CHAPTER 109: My Hero
by Nicky
Voiceover by Grayson Hall: “On
this night, Barnabas Collins finds himself in the gravest danger he has ever
faced in all his long two hundred years.
For Roxanne Drew, herself a powerful vampire, has taken him to her lair
in the House by the Sea, and in that terrible, haunted place she has used the
Dagger of Ereshkigal to torture him … and, as the women who love him will soon
discover, the wounds Roxanne has inflicted refuse to heal …”
1
She
was very near a breakthrough, as she would tell Julia later, when the pain
exploded in her right eye, as if she were being gouged, stabbed, dismembered, and so Cassandra flew
backward with a wail of agony, clutching her eye so that the Amulet of Caldys
fell from her fingers and clattered against the stone altar over which she had
been chanting for the past three days and nights without cease.
She
was sobbing and she couldn’t quite help herself; the pain had been so sudden,
so shocking, and even as it faded
away to nothing but a dull throb, the memory of it was enough to cause her to
pull in her breaths in ragged gasps.
Cassandra
had gone far away from Collinsport, far away from Maine, from the United States,
even, to the jungles on the island of Martinique and a secret altar her
mother’s mother created, and that she herself hadn’t used in nearly two
centuries. To be honest, she had
forgotten all about it; not even Nicholas had known of its existence, and he
might have been deeply, darkly interested in the power it held if he had known; but she never bothered to
tell him, as she had told him so little else about her life. It had seemed at the time, and it seemed now,
as if that had been a very wise decision indeed.
The
altar held ancient power, knew the taste of blood, animal and human, was a
place of sacrifice and darkness, and so, Cassandra thought, seemed like a
natural place to attempt to unlock the secrets of the Amulet, which might hold
the key to saving them all.
Somewhere,
within the night-heart of the jungle, throbbing around her with sultry heat, an
animal – a bird? a bat? – began to
shriek.
What
happened? Cassandra wondered, absently picking up the Amulet of Caldys. Why the pain?
What did it mean?
I don’t know!
She
smiled suddenly. She wasn’t exactly
helpless, was she. She was no mere
mortal; no Maggie, no Carolyn, no Victoria; she was not required to wait around
and wonder.
She
held out her hands, outstretched before her, and said, “Ostende mihi.”
Emerald
light flickered and then flared up between her fingers.
Her
eyes widened, her mouth gaped.
“Barnabas,”
she whispered, then snapped her fingers.
A
breath later, and the little clearing was deserted. The altar sat alone.
2
“Th-th-this
is n-not exac-c-ctly d-discreet,” Julia said through chattering teeth.
Audrey
only laughed. Enormous black wings
sprouted from her back, and she held Julia by the shoulders with talons that
had grown uncomfortably sharp. The
vampire’s wings, as they flapped through the air, reminded Julia of the sound
her mother would make during Julia’s girlhood as she hung up the dirty carpets
and beat them into cleanliness.
Don’t
look down, Julia told herself, don’t look down, don’t …
But
of course she did.
“Oh,”
she whimpered.
“You
shouldn’t look down,” Audrey advised her cheerfully.
“T-tell
me that we’re near,” Julia said, wishing madly for a warmer coat. Stupid almost-winter in Maine, she thought
darkly. The little lights of Collinsport
far, far below her sparkled prettily,
as if mocking her.
“We’re
near,” Audrey said immediately. “I can
feel him.”
“That’s
comforting,” Julia grumbled. A thought
occurred to her. “Have you always been
able to sense him?”
“Most
of the time,” Audrey said. “Not
always. We have a connection, I guess
you’d say. I can’t read his mind or
anything, but when he’s nearby … I can feel
him.”
Julia
pondered this for a moment, closing her eyes tightly. As her stomach continued to gallop around
wildly inside her, she found that focusing on the problem at hand helped it to
settle. Audrey would be able to find
Barnabas, wherever he was. And Barnabas
would be able to provide a distraction that would, hopefully, allow them to
stop Gerard from helping the Enemy manifest as a corporeal being. But this newest bit of information Audrey
provided her was fascinating. Vampires
felt a connection to their maker, the vampire who created them? So a psychic link of some kind exists, Julia
thought. If it works both ways, she
realized with a spark of excitement that nullified, for the moment, the intense
nausea she felt as they flew over the countryside surrounding Collinsport, then
Barnabas will be able to find Tom Jennings!
“We’re
here,” Audrey said, and with no warning, they dived, and Julia would have
screamed if her breath hadn’t been snatched away by a sudden gust of icy cold
wind. Audrey released her inches above
the ground and she tumbled, couldn’t help herself, and rolled over several
times, the wind knocked out of her.
She
sat up, gasping, glaring. “That was
completely unnecessary,” she snarled between gasps.
Audrey
watched her passively. “Sorry,” she
said, and Julia wondered again at the mind of a vampire, which seemed so like
and, yet, so very unlike that of a human being, especially the human being they
had once been. “I’m still pretty new at
this.”
“Where
are we?” Julia stood, brushing herself
off, but the moment the words emerged from her lips, she knew. She recognized the house because it had been
one of the focal points of the supernatural nonsense that plagued Collinwood
last winter around this time: the
so-called House by the Sea, or Seaview, a mansion built by Gregory Collins in
the 19th century and occupied by Nicholas Blair and Maggie Evans
until recently. Since Maggie had turned
her back on her darker nature, she had abandoned her evil castle and returned
to her father’s cottage, and since then the house had sat empty. All by itself.
A
line from Shirley Jackson suddenly occurred to her: “Whatever walked there, walked alone.”
Julia
shivered.
Audrey
was glaring at the house, and her eyes, as Julia watched, grew a darker and
darker crimson until they were nearly black.
“He’s in there,” she growled.
“With her. He’s hurt.
She hurt him.” Those terrible eyes flickered to
Julia’s. “And he’s afraid.”
3
Roxanne
nonchalantly wiped the goo off the dagger on the leg of her long cotton hippie
skirt and beamed down into the tortured, ruined face below her. “Poor Barnabas,” she simpered. “I suppose you needed that eye. Ah, well.
I’d love to tell you that it will regenerate, but as you’ve probably
noticed that under my attentions –” and she examined the Dagger of Ereshkigal
“— your wounds haven’t exactly been responsive to your healing powers, have
they.”
Barnabas
could make no sound, so great was the pain.
He could barely think. My eye, he
thought when he could, my eye my eye my god my eye …
Roxanne
leaned down close to him, inches away from his face, and she was no longer beaming. “The time has come, Mr. Collins,” she
whispered. Her breath was the stench of
rotten meat, of graves exploded outward.
“For you to tell me everything.”
He
wanted to tell her to perform on herself some colorful action to which Willie
had once referred under his breath, but he couldn’t make the necessary
operations required for the release from his mouth of logical speech.
“Julia
Hoffman,” Roxanne said clearly. “She
travelled to 2014. She met your family
there. She nearly died. She was supposed
to die, Mr. Collins. If she had, she
would have remained trapped in a loop, a vicious circle that would, somehow,
maintain the status quo. Because of this
loop, because of its great miscalculation in killing her in order to fulfill
its own purpose, the Enemy would fail, the world would be safe. You would die, unfortunately, and so would
all your friends and family, but the world, Mr. Collins … the world would be safe. Do
you understand?”
He
tried to nod. Misery settled over him,
more penetrating than the pain blazing away in the gory socket where his eye
used to lie.
“So
you have to tell me,” Roxanne whispered.
“Something happened in 2014 to save Dr. Hoffman’s hide, and you know
what it is. Or who it is. And you’re going
to tell me. And then I’m going to kill
you.” Her lips brushed against his
earlobe. “I’ll make it quick, I promise
you.”
“Why
don’t you ask me yourself.”
Her voice, Barnabas thought, and panic
fluttered inside him. No, he thought,
no, she can’t be here, she shouldn’t be here now, no, no, no, no …
“Julia,”
he croaked.
Because
it was. He could see through his one
good eye that Julia was in the room somehow, and she wasn’t alone. Audrey stood beside her, enormous black wings
unfolded from her back, her hands planted firmly, heroically, on her hips.
He
wanted to cry out a warning to them, if only he could. He wanted to warn them.
They
were both doomed.
4
“Oh,
Barnabas,” Julia whispered when she saw him, really saw him, as she and Audrey descended into that pit of hell
beneath the main floor of Seaview. His
eye, Julia thought, pain gouging her at the sight of his face, his poor dear
face; what has that bitch done to his
eye?
“Dr.
Hoffman,” Roxanne Drew said mockingly, rising and bowing a little, “just in the
nick of time. However did you manage it,
my dear?” She laughed, and Julia could
see how her face was growing more monstrous with every moment, rippling,
shifting into something grotesque. And
she was holding something – a knife, a dagger perhaps, curved, and red with
Barnabas’ blood.
“You
underestimate me,” Julia said. “You want
to know how I escaped from the Enemy in the future? He
underestimated me too.”
“A
singularly unfortunate thing to do, apparently,” Roxanne said. “No matter.
I suppose I could’ve just kidnapped you instead of your poor, dear
Barnabas, but this …” She plunged the knife into Barnabas’ chest again, then
drew the knife out immediately. Julia
cried out and moved forward, but Audrey held her back. “… this
was just too much fun to resist.”
“I’m
going to kill you,” Julia said in a thick, guttural voice.
“You
should really consider your options,”
Roxanne said, then casually licked the blood from the blade. “I’m here to help, dearie, which Barnabas
could probably explain to you if he were in any condition to say anything.”
“And
you know I truly doubt it,” Julia said.
“Let
me kill her,” Danielle Roget growled.
“Time has been rolled and unrolled, ripped and sewn back together again
in patterns that I do not like at all. Let me kill her with that blade. I want to taste her blood.”
“Danielle,”
Edith said quietly, and Danielle whirled away furiously, her arms folded over
her breasts.
“Don’t
worry, Julia,” Audrey said, and stepped forward, “I’m not going to let any of
these honky bastards lay even a finger
on you.”
“A
lovely, if not misguided, sentiment, my dear,” Count Petofi “You don’t seem
to understand your place on the chessboard, I’m afraid. You aren’t even a pawn.” And he thrust out his disgusting hand, and a
red bolt of energy flew from his squat, fat fingers and knocked Audrey across
the room. Julia cried out. The little vampire rolled over once and then
lay where she fell, her eyes closed.
said in his
rasping, bubbling voice.
“You
killed her,” Julia said accusingly.
Petofi
puffed out his chest, looked affronted.
“I did no such thing,” he said, pooching out his enormous, livery lower
lip. “I just took her off the board …
for the moment.” He looked her up and
down , his eyes magnified to ridiculous proportions behind the lenses of his
glasses. “My dear Dr. Hoffman,” he
said. She could smell him, somehow fishy
and dirty and … and unwashed, despite his fancy clothes and well-groomed curly
mass of hair. Her stomach turned over
again. “So we meet at last. Or, should I say, again?”
“I
have never met you,” she said, biting down on the vomit that wanted to rise up
and out of her in a tide.
“Time,”
Danielle grunted unhappily.
“My
associate, Mademoiselle Roget, makes a valuable point,” Petofi said, grinning. “Because, the fact remains, Doctor, that we have met before. In other timelines that, unfortunately, no
longer exist. In one of them, as you
know, I killed you. And your ghost
appeared to prevent me from destroying your friend the vampire. And,” and he cast a dark glare in the
direction of Danielle Roget, “after that, I was quickly dispatched by my associate.” Danielle looked away, rolling her eyes in
exasperation. “But this is neither the
time nor the place to discuss recriminations.
No, my dear Dr. Hoffman. We are
interested in this power of yours.”
She
thrust out her chin and it trembled even as she scowled at him, made her most
ferocious face. “I have no power,” she
said.
“Perhaps
not while you live,” Petofi chortled.
“But your ghost, now. Your very
persistent spirit has proven, in several instances, to possess an incredibly
potent power: that of time travel. You traveled to 1795, your ghost traveled to
1897, and, before the future was changed, your ghost again traveled from the year
2014 back to this present time.
“And
we,” Petofi grinned, leaning in so that he was mere inches from Julia’s furious
countenance, “we want to know how you
have accomplished this final feat. That
is, how did you break free of the time loop and return to 1968 as a living
woman and not a spirit?”
“I
wouldn’t tell you even if I knew the answer,” Julia snarled, and cried out when
Petofi backhanded her. She touched her
cheek where it stung and, thinking of Angelique, snarled, “You’ll be sorry you
did that!”
“Will
I?” Petofi mused, then chuckled his dark amusement. “Somehow I don’t feel that I will.”
“Enough,”
Roxanne said, clapping her hands briskly.
“Keep your paws off her, Petofi.
We need her on our side.”
“That
will never happen,” Julia said icily.
“You’d
be surprised,” Roxanne purred. “During
times of war, the strangest of allegiances are formed.”
“You
want to fight the Enemy,” Julia said as sudden understanding washed over
her. “You … you aren’t on his side!”
“He
isn’t a he at all,” Roxanne said, shaking her head. “And yes, we seek to destroy the Enemy, just
as you do.”
“You
aren’t anything like us,” Julia
growled. “You will do whatever it takes,
won’t you. Even kill if you have to. Innocent people will die.”
“You
don’t understand the stakes in this game.
It’s not only this world, but all
the worlds. The Enemy is just that
powerful, and I’m sorry, Dr. Hoffman, but one particular branch of the Collins
family and their friends seem like a worthy sacrifice when one considers everyone else in existence.” She snickered. “And since when are they – or any of you – innocent?”
Julia
hesitated, then turned away. Her face
worked miserably. “Let Barnabas go. Let us
go.”
“The
Enemy needs him,” Roxanne said immediately.
“So you’ll forgive me if I say, ‘No way in hell.’”
“Then
you’ll forgive me,” Julia said, grinning, “if I promise you that I will destroy
you.”
Roxanne
stepped forward, her eyes glowing crimson, her jaw stretching, fangs bristling,
her tongue flopping out, pointed and searching through the air. She reached for Julia then, and her hands
became enormous claws. “We’ll see,” the
thing chortled, “we’ll sssssssee who destroyssssss who …”
Julia
blanched then, and thought clearly, Goddamnit, I’m going to die … again; when the room was filled with a
flood of sudden darkness and icy, icy coldness, and the darkness threw Petofi
and the others in Roxanne’s army back against all the walls in the basement
room; Roxanne herself was thrown to the ground, and lay in a heap beside
Audrey, who was only now beginning to groan and pick herself back up again.
Julia
blinked; the darkness withdrew; Cassandra was in the room. Her eyes were black oil slicks; her hair
floated around her head like inky serpents; black lightning crackled around her
in jagged shards. “GET AWAY FROM THEM,”
she commanded, and her voice rolled over them all like thunder.
“Mrs.
Collins,” Roxanne said, sitting up, blood from both nostrils twining together
and smearing her grin an unpleasant crimson, “how nice to see you this
evening. I was hoping you would make an
appearance, I sincerely was.”
Cassandra
said nothing, merely cast Roxanne a dark glance, then turned her attention to
Barnabas. She made no gestures, but the
invisible ropes that bound him flared up with green energy and dissolved; then
Barnabas himself rose into the air, his head lolling, blood running in a
ceaseless tide from his ruined face, and Cassandra turned accusingly back to
Roxanne. “The Dagger of Ereshkigal,” she
said, and Roxanne nodded, pleased. “You
stupid bitch,” Cassandra sighed, and sketched her fingers rapidly through the
air. Eldritch energy crackled Barnabas,
surrounded him in a cocoon, and within seconds he was utterly lost from sight.
“Even
your powers can’t cure him completely,” Roxanne jeered.
“He
will heal quickly enough,” Cassandra said.
“I suppose I don’t need to ask where on this earth – or elsewhere – you
acquired the Dagger.” Her eyes flickered
to Edith, and she smiled a little, unpleasantly. “Was it you, my dear? My, but you’re pretty once again. Time has been kind to you since I dispatched
you, and with such ease. Edith Collins, one of the legendary beauties
of the Collins family. So sad how
quickly that beauty faded in the end.”
“Miranda,”
Edith said tightly.
Cassandra
cackled. “Is that all you have to say to
me? My dear, how you disappoint me. I bested you by barely raising a finger in
1897. And without the help of Roxanne
and Count Petofi, I have no doubt bested you would have remained.”
“As
I did best you, Miranda,” Petofi growled.
Cassandra’s smile faded, and she bared her teeth. “So don’t gloat, witch. Your time will come.” His enormous lips split into a devilish
grin. “Sooner than you anticipate,
perhaps.”
“Doubtful.” She closed her eyes and began to weave her
hands through the air; in that moment, Julia saw what was about to happen and
tried to cry out, but Danielle’s hands were somehow over her mouth, strangling
her, keeping the words of warning inside.
Cassandra’s spell sent
giant cracks spiraling out across the floor, and the earth rumbled and began to
shake; but Roxanne was quick, quick as death, and she ran forward with that
twisted knife or whatever it was in her hand, and Edith Collins thrust out
three fingers and screamed, “Cultrum,
sectis!”; and Cassandra opened her eyes, too late, too late; and the knife
in Roxanne’s hands sliced through the air beside her, and Julia blinked and
shook her head to clear it, but it would not be cleared, because where
Cassandra Collins stood there were now two
women, and one of them, blonde, terrified, a young woman in an olive green
maid’s gown with white ruffles on its apron, uttered a shrill, rabbit-like scream
and then collapsed onto the floor, which was rapidly beginning to crumble and
break into enormous stone chunks.
“Angelique!”
Julia cried, began to run forward … then stopped. Because there weren’t simply two women, there
were two Angeliques: the blonde maid-servant collapsed, sobbing,
on the ground, and the other: black hair,
black eyes, skin white as salt, and those terrible magical symbols like black
veins, moving, moving, always moving, marching up and down her skin. This terrible creature wore no expression,
but turned her monster’s eyes onto Julia, and in that awful moment time seemed
to be moving backward to the night when Angelique destroyed Victoria Winters.
Julia
turned, terrified, exalted, furious, to face Roxanne, who stood over the
quivering blonde woman with her dreadful dagger still raised. “What have you done to her?” Julia cried.
Roxanne
smiled her terrible smile. “I have given
her what she has wished for all along,” Roxanne said. “Freedom.”
An
explosion of mystical energy erupted from the still-dark haired version of
Angelique, and Julia stuttered back down to her knees. It was staring at her, Julia could ascertain
that much, but it was bathed in a silver-white glow that made looking directing
at it impossible. “MORTAL WOMAN,” the
thing that was not Angelique, was not Cassandra, wasn’t anything remotely
human, thundered, “LEAVE THIS PLACE … WHILE I STILL ALLOW YOU TO LEAVE.”
Roxanne
took a step forward, but the moment the Angelique/Cassandra-thing turned
her/its gaze upon the vampire, she flew backward and rebounded off the
wall. The dagger fell from her
hand. Julia cried out; in that moment
she missed Audrey skittering after it, seize it, stuff it into the pocket of
her jeans, then hoist herself back to her feet.
Julia
crawled over to the sobbing blonde woman and turned her over. She squinted, then recoiled. It was Angelique, all right, but younger
somehow, dewy, Julia supposed the
word was, her hair a dark golden blonde, her eyes wide and greenish-blue and
full of a terror Julia had never seen there before. “H-help me,” Angelique whispered.
“I’m
going to try,” Julia said between gritted teeth. She scooped one arm beneath the other woman’s
back and pulled her up so that she stood, swaying in Julia’s arms.
The
air was full of smoke and the sounds of screams. The Angelique/Cassandra thing had raised its
arms, and the walls around them were tumbling.
The earth exploded upward in dark black, foul-smelling chunks; beneath
lay darkness that glowed a sinister red.
The expression on the demon-woman’s face was almost serene, Julia
thought. Petofi lowered his head like a
bull and ran at her, but he burst immediately into flames and sank to his
knees, wailing. To his right, Edith
Collins stood chanting, her eyes closed.
When that same bank of flames rose up, Julia could tell that she had
erected a force-field of some kind, like a plastic bubble that the flames could
not penetrate. Or could they? As she watched, Julia saw that the bubble
around Edith grew smaller and smaller.
Finally, with a shriek, she turned and ran, the flames exploding around
her as she pelted away. Danielle Roget
seized her hand and they fled together, disappearing into the smoke.
Julia
turned, Angelique still at her shoulder, and Tom stood before her. His face was so white it was nearly blue, and
his eyes blazed like copper coins. When
he smiled she saw his fangs, beautiful, white like ivory. “Juuuuuulia,” he crooned, and suddenly where
he stood a bat hovered, beating the air with its wings. It turned, its wings buffeting, and was gone.
“Come
on, Julia!” Audrey roared over the crackling of the fire and the destruction of
Seaview that was happening around them.
Julia saw with relief that she had slung Barnabas, unmoving, unconscious
or dead, Julia couldn’t tell, over her shoulder. Some of Cassandra’s emerald magical energy
still crackled in tiny lightning bolts all over him, but each one grew smaller,
until it seemed as if all of it had dissipated.
“Come on,” Audrey roared
again, and seized Julia by the arm, “shake your ass, girl!”
And
they ran, then. Up the steps, which
collapsed behind them as they went. The
kitchen, when they burst into it, was already a shambles: broken crockery, shattered windows, cracks
running zigzags up the walls, and fire, of course. Fire everywhere. Angelique was moaning beside her, but Julia
couldn’t understand her, if indeed she was actually mouthing any words. They ran, the four of them, through the
parlor as the wallpaper crawled with deadly flames and lamps exploded, missiles
around them, and the windows coughed their glass onto the lawn outside. They fled, across the flaming carpet, hit the
door, rebounded, Audrey kicked at it until it flew open, and then they were
outside, inhaling the sweet night air whether they needed to or not, but only
for a moment, because the house was exploding behind them, or imploding,
collapsing: destroyed, Julia thought.
She
paused in her flight, Angelique still sobbing at her side, and shielded her
eyes with her free hand. There were
people inside after all, she saw, or thought she saw; children with white faces
and holes where their eyes should be, and suddenly she remembered the horror
stories of Seaview that Elizabeth had told her one night not too long after she
first came to Collinwood to avoid the nervous breakdown she was certain was on
its way. “Oh, the packs of children,”
Elizabeth had laughed, then her own laughter died away. “I suppose it’s not so funny after all, if
you think about it. They were said to
have killed him, you know, Gregory Collins, their own father. They formed packs, rival factions. Very Lord
of the Flies. Eventually they were …
put down.” Sip of tea, delicate,
lady-like. “So the legends say, of
course. But legends are just
legends. I’m certain there’s no truth to
it.”
Only
there they were, the children of Seaview:
milky white, crying out, ghostly blood or ectoplasm running down their
faces as the flames took their home.
Whatever walked there…
Julia
shivered.
The
windows were empty. There were no
children.
“Look,”
Audrey said, and pointed.
The
Angelique/Cassandra thing, whatever it truly was, stood before them, but she
wasn’t looking at them. She watched the
house instead. Something exploded
inside, but she didn’t react. Julia
wished she could see her face, then retracted her wish. There was something deeply unnerving about
whatever it was Roxanne had done to Cassandra in a way that Julia hadn’t
experienced before, even after Angelique initially donned the Mask of
Ba’al. No, being around this … this
other thing, she thought, was very
much like stepping a toe beneath a stream of water in the bathtub on a cold
morning in December to test its temperature, and finding it unchangingly, icily
cold.
“She’s
moving,” Audrey said. Indeed, as she
said the words, they watched as the Angelique/Cassandra thing lifted its arms
and ascended, flying high above them, higher and higher, until she was a tiny
speck in the night sky, and then she was utterly gone from their sight.
“J-Julia?”
It
was Barnabas. He twisted in Audrey’s
grip, then, as Julia moved toward him, he turned his face so he could see
her. She stifled a moan as she saw the
damage. The wounds had healed, but they
left scars, terrible scars. And his
right eye was worst of all: a dark hole,
completely empty, save for the thick pink scar tissue left in the wake of
Cassandra’s healing spell.
“Oh,
Barnabas,” Julia whispered.
“We
have to get away from this place,” Audrey hissed. “Get back to the Old House, like, five
minutes ago.” She glanced around. “I don’t know where Roxanne’s pity party took
itself off to, and I don’t care. Maybe
they’re all dead. But I sure as hell
don’t want to stay around here and find out, so let’s shake a tailfeather!”
“Leave
me,” Angelique moaned. “Leave me, leave
me, let me die, let me die!”
“Shut
her up,” Audrey snarled.
“Angelique,”
Julia said with as much tenderness as she could muster. “We’re not going to leave you. I promise you. We’re going to get you back to the Old House
and assess the damage. Then maybe you
can use your powers to figure out –”
“My
powers?” Angelique said, then tittered obscenely. “My powers?” And she screamed insane laughter that
de-evolved quickly enough into actual screams.
“My powers? My powers? My powers?” She cackled, then the laughter died, and the
screams, and she stared, a child barely out of her teens, into Julia’s
face. “I have no powers,” she said. Her face was frozen, perfectly placid, and
wet with tears. Her eyes ate up her
face. She said, “I am a witch no longer.
“I
am human.”
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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