CHAPTER 118: Backward, Turn Backward
By Nicky
Voiceover by Lara Parker: “Barnabas
and Julia have, against all odds, transcended time once again. And while they face the dangers of the past,
Angelique seeks to join them there, in the year 1840. But, unbeknownst to her, it may already be
too late to make any difference.”
1
The Old
House, January 1, 1969
Angelique
stood by herself in the center of the drawing room of the Old House and
repressed the screams that wanted to force themselves from her lips, but she
failed, and so the shrieks came, and came, and came, and even as she pulled at
her long blonde hair and forced her fists against her eyes, the screams – and
the memories – continue to come, pouring into her brain like saltwater.
Because
Barnabas and Julia were in the past, and they had changed it already.
And
now they would all pay the price.
“This is a body nothing more, nothing less. When you released my spirit from the wall
where you imprisoned me so long ago, it merged seamlessly with poor, sweet,
simple Valerie Collins. She’s gone,
Barnabas.”
Her own words, words she
had never spoken, and yet … yet, she had. She was speaking them right this moment,
somehow, a hundred and thirty years in the past. Her own voice, hissing at her through
corridors of time, the memories there, as if they’d always been there.
“And I am here again, here to reclaim my role as Mrs. Barnabas Collins. And after dear Daniel dies once and for all, you will be mine again, forever. As it was meant to be.”
“No,”
Angelique whispered, and realized that she had collapsed to the floor at some
point. This was the reason we were
supposed to be forbidden to cross the boundaries that separate moments, the
reason we were not allowed ever again to meddle in what is past.
I feel as if I’m losing my mind.
The
past was being rewritten even as she kneeled there like a weak, foolish human on the drawing room floor. She was Angelique; even if she had been
stricken, somehow, of her powers, she was still better than this.
She
rose to her feet; trembling, she placed a hand against the mantle. She forced her breath to slow, her heart rate
to slow, the sweat soaking her brow with icy beadlets to fade away. A smile, that old familiar smile, the one
that always made her feel her most powerful, stretched across her lips. She was Angelique. She had survived death more times than
anyone, mortal or immortal. They were
old friends. Very old friends.
The
I Ching wands sat where she had placed them on the table, before the memories
swept over her and forced her to her knees.
These will work, she thought, gritting her teeth, and lifted the wands.
“I
would stay away from such trifles if I were you,” a familiar, hated voice said
from behind her. “They don’t become you
anymore, it seems.”
She
ground her teeth together, then spun around.
“You don’t scare me, Roxanne Drew,” Angelique said, and lifted her
chin. “I have faced vampires before, and
they are dust, while –”
“While
you go on, yes, I’m sure,” Roxanne said, bored already, from the corner across
the room where she materialized seconds before.
“The immortal Angelique Collins.
Or shall I call you ‘Valerie’?
That’s your newest alias, if these newly minted memories tramping around
in my brain mean what I think they do.”
“You
were there, of course,” Angelique breathed.
And now she knew it: she could recall Roxanne, a vampire already,
and they were facing off, much as they were now, and it was here, in this very
room, but they weren’t alone, were they, and there was another essential
difference, and this difference was …
“The
difference,” Roxanne said, “is that you were in full possession of all your
faculties back then … and your powers.
You bested me then, my dear, but I fear you won’t fare quite as well … this time.”
Angelique’s
eyes widened. The vampire woman lifted
her lip and revealed her fangs, like a serpent’s, longer and curved than any
Angelique had ever encountered, including her own.
Grinning,
Roxanne advanced. “You have the Amulet
of Caldys,” she said, panting like a dog, “and I want it … for myself. And you’re going to give it to me …”
“Stay
back!” Angelique screamed. Panic rose up
and flowed over her in a stinging, humiliating tide; she remembered the last
time she had become the victim of a vampire, as Charity Trask and Tim Shaw made
her their plaything, raped her over and over …
“Stay away from me!”
“I
have no intention of staying away from you,” Roxanne said. She was close now … very close. Her voice was soft, caressing. Angelique could smell her: the familiar charnel smell, the scent of
rotten meat, the essence of tombs. “Not
until you give me what I need … what’s mine …”
Angelique
closed her eyes.
2
1840
Barnabas
fell backward – a coward, he thought, over and over, I’m a coward, a coward,
I’m always a coward – and though he could suddenly move of his own free will,
he still couldn’t speak. And even if I could, he thought, crawling on
his hands and knees away from the witch behind him, I wouldn’t call for
Julia. Angelique – Valerie, whatever she
was – mustn’t learn that Julia was a ghost, a spirit only, because even now,
still a hundred years from achieving her full potential, Angelique from 1796
was still a talented enough witch that she could banish Julia with very little
effort.
And
what would happen to the future then?
“Poor
Barnabas,” Valerie simpered behind him.
He cast a terrified glance over his shoulder. She hadn’t moved, was merely watching him,
amusement in those cool blue eyes. Her
arms were crossed over the beautiful blue gown she wore. She was enjoying this, watching him suffer. How could I have ever thought I loved her?
Barnabas thought, despairing.
Because she changed. Like you changed.
Now,
in this moment, he doubted it.
“You
are exactly where I have always wanted you, my love,” Valerie said, and took
her first step forward. “Crawling before
me.” She extended one booted toe. “You should kiss my foot.”
He
began to crawl once more, and now, instead of calling out his own cowardice, he
thought, Not again, not again, not again,
not again –
“You
haven’t truly answered for your sins,” Valerie said, and took another
step. “After your father chained you in
that box, you were fated to lie there for the rest of eternity, just as I lay
in darkness. Oh, once I was freed – and
I knew it would happen eventually – I planned to visit you. Just to see if you’d learned your
lesson.” Her expression darkened. “But forty years for people like us is nothing, Barnabas. You haven’t even begun to suffer.”
He
wanted to beg, to plead; he tried to rise to his feet, but with one flick of
her wrist, one extended finger, he was forced back to his knees by an enormous,
invisible bar of iron that pressed against his lower back. He opened his mouth to cry out, but he could
make no sound. Save me, he wanted to
cry, surely someone … someone will come … in time …
“Buried
alive,” Valerie said, musing. “Not my
original intention, of course, but after a few days I began to appreciate the
irony of our twin situations. It would
have been very easy to free you, I thought.
Ben Stokes was my slave once; I might have invoked our invisible bonds,
tenuous as they were, to send him to the tomb to free you.” She sighed.
“But I couldn’t even use him to save myself. I discovered that soon after you … you entombed me. And so I writhed in anger.” Her face smoothed out, and that devious
little smile he knew all too well resurfaced.
“For a little while, that is.
Then I realized how delicious was your punishment, and how nice and safe
you’d keep there in your lonely tomb until such time as I was ready to release
you. My terms.” She tutted, sighed. “And however it is that you’ve become freed,
these are not my terms. Your humanity is not on my terms. Whoever
this woman is, this ‘Julia Collins,’ her existence here as my dear
sister-in-law is not on my terms. So
…” And she shrugged prettily. “After I’ve dealt with you, my unfaithful
husband, and have reclaimed my rightful spot as Mrs. Barnabas Collins, I will deal with her accordingly.”
She
was beside him in a flash; he hadn’t even seen her take another step. She smiled at him, reached out to stroke his
hair with her long, white fingers. “My
darling, my darling, you mustn’t fear.”
Her laughter was soft, musical.
“When everything is over, you’ll love me, just as you did those nights
in Martinique.”
She
rose to her full height and held out her arms.
“Let the spirit of Dark Night take possession of this room,” and the
room was plunged into an icy shadow. His
tortured breath emerged from his mouth in white clouds, and he tried to close
his eyes, but they refused to obey him.
He had to watch; he had to know.
But
he already knew. No one was coming to
save him.
“I
call upon the Powers of Darkness to help me once again,” Valerie intoned,
weaving her hands through the air. They
left emerald streaks in their wake as witch patterns flared up and died away: strange, curving symbols, runes he almost
recognized, and then, finally, horribly, the shape of the bat.
Valerie
grinned. Her eyes were solid black,
obsidian. “I set a curse on you,
Barnabas Collins,” she whispered, “and you will live with it for all eternity …
all eternity … all eternity, Barnabas
…”
He
lifted his eyes, and there it was, in the far corner of the room, swathed by
shadows. It was enormous, nearly six
feet tall, more hideous than he remembered it; it had been ages, it seemed,
since last their paths crossed. Its
awful toes, each tipped with a curving yellow talon, held fast to nothing; it
lifted its giant head and bared fangs that were nearly a foot in length,
butcher knives lining its mouth. It
opened its mouth and shrieked, a terrible sound, the rending of metal.
Valerie
was laughing, and her laughter threatened to drown out the terrible and somehow
eager cries of the bat as it launched
itself at him, its wings shredding the air; he tried to fall backward, but it
was no use, and the bat was on him, its teeth were in him, it was happening again; the bat opened him, tore him open
from chin to crotch, gutted him, and then
it nestled deep down inside him; now
he could scream, now he could make
sound, but his screams were inhuman, and as his skin folded back up, encasing
the horror within, knitted itself into wholeness, he knew exactly whose screams
they were, falling from his mouth.
The
metallic, animal shrieks of the bat.
3
1969
Angelique
tried to cover her throat, but Roxanne seized her shoulders with her talons and
forced her head back, exposing the long, slender line of her throat, the vein
pulsing there. She wanted to scream, but
she could make no sound, so powerful was the vampire’s thrall, and she had never
wanted to scream so badly in her life as the moment when Roxanne’s mouth
stretched into a vicious leer, then stretched more, beyond the endurance of mortal flesh and bone; the teeth
jostled and grew longer and then longer still, until there was nothing human
left in the vampire’s face.
Perhaps
it won’t hurt, Angelique thought as she closed her eyes; perhaps she’ll let me
live; perhaps she’ll turn me, and with my new powers I can find Barnabas and
Julia … maybe I’ll stay me … it’s possible …
She
knew it wasn’t.
She
waited.
The
teeth did not penetrate her skin. They
did not tear at her jugular, or lap the blood that would then spurt out in
red-black ropes.
And
then Roxanne loosened her iron grip on Angelique’s shoulders, and she fell
backward, unceremoniously, to her knees on the drawing room floor.
She
looked up.
Victoria
Winters stood over her, Victoria goddamn Winters was her savior, and now Angelique shrieked, but this was a
scream of pure fury.
But
Victoria Winters seemed not to hear her, had only eyes for the vampire writhing
on the floor, a bolt of wood emerging from her back; her eyes bulged, her
tongue, long and serpentine, flopped around like a snake lapping at the
floor. “Vicious bitch,” Victoria Winters
said.
Don’t be an idiot. That isn’t Victoria Winters. Victoria Winters is dead.
You should know.
You killed her.
“Of
course,” Angelique breathed. “Alexandra
March. Her sister. Petofi’s other daughter.”
“Thank
me later,” Alex said off-handedly, then kicked out at the hissing, snarling
vampire on the floor. The toe of her
boot caught Roxanne in the gut, and launched her across the drawing room.
Don’t
count on it, Angelique thought sourly, and dragged herself to her feet.
But
the battle wasn’t over.
Roxanne
had also made her way to her feet, and with one extended arm, trailing the
beginning of a membrane that, given time, would become a wing, easily found the
wooden stake Alex used to impale her and plucked it as if it were a mere
splinter, then ground it into actual splinters with her terrible monster’s
hand. “Miss March,” the creature managed
to grate as Roxanne’s face attempted to reconfigure itself into something more
closely related to a semblance of humanity.
“I can’t say it’s a pleasure.”
“Get
out of here,” Alex said. She lifted her
hands and a crimson energy danced there.
Roxanne, grinning, took a step forward, then winced and held her hands
up, warding the other woman off.
“Get
away,” Roxanne whimpered. “It burns … it
burns!”
“Of
course it burns,” Alex said, disgusted.
“It holds the essence of the sun.”
And nearly impossible to conjure, Angelique thought wisely. If I had my full powers it would be no
problem, but for her … even with all of the strength Petofi granted her, however
unwittingly, it’s still an effort to summon the strength of the sun … and then
to maintain it. And yet, she’s doing
it. She really is. “And it will burn you to a crisp if you take
another step.”
“You
don’t know what you’re doing,” Roxanne wailed.
“I’m trying to help; can’t any
of you idiots see that?”
“You’re
helping yourself,” Angelique spat. “To me, and I don’t much like it, thank
you.”
“The
Amulet is useless to you now,” Roxanne said.
“Give it to me! I can make it
work, I swear, and then I can end all this madness! I can destroy the Enemy!”
“You
can do no such thing,” Angelique said.
“It would destroy a vampire; it would –”
And she threw her head back and shrieked, clutching at her skull and
pulling at her long blonde hair.
Roxanne
and Alex exchanged mutual looks of confusion.
Roxanne shook her head. “Not
guilty,” she said.
Angelique
wouldn’t allow herself to sink back onto the floor of the Old House, but she did allow the tears to begin again, the
first she had wept since the night she had become human again. Oh Barnabas, she thought mournfully, oh my
poor Barnabas … my poor, poor Barnabas …
I set a curse on you, Barnabas Collins, and
you will live with it for all eternity …
It
had happened.
She
was too late.
“I’ll
have the Amulet of Caldys,” Roxanne was saying, or something similarly inane,
and through her tears, Angelique saw that she was pulling her old familiar
vanishing act; within the moment it took her to draw a breath, Roxanne was
gone.
And
Alexandra March was there, extending Angelique a hand.
Angelique
drew another breath. Pride, she thought,
my insufferable, eternal pride, second in its ability to cause destruction only
to my envy and rage.
The
other woman didn’t look kind. Merely
grimly determined.
Angelique
took her hand and allowed herself to be helped to her feet.
They
looked at each other.
“You
killed my sister,” Alex said after awhile.
Angelique
considered this, surprised at her own ability to be surprised after all this
time. Of course she is Vicki’s sister;
of course Petofi had two identical daughters.
“I did,” she finally said.
Alex
chewed her lower lip and said nothing for nearly a minute. Angelique watched her patiently. “I should destroy you,” she said.
“You’ve
had multiple opportunities.”
Alex
shook her head of dark hair. “That’s not
what I mean,” she said. “You obviously
know who my father was.” Angelique
nodded impatiently. “Then you probably
guessed that I inherited some of his powers, just as Victoria did. I’ve been raised by a man – well, he isn’t a
man so much as an … an entity, I
suppose you could call him – and this man has instructed me my entire life to
fight back the forces of darkness.” Her
lips twitched into a smile. “It sounds
so silly, doesn’t it? Very
dramatic. But once upon a time those
terms made sense to me. Until I came to
this town.”
“We’re
complicated here in Collinsport,” Angelique sighed. “Scratch anyone on this estate and you’ll
probably find a murderer of some
kind, a monster at the very least.”
“That’s
exactly right. But being a monster doesn’t
necessarily mean they’re bad people. Some have changed. Or are trying to change. You.”
“I’d
like to think I have.”
“So,”
Alex said, “I decided not to destroy
you. Just as I’ve decided not to destroy
Sebastian Shaw or Chris Jennings or Barnabas Collins.”
That’s
very big of you, Angelique wanted to say in her snidest voice, but she reminded
herself that this woman had just risked her life to save Angelique’s. Plus, she was in possession of some
extraordinarily potent magicks, if that trick with the sun’s energy was any
indication. “Thank you,” she said
instead. “I think we can use as many
allies as will help us.”
“The
Enemy,” Alex said.
“Not
only the Enemy,” Angelique said.
“There’s also Laura Collins. Also
me, or the magical version of me.” Alex
opened her mouth, and Angelique allowed herself a rueful laugh. “It’s a long story,” she said, then froze as
an idea occurred to her. “You do have powers, don’t you.”
Alex
squinted. “Yes,” she said suspiciously,
“I suppose I do …”
“Then
maybe all isn’t lost,” Angelique said, smiling, “after all.”
4
1840
The
ceremony was happening, and Julia, or the ghost of Julia, thanks to the I Ching
in full possession of her living body’s faculties back in 1969, was watching,
and paralyzed with indecision. I should
stop it, she told herself, niggling at the ectoplasm that made up her lower
lip. I could do it; fly upon Gerard, try
to possess him, maybe scare him enough that he puts off the ceremony …
And
then what, Julia? she snarled at herself. You change the future in some unfathomable
way, and you don’t dare do that. You’ve
changed it enough already!
Which
was the reason, she thought, that the doors to the past were supposed to have
been barred to all of them. Angelique,
especially, could undo all the damage that Victoria Winters caused during her
rampage, could save her husband Sky, could, perhaps, successfully stop once and
for all Barnabas from falling in love with Josette DuPres.
Gerard
was chanting, Daphne Harridge and Roxanne Drew had both closed their eyes and
had lifted their beatific faces up to the ceiling, while Leticia Faye merely
looked terrified. But she was glowing
too, Julia observed, with a silver-white effervescence that illuminated the
room. Gerard saw it too, and though he
continued his incantations, his mouth grew large in a reptilian smile. This is what he wanted, Julia thought, this
is why he needed her … and why she may be the key to destroying him in the
future – our present.
That
thought decided her. These events must
unfold as they had originally. Something had stopped Gerard Stiles once
before. Perhaps, Julia thought, perhaps
that’s why we’ve been allowed back in this time: to observe, then to return with the knowledge
we need to stop the Enemy once and for all.
Leticia
was levitating.
Julia’s
spectral eyes widened.
The
pretty blonde woman was floating in the air now, had already risen nearly a
foot above her seat. Her eyes were wide
and unfocused; she seemed utterly unaware of what was happening to her.
“Gerard,”
she whispered, but her voice was loud and clear and cut through the thick, dead
air of the room like a deadly sharp icicle.
“Gerard Stiles.”
“Who
are you, spirit?” he demanded. “Tell me
your name, I command you!”
“You
will never know,” the being who spoke through Leticia said, and pursed its
hosts lips into a wicked smile, “for such knowledge would grant you power over
me, and this you will never have.”
Gerard’s
mouth writhed in fury. “Then tell me
what you seek, spirit! I have no time to
bother with your foolishness.”
“You
have time,” the spirit said. “I’m going
to destroy you, Gerard Stiles. For
daring to disturb me. I will end you now
for all time.”
Gerard
chuckled. “You?” he said. “A weak and puling ghost? Don’t make me laugh at you again,
spirit.” He raised one hand, pinkie and
ring finger extended, and began to incant, “I banish you, alien spirit, by the
judge of the quick and the dead –”
Leticia
threw back her head and uttered a scream so impossibly loud and powerful that
Daphne and Roxanne were thrown backward against the wall, while Gerard was
caught in the grip of an invisible fury that raised him nearly six feet off the
ground by the throat and held him there.
Leticia’s
eyes glowed as white as the rest of the energy surrounding her. Her teeth were bared in a feral snarl. “YOU DARE,” she boomed, “YOU DARE CHALLENGE
ME, YOUR BETTER? HEAR ME NOW, GERARD
STILES, AND KNOW THAT I WILL OWN YOU, BODY AND SOUL, FOR THE REST OF ETERNITY.”
Gerard
tried to speak, but only a series of glottal sounds emerged from his puffy
lips, which were beginning to turn blue.
Leticia
screamed a harpy’s laughter. “You
thought this ignorant cow would provide a conduit for you to access the power
of Judah Zachery,” she chortled. “You
fool. You have given me a voice,
finally, after more than a hundred years in darkness, and eyes by which to
see. And now, I will –” But the voice was cut off suddenly, Leticia’s
face contorted as if two powerful personalities struggled for control of her
motor functions, her muscles, her very skin,
and then, after a long beat, a woman’s
spoke from Leticia’s mouth instead.
“No,” it said, this new voice, not like the grinding of stones Julia was
reminded of when that the other, more demonic voice spoke, but strong with
determination nonetheless. “I will not
allow you to be free. Not now … not like
this. I will suppress thee, as I have
suppressed thee lo these last hundred years.”
Julia’s
mind, racing, remembered something Carolyn had told her about her experience at
the séance with Eliot a few months before, of encountering all the women who
might have been her own past incarnations, including Leticia Faye, but also of
her meeting with a strange, dark young woman, a Puritan, Carolyn explained, who
was part of the Enemy, somehow.
Isaac was a fervent member of Judah’s coven. He wanted power for himself, so he brought
the girl for sacrificing.
That
was the explanation Gerard had offered Leticia moments before he began the
ceremony. Could that be the owner of the
voice who was speaking now, this other from Leticia’s throat? The girl who was supposed to be sacrificed by
Judah Zachery in 1692?
“You
have no say,” the demonic voice croaked.
It was angry and powerful, certainly, Julia thought, but was it also …
surprised? Afraid, maybe? She thought that was a good possibility. “Begone!”
“I
will stay,” that soft female voice replied.
“I will help to undo your curse.
All your curses.”
“THIS
CANNOT BE!” the demonic voice roared, and one of Leticia’s hands, suddenly
horrifically, monstrously long, impossibly long, shot out from across the table
where she now hovered and attached itself to Gerard’s throat. “YOU ARE MIIIIIIIIIIINE,” it gloated. “FOR ALL ETERNITY, GERARD STILES. MY SLAVE … MY DOG. I WILL SUMMON YOU WHEN THE TIME COMES.”
A
beatific expression had fallen over Gerard’s face; incredibly, Julia saw that
he was smiling. “Yes, master,” he
managed to say, choking. “I … am yours. For eternity.”
“Good
enough,” the demon’s voice said, and released him.
But
then, “No,” the woman’s voice said from Leticia’s lips, “it isn’t,” as a stream
of white light, so blindingly furious, so pure
in its intensity, poured from her eyes, her mouth, each of her fingertips, from
her heart; and Julia winced, because the light burned, but it wasn’t aimed at her.
It struck Gerard Stiles, who howled the moment it enveloped him, but he
was transfixed and could do nothing.
Daphne
Harridge tried to rush to his side, but, grinning, revealing her ravenous
fangs, Roxanne Drew held her back. “No,
no, dearie,” she hissed, “remember, god helps those who help themselves.”
And
still the light poured from Leticia.
“You are banished, fiend,” she said, and Julia’s eyes widened in
amazement, because it wasn’t just the voice of the Puritan girl, if that’s
indeed who had combatted the demon inside Leticia, but also Leticia herself, her voice combined with that
other woman’s, and there was such power between them that Julia thought she
understood now what they needed, what could save them all. “Leave this place, claimed now for the
Light! Begone!” And their combined voices rose to a fever
pitch, and the windows of Rose Cottage exploded outward as that light blazed
forth in such glory that Julia was unable to see anything now but a blinding
sheet of white. “BEGONE, I SAY! I CAST THEE OUT!”
Gerard’s
final scream was last in the roaring of the light – or Light – and Julia found
that her own ghost’s mouth was open and that she was screaming silently as
well.
Then
it was over. The Light had faded away
utterly.
Daphne
and Roxanne leaned against the table.
Neither woman panted, for neither woman required breath, but they looked
exhausted, their faces white as salt.
But they were alone.
Gerard
and Leticia were gone.
5
1969
“I
don’t always have complete control over my powers,” Alex said
apologetically. “Just so you know.”
Angelique
resisted the urge to roll her eyes. Even
though she was powerful, perhaps even more so than her goddamned sister, Angelique
found, to her absolute lack of surprise, that Alexandra March was just as
whiney as Victoria Winters. Maybe even
more.
Instead
of rolling her eyes, however, Angelique patted the other woman on the
shoulder. They sat at the little table
in the drawing room of the Old House, directly across from each other. The house was chilly despite the fire they
had stoked together in the wake of Roxanne’s attack, but somehow the New
England New Year winter had its icy claws dug deeply into the center of the
house. We have to try, Angelique told
Alex, we have to keep the cold out somehow. “It’ll be fine,” she said now. “I have faith in you.”
Alex
blinked her big brown eyes, considered this, then smiled. “Thanks,” she said, and her voice was
shaky. “I appreciate that. Especially considering I have no idea what
I’m doing, or about to do.”
“We’re
going to find them,” Angelique said with more confidence than she really
felt. “And we’re going to bring them
back.”
“But
the I Ching didn’t work.”
“Not
for me,” she said. “Julia is still in the trance. Carolyn and Elizabeth and Willie are taking
turns watching her.”
“And
… and Quentin?”
Angelique
repressed a tiny smile. “Quentin is
helping Sebastian and Chris. When they
aren’t researching the Collins family history to find something that might help
us fight the Enemy, they’re practicing a meditation technique that Sebastian
thinks will help Chris with his transformations.”
“I’m
glad he stopped me,” Alex said in a low voice.
Angelique
raised an eyebrow. “From doing what?”
Alex
looked up at the former witch, and her eyes were tortured. “From killing them,” she said. “I was going to. I had a special sword and everything. Oh Angelique, it was horrible – I was horrible! I didn’t even think twice; I had the sword, I
was out there, following them, and then I was … I would’ve …” She trailed off as tears fell from her
eyelashes.
Angelique
watched her stonily for a moment. Once
upon a time she would have slapped the other woman, or shaken her, or blasted
her to a cinder. Time was wasting. People were in danger. Barnabas
was in danger. And when it came to keeping
Barnabas Collins safe, Angelique was fond of telling anyone within earshot that
everybody else was expendable.
But
not now.
She
reached out instead and put a hand on the other woman’s shoulder. “But you didn’t,” she said kindly, and
Alexandra looked up at her, startled.
Finally,
she said, “No. No, I guess I didn’t.”
“We
can change,” Angelique said quietly.
“Any of us. And we do.
If we let ourselves, we can change.
We don’t have to hurt people.”
“I
just want to help,” Alex whispered. “I
just want to save people.”
“You
can. And you will.” Angelique found she was beaming. I believe myself, she thought,
marveling. Will wonders never
cease.
She
took Alexandra March’s hand and held it tightly with both of hers. Her eyes sparkled. “Do it,” Angelique said. “Do
it. Now.”
6
There
was a sound, a rushing sound in her ears, and a strange, eerie howling, like
the wind, almost like the wind, but different; more like alien voices
screeching, but the voices were tangible somehow, and they reached at her,
clutched at her, tried to grab her and hold her, and she wasn’t a body, she was
nothing, nothing, nothing …
Maintain.
Maintain. Maintain.
Professor
Stokes? she tried to whisper, but if it was him, he was gone, flashed out at
her like a glowing light and then vanished back into the endless howling dark …
You will find them. You will find them. You will find them.
That
was Alexandra. How was she here, how had
she followed Angelique to this place, wherever it was, this dreadful darkness
in between every world, every moment of time once it had passed?
It isn’t Alexandra.
Angelique
tasted sweet horror in a mouth that didn’t exist.
You will find them. I will help you.
Victoria
Winters. Victoria Winters was with her.
Had
she a body, Angelique would have recoiled, would have screamed out her hatred,
would have attacked that most-reviled face with her fingernails; this is for
Sky, she wanted to shriek; I loved him, I loved him, you don’t know how much I
loved him …
Yes.
I do. Don’t you remember? You made us all feel it. You can love, Angelique. And so can I.
And you can forgive.
No. Never.
I will never forgive you –
You can.
If you want to go back. I can
help you – I want to help you, just as my sister does – but first you must help
yourself.
I am so sorry.
Please. Angelique.
Please forgive me.
I
love you, Barnabas.
I do this for you.
No. That was selfish. And if she wanted to save Barnabas and Julia
and the world – all the worlds – by extension, then she couldn’t be selfish any
longer.
Victoria Winters was
watching her. Waiting. Patient.
Oh
Sky, Angelique wanted to whisper, but she didn’t.
“I
forgive you,” she said instead.
Then
opened her eyes.
Angelique
blinked in surprise.
She
had eyes to open, for one thing, but here she was, back in the Old House, just
as she had left it.
But
… not quite.
It
wasn’t exactly a shambles, but it had obviously not been lived in for more than
a few years. The furniture was covered
in dust, shredded in some places, but the windows were whole, the door hung
properly so that it didn’t gape like an idiot’s mouth, and a fire crackled
merrily in the fireplace.
“Witch,”
a man’s voice said from behind her, growled, an animal, and so familiar –
Oh
no, she wanted to say, but his hands were already around her throat. He spun her around so that she could see his
monster’s face, the eyes blazing red, the fang teeth reaching, reaching for her
throat –
“You’ve
done this to me,” he hissed, his breath foul beyond measure, “done this to me
again –”
Barnabas,
she tried to choke, Barnabas, it’s me!
But
his thumbs were already crushing her windpipe.
“Die,”
he said.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
No comments:
Post a Comment