CHAPTER
114: Apocalypse Season
by Nicky
Voiceover by Thayer David: “The
end is approaching … the end of days, and nights, and people, and stories. For the Enemy continues to gather its forces,
while at the same time Angelique and Laura Collins have joined forces for the
same nefarious purpose: to end all life
as we know it.”
1
“No
one knows I have this,” Audrey said, and held the curving blade up to the light
that glowed warmly, benignly, from the lamp beside the little table Sam Evans
crafted when Maggie was seven and he was experimenting with woodwork. Outside the Evans cottage, both women could
hear the ever-present crashing of the sea, and they paused, listening to it,
out there in the dark.
Finally,
Maggie said, “You know, I’m becoming just the teeniest bit tired of everyone
coming to me when they have a problem.
Unless that problem can be solved with a cup of coffee and a slice of
apple pie. Then I’m your girl. But this magic junk? Can’t you guys understand that I’m trying to
wean myself off of it?”
“I
do understand,” Audrey said patiently – well, patiently for her – and tried to
smile. “But you have to understand, Miss
Evans –” She paused, clearly waiting for
Maggie to assure that, no, it was quite all right to call her by her first
name.
Maggie’s
smile was wide and warm. “You can call
me Miss Evans,” she said.
Audrey
frowned. “You have to understand, Miss Evans. I’m new to this supernatural jazz too. Before a few months ago, I had no idea there
were such things as vampires, werewolves, and witches, much less that they all
boogied down in the same town.”
“Collinsport
is a fun place,” Maggie said,
simpering. She held out her hand. “May I?”
Audrey
hesitated.
“Since
you came all this way,” Maggie sighed, “and since clearly I am going to help
you, you might as well at least pretend to trust me. Or begin to.”
Audrey
bit her lower lip, then reached over and handed the Dagger of Erishkegal to the
witch.
She
looked at it for a long time. “It hums,”
she murmured. Audrey raised an
eyebrow. Maggie smiled. “With magic.
It’s powerful.”
“I
know that,” Audrey said. “I’ve seen the
damned thing in action.”
“I’ve
never heard of this particular goddess before,” Maggie said. Her eyes were closed now. Little black sparks had begun to jump and
circle and collide around her fingertips.
Audrey watched them nervously.
“There were so many areas of the magical world Nicholas never got around
to explaining to me.”
“Nicholas?”
Maggie
cracked one eye. “My former lover,” she
said. “A warlock.” Simply.
“He’s dead now.”
She
killed him, Audrey thought, but wisely held her tongue.
Maggie
handed her back the dagger, then leaned back against the sofa and the hideous
motley afghan that hung over it, and sipped her coffee delicately. “This is the third time in as many months
that I’ve had visitors begging me for my magical help. I’m beginning to feel like I’m only here to
offer exposition. Or to be a deus ex
machine. That’s not in the cards for me,
sweetmeat.”
Audrey
blinked. “I don’t know what that means,”
she said.
“It
means,” Maggie said, “that it’s about time I got something out of this deal.”
“What
do you want?” Audrey said, and shifted uncomfortably against the scratchy
fabric of the threadbare recliner Maggie had offered her.
“I
don’t know yet,” Maggie said, and pursed her lips. “Oh wait.
Yes I do.” Her eyes flooded with
sudden black; Audrey leaped up from her chair, but Maggie wasn’t focused on her
at all. She seized the dagger back, then
rent the air beside her with it and commanded, “Cultrum, sectis!”
Audrey
gasped.
Maggie
still sat on the couch.
Entirely
by herself.
“Damn
it,” she said at last. Her eyes had
returned to their regular fawn-brown coloring.
She threw the dagger onto the coffee table with a snarl of disgust. “I suppose it only had one really good go in
it.”
“What
were you trying to do?” Audrey said furiously.
“You don’t know what that thing can do!
You haven’t seen it! It could
have killed you!”
Maggie
shrugged, and sipped calmly again at her coffee. “I suppose it could have,” she said
reflectively. “But it didn’t.” Then, lowly, quietly: “Wouldn’t have been a great loss anyway.”
“I
don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“You
don’t know me,” Maggie said in that low, flat voice. “That’s probably a good thing. I’m a terrible person, it turns out, or, at
the very least, an uninteresting one.”
Audrey
laughed. “You’re a witch. That’s about as far from uninteresting as you
can –”
“Oh
sure,” Maggie said. “Just another witch,
here in the fabulous fishing town of Collinsport, ME. Right next to Angelique and Edith and
Nicholas and Petofi and any other sucker dumb enough to practice this
horseshit.”
“Why
does that make you a bad person?”
Maggie
shook her head and glared into her coffee cup.
“I killed my father, for starters,” she said. “I didn’t have to. And I can blame the magic, but that’s too
easy. I wanted to. Had for a long time, I guess. And maybe that
makes me a psychopath and not a bad person.
Hell, you say potato, I say crazy person.”
“I
don’t think you’re crazy.”
“What
do you know?” Maggie said with sudden fury.
“Pardon the pun, but you got sucked into this garbage in the third
act. You have no idea what it means to
live in this town all your life but to never feel … to never really know what
it’s like to …” Suddenly she put her
hands in front of her face.
Audrey,
unsure, watched her for a long moment before she finally knelt down beside
her. “There, there,” she said, and
patted her on the head.
“Oh,
leave me alone!” Maggie screamed. “God,
why can’t you all just leave me alone?”
Audrey
said nothing.
Maggie
looked at her, her eyelids streaked with black chunks of mascara. “There’s an apocalypse coming, isn’t that
what you all think?”
“I
guess you could call it that.”
“And
the world is supposed to end.”
“All
of ‘em, according to Angelique.”
“Maybe
that’s not such a bad idea,” Maggie said snuffily. She waved her hand and a handkerchief
materialized.
“Neat
trick,” Audrey said as the other woman blew her nose.
“Comes
in handy sometimes, I’ll admit it,” Maggie said. “No, I’m wrong. I don’t want the world to end. That’s why I’m helping you. Why I’ve helped the others. But I was hoping …” She sniffled.
“I was hoping that the Dagger would separate me from my magic. Just like it did for Angelique.”
“Maybe,”
Audrey said, “maybe Angelique is different from you.”
“Or
maybe the Dagger works differently,” Maggie said thoughtfully. “I hadn’t thought of that. It may require … fuel.”
“What
kind of fuel?” Audrey was rapidly
growing tired of anything related to magic.
Suspicion sharpened her tone.
“Some
mystical objects,” Maggie said carefully, “particularly those of the darker
magical persuasion, need a catalyst to cause them to work. The darker the object, the darker or more
dangerous the catalyst.”
“What
kinds of catalysts?” Audrey was now
bored beyond belief. She examined her
fingernails and wondered if, by sharpening them, she might more effectively
slash a throat. How did one go about
slashing a throat? She wasn’t certain. But she thought she’d like to try.
“Blood
is the most common, and it must usually be human to cause the spell to work
properly. Sometimes the object requires
a death. With a … a thing like this, and
since it belongs to a goddess of death, I’m willing to bet the person casting
the spell would need to kill someone.
With the dagger.”
Audrey
was suddenly all ears. “You don’t say,”
she purred, and picked the knife up again.
“Anyone
you have in mind?” And Maggie’s smile showed all her white, white teeth.
2
“Baby,”
Sebastian said, and kissed Chris’ forehead, “it isn’t the end of the
world.” They were snuggled together in
the bed in Chris’ cottage, and the fire crackled merrily out in the living
room. But they were warm enough in the
cozy little bedroom, even with the winter wind whooping it up outside. There would be a storm, Sebastian had
predicted, later on, a Nor’easter, a real bitch. “Sometimes,” he had said, “our worlds aren’t
so different.”
“But
that’s what I’m afraid of,” Chris said now, glumly. “That that’s exactly what it is. The
end. Of everything.”
“I
didn’t hurt him. He didn’t hurt me. He didn’t hurt you.”
“But
he wanted to. He would’ve tried to. And you …”
Chris looked away, niggling his lower lip with his teeth. “You shouldn’t have done that,” he whispered.
Sebastian’s
smile was roguish. “Done what?”
“You
know.”
“Don’t
hide like that. Get your head out from
under the covers. Threatened him, you
mean?”
“You
wouldn’t have really …” His voice
trailed off, and he peered at his lover above the covers with eyes that were
still flecked with emerald shards amidst the brown.
“Torn
off his head? Strewn his limbs from here
to Collinsport?” Sebastian
shrugged. “Probably not.”
“Probably.”
“Christopher,
come on.” Sebastian nuzzled his neck,
nipped delicately at his earlobe. Chris
shivered. His toes curled, and he
pressed his icy feet against Sebastian’s, which were blazing. “You know what it’s like to be the
Animal. You’re beginning to gain
control. You’re beginning to find
strength in its power. I’ve never lived
with the wolf the way you have: the
blackouts, the murders. I have never
killed. Your feet,” he added, “are
freezing, by the by.”
“But
you wanted to. With J –” He took a breath. “With Nathan.
And I’m sorry. But they’re
getting warmer.”
“To
kill. To protect you? To save your life?” His face darkened; his eyes flashed in the
dimness of the room. “I might.”
“I
feel bad for him,” Chris whispered.
“Yeah,”
Sebastian said unexpectedly, and Chris peered at him, owl-eyed, “so do I.”
“You
do? Why?” He sat up on one elbow.
Sebastian
stared at the ceiling. “Because I think
he really does love you. And that eats
at him. From what you’ve told me, and
from what I know about the man just by meeting him, I have managed to surmise
that Nathan Forbes is an egocentric, self-obsessed, not particularly
imaginative sonofabitch. He’s also a
liar.”
“Yeah,”
Chris said sadly. “He is.”
“But
there is one thing he hasn’t lied about:
and that’s his feelings about you.”
Small: “They scare me.”
“They
should, baby. He almost turned himself
into a vampire to get you to love him.
That scares me too.” He touched
Chris’ hair, marveled at how fine it felt, how soft it was. “Losing you.
That thought.”
Now
he smiled, warm and genuine. His eyelids
were fluttering. “You aren’t going to.”
“Be
careful when you say things like that in this town, near that house. We’re never far away from the edge; you know
that. From losing everything; from
losing it all.”
“Do
you ever wish,” Chris said sleepily, “that I was him?”
Sebastian
froze. His fingers stopped their dance
in his hair. Chris didn’t notice. “Him?”
“Him,”
Chris said. His eyes were closed. He was near to dozing, almost asleep. “The other Chris Jennings.”
“Collins,”
Sebastian whispered. “His name was
Christopher Collins.” But Chris was
sleeping; his eyelashes fluttered, and his chest rose, his breath a gentle
susurration, slow, slow, slow, and deep.
Sebastian watched him. Outside
the wind screamed and cackled like a wicked witch in a fairy tale, and
Sebastian, not sleeping, watched on throughout the night.
3
“Barnabas,
thank god!” Elizabeth threw open the
doors of Collinwood to admit her cousin, whose arms were occupied with the
unconscious body of David Collins, head lolling, mouth agape, eyes still
closed.
“Help
me with the drawing room doors, Elizabeth,” Barnabas commanded. She did as she was bade, and, hands clasping
and warring with each other, followed them into the drawing room. The windows outside were choked with the
skeins of snow that swirled relentlessly out there in the blackness, and she
cast an uneasy glance in their direction before she knelt at her nephew’s side.
“Is
he all right?” she whimpered. She brushed
a knuckle against David’s cheek, then drew it back hastily. “Oh Barnabas, I was so scared –”
“He
is alive,” Barnabas said grimly. “But
for how much longer, no one may say.”
“Barnabas!”
Elizabeth gasped, and pressed her hands to her cheeks. “Your eye!
What’s happened to your eye!”
Barnabas
bowed his head with a sigh of deep weariness.
“It is a long story, dear cousin,” he said.
“But
you’ll tell me,” she said, with such firmness that Barnabas, surprised, lifted
his head to gaze at her in amazement.
“You must tell me! We have kept
too many secrets in this house for far too long, Barnabas. That ends now, this night.”
“I
don’t know what you mean,” he said weakly.
“You
can’t hide things from me any longer,” she said. “I know too much. I know … what you are.”
His
good eye grew wide. “Elizabeth!”
“You
needn’t deny it any longer.” Her cheeks
were high with color; her breath came in little pants; and he could hear her
heart thrumming away in her chest like an excited bird. “I know that you are Barnabas Collins … the only Barnabas Collins, and that you died
in 1796, and that you live on, somehow … as one of the living dead.”
… as one of the living dead …
Barnabas
moaned. It was too much – too similar to
the words his mother had uttered before she died in his arms, the poison she
consumed performing its job all too well as it burned away her insides. “You know,” he whispered.
She
lifted her head even higher, impossibly.
“And I don’t care.”
He
looked at her. He gaped; he was unable
to stop gaping.
“You
are a Collins,” she said firmly, proudly.
“And you saved us. I know
that. Something terrible happened to us
all and you went back in time and you stopped it. I don’t know how, and I don’t know what it
was, not exactly, but I know that you love us enough to risk your own life, and
that means the world to me, Barnabas.
Even if you are a … a …”
“A
vampire,” he said softly. “You may say
the word, dearest Elizabeth.”
“A
victim of a curse,” she said firmly.
“You fought it and you triumphed.”
“I
have not triumphed,” he said sadly.
“And
yet you continue to try. Barnabas, don’t
you see? An apocalypse is an
ending. It destroys the old and out of
the ashes of that old something new arises.
In the wild there are forest fires, and they annihilate what stands in
their path, and after the rains fall and the fire is extinguished there is new
life and new growth, and that’s the cycle of life. It’s natural,
Barnabas. Our old lives are dead. They’re gone and they aren’t coming
back.” Her eyes were shining. She put a hand on his shoulder, and he
surprised himself by covering her hand with his own. She did not shy away from its cold and clamminess. “But we are still here. We endure.
And we will always
endure. Not every apocalypse is
something bad, Barnabas.”
He
held her hand for a moment longer, then brushed it with his icy lips. “You are an amazing woman, Elizabeth,” he
said.
“Not
really,” she replied. “If anything, I am
only now discovering who I really am.
How strong I can be. I tried to
save my sister from something dark and terrible a long time ago, just as I
tried to save her daughter. Both times I
failed and I let the darkness consume them.
I will not fail this time, I swear it.”
They
looked at each other as the fire crackled in the hearth and the wind screamed
outside, and there was real understanding there between them for the first
time; Barnabas opened his mouth, not completely certain of what he was about to
say, and suddenly David stirred, and cried out, and they were at his side in an
instant.
“The
fire,” David moaned, “the flames – it comes!
It comes!”
“David!”
Elizabeth cried.
“David,”
Barnabas said, and touched his face gently, “David, are you awake? Can you hear our voices?”
“Mother,
mother,” David whimpered. “She’s
gone! Mother, where are you?”
“He’s
burning up,” Barnabas said.
Elizabeth
strode toward the phone. “I’ll call Dr.
Reeves,” she said.
“He
won’t do any good.”
“Then
Julia –”
“Julia
sent me here with him,” Barnabas said miserably. “I’m afraid that we are unable to rely on
medical science for an explanation.”
“Laura,”
Elizabeth said darkly. “Barnabas, she
was here, only an hour or so ago. I
thought …” She hesitated, unsure of how
to proceed. “I thought we had come to some kind of understanding. I went to make us some tea and when I came
back she was gone. I have no idea where
she is now.”
“Gone,”
David, thrashing, gasped, “gone, gone, gone!”
“This
malady is supernatural,” Barnabas said.
“Then,”
Elizabeth said with a tight little smile, “we require supernatural assistance.
“We
will hold a séance.”
4
The
shadows clustered thickly in the great hall of the monastery at St. Eustace’s
Island. Roxanne, who ordinarily felt
supremely comfortable amidst the shadows, suddenly found herself loathing
them. In her human life she had longed
to travel to London, Paris, Milan, cities of light and adventure and
excitement; it wasn’t until Gerard Stiles transformed her into the loathsome
night-thing she had become that she was able to shed her old skin and finally
break free of Collinsport, and only then had she dared to visit all those
places she had only thought to dream of before. But even then she dwelt in the shadows, still
afraid of the sun.
She
missed it suddenly, unexpectedly.
“It
was unwise to return to this place,” she said.
Neither she nor her companion had spoken after their initial, grumbled
greeting of each other.
“I
disagree,” Petofi said. “There is a
power here. The Light dwelt here once,
or its champions, but they abandoned this stronghold so that the Dark could
take its proper place.” His grin
revealed strong, square teeth. He was
wholly restored now; the power inherent in his Hand finished what her own
spells and the strength of her blood had only begun. “That means that you and I, my dear Roxanne,
are meant for a place exactly such as
this. We can grow strong here
again. We will best our enemy, or
enemies, I promise you that.”
“You
can’t know that.”
“Such
glumness. Such gloom. My dear, you must learn to trust me. I am
Count Andreas Petofi. I am infallible.”
“Not
entirely. You’ve been banished before.”
“Never
for long,” Petofi said, his smile fading a bit.
“And I don’t care to be reminded of those times. At any rate, from each ending, a new
beginning. The world changes, and you
must never forget it.”
“Isn’t
that what we’re attempting to prevent, though?” Roxanne said. She felt drained, exhausted. She hadn’t fed in three days, and the lack of
nutrition was beginning to show. Her
hair no longer gleamed with crimson fire, and there were deep-cut lines developing
beneath her eyes. Her gums had receded
so that her fang-teeth were always visible now.
“Perhaps what the Enemy wants is what is supposed to happen. Perhaps it really is time for all the worlds
to end.”
“Nonsense,”
Petofi chuckled heartily. “If you really
believed that in the depths of your non-beating heart, you would never have
expended so much of your own energy to bring each of us back the way you have.”
“Edith
–”
He
waved the Hand dismissively. “So you’ve
lost a soldier or two. That’s what
happens in a war. And they were
weak. Weak, Roxanne. Edith, Nathan,
even dear Danielle. We are better off
without them. And … there are others.
Yet to be summoned.”
“Perhaps.” Yet, still she sighed. “I have no idea what to do next. For the first time in a hundred years. That scares me silly.”
“You
don’t strike me as a woman who scares easily.”
“Once,”
and she chuckled. “As a human, a mortal,
oh sure! Collinsport is a place of
intense Darkness, as you yourself have pointed out. When I lived here with my sister, I never
knew exactly what was out there, lurking in the shadows. But I found out. And it terrified me.”
“Until
you took that Darkness for yourself,” Petofi said soothingly. “Until you allowed it to transform you that
you might better own it for yourself.
You must allow that to happen again, dearest, darlingest Roxanne. You must find strength in the Dark so that we
might triumph.”
She
touched his face lightly with the back of her hand. “You are a marvelous man, Count. Do you know that?”
His
chuckle was booming, hearty. “So I have
been told, but rarely by a woman of such grace and beauty as you possess. We will triumph, Roxanne. You must never doubt that. You must never doubt yourself.”
“I
doubt your doubt,” a pleasant voice said from above them, and both vampire and
sorcerer jumped, taken by surprise, and lifted their heads.
Angelique
and Laura floated above them, held in place by the power of the witch-goddess,
silver, sparkling. Both women wore matching
mocking smiles.
“Laura
Collins!” Roxanne gasped. “But I …” Anger flooded her and she bared her
fangs. “…I brought you here! I brought you back to this world so that you
might save your son!”
“My
son is in no danger,” Laura purred. “I
have the power now, Miss Drew. Or,” and
she flashed her spectacular smile in the direction of her companion who nodded
back at her happily, “should I say, we
have the power?”
“I
believe we do,” Angelique agreed. “I
believe we do indeed.”
“My
dear Angelique. You have grown in
stature since last we sparred,” Petofi said, and bowed stiffly. When he rose, he held the Hand aloft. It snapped and crackled with black scrawls of
energy. “However, now I find that –”
“Boring,”
Angelique said, yawning, and snapped her fingers.
Petofi,
mid-sentence, disintegrated.
First
his eyes fell in. His hair, curling,
curling, curling, curled finally into non-existence. His teeth scattered out of his skull and
exploded into tiny mushrooms of dust when they struck the monastery’s stone
floor. His clothes faded, turned white,
and shivered into threads and then into nothing. For a moment only a skeleton jumped and
jigged, held up by the invisible power in the Hand, itself sadly reduced to
bones; then the power exploded outward, and the bones clattered to the ground,
shattering into splinters and beyond as they did so.
The
dissolution took under two seconds.
Roxanne
screamed.
“The
spoils of war,” Angelique said brightly.
“Or not. Look, Laura
dearest. Not even the Hand remained, and
it supposedly held some of the most potent magicks known to this world.”
“I
avoid magic whenever possible,” Laura sniffed.
“Too unstable.”
“You’ll
pay for this,” Roxanne snarled.
“Oh,
I sincerely doubt it,” Angelique said.
“In fact, it seems that the only person paying anything around here is you.
Hubris, dear heart, hubris. After
all, if it weren’t for your thoughtful, shall we say, intervention, then my
good friend Laura Murdoch Collins and I wouldn’t be the women we are today.”
“We
certainly wouldn’t.” Laura
tittered. Flames danced on her tongue
and between her teeth.
“I
only wanted to make things better,” Roxanne wailed. “I wanted to do the right thing!”
“No
such an animal,” Angelique said. “Darling. Look. The
world is about to end. You might spend
it doing something you enjoy. Cut a bloody
swath through Collinsport would be my recommendation. Because after all,” and she cast a pointed
glance in Laura’s direction, “you haven’t much time left.”
Laura
nodded, smiled, then spread wide her arms.
She threw back her head and cried, “Let the fire come, great Ra … let it
come!”
“She
loves this part,” Angelique told Roxanne confidentially.
And
balls of fire, rolling out of nowhere, engulfed the great hall.
Screaming,
hissing like a scalded cat, Roxanne flung herself against a wall. “You’ll be sorry!” she shrieked, fading,
growing misty and indistinct, “I swear it!
I swear it!”
She
was gone, and the women were alone.
“You
giant ham,” Angelique said to Laura.
Laura,
points of fire glinting in her eyes, only smiled. “I do enjoy melodrama,” she said.
The
women linked hands. “Shall we?”
Angelique said.
Nodding,
Laura said, “Onward and upward!”
And
they vanished, leaving the fire to consume the monastery and, eventually, the
rest of the island. Only the water
stopped it from continuing on to the mainland, and even then the fire hissed
and crackled its hostility until nearly three in the morning, when a
particularly heavy snowstorm finally put out its final, baleful spark.
5
“I
don’t like this,” Carolyn whispered. The
Professor smiled his broad smile and took her hand between both of his and
squeezed it.
“We’ve
been training for this,” he whispered back.
“You’re going to be fine. You’re
stronger than ever. You’re ready for
this.”
“I
couldn’t do this without you,” she said, and smiled tightly. Then it faded. “Professor, is this really the right thing to
do?”
“We’ll
find out, won’t we?” he said, and chuckled.
Across
the drawing room from where they stood together, before the fireplace, which
provided their only illumination, Julia, Barnabas, the mortal Angelique, and
Elizabeth arranged the round table and its chairs to their satisfaction. As Carolyn watched, Angelique gingerly placed
a candelabra in the center of the table.
“The Candles of the Seven Secrets,” she had explained. “Long used to extract information from the
spirit world. Or,” and a secret smile
had danced upon her lips, “to banish hostile energy. If something … unpleasant … should appear to
us, we may simply snuff the candles to send it back to the void.”
“When
should we tell them?” Carolyn said now to the Professor.
“After
the séance,” he said. She looked pained,
and he patted her comfortingly on the shoulder.
“We need to be certain before we lead everyone over a cliff.”
“I
suppose you’re right,” she sighed. “I’d
just feel better if we knew that it would really and truly work.”
“I
believe that Julia Hoffman’s research may bear us out,” he said. “She’s been looking into the mid-nineteenth
century of your family’s history, and this woman you saw during your experience
during the last séance –”
“Leticia
Faye,” Carolyn said. “She came to
Collinwood in 1840 with Gerard Stiles and disappeared shortly afterward. No one ever found out what became of her.”
“We will,” Stokes said, and he squeezed
Carolyn’s hand again reassuringly.
“You
may take your seats now,” Angelique said.
“Without
your powers,” Barnabas said to her, “are we certain that this will even work?”
“I
don’t need my powers to hold a séance,” Angelique said tightly.
“She’s
right,” Julia interjected swiftly.
“Angelique and I have been quite successful at contacting the spirit
world in the past.”
Elizabeth,
who looked pale, simply shook her head.
Carolyn
crossed the room and laid a hand on her shoulder. “Mother, are you sure about this?” she
said. “You don’t have to –”
“I
do, though,” Elizabeth said. “I refuse
to cower in the dark any longer. It’s
time that I took action. And if
something I can do will help save my family, then by God I won’t just cover my
face and pretend it’s not happening!”
“Bravo,
Mrs. Stoddard,” Stokes said, and applauded lightly.
Elizabeth
permitted herself a tiny smile, then sat at the table. “Please join me, all of you,” she said, and,
one by one, they did as they were bade, casting nervous glances at each other
and sharing small smiles.
“The
fingers must touch,” Angelique said.
“Spread out your hands on the table.”
They obeyed. Angelique closed her
eyes and lifted her chin. “Spirits
around us,” she intoned, “those who watch us and who know. Hear our plea to you.”
“Hear
us,” the others echoed her.
Angelique’s
face had grown beatific. “Open the
door. We seek guidance in this most
crucial hour. Our enemies are aligned
against us. We beg your assistance so
that we might fight these forces and triumph!
Spirits! Do not ignore this
supplication!”
Carolyn’s
eyes closed. She hardly felt them
go. Of course it would be me, she
thought dimly, dazedly as she descended; her training in the psychic arts, as
Stokes referred to them, had progressed more quickly than either of them anticipated,
especially after her visitation from the Enemy in the guise of her once-beloved
Tony Trask. “It’s trying to scare me,”
she had told Eliot the next day, “and it has – I’m frightened. But I’m angry too. My god, Professor, this thing wants to wipe
us all out, and it’s using people we love to do it! Do you know how disgusted that makes me
feel? I want to fight it. I want to keep fighting it.” And so more crystal gazing (scrying, he
called it), more practice trances, more Latin phrasing learned, the names of
archangels, protective chants, all to strengthen her so that she could be the
warrior she wanted to be, the force she must become if they were to triumph.
I’m so sorry, Tony. I will always be sorry. So I do this for you, and for everyone else
this curse has touched. I will end it, I
swear it.
“…
she’s going into the trance …” Was that
Barnabas? She was hardly able to look at
him, but she must, she must find it
in herself to forgive him for the way he had treated her, the way he had raped her …
“…
darling? Carolyn? Oh my god …”
That was her mother, who only wanted to help. Would she survive the battle? Carolyn felt something dark and uncertain,
and she wanted to scream …
“…she’s
strong, Mrs. Stoddard …” Angelique or
Stokes? She wasn’t sure. Maybe both.
They believed in her. They
understood her.
And
so she let herself go.
Help us … help us, please, we need help …
“Come
with me.”
She
opened her eyes and gasped.
The
woman standing before her was Victoria Winters.
She
was human, smiling, restored, whole. Her
hands were folded placidly before her.
She was as Carolyn remembered her on the first night she came to
Collinwood. God, it felt forever ago. Nevertheless, she felt a spike of fear pierce
her. “I am who you think I am,” the
woman before her said.
“You’re
not that other girl, are you?” Carolyn said.
She glanced around. They were in
the drawing room, but it was different somehow.
The table was not set for a séance, and they were the only two people in
the room. She looked back, but it was
still Vicki: still wearing the plain,
drab suit she wore her first night at Collinwood, her hair restored to its
lustrous dark shade, no traces or streaks of white; her eyes were brown and
human, not the oil-slick pools that had glared at Carolyn and David as she had
tried to …
“No,”
Vicki said, and laughed softly. “No, I
am not my sister. Nor am I the monster
you fear, the one who tried her best to kill you.”
“You
shouldn’t laugh,” Carolyn said furiously.
“You shouldn’t joke!” Pain and
fury choked her like vines. “You killed
my Uncle Roger!”
“I
did,” Vicki said calmly, nodding. “And I
would’ve killed the rest of you. And I
am sorry. There’s no excuse for what I
did, and there’s no making up for it.
But I continue to try. Somehow, I
am able to – am allowed – to try.”
“You
won’t be able to make it up.” Tears
burned her eyes. “Go away! I never want to see you again!”
“I
am here to help you, Carolyn,” Vicki said, and took a step forward.
“No!”
Carolyn screamed, and turned, and ran …
…
and the door to the drawing room opened …
…
and Carolyn, blasted backward by a white light that was more like something
living and aware than anything so
simple as light, blinked, collected
herself, and turned …
…
and gasped at the sight of her Uncle Roger, restored, alive, standing beside and slightly behind her mother, who peered
out the opened drawing room windows and into the night. She was beautiful, younger, it seemed to
Carolyn, regal in a long black dress and wearing her best pearls. That’s how she looked on the night Vicki
arrived, Carolyn thought, wondering.
“A watched pot never
boils,” Roger purred, “to coin a phrase.”
Elizabeth didn’t stir,
but her tone was irritated. “Don’t you
think you ought to look in on your son?” she sniped.
“The little monster’s
asleep,” he chuckled, “and I'm delighted. I choose my words with infinite
precision.”
“Roger,” Elizabeth said,
and Carolyn could almost believe she was sad, “you’re a fool.”
He sneered at her. “Not one tenth the fool you are, my dear.
Look at you, standing at the window looking out into the night, waiting for
someone who should never have been asked to come here in the first place.”
“She'll work out very well,
I'm sure.”
“Doing what ... holding
my little son's hand? Comforting you when the shutters creak? Elizabeth, with
all our ghosts we don't need any strangers in this house and you know it.”
“I think I can be the
judge of that.”
“But you don't even know
the girl. Elizabeth, I'm your brother, I'm thinking only of your own welfare.
Why bring somebody all the way up from New York to do something we're perfectly
capable of handling ourselves?”
“Because I choose to do
so."
Now Roger revealed his true feelings: the fury, the disgust … but why? What secrets did he have to hide? Carolyn wondered. “Oh come to your senses, Elizabeth. When the girl arrives give her a month's salary and tell her to go back to where she came from. Why don't you open the door so that the whole town comes trooping through the house and have done with it?”
“The girl will
stay.” And that, Carolyn knew, was her
mother’s final word. It’s her, she
thought; it’s really her. It’s both of them.
“You are a fool, Elizabeth,” Roger sneered. Carolyn watched her mother’s shoulders tightened, her
face. “Yes, you are. Inviting problems
…”
Elizabeth whirled to face
him. “The only problem I've invited is
standing before me at this moment. I've asked Miss Winters to live here and
she'll stay.” And Elizabeth stalked out
of the drawing room, leaving Roger to hold his snifter so tightly that it
cracked and shivered into broken shards, cutting his hand so that the blood ran
down …
Carolyn!
Vicki calling, and
Carolyn tried to scream, couldn’t find her voice, but she must run, must get
away, away …
… the Blue Whale, and she
was there, younger looking, all blonde hair and frugging? Yes, frugging, and why was Joe Haskell there,
my god, I dated him, like, a million years ago, and he looks so angry …
…staring up at the
portrait of Jeremiah Collins, her face scrawled into a twist of hatred and a
heartbreaking sorrow: “When I was ten
years old I used to dream that a white knight would come along and rescue me
from this dungeon. I guess white knights have gone out of style.”
I would never do anything to hurt my own flesh and blood! and her
own drilling screams…
I don’t want a sedative; I only want Jeb! and a man with blonde
hair fell from the edge of Widow’s Hill and they screamed in unison, and she
felt the pain in her doppelganger’s eyes …
…
and the world trembled again, and that light flared …
Not my world; similar but different somehow,
fundamentally, but how? Why?
And
now she stood in a room colder than the Collinwood she knew, the edges sharper,
strewn with antiques and furniture, and she backed away, a scream forming and
dying in her mouth, because she was looking at herself, sprawled before the
door in a pink ballgown, her hair tousled and unkempt, her face ghastly white
and her china-blue eyes staring, staring, because she was dead, and there was
blood, god, so much blood staining
her shoulders, streaming out of two giant wounds in her throat …
“No,”
Carolyn cried, “he did it to me, he did it after all, he killed me, he killed me,” and Vicki was beside her,
Vicki’s face was sympathetic, Vicki was trying to say something, but Carolyn
ran from her …
…
and a man who looked like Chris Jennings, chest bared, flesh pale and taut,
stood before her own image again, but this time she was clad in a long white
nightgown, and this nightmare version that Chris protected sported enormous
fangs that she bared before the policemen who danced around her, shoving cross
after cross into her face …
“This
isn’t real,” Carolyn cried, but the world trembled again and she stood in yet
another mansion that didn’t resemble the Collinwood she knew and loved and yet,
somehow, somehow it did …
She
turned; an ancient freak with bald head and glaring eyes throttled Julia
Hoffman, sank his fangs into Maggie Evans; Professor Stokes, fangs bared,
attacked a man Carolyn had never seen before, then screamed as the man pumped bullet after bullet into his chest …
…
Uncle Roger, fangs bared, hissed as that same stranger rammed a wooden bolt
into his chest …
“Stop
running, Carolyn,” Vicki pleaded. “It’s
what the Enemy wants. It’s trying to
trap you, to stop you from telling what you know …”
Quentin
and a dark-haired girl Carolyn had never seen before, his fingers wrapped
around her throat;
A witch is hanged in the garden … she’ll be
back …
Angelique
in a diaphanous gown, her face translucent, her eyes glaring, fish-white hands
reaching, reaching …
“No,”
Carolyn screamed, shaking her head, “no, stop, no please stop no no no” but she
ran and she ran, and the world shifted,
the world breathed, and Collinwood
was different again –
A
girl with dark hair and strange clothes followed another woman with strange
clothes – my god, was that a leather skirt? – and tousled golden hair up an
enormous staircase, and before them was a portrait of a handsome man in
eighteenth century garb, and somehow Carolyn knew that this was yet another
iteration before her, that this was a Victoria Winters and another Carolyn
Stoddard and that the portrait was of Barnabas …
“This
place is huge,” the dark haired girl said.
“How many rooms are there?”
“I
don’t think anyone really knows,” the golden-haired girl replied with a
mysterious little smile dimpling her lips.
Her voice was low and throaty, seductive. “Anyway, most of them are closed off now, but
there are a lot.”
“This
isn’t real!” Carolyn shrieked, and before her, the golden-haired woman thrashed
in the arms of a nightmare, another monster, a creature older than time, its
head bald, its eyes yellow and red, like blood, and its fangs were digging into
her throat …
Then
the old man was gone, and he was the handsome Barnabas Carolyn she recognized
from the portrait, and they were kissing, and he was whispering to her, “Blood
of my blood, kin of my kin: soon you
will walk with me as my partner in the night.”
No no no no no no no no …
Dark-haired
Victoria clutches a woman who somehow resembled Carolyn’s mother, and stares at
Barnabas, handsome, terrified Barnabas, and he freezes because she knows …
The
worlds continued to tear as Carolyn ran through them as if they were nothing
but thin sheets of tissue paper.
Another
man who could only be another Barnabas
stood beside a pretty young woman with short blonde hair, and together they
gazed at a portrait whose subject could be the twin of the blonde girl …
“This
is the way you found it?” the girl said.
The
handsome man nodded. “For some reason
the door had been plastered over. It’s
exactly the way it looked over two hundred years ago.”
“It’s
like walking back in time,” the blonde girl breathed.
He’ll
kill you! Carolyn tried to cry, but the words stopped; there was a corpse now,
a hideous rotted corpse in a red dress with glowing black eyes, and it was
reaching for her …
“Let
me help you!” Vicki cried, reaching for her.
“Please, Carolyn, please!”
Running,
running, running, and she was in the foyer, only it was enormous, and it was in
flames. There were carvings everywhere: of mermaids, of great fish, creatures of the
sea, and they moved, horribly, and one of them gripped Barnabas in its
ferocious wooden arms; atop the staircase a blonde woman who somehow, and
Carolyn couldn’t have said how, but somehow
resembled her mother held a wolfen monster in her arms and sobbed (she isn’t
me, Carolyn told herself; that tiny terrible creature can’t be me). And a woman who could only be Angelique
clambered atop the white-faced man in the grip of the statue, purring
obscenities …
“It
goes on and on like this,” Vicki whispered at her side.
“Make
it stop,” Carolyn whispered.
Fangs
bared, hands clutching Julia Hoffman, Barnabas snarled, “Madam! I am neither good nor gentle. And I do not forgive!” And sank them into her throat …
“He
always kills her,” Carolyn moaned. “Or
he kills me. Please, Vicki … please, I
don’t want to see these things, please …”
Collinwood
ablaze. The blonde woman bringing two
children close to her said, “We’ll do what we’ve always done: we will endure.”
“I
have tried my best to change things,” Victoria said to Carolyn, and turned her gently
away from the flames. “These are other
worlds, other possibilities. The story
of the Collins family is important. It
appears again and again, and dies, and then rises and goes on and on. It endures, as your mother just said.”
“That
isn’t –”
“She
is,” Vicki said firmly. “Every
world. Every world is important. And you’re going to save them, just as I
tried to do.”
Carolyn’s
eyes widened. She understood suddenly;
and the knowledge was bright and glimmering inside her. “It was you!
It was you who brought Julia back to life, who –”
Vicki
lowered her eyes. “Dr. Hoffman didn’t
need me to bring her back to life,” she said quietly. “I simply removed her from the loop in which she
had become trapped.” She sighed, and
looked around; all the worlds were there now, and she nodded in the direction
of one. Colorless, black and white
somehow, like an old movie, and a much younger looking Carolyn and an
impossibly innocent Vicki explored the newly restored interior of the Old House
together. “We were friends in this
world,” she sighed. “Close friends. We were never allowed that comfort in our
world. I’m sorry, Carolyn.”
“You
want to save us,” Carolyn whispered. “You
really do. Oh, Vicki …” And flung her arms around the other woman.
Vicki
allowed this for a moment, then gently pushed Carolyn away. “I can’t stay much longer,” she said. “I’m here to help you, as I helped
Julia. You would become trapped here
otherwise, which would serve the Enemy’s purpose, until such time as it is
successful, becomes flesh, frees itself from the tomb where it is trapped, and
destroys all of these worlds. Then it
will be as if the Collins family never existed … anywhere.”
“You
can help me go back?” Carolyn’s face was
wet and streaked with her tears.
“I
can,” Vicki said. Her face grew sad,
then stony. “You must be strong,
Carolyn. Something terrible is coming,
and I can’t stop it. My powers are
limited now.” She took a deep
breath. “I want you to be strong.
Professor Stokes … Professor Stokes is right.
Find Leticia Faye. She will guide
you. And be strong. You know you
are. Never forget it.” Vicki’s face was beginning to glow with light
like tiny white pearls, but Carolyn saw that the light came from inside her and was now leaking, bursting
out of her, and it was bright, so bright
…
…
exploding stars, births and deaths, supersupersupernovas …
…
she put her hands up to shield them from the brilliance …
…
caught one last glimpse of Vicki, and she was smiling, and her hand, the
fingertips glowing with that same wondrous whiteness, brushed Carolyn’s
forehead …
And,
gasping, she reared back from the table where the other members of the séance
looked at her with white, blank faces, and Carolyn gasped, “I know! I know!
I know what will happen!”
“Miss
Stoddard?” Professor Stokes said, stood, reached for her –
“I
know what will happen too,” a man’s deep voice, gloating, echoed throughout the
room, and Carolyn, a scream rising to her lips, remembered Vicki’s words: “Something terrible is coming, and I can’t
stop it …”
Gerard
Stiles stood beside them, his face green, the lips split into an enormous grin
of triumph, and one hand drew back, clenched into a fist, and before any of
them could move, he drove it forward.
Into
the chest of Eliot Stokes.
Stokes’
eyes widened, his mouth gaped, and then ejected an enormous stream of blood,
black in the lunatic firelight. It
covered Stiles’ face, and his grin grew even wider, and as the others pushed
away from the table, screaming, Carolyn saw the beast-man’s tongue flicker out
from behind those sensual lips and lap at the blood, drawing it into his mouth.
Then
he pulled his fist back out of Eliot’s chest, and he was holding the heart, his
black and furiously pumping heart, and it was too much, too much, and so
Carolyn screamed as the Professor collapsed to the floor. His body twitched once, one hand grasped at
the carpet, and then he lay still.
“So
much for knowledge,” Gerard said, and licked the blood from his fist. He smiled then, and reached for Carolyn with
his gore-streaked hands. “Now,” he said
brightly, reaching, reaching, “let’s see what we can’t do about the things you know.”
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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