CHAPTER 121: Zuvembi
by Nicky
Voiceover by Kate Jackson: “Collinwood
in the year 1840 … a time when the Collins family faced one of the greatest
threats to its existence … for the power of Gerard Stiles has infected the
governess Daphne Harridge … and the monstrous thing she has become will bring a
new reign of terror to the great house …”
1
Julia
flexed her fingers, and smiled happily to herself. Flesh and bone, she thought; who knew there’d
ever come a time when I would actually miss my body?
Then
she remembered, and her smiled faded.
Oh
yeah, she thought. Being alive again
means I’m back in my own time.
Alone.
Without
Barnabas.
She
glanced around the drawing room, which currently held her as its only occupant.
But the other two women, she knew, would
rejoin her in a moment, as soon as Carolyn could find the proper shoes from where
she had stashed them in one of the many wardrobes she possessed. Outside, thunder grumbled. There was a storm coming – of course. It wouldn’t be Collinwood, Julia thought
ruefully, in this or any other century if there weren’t a storm brewing
outside.
After
spending several weeks inhabiting her own ghost, Julia had returned to the
great house in the early spring of 1969 without Barnabas and Angelique, leaving
them against her will to fend for themselves back in 1840.
However,
she hadn’t returned completely alone.
“Are
you here to take me home?” the blonde spirit had asked as they wandered together
through the shifting gray curtains of mist that seemed to comprise the only
landscape of the world where they now found themselves thrown together.
“I
wish that I could,” Julia had told her, surprised. “Do you know who I am?”
“I
feel like I almost do,” the blonde woman said.
She flickered in the gloom with a silver radiance that split the
darkness and pushed away the fog. It
glowed in her eyes and in the cracks of her lips and in each strand of hair;
even her teeth shimmered with silver sparks.
“Your name is Julia, isn’t it?” Leticia said, surprising even herself.
“It
is,” Julia said. She glanced down at
herself, and was astonished that she had a self to glance at, including hands that emerged from the frilled cuffs of the
nineteenth century costume she had conjured from empty air simply by willing it
the first night she and Barnabas arrived in 1840. “And you are Leticia Faye.”
“You
came looking for me,” Leticia said, and squinted with sudden suspicion. “Isn’t that right?” Her Cockney accent grew thicker.
“I
did,” Julia admitted, then added in a rush, “but you needn’t be frightened,
Leticia! I’m from a future year, long after
you lived at Collinwood. I’m –” She cut herself off though as she saw the
fright that rounded Leticia’s already enormous cobalt eyes. Excellent move, doctor, the sarcastic
ghost-voice of the Barnabas Julia knew when she met him two years ago sniped in
her mind. This was the voice she
developed to chastise herself as she and Barnabas endured adventure after
excruciating adventure. Now it said,
sneering, Keep talking and she’ll flee to the other side of this
wherever-you-are, and you’ll never see her again.
And worse, you’ll never leave this place.
It didn’t matter that the
voice was her own, disguised as Barnabas.
It was right. She had to step
carefully from now on.
“The
time I lived?” Leticia squeaked. “Does
that mean … does that mean..?” She
clawed at her own face with sudden vicious terror, but instead of blood, the
scratches left in the wake of her fingers filled with that same silver luminescence. “Does that mean I’m dead, Julia?”
“Not
necessarily,” Julia said as soothingly as she could. “Something happened, didn’t it, when you
banished Gerard Stiles.”
“I
suppose it did,” Leticia said tearfully.
“I was so scared! I didn’t
exactly know what I was doing. I didn’t mean it, whatever it was. And I don’t remember
exactly what happened.” She glanced
around hesitantly. “I don’t even know
how I got to this place.”
“I
don’t either,” Julia said. “But the
important thing is that we found each other.”
“I
don’t even know how long I’ve been here,” Leticia whispered. Without seeming aware of it, she had sidled
closer to Julia.
“I’m
not exactly sure what kind of a place this is,” Julia said, looking around and
wrinkling her nose. “It seems like it’s
some kind of … of netherworld. Not
heaven or hell. Like … an in-between
place. A mystical holding pen, perhaps.”
“I
don’t like the sounds of that, I can tell you.”
“I
don’t either. But I don’t think we have
to stay here forever.”
Leticia
blinked. “What do you mean?”
“I
mean,” Julia said, and turned so she could lay both her hands on Leticia’s
shoulders, “that you can get us out
of here.”
“I
can’t,” Leticia said. Her face was
pinched with terror. “Julia, don’t you
think I would set myself free of this place if I could? I’ve tried.”
“You’ve
tried by yourself, you mean. I’m here
now.”
“You?”
Her
smile was tight, strained, but warm. “Leticia,
you have more power than you know. I know; I saw it. I saw you in action, remember. You are strong. You are powerful. And so am I.”
“I
believe you,” Leticia whispered. “About
you, I mean. I’m not so sure about
myself.”
“I’m sure of you.” She released her, and glanced around the fog,
the swirling eddies of nothing. “Do you
want to stay here forever? Is that what
you really want?”
“I
don’t know,” Leticia cried, and turned away.
“You say you’ve seen what I can do?
Have you seen what I have? Gerard
Stiles … he’s a beast! A murderer!”
“Gerard
Stiles is alive in the time from which I come,” Julia said in her stoniest,
most deadly tone.
Leticia
froze, then turned slowly, her face streaked with tears, to face Julia. “Oh no,” she said. “Oh Julia, how? Why?”
“He
is the slave of a demonic entity we call the Enemy,” Julia said. “This creature has the power to bring Gerard
out of the void where your power consigned him and allowed him to live
again. To kill again. That’s why we need you, Leticia. You banished him before. And I believe you can do it again.”
“He
tried to kill me.” Her voice was small,
a child’s.
“And
he failed,” Julia said fiercely. “You
have to remember that, Leticia. He
didn’t kill you; no one did. History
records that you simply vanished from Collinwood one day; of course everyone
thought you died! They couldn’t possibly
know where you really were: in a place
outside time. Waiting. Waiting to return.”
“You
think I can do that?”
“I
know you can.” Julia held out her hand. “Will you take my hand, Leticia? Will you leave this place with me?”
Leticia
looked at the other woman’s hand, then lifted her eyes to Julia’s. They widened, then grew wider yet, and
suddenly she smiled.
And
took Julia’s hand.
Her
face was wet with tears.
And
suddenly they were both galvanized by Leticia’s light, which exploded out of
her and carried them both away.
2
To
the drawing room: Collinwood, March of
1969.
Time
passed while we were in 1840, Julia thought now; “I forgot how comfortable
these clothes were,” she told Leticia, after she had helped her into one of
Carolyn’s miniskirts. “So indecent,”
Leticia had said darkly, but then she burst into a delighted flood of
giggles. “Julia, people will see my legs!”
And
Carolyn: unsure of how to take this
newest addition to the great estate.
“She looks just like me,” she had whispered to Julia. “Julia, how is that possible?”
“I
don’t understand reincarnation,” Julia had admitted; Leticia, examining one of
a pair of blue pumps, fingered the heel, then blushed prettily, and both women
smiled as she did it. “I don’t even
really understand the logistics of time travel, or the place where I found
Leticia after I was forced out of the past.
I don’t understand the I Ching, or how my present-time self could
possess my ghost when I’ve never died, at least not to my knowledge. But whether Leticia is a past version of you
or not –”
“She
can’t be,” Carolyn said. Julia raised an
eyebrow. “Don’t you see, Julia? She
never died. She’s been lingering in
that … that holding place you described, that weird limbo for a hundred
years. Until you helped her get
out. Brought her here. Which means she never really died.” Leticia, cooing, slid the pumps onto her
feet, and clapped her hands, delighted as a child that they fit. “Which means,” Carolyn said insistently, “she
can’t possibly be me.” Her voice
softened. “And yet … and yet I feel … I
can’t help but feel that … maybe …”
“She’s
here to help us,” Julia said forcefully.
A thought occurred to her suddenly, and her face creased with fear. “And you say there’s been no sign of Gerard
while we’ve been gone?”
“No,”
Carolyn said, disturbed. “It’s been
nothing but quiet. Angelique – that other Angelique, I mean – and Laura have
been conspicuously absent, and so, with a few exceptions, has Roxanne. It’s … it’s as if everything is just
waiting. Holding its breath until …”
“Until
we returned from the past,” Julia said bitterly. “Only we
haven’t, have we.”
“Barnabas
and Angelique will be back,” Carolyn said, and took the other woman’s
hand. “I can feel that; can’t you?”
Julia
hesitated. She looked to Leticia, who,
tottering, had stood up with the heels.
“How does anyone ever walk in these?” she called indignantly.
Julia
turned back to Carolyn. “I don’t know,”
she said bleakly. “I just don’t know.”
3
They
stood outside the front door of Collinwood, he, swaying slightly, she, watching
him with a poisonous smirk on her face.
“You’ll have to do better than that,” she said, then added, derisively,
“husband.”
Quentin
turned to look at his new bride; his eyes were silver, without pupil or iris,
and he smiled suddenly. His teeth were
stained pink. An after effect, the
Daphne-creature supposed, of the treatment she had administered him, a
treatment similar but not identical to that which Gerard Stiles had
administered her a few days
before. Didn’t matter; she and Quentin were
married now, and bound together by their lovemaking, and she had killed him and
resurrected him and now he was zombi, just
as she was zuvembi, the female of her
kind. Thanks to Gerard Stiles.
And
together they would rule Collinwood, the great undead.
If
only, she thought critically, he could wake from the death-trance she had
placed him under.
“Quentin,”
she said sharply, “you’re going to have to control your appearance. The servants will run screaming after one
look at you.”
“Servants,”
Quentin said slowly, stupidly. His voice
was the deliberate creaking of a tomb.
And his eyes were still silver.
“Damn
it,” she whispered. She had recovered
from her death; why hadn’t he? “Quentin,
you simply must –”
Which
was, of course, the moment the doors opened.
“Miss
Harridge!” Tad Collins, fourteen, wide-eyed, innocent, cried. “Father!
You’ve come back!”
“We
have,” Daphne said brusquely. Seizing
Quentin’s arm, she swept past her new stepson and into the Collinwood
foyer. The lights, she decided, were too
bright. They hurt her preternatural
eyes; at her side, Quentin was whimpering and struggling in her grip, trying to
shield his own eyes.
“Where
have you been?” Tad whined. “Miss
Harridge, such things have happened here tonight! Did you know that Nicholas Blair is a
wizard? They’ve come for him, the people
of the town, and they set up a stake and a pyre on the beach and they burned him there! I watched it all! No one,” he said, suddenly quietly, “no one
even tried to stop me.”
“Tad,”
Daphne said severely, “your father has had a great shock. No,” she said swiftly, and forced Quentin’s
head back down as he tried to look up, “no, you must leave him alone. He needs to sleep. I will care for him.”
“You?”
Tad said blankly. “But … but you’re my governess!”
“Not
any longer,” Daphne said grandly, and lifted her chin. She smiled coldly. “I am your new mother. We are married.”
“This
is impossible!” Daniel Collins roared from the top of the staircase. Two heads swiveled to look up at him; Quentin
continued to stare blankly at the carpet.
The old man began to descend the stairs, but slowly, painfully, and his
face was a thundercloud. “Impossible,”
he said, panting as he descended, “he cannot marry you. He is already married.”
“Where
is my mother?” Tad whispered.
“Tad,”
Daphne said sharply, “go to your room.”
The
boy hesitated. “But I –”
Daphne
fixed him with her eyes. They grew as
silver as Quentin’s as they pinned the child like a snake. Daphne, dead longer than Quentin, had already
begun to experiment with her newly developed powers, even before she met
Leticia in the woods; now, she thought, now I can play. “I told you to go to
your room,” she said slowly, deliberately.
Tad
nodded slowly. His mouth gaped. “I will obey,” he whispered.
“Good
boy,” she purred, and patted him on the shoulder.
“You
are zuvembi,” Stiles had told her,
the first thing she remembered upon … waking up? That wasn’t the proper term. He killed me, she thought now, and
unbeknownst to her, her eyes flashed silver again. He took my heart; and the human Daphne, who had lived a more-or-less ordinary
kind of life in the village right up until the moment she was hired to be Tad
Collins’ governess in the big house, that
Daphne would have quailed and wept and fled the room, gasping and panting in
some locked room until she dissolved utterly into tears. Zuvembi
Daphne, however, looked upon her former self with something even worse than
contempt: a black kind of hatred that
burned inside her. Where my heart should
be, she supposed.
“With
your new life comes a startling array of powers,” Stiles had promised her, then
kissed her softly upon her dead lips.
“And you will use them all. At my
command, of course,” but – of course – Stiles wasn’t going to be ordering
anyone around anytime soon.
You will be the bride of Quentin
Collins. You will bring him over to our
side. You will become the mistress of
Collinwood, and you will cause it to become a sanctuary for the time when I hold
the power of Judah Zachery … when I shall unleash hell on earth.
He
had actually said those things to her.
And,
if she’d been capable of ordinary human thought, it might have occurred to her
now that she continued to actively follow Gerard’s plans to the letter.
But
now: she needed to be careful; if she
gazed too deeply into her stepson’s eyes, the power of the zuvembi would overtake him, and she would have his soul. That was a useful trick, but one she decided
now to save for a more valuable time. “Go
darling,” she said, and placed her cold lips upon Tad’s forehead. His eyes rolled back in his head and he shuddered,
though with disgust or pleasure, she couldn’t tell. Didn’t matter. He was already mounting the staircase,
unsteadily, weaving a bit, a fact which wasn’t lost on Daniel, rheumy eyes or
not.
The
old man was already thundering down the staircase. “Quentin, are you mad?” he roared. They kept him in the tower room; Daphne had
discovered that soon after her employ with the Collins began. He killed his first wife, one Harriet
Collins, on a stormy night twenty years ago, strangled her and then threw her
corpse from the top of Widow’s Hill, a fact which remained deeply buried …
until he tried the same trick with his latest wife, the pretty dishmop Valerie
Collins. They hid the scandal from the
rest of the world, as the Collins family was wont to do, and while Daniel
remained the nominal head of the family, of course it was Quentin who ran the
estate and the fishing fleet below the hill.
But Daniel was also known to escape from time to time; Stella Young, who
acted as secretary to Quentin, disappeared a year or so ago, and it hadn’t
taken long for Daphne to learn that her disappearance coincided with one of
Daniel’s many escapes.
So
perhaps, Daphne thought, chewing on the tip of one fingernail (and she didn’t
notice how it magically regenerated even as she gnawed at it; such was the
power of the zuvembi), it might
behoove me to keep just a bit of
space between me and the old man.
“Quentin,
look at me when I talk to you,” Daniel growled.
He had reached the base of the staircase, and Quentin, as ordered,
continued to look steadfastly away from the man who had been his father. The Dark One is his father now, Daphne
thought, thrilled, and hid her grin with the back of her hand. But Daniel, his eyes a bit more eagle than
Daphne originally figured, narrowed, and he snarled, “I don’t see what is so
amusing about this, Miss Harridge.”
“Mrs.
Collins,” Daphne said, dropping her hand.
“We are married, Mr. Collins. Daniel.” She smirked.
“Father. It is a fact, and you cannot change it.”
“I
can have your marriage annulled,” Daniel growled. “This is … this is some kind of
nightmare! Samantha has been dead for
less than a night, and already you,” and he swept his basilisk gaze back to his
son, shaggy head obediently lowered, “you
are cavorting with this … this …”
“Governess,”
Daphne supplied helpfully.
You are zuvembi. You can call the dead back
from their graves.
Well,
Daphne thought suddenly, wouldn’t that be a fun trick to try out.
“Mr.
Collins,” she said in a low voice, “you would be wise to let us retire to our
bedroom now.”
Daniel’s
face grew an unhealthy magenta color, and he managed to choke, “Your –!”
“Yes,”
Daphne hissed, “ours, Quentin’s and
mine. He is my husband. I am his wife. Samantha is dead; the coroner will report a
heart attack –”
Daniel
gaped at her. “How do you know what the coroner will –”
Her
smile grew more poisonous. “The coroner
will report a heart attack, and no court on this earth will stand in my
way. I am Mrs. Quentin Collins. And if you continued to interefere–”
“How
dare you speak to me this way,” Daniel choked.
“You – you harlot –”
“Let
the spirit of dark night take possession of this room!” Daphne cried, whirling
away from the old man and throwing out her arms. Instantly the room was plunged into
blackness; only an eerie greenish-blue light, which flickered into existence
around her hands, allowed them to see.
“Quentin!”
Daniel cried, clutching his son’s arm, “Quentin, you must save me! You must –”
But Daniel’s words broke off with a scream, for Quentin had lifted his
head at last, and his eyes glowed an unholy silver, and he grinned, and Daniel
saw how his teeth were stained black with blood –
“Release
a spirit from her watery grave,” Daphne intoned; the words flowed from her
lips, and she didn’t question them. I am
zuvembi, she thought proudly. “Let him look upon her face! Show him the misery he has caused; show him
the tears that rotted in her eyes!”
Light
flared in the far corner of the room, near the servants’ entrance, and the form
of a woman took shape within the shadows that capered there. Daniel, who recognized her immediately,
blanched. “No!” he whimpered. “No!
Send her away! I don’t want to
see her! I don’t want to see her!”
But
the ghost in the corner was relentless.
She came creeping from the shadows, her elbows and knees bent at strange
and impossible angles, making each movement quick and crab-like, her head
cocked like a mongrel dog; she was white as salt, and her hair hung lank over
her glaring, unblinking eyes.
Seaweed dangled from her
shoulders and her fingertips, reaching, reaching, reaching for her husband …
“Spirit
of Harriet Collins,” Daphne said, grinning, “here is your murderer! He is yours; take him, take him back to the
sea! Make him scream, the way you
screamed the night he murdered you on Widow’s Hill!”
“Harriet,”
Daniel blubbered, and covered his face with his hands, “oh Harriet, no, no, no,
please, no –” but the ghost was
relentless, and came creeping, creeping –
“Take
him!” Daphne shrieked in an ecstasy of hatred.
“Take him away with you! Devour
him there on the edge of the cliff; drain him; drink him completely! He is yours – yours – yours to –”
But
the explosion of the rifle cut off whatever else the undead woman might have
commanded her puppet; its discharge tore through the shade of Harriet Collins,
who winked out like a candle flame, and then through the forehead of Daphne
Collins, nee Harridge. The top of her
skull, from the nose to her crown, disintegrated; her mouth gaped open and her
tongue, gray and wormlike, flopped out and dangled for a moment before her entire
body shuddered, dropped to its knees, then fell forward. Behind the place where Daphne had made her
last stand, the wallpaper beside the portrait of Barnabas Collins was sprayed
with a black and red stains and flecked with tiny white bits of bone and gray
streaks of what had been, once upon a few seconds ago, Daphne’s brains.
Quentin
turned his head dreamily, his face unreactive, in the direction of the drawing
room.
“Oh
my god,” Daniel babbled, “oh my god, oh thank god, oh thank Jesus, sweet sweet
Jesus –”
Gabriel
Collins held the rifle in his lap; a beatific smile crossed his features, and
he nodded. “Yes Father,” he said. “You might well call upon the Savior
now. He has released us from the curse
of yet another of Satan’s night beasts.
He has delivered us, and I am His instrument.” He grinned, and cocked the rifle, ejecting a
shell onto the carpet. The smell of
gunpowder filled the foyer. “Me,” he
said, “and this.” He began to reload.
“Gabriel,”
Daniel cried, “something … something is terribly wrong with your brother! He’s … he’s under a spell; he …”
“He
is a warlock,” Gabriel said, and spat.
“He sits at the right hand of Lucifer.”
Gabriel lifted the rifle and took aim.
“NO!”
Daniel shrieked.
The
explosion took Quentin in the chest. He
didn’t move; didn’t fall backward; merely grunted, then looked down at the
large black hole above his stomach. He
lifted his head and glared at Gabriel; his silver eyes flashed, and he held his
hands out, grasping in his brother’s direction.
But
Gabriel had already reloaded. For a
moment, something like pity flickered in his
eyes. He aimed
the gun between his eyes. “Quentin,” he
murmured, but no one heard him.
“Brother.”
Quentin
grunted.
And
Gabriel fired.
Quentin’s
corpse, now merely a corpse again, dropped to the floor beside Daphne’s
sprawled body.
Daniel
wailed.
“It
had to be done, Father,” Gabriel said, but his voice was suddenly
unsteady. “He was a monster. Something inhuman. He hasn’t been human for a long while, I
believe.”
“You
believe,” Daniel sobbed, then
suddenly, startling, reached out and slapped Gabriel across the face. “You bastard,”
he snarled. “It should have been you, it
should have been you, it should be
you lying there –” And he turned away
and knelt at Quentin’s side, lifted his hand and wept his tears against it, and
sobbed, “Quentin, oh … oh Quentin –”
“Father!”
Gabriel called. His voice cracked,
warped into a glissade of pain.
“Father! Please! Father!”
In
the end, it was Ben Stokes again, as it was always Ben Stokes it seemed, who
patted Gabriel’s shoulder, said, “I’ll take Mr. Dan’l back to his room; I’ll
remove the bodies; I’ll bury them in the woods, and no one will ever know … we’ll
tell everyone they tried to sail to England, that their ship went down … no one
will ever know … the secret will be safe … the family will be safe … always …”
Gabriel
sat in his chair before the fireplace now, glaring into the flames, his fingers
steepled. It was nearly dawn. Tad would have to be told the tidy fiction
Ben composed, Gabriel told himself, that his father and his governess had left
Collinwood immediately for a honeymoon trip; after enough time, they would
spread the word that the ship went down.
And Tad will take control of the house and the fortunes, Gabriel thought
darkly, and peeled his teeth back in a dog-like grimace. What about my boys? What about Caleb and Gregory? It wasn’t fair; he thought of his father
keening over Quentin’s destroyed body; dammit, it wasn’t fair.
“No,
my darling,” a voice said from behind him, and he stiffened, dug his fingers
into the wood arms of his chair; his eyes widened and his mouth gaped and
worked, spilling out soundless words, because it wasn’t possible what he was
hearing, not possible at all.
But
the cool hands that reached out from behind him before he could turn around,
those soft fingers that stroked his cheek once, hands he had loved once upon a
time, those hands filled with a sudden and inexplicable strength he knew they
had never before possessed; those hands that gripped his chin and crown; those
hands that twisted suddenly, viciously to the right so that the crack of his
neck as it broke came, so satisfying; those hands that belonged to his dearly
departed wife, Edith Collins, were now being wiped delicately on the front of
her dress.
She
came around the front of the chair now and peered curiously at Gabriel’s head,
canted now at an impossible angle. His
frozen blue eyes stared furiously at nothing.
“It
isn’t fair, is it,” she said. “Not even
a little bit.”
And
began to laugh.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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