CHAPTER 108: The Plan
by Nicky
Voiceover by Joel Crothers: “The
dead walk on the great estate of Collinwood, and elsewhere, in the town below
it … as forces, strong as the tides and the ancient waves that crash against
the shore, collide, come together, draw apart … for plans are being laid and schemes
hatched … and on this night, two men face separate challenges … and for one of
them, his long life may at last be drawing to an end.”
1
“Get
out,” Chris said immediately. “Plus,
you’re dead.”
“I
am?”
“I should know.” Painful swallow. “I killed you.”
The
man in front of him smiled his silky smooth smile and pushed his bangs
back. His hair, Chris thought, was
longer and curlier than he remembered.
Suddenly he felt the surreal nature of this moment for the first time,
but here he was: Joe Haskell, in the
flesh. No, Chris thought, frowning, shaking
his head, not Joe … Nathan. Goddamn, goddamn Nathan Forbes. “Stop shaking your head, baby. You did kill me,” Nathan purred. “And ate me too, as I recall. And not in the way I usually like.”
Chris
refused to allow his all-too-readily-accessible wave of guilt to rise up and
wash over him again. “Get,” he said
instead, “out.”
“But
I’ve been dying to see you,” Nathan said, pretty lips smirking, “if you’ll
pardon the pun.”
There’s
no Quentin here to save you this time, Chris thought grimly; he crossed his
arms over his chest and tried to stand taller.
Within him, the animal – or Animal, as Sebastian termed it; and thinking
of Sebastian did allow the
all-too-readily-accessible wave of guilt to rise up like bile – the Animal
twisted and snarled, but was it snarling with anger, impatience, or … or
something else?
I
could let it out, Chris thought miserably; I could let it out right now and end
this … end it again. Like before.
No. I
can’t.
“You
can’t do it,” Nathan said. “We both know
it, Chrissy Sissy. You’ve been beating
yourself up for months now, haven’t you, and all because of little ol’ me. It isn’t worth it, baby, because I’m
here.” He laid one hand on Chris’ chest
and, horribly, began to rub him in ever-growing concentric circles. “I’m real.
I’m alive.”
Chris
jerked away, and he felt his eye color change, felt the fangs just bristling
under his gums. “Get away from me,” and
his voice was a growl.
Nathan
only seemed amused. “You think I didn’t
figure this might happen?” He reached
inside his shirt and revealed a tiny silver pentagram on a chain, then dangled
it before Chris’ face. “Enchanted. In case you wondered. Our resident witch laid down the mojo for
me. Works like a charm … or so I’m
told. In case you’ve developed a
tolerance to silver since last we met.”
“Resident
witch?” Chris frowned. Don’t engage, the wiser part of him whispered
urgently, that’s what wants, don’t engage, don’t engage. But it was impossible not to. He could feel
Nathan beside him without looking at him, feel him like heat. “Cassandra Collins?”
“Not
that old bag,” Nathan simpered, and waved a lazy hand through the air. “Nah, cuz, someone else on the down dark and
dirty. They got big party plans, see,
and I’m kinda like … like an ambassador I guess.”
“You.” Chris’ voice was dry, heavy with disbelief.
Nathan
arched a perfect eyebrow. “You don’t
believe me? I’m deeply hurt. I thought you of all people would want to
understand what’s been happening around here.
All this time travel, backward, forward, and sideways. All these dead people suddenly popping up
willy nilly. What our Plan is.”
Chris
scoffed. “You don’t have any idea. You sell yourself to the highest bidder. You always have.”
“Except
when it comes to you.” Nathan was very
close to him now, tried to put his arms around him, and Chris pulled away and
stalked angrily toward the fireplace. He
stared into the curling flames, even as they died away beneath his gaze. “Listen, baby, just listen. I loved you two centuries ago when you were
Todd Jennings and I love you now. You
came back to me. And I was allowed to
come back to you – twice. Don’t you think that means something?”
“It
means you’re a psychopath.”
He
waved a dismissive hand without looking away from the flames. “That’s too easy. I never wanted to hurt anybody. Not really. Millicent Collins was a means to an end. So was Nicholas Blair.”
Chris
decided to ignore the woman’s name Nathan spoke with such ease, just as if Chris
was supposed to know who she was.
Wait.
Millicent Collins …
Hadn’t
Carolyn mentioned her recently? After
her experience a few weeks ago with the séance, hadn’t Carolyn told them all
that she had actually become Millicent Collins for a few minutes, an ancestor
from the late eighteenth century, seen through her eyes?
“She was mad.
Oh, it was terrible, Chris. There
was such tragedy in her eyes, such lunacy.
Like she’d seen all these horrible truths and her poor mind couldn’t
handle it.”
“Millicent
Collins,” Chris whispered. Sudden
understanding flooded him. “You were
going to marry her, weren’t you.” Nathan
stared at him impassively. Chris’ words
grew harsher, sharper, more accusing.
“And then do something horrifically, stereotypically gothic, I
suppose. Did you drive her mad?”
“I
tried,” Nathan said quietly. “I should
say, I began the process. But I never
succeeded. Never even managed to marry
the poor thing. Your friend Barnabas saw
to that.”
“Barnabas
killed you,” Chris said slowly.
“’Fraid
so. And then he drove Millicent mad. Sad
story, I know. But true. Does that muddy the waters a bit?” he said,
jeering suddenly. “Does that weaken your
resolve just the tiniest bit? Maybe I’m
not a monster.” Nathan reached out and
put the tips of his fingers against Chris’ cheek. And Chris let him. His voice grew gentle, warmer. “Maybe I’m not after all.”
“You
can say that all you want,” Chris said, pulling away, memories of their time
together filling him like icy water.
“Words, Nathan, nothing but words.
You show me that you’re more
than a monster, then maybe we’ll talk.
What is this Plan you’re babbling about?”
Nathan
hesitated, all his good humor seemingly evaporated. “We need you,” he said slowly. “All of you.
Everyone at Collinwood. It’s time
to let bygones be bygones. Water under
the bridge and all that. We need you on
our side.”
“Me
specifically.”
“Yes,”
Nathan said immediately. “You’re a
Collins, Christopher, and a powerful one.
The Enemy needs you just as he needs everyone else in that house. Which means we need them too.”
“And
who is ‘we’?”
2
“My
friends. I handpicked them, you know,”
Roxanne said, and slowly, lovingly, ran just the tip of the knife down
Barnabas’ chest, slicing through his white-dress shirt and causing roses of
blood to bloom on the cloth. “All of my
friends. Part of the Plan. Because they have each been intimately
connected to your people on the hill at one time or another.”
Barnabas
couldn’t force his fangs to retract.
“What is your Plan, Roxanne?”
“It’s
marvelous, really,” she said, amused, tapping his forehead with the knife, “but
… unfortunately … won’t involve you in the long run.”
“You’re
going to kill me.”
“Of
course!” She blinked at him with her
enormous violet eyes filled with mock surprise.
“But you had that figured out long ago, didn’t you.”
“But
you need information from me first, of course..”
“Very
good,” she said, smiling. “If I had a
kewpie doll, I’d give it right to you.”
He
glared at her.
“What’s
really amusing,” she said, carving away at his chest with the knife, and each
wound opened and wept dark blood and refused to close, refused to heal, “what’s
really amusing is how you brought
this all on yourself. I mean, that’s
been your problem all along. All of you
Collinses. Why, the Enemy itself is all
your fault, will destroy the world because of you if we let it, if we let it, all because you Collins
men cannot keep it in your goddamn pants. Quentin … you … Amadeus … Aidan … Isaac … all
you filthy, filthy, foul Collins
men.” She punctuated the last sentence
by slamming the knife up to the hilt in the center of his chest, just missing
the heart. He threw his head back and
roared. “Just want to make sure you see
my point,” Roxanne said, and grinned.
3
The
figure inside the broken down house, as far as Julia could see, was made visible
only by the light of one flickering candle, but she could make out his features
easily enough, and her stomach cramped with equal parts fear and fury. Gerard Stiles, she wanted to growl, and
gritted her teeth anyway, the disgusting beast who had nearly throttled her
into oblivion almost fifty years from now, in a future Julia was trying
desperately to change.
What
is he doing? she wondered, and then
suddenly she knew.
This
particular house, she learned through her recent research, had once been called
“Rose Cottage” by the occupants of Collinwood in the year 1840. Since then, terrible things had happened
within its walls, naturally, and it fell, as seemingly happened to so many of
these kinds of buildings on the great estate, into ruin and disrepair. And of course, Julia thought, Gerard himself
was a part of those terrible things.
Blood sacrifices and murders, demon worship, and the attempted summoning
of an accursed ghost, at least, she remembered, according to the diary of
novelist Flora Collins, who, after her year with her Maine relatives, never
wrote another word.
Gerard
was chanting, Julia saw, waving his hands over that flickering candle
flame. She leaned forward just enough to
hear him, but she already knew the words.
Hadn’t she heard them, over and over again, while she lay in her stupor
after they all left Parallel Time?
“Emperor
Lucifer, master of all the revolted spirits, I entreat thee to favor me in the
adjuration which I address to thee …”
He
lifted a bottle from the table before him, a beautiful antique wine decanter,
and carefully, oh so carefully, he allowed a single drop of the liquid within
to fall into the candle flame.
Her
nose wrinkled. She knew what that liquid
was.
“I beg thee, O Prince
Beelzebub, to protect me in my undertaking. O Count Astaroth! Be propitious to me, and grant me the powers
I require –”
“Let
me at him,” a voice whispered beside her, and Julia jumped. But of course it was only Audrey.
Only Audrey?!?
“What
are you doing here?” Julia growled in her own fiercest whisper.
“I
followed you when you left the house,” the pretty little vampire said simply,
and smiled. “Thought you might need a
little protecting just in case anything goes bump in the night.” She cast her gaze through the window, and her
smile faded. “And it’s a good thing I
did too. That guy’s a killer. Believe me, I know.”
“We’re
not here to fight him,” Julia said.
“Actually, we shouldn’t be here at all – I shouldn’t. Barnabas is in
trouble.”
The
other woman’s face brightened. “Then you
do need my help!”
Julia
hesitated. “Possibly,” she said at
last. Well, why not? she thought. The injections hadn’t taken complete effect
yet, and obviously Audrey continued to exhibit her vampire powers. Perhaps they
could be put to good use.
“Is
Barnabas in there?”
“No,”
Julia said. “I … I miscalculated. I thought he might be, that maybe Roxanne
Drew had taken him here.”
“Roxanne,”
Audrey said, and made a face.
“Her
sister was a Collins in 1840,” Julia said, explaining as quickly as she could,
because she had a dreadful, dreadful feeling that time was running out. “Roxanne was a guest at Collinwood from time
to time, and sometimes, when visiting her sister Samantha, she stayed over for
a night or two at Rose Cottage.”
“And
this dump,” Audrey said, sniffing, “is Rose Cottage.”
“Yes,”
Julia said, “but it seems that Roxanne isn’t the one holed up here after all.”
“It’s
Gerard,” Audrey said, studying him through the window as he added another drop
of blood to the candle flame before him.
“And the Enemy.”
“He’s
conducting a ritual,” Julia said, “and if I’ve done my occult homework well
enough, I’ll bet you it’s designed to allow the Enemy to manifest corporeally.”
“English,
please. Remember, Julia, I majored in
accounting, not in …” She frowned. “… words.”
Julia
tried her hardest not to roll her eyes.
She means well, she reminded herself, just keep telling yourself that,
she means well. “It means that, whatever
little ritual Gerard is trying to accomplish, it will allow the Enemy to take
on a body. Something physical.”
“Something
physical,” Audrey said musingly. Her
eyes gleamed. “Julia,” she said
suddenly, “listen up. I got an idea.”
4
“And
they brought you back,” Chris said,
“so that you could convince me to help them.”
“That’s
the idea,” Nathan said, hunting around.
“Hey, you got any Scotch?”
“That’s
the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard in my life,” Chris growled, and rolled his
eyes.
Nathan
stopped his quest and blinked at him.
“Scotch?”
“That
you could convince me to do anything.” He strode firmly
to the door. “I meant what I said,
Nathan. Get out of my house. Now.”
“Christopher,”
Nathan whined, “c’mon, you’re not being reasonable.”
“Must
be the werewolf side of me,” Chris said.
“It makes me all irrational.
Either that, or you’re just an incredible asshole.”
“I
haven’t even told you the whole Plan yet.”
“And
that’s why I’m telling you to get the hell out,” Chris said, and actually threw
open the door, “because here’s the thing, Nathan: I don’t think you know this so-called Plan.”
Nathan
gaped at him, then closed his mouth. His
eyes narrowed. “What makes you think
that?”
“Why
would someone like Roxanne Drew, who seems, for all intents and purposes, to be
some kind of uber-powerful vampire, and thus must have at least a little more
intelligence, entrust any real, any pertinent
information with you? You’re little more than a lackey. The general doesn’t put the plan to win the
war in the hands of a foot soldier. I
never even finished college and I know that much.”
Nathan’s
upper lip drew back from his teeth, canine-like. Then his arm lashed out. Chris caught it mid-wrist, then held it. They glared at each other.
Finally
Nathan began to grin again. “That’s my
boy,” he said, his chest heaving beneath the tight Mickey Mouse tee-shirt he
wore, the same one, Chris belatedly remembered, that he wore the night a year
ago when he first appeared at Chris’ door in the Collinsport Inn, the same
tee-shirt that ended up on the floor next to Chris’ bed when Joe had … when Nathan had …
Chris
relaxed his grip, and in that moment Nathan leaned forward and pressed his
mouth firmly against Chris’, nudging it, opening it, and his tongue invaded
Chris’ mouth, and Chris didn’t think, didn’t stop him, didn’t stop his own
tongue from questing out, from meeting Nathan’s …
“Goddamn
it,” Chris snarled, and shoved Nathan backward, but he was grinning, still
grinning.
“Goodnight,
Chrissy Sissy,” Nathan said as he strolled out the door. “See you around.”
Chris
stood where he was, by the fireplace, his hands locked into tight fists he
couldn’t quite seem to relax. His eyes
burned, with tears or with the werewolf’s rage, he wasn’t sure. He was quaking, and he couldn’t seem to stop.
Nathan
hadn’t closed the door behind him.
Wiping at his eyes, finally forcing himself to move, Chris crossed the
room toward the door, then recoiled as it was pushed open. Had Nathan returned so soon? He felt his eyes lightening, felt his teeth
lengthening …
“You
should keep the door closed, babe,” Sebastian said, kicking it shut with his
heel; both his hands were occupied, Chris saw as relief descended over him and
the Animal retreated, holding a bag of groceries and another containing a
bottle of wine. “It’s freezing in
here.” He stopped suddenly, and squinted
as Chris through the darkness. “What’s
the matter? Something’s wrong.” He set the bags down quickly on the coffee
table and put his hands on Chris’ shoulders and looked deeply into his eyes. “Tell me what happened.”
As
he laid his head against Sebastian’s shoulder and allowed the other man to wrap
him in his very big arms, Chris was tempted, briefly, to say nothing, to brush
it off, to not mention Nathan at all.
Sebastian didn’t know about any of that, any of that shameful bullshit,
of the things they had done, of the awful things he had let Nathan do to him,
the awful things he had done to
Nathan, beasts, he thought, we were beasts;
but it’s Sebastian, Chris thought, and looked up and held his breath and then
carefully, very carefully said, “I think,” licking his lips, “I think we have a
problem.”
5
“Sonofabitch,”
Nathan said conversationally to no one.
But he was cold. Since Roxanne
and Count Petofi had magicked him back from the great beyond, he realized he
was still adjusting (re-adjusting?) to life on the mortal plane. And this included things like cold autumn
nights while he wore only a skimpy little tee-shirt.
My
nipples are hard from the cold, he thought as noticed just then, and grinned in
the act of admiring them. Too bad
Chrissy Sissy couldn’t see them.
Something about my nipples just drives him wild.
“You
unfortunate narcissist,” a woman said sadly from behind him; in that moment he
was struck by a burst of energy that stung like a bitch and knocked him down in
the bargain, tumbling him along the road until he stopped, dizzy and
aching. He looked up blearily, and there
they were, his new “friends”: Danielle
Roget, Edith Collins, and Tom Jennings. Edith
was shaking her head sadly, disgustedly.
“Concerned only with yourself, your petty problems, your feelings. Don’t you know you could ruin this for
everyone?”
“But
it’s fun,” Nathan croaked.
Tom
glared. “You will see my big brother
when we say you can see him,” he
hissed through his fangs.
“You,”
Nathan said grandly, standing and dusting himself off, “are not the boss of
me.”
“We’ll
see about that,” Tom said, baring his enormous fangs and taking a step forward,
reaching with claws grown long and sharp.
“I can make it hurt, baby boy; you have no idea. You will be my slave
if I want you to be. I have no great
love for you; I’ll make you wish you were never –”
“Enough,” Edith thundered. Her eyes flared obsidian, and Tom and Nathan
flew apart, and she hadn’t moved a muscle.
“Bon,” Danielle whispered. Her admiration for Edith Collins grew with
every passing moment.
“We
are returning to Seaview,” Edith said.
Her eyes continued to crackle black with dark energy. “Roxanne has need of us.”
“Screw
her,” Nathan said clearly.
Danielle
cuffed him upside the head. “Watch your
tongue, boy,” she said evenly. “You are
speaking to a lady.”
“Listen
to me, Nathan,” Edith said. She took
hold of his chin and squeezed it painfully.
“Roxanne brought you back. She
brought us all back. We owe her a great debt. And after she finishes with the Collins
family, we will be rewarded. She will
allow us to destroy them, have no doubt.
Until then, you will behave. Stay
in line. Otherwise …” And she shrugged. Above them, the air shivered and screamed; a passing owl exploded into a
burst of red meat and feathers that floated gracefully to the ground.
Danielle
giggled and clapped.
Nathan
watched, gawping. Finally, he bowed his
head. Goddamn witches, he thought, and
wanted to cry; his eyes burned with sullen tears, but he would be goddamned if
he would let them fall. Goddamn witches
and goddamn warlocks, think they’re so big.
He’d
show them. He’d show them all.
Someday.
“Come
on now, Mr. Forbes,” Edith said, and put a gentle hand on his shoulder. Her voice sounded kind, and her eyes were
blue again. They sparkled with
mirth. “I’m not so bad, I promise. So long as you remember that we’re all on the
same side, everything will be hunky dory.”
She began to lead him down the lane that led, inevitably, to
Seaview. “Come along. Our mistress awaits.”
Sure,
Nathan thought bitterly, casting furious glances at Danielle Roget and Tom
Jennings, sure, we’re all on one side.
My side.
And
these bastards will know it all soon.
6
“And
that’s the problem,” Roxanne said. “It’s
you. This is all your fault. If you hadn’t crossed over into that other
world, the one your foolish Professor insists on calling Parallel Time, I wouldn’t
be here. I would never have been called
back to this place, and you, Mr. Collins, would be in a much happier, much healthier position.” She etched a little cross above Barnabas’
right nipple, wrinkling her nose as acrid black smoke rose from the wound. “For awhile, anyway. Because without me, the world will end, and that would be your fault as well.”
“Kill
me,” Barnabas groaned. “Kill me.”
“Not
yet,” Roxanne said, and added three more smoking crosses beside the first
one. “You have to understand your part
in all this before I grant you that mercy.
And I have to understand your friend Julia Hoffman.”
Barnabas
bared his fangs. “Leave Julia out of
this.”
“Would
that I could,” Roxanne purred.
“Unfortunately, Dr. Hoffman holds a rather large piece of this puzzle
that not even I understand, and that’s saying a lot. I’m very, very
versed in occult arts, as I’m sure you’re beginning to realize. The fact that I can’t quite grasp how Dr.
Hoffman made her way to the future – and how she came back, alive, that is –
infuriates me. I don’t like to feel
infuriated, Mr. Collins. Not even a little
bit.”
“My
… my place?” he croaked.
“Ah
yes,” Roxanne said and heaved a sad sigh.
“Self-involved as always. Just
like the rest of your family. Which, as
I was saying, is the problem. Your
incredible ability to think only about yourself, what you want, what you need, and the rest of the world can go
hang. Do you remember,” she said, idly
dangling the dagger just above his right eye, “that conversation you had with
the Roxanne of that other world? The one
you call Parallel Time?”
“Yes,”
Barnabas said, hesitating momentarily.
He couldn’t take his eye off the blade.
The cuts, he thought, the cuts don’t heal …
“Good,”
Roxanne said. “So do I. She’s me, after all, or a version of me. Or I’m a version of her. It’s hard to tell sometimes. Because, as she told you – and she was right,
by the way – the events that happen in this world reverberate in that world,
but the reverse is true as well, and that’s
why you’re in the mess you’re in right now.
You crossed over into that world seeking your precious Victoria
Winters. Inevitably you interfered with
Angelique Collins’ plans, which caused her to kill the Roxanne of her
world. That death caused me to return to Collinsport, to discover the
Enemy’s plan, and to form my own Plan to combat it.” She smiled, satisfied. “There.
Doesn’t that all make much more sense now?”
“You
… you are not working for the Enemy.”
“Good
heavens!” Roxanne said in mock-shock, clutching a hand to her breast. “Do I look like an idiot? Think carefully before you answer that.” She ran her other hand through her red hair,
cut into a fashionable shag. “The Enemy
seeks to bring about the end of the world.
It is, at its core, a demon, and a very powerful demon as far as demons
go. It was summoned into this world to
bring about its end as we know it, to create on this plane a glorious paradise
for others of its kind. A hell on earth,
you understand. Now, as it happens, I like this world. I like it just the way it is. And the Enemy, being a demon, has become
rather … ambitious. It doesn’t simply
seek to destroy this world, Mr. Collins, and this is why I could just kill you
right now.
“No.
“It
seeks to end all the worlds.
“And
it needs you.
“It
needs your family.”
She
smiled, revealing her fangs.
“And
that,” she said, and suddenly,
ferociously, drove the Dagger of Ereshkigal directly into Barnabas’ right eye, continuing
to speak sweetly over his shrieks of agony, “is why I’m going to kill you.”
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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