. Finally, finally healing. And it was glorious.
Then
it was over, and she floated slowly back down to the floor of the foyer,
gasping. “My god,” she whispered. “Cassandra, my god!”
“Not
really,” the other woman laughed quietly.
She sobered suddenly. “But I have
you to thank for my life, Carolyn, and I will never forget this. No, I will never forget it. As long as either of us lives.”
“I
couldn’t just let you die,” Carolyn said in a small voice. “My mother …”
Her voice trailed off, and her eyes grew wide with horror. “My mother!” she exclaimed, and ran to the
place where Elizabeth lay, still unconscious.
“We
must have a conversation with your mother,” Cassandra said, unable to prevent
the ice from filtering into her voice, but Carolyn didn’t seem to notice. She was lightly patting Elizabeth’s cheeks,
rubbing her wrists, and whispering her mother’s name.
Cassandra
rolled her eyes. She simply couldn’t
help herself. Humans, she thought with
an inner sniff of disdain, but then she remembered the sound of Nicholas’
laughter, and she knelt beside Carolyn, raised one finger, and said, “Let
me.” A brief burst of aqua witchfire
appeared at the end of her finger and illuminated Elizabeth’s waxen
features. After a moment of anxious
watching on Carolyn’s part, Elizabeth’s eyes began to flutter. “Carolyn?” she whispered, and took her
daughter’s hand.
“Welcome
back, Mrs. Stoddard,” Cassandra said amiably, offering the matriarch of
Collinwood her biggest, brightest smile.
“We thought we lost you for a moment.
You fainted, you see, and –”
“I
know what happened to me,” Elizabeth snarled suddenly, retreating into
Carolyn’s arms, “and I know who was responsible … you … you witch!”
3
Barnabas
turned the cane in his hand over, then over again, then over again. The wolf head stared up at him, panting in
its eternal fashion, its silvery eyes fixed on his. The sun still rode the heavens outside, but
here in Josette’s room, with the windows firmly covered by thick drapes over a
hundred years old, he could sit with Julia and not burn to a crisp. “I owe you so much,” he said suddenly, and
Julia blinked.
“Don’t
say that,” she murmured, blushing. “I
promised to save you, Barnabas. I keep
my promises.”
“You’ve
risked your life for me,” he said, suddenly finding the words terribly
difficult to string together, “so often.
I owe you my existence, Julia.
And I feel that I haven’t said ‘thank you’ nearly enough.”
Her
lips trembled into a half-smile. “What’s
brought this on now?” she said hesitantly.
“I
fear,” he said, “I very much fear that we may not be able to succeed in our
fight against the Enemy.”
“Barnabas,”
she said, but he held up a finger.
“Your
story of the future continues to trouble me,” he said. “My … transformation. The Enemy’s plan. All the … all the death that is to
come.” Your own, he wanted to say, but wouldn’t allow the words to form on
his lips. “Ever since Audrey was …
transformed, I’ve been pondering the events that will transpire here. How they will occur … how the knowledge of
what you went through will affect the future this time around. And I’m afraid, Julia. Terribly, terribly afraid.”
She
took a breath. “We’ve faced danger
before …”
“Never
like this,” he said with a quick shake of his head. “You can feel it too, can’t you.”
She
hesitated, then nodded. “Yes,” she
admitted with a sigh, “yes, I suppose I can.”
He
hesitated then too, pausing, agonized, and wondered, Is this the right
thing? Is there anything that is right,
that can be right, ever ever again? and decided in that moment that it had to
be done, that the future could be changed, but only if he acted, if he proved that he was more man than monster. But to do that, he would need to show his
monstrous side now, this very minute, no matter what might happen next
“Barnabas?”
Julia’s brow was furrowed. “Barnabas,
what is it?”
He
swallowed, thought, Now, now, now or never, and held his hands up. He dropped his cane as he did it, and it
struck the carpeted floor of Josette’s room almost silently.
Julia
gasped, was unable to help herself, a tiny painful sound, guttering out as she
held it.
His
face was grim. His hands, his monster’s
hands, the triple knuckles, the pointed yellow talons, murderer’s hands.
“Oh,
Barnabas,” she whispered.
“I
had to show you,” he said, and tried to swallow the shame that rose up inside
him like vicious bile. “After what you
told me of the future, I had to show you.”
“May
I?” she said and reached for him. He
nearly pulled back then, but she was tender, of course, Julia was nothing but
tenderness when it came to his care, and she took one of his dreadful claws in
her own hand and held it. “They’re
cold,” she said, then, a flash of smile, “but that’s nothing new, is it.”
“Sadly,
the transformation is new,” he said,
and her smile faded.
“How
long?” she asked then.
“Two
weeks. Maybe three. Since our return from Parallel Time, but
before you came back to us from your voyage to the future.”
“You
should have told me.” Her words held no
weight of accusation.
He
said nothing.
“It’s
my fault, isn’t it,” Julia said. She
laughed. It was a jagged, bitter sound,
and Barnabas winced. “Just as with Chris
Jennings. The serum is destroying you.”
“Not
destroying,” Barnabas said with a swift shake of his head. “And Julia, we have no idea if … if what’s
happening to me is related to the serum.
Remember how I transformed into that ancient, hideous creature?” She nodded, but slowly, as if she weren’t
convinced. “Perhaps this is a result of
the Leviathans, or Petofi, or whatever happened to me after I was pulled out of
1897. It may have nothing to do with the
serum at all.”
“But,”
Julia said, her voice catching, “but Barnabas, if it has, then Audrey is in as much danger as you are. And perhaps Carolyn as well.”
“Carolyn
is fine.”
“But
for how long?” Julia rose swiftly to her
feet and paced across the floor like an angry panther. “How long before Audrey twists up and
dissolves into dust, or before Carolyn wakes up with fangs and bat wings
sticking out of her back?”
“Julia,
don’t –”
“Don’t
tell me not to be ridiculous!” she turned, screaming into his face with such
vehemence that he recoiled, and the shame was back, pulsing and burning inside
him. “Not you, Barnabas! Never you!
You more than anyone should
understand how deadly serious I am, all
of this!”
“You’re
right,” he said, bowing his head. “I’m
sorry, Julia.”
“Angelique,”
Julia said instantly. “She can help
us. She can reverse the transformation.”
“I
don’t know if she can.”
“If
it’s the price, we’ll just have to –”
“Not
the price,” Barnabas said. “I don’t know
if she is capable of removing the
curse.”
“That’s
absurd. She’s the most powerful being in
the world. She has,” and Julia could not
resist rolling her eyes, “told us all that exact fact time after time.”
“Even
her powers have their limits, I can only assume. She has admitted to me that she has tried to
lift the curse … and she has failed.”
“Which
means,” Julia said, chewing on her lower lip unconsciously, “that the curse is
no longer hers. And that her powers are limited. An alarming discovery, to say the least.”
“She
has something up her sleeve,” Barnabas said.
“She helped cure Sebastian Shaw of a malady that might have killed him
in exchange for a bit of blood from Quentin and from me.”
Julia’s
eyes narrowed, as they usually did during any discussion of Angelique’s
motives. “Did she tell you why she
needed it?”
“No,”
Barnabas admitted. “Only that it would
help all of us, somehow. I’m assuming
she means for it to fight the Enemy somehow, and that the operation is
delicate.”
“I
can’t help but remember her actions in the future,” Julia said, shivering. “She turned me over to the Enemy with very
little consideration, Barnabas. I can’t
forget that.”
“I
trust her,” Barnabas said quietly. “She
is different. More than the changes that
the powers of the Mask of Ba’al have wrought upon her, she is different
somehow.”
“We
have to find her,” Julia said. “Convince
her to use her powers again. It can’t
hurt, can it?”
Barnabas,
staring miserably at his monster’s hands, could only say, “I don’t know,
Julia. I don’t know anything anymore.”
4
Her hair was red again,
and that was somehow comforting to him; Quentin, sitting on the very edge of
the couch in the Evans cottage, squirmed a bit, so that, he decided, meant he
wasn’t completely at ease, which was only to be expected.
Maggie Evans stared at
him wordlessly, as though considering carefully the words she might speak.
He waited.
“Go to hell,” she said at
last, and he blinked at that, and then laughed.
She watched him, expressionlessly, waiting.
“Sorry,”
Quentin said, still snorting a little, “sorry, sorry. It’s just … it’s so funny!” She said nothing still. He wiped a tear away from the corner of his
eye. “I think I’ve already been
there. To hell, I mean. A hundred years of hell.”
“I
was going to say,” Maggie spoke after
a moment. “But I thought better of it.”
He
stared at her. “Yeah?” he said at last. “What do you mean?”
She
stood up and stretched, then wandered over to the big picture window where her
father, before his untimely death, used to paint sunrises over the sea. “I’ve spent a lot of time hating you,
Quentin,” she said. Her voice was thoughtful,
almost pensive. “And I finally realized
something.” She sighed, then chuckled a
little. “We’re more alike than I ever
realized.”
“We
are.” It wasn’t a question.
“Of
course we are. We both want power. We both have lousy self esteem. We’ve betrayed and killed those closest to us
…” She sat beside him. “We have a lot to answer for, you and I.”
“That
brings me to the reason I’m here.”
“I
know why you’re here.”
“Maggie,”
he said carefully, “if you really do – if you really understand – then you know
how dangerous what I’m about to ask you is for you.”
She
tossed back her hair. “I’m not
afraid. I’m not that scared little girl
who used to sling hash and pour coffee.
For you and for the entire town.
I’ve grown.”
“So
I’ve noticed,” he said wryly, unable to help himself, but she didn’t seem to
mind. Maybe she really had changed, he
thought. “Your powers may come in
handy.”
“My
powers are nothing compared to Angelique’s,” Maggie said immediately, as if she
had read his mind. Who knows, he
thought; maybe she did. “What do you
need me for?”
“Something
dark is rising,” Quentin said. He was
unable to keep the tremor out of his voice, and she must have caught it,
because she looked him in the eye for the first time, and for the first time in
a year Quentin saw Maggie Evans, everybody’s pal and no one’s friend, the girl
he had, for a time, fallen in love with.
“Something evil, way more evil than either of us. And I think we’re going to need all the help
we can get to fight it.”
“I
assume Professor Stokes would have told you,” she said evenly. “Maggie Evans is out of the magic business.”
Quentin
glanced around the room; the new carpets, the paintings that were distinctly not Sam Evans – one of those was a
Monet, he would bet his immortality on it – objet d’dart, velvet drapes … then
he glanced back at her. He raised an
eyebrow. She shot him a fiery, defiant
glance back. “Let me guess,” he
smiled. “The Samantha Stephens-ing is a
little harder than it looks on TV.”
She
lifted a hand, and Quentin flew off the couch and slammed against the
ceiling. Her face remained frozen, her
eyes icy, and Quentin spun around three times and then fell back onto the
couch. He groaned, but he was still
smiling. “I suppose I deserved that,” he
said.
She
kissed him then – of course, Maggie thought, of course I’m kissing him – and,
worse, he was kissing her back, like old times, oh god, like old times …
She
broke away from him. “I –” he said, but
then they were in her bedroom – a travelling spell courtesy of one Mr. Nicholas
Blair, now sadly defunct – and his hands were her hands, in the places she
wanted them to go, and how much was the magic?
How much?
5
Alexandra
groaned, feeling the red pulsing behind her eyes that had been throbbing for
god knows how long before she swam back into consciousness; she was also fairly
certain that she’d been making this animal groaning sound for awhile as
well. She was lying down, and upon
something that felt soft and comfortable; there was music, playing somewhere
far away, a pleasant sound, soft and tinkling, like water running over rounded
stones. Her eyelashes fluttered, and
though the pain in her head intensified as light pierced her, at last she
opened her eyes.
The
man she knew as her uncle peered down at her, his bowler hat pushed back to
reveal his receding hairline, his pleasant face cracking into a gentle smile
when he saw that she was awake. “Welcome
back, my dear,” he said. “You’ve been on
quite an adventure.”
“Where
am I?” she groaned, rolling onto her side and peering around the room. It was elegantly decorated in blues and
golds, with a plush sky-blue carpet on the floor and paintings of landscapes
adorning the walls.
“Those
are genuine Charles Delaware Tates,” he said, following her gaze. “You’ve heard of Tate?”
“Wasn’t
he a painter?” Her head gave another
throb. Why were they talking about art
when all she wanted to know was where she was and what had happened to her? But then, she discovered, it was starting to
come back to her in bits and pieces: the
young man with the marks of the vampire scarring his throat, floating above the
concrete basement floor of the House by the Sea; Roxanne Drew, her body
shifting and transforming into something hideous, more akin to a gargoyle or
dragon than a bat; and the worst horror of all, the lumpy, rotting thing that
had called her … that had called her his …
She
couldn’t think of that now. Her head
gave another sickening lurch.
“Charles
Delaware Tate was, for a time in the late nineteenth century, a resident of
Collinsport,” her uncle continued in his soft, even voice. “Did you know that?”
“No,”
she whispered.
“He
was an associate of one Count Andreas Petofi.”
Her eyes widened and she sat up, or tried, despite the pain. He smiled a little. “I thought that might seize your
attention.”
“Petofi
died,” Alex said with more certainty than she truly felt. “A long time ago.”
“So
it would seem,” he said smoothly. “But
the powers inherent in his Hand are formidable to say the least.”
“Are?” Panic began to flutter inside her like a
frightened bird. Petofi, in the
centuries he walked the earth, had proven himself to be one of the most
powerful – and the most vicious – sorcerers of all time, if not the most powerful. “Is he alive?”
“He
has been dispatched many times,” her uncle with a weary little smile. “Elizabeth Collins Stoddard stood against him
once, it may surprise you to know, in a timeline that no longer exists. The woman whom you so very much resemble
stood against him later, trapping him in his own ring. But he is crafty, as you have no doubt
heard. And strong. As a wise gypsy woman once observed, he
cannot be destroyed, only contained.
Suffice it to say, the container is broken, and Petofi is among the
living once again.”
All
the color fell from her face. Specks
floated and danced in her vision. She
thought she might faint. “That … that
thing,” she said huskily. “That thing in
the basement of the House by the Sea …”
Her
uncle nodded, and his face was sad now, and a little grim.
“He
… he called me …” The word twisted in
her mouth, clutching at her tongue with spider’s legs, but she spat it out, had
to, couldn’t let it curdle and fester inside her. “… daughter!” she cried. Her eyes bulged with terror. “He called me his daughter, Uncle, and that
can’t be right, that can’t be true, tell me it isn’t true …”
“There
is a great deal I must tell you,” the man who called himself her uncle said,
the man who was known in many times and in many places by many different names,
but who, when he passed Collinsport way, chose to refer to himself as “Mr.
Best.” He touched her face, and his
expression was terrible with compassion.
Alexandra burst into tears, couldn’t help herself, couldn’t even muster
the strength to feel embarrassed. If
only he would stop looking at her like that, she thought miserably, maybe she
could staunch the tears, but he didn’t, he didn’t.
“You
are powerful, Alexandra,” Best said, “as you must know by now. But until now you have never understood the
source of your power. It is as you have
guessed.
“You
are Petofi’s daughter.”
She
felt the world fall away from her.
“But
there is so much more to it than that … much, much more …”
Her
eyes opened, and despite herself, she listened to him as he told her the story.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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