CHAPTER 127: Infection
by Nicky
Voiceover by Don Briscoe: “Collinwood
in the year 1969 … where the first peaceful months of that year are about to be
shattered … for many enemies have risen up against the Collins family, who, on
this night, are preparing to fight back …”
1
Julia
finished wiping her mouth with the cloth napkins she and Vicki had discovered
in one of the attic rooms shortly after Barnabas’ release from the coffin in
1967 and admired it for a moment before setting it delicately beside her empty
plate. A beautiful indigo, the napkins
were probably two hundred years old and remarkably well preserved. Antiques, she thought with a twinge of guilt,
that probably belong more properly in a museum, but Barnabas insisted on their
use. She tried to recall from her time
peering through the eyes of Natalie DuPres in 1795 if the napkins were part of
Josette’s trousseau.
“Exquisite,”
Julia said as Willie came by to remove her plate. “You really outdid yourself, Willie.”
“Yes,”
Angelique chimed in, and Julia resisted the urge to roll her eyes. She had come to like Angelique – grudgingly,
and this was after much soul-searching and self-lectures about the power of
forgiveness and analysis of the metaphysical nature of the soul, since,
allegedly, Angelique had somehow lost hers at one point and then regained it, a
story Julia had never really bought
into – but the former witch was getting on Julia’s very and truly for
reals-this-time last nerve. Why did I
decide to quit smoking now? Julia
wailed to herself, but forced a demure smile onto her mouth. Angelique batted her long black eyelashes;
the green mascara she wore turned her eyes turquoise. Julia wished for a moment she had a torch and
some gasoline. “Really and truly outdid
yourself.”
“Aww,”
Willie said, blushing. As he passed by
Audrey, who had been offered a plate that remained, as did Barnabas’, empty
throughout the dinner, the beautiful vampire squeezed his arm and offered him
one of her dazzling smiles. She was
proud of Willie, as were they all.
Originally a rough and tumble con artist and drifter when he released
Barnabas from his chained coffin, Willie had somehow transformed himself into a
combination housekeeper, repairman, carpenter, decorator, and master chef. The dinner of duck a l’orange was one of the best Julia had ever enjoyed. “It wasn’t nothing, really.”
“You’re
too modest, Willie,” Barnabas said lightly from his place at the head of the
table. He rested both of his hands on
the top of his wolf’s head cane and watched his servant with admiration. Julia thought Barnabas looked remarkably well
for a man coping with the reinstatement of the vampire curse, this time apparently
more primal and ferocious than any of the other variations he had endured over
the centuries. She hadn’t exactly been
privy to all the details, and neither Barnabas nor Angelique had offered up any
more details than were necessary. Still,
Julia had managed to glean that this newest iteration of the curse involved an
actual demon bat that had, somehow … invaded?
Infested? … become a very literal
part of Barnabas.
Magic,
she thought now, and wanted to roll her eyes.
Once upon a time my life was normal.
Was that ever true? Really?
This
dinner party, suggested by Willie and seconded by Audrey, was intended to be a
respite from the insanity that had plagued all their lives well before
Barnabas, Julia, and Angelique jaunted off to Parallel Time; ever since, as
Julia now considered, Victoria Winters’ descent into darkness that ended with
her death, as well as the death of Elizabeth’s brother Roger and Chris
Jennings’ sister Amy. Yes, Julia
thought, we are all exhausted. We could
use just one night where nothing terrible happens.
Which
was when, of course, the picture window beside the front doors exploded and Tom
Jennings leaped into the room.
He
stared as he crouched for a moment before them, red eyes bulging like a hideous
rat, fangs bared.
Then
Barnabas erupted from his chair, silver cane raised, and roared, “JENNINGS!”
Julia
felt her stomach flip. Tom had been her
lover once upon a time, in a saner life, before Barnabas and Vicki’s twin
arrivals brought so much darkness and terror into all their lives. Then he had discovered Barnabas’ dark secret
and Barnabas had been forced to feed off him.
But it was Angelique, then in her guise as Cassandra Collins, who had
opened the wounds on Tom’s neck, murdering him and condemning him to life as a
vampire. Tom had immediately tried to
turn Julia into his vampire bride, and she had only been saved when Barnabas’
quick thinking turned silver shards of a broken mirror into a weapon that
pierced the vampire’s heart.
Yet,
here he was, back from the dead.
He
was quick. One moment he was still
crouched in the direct center of the room; the next he stood behind Willie, one
hand twisting the other man’s arm up and behind his back so that Willie
grimaced with pain; the other bared Willie’s throat. Jennings lowered his mouth so that his needle
fangs were bare centimeters above the spot where Willie’s jugular vein pulsed
delicately. “No one move,” Tom purred,
“or I will slit his jugular and carotid before he even takes another breath.”
“What
do you want, Jennings?” Barnabas growled.
“The
Amulet of Caldys,” Tom said instantly, and his red-blood eyes flickered to
Angelique. “Get it. This moment.
Or he dies.”
Angelique
hesitated. Droplets of sweat stood out
on her forehead. “But I –” she began.
Audrey
was in her face with the same demonic speed that Tom exhibited. Her own fangs protruded, long and slender,
like a cobra’s. “Get … the damned … amulet,” she growled.
Angelique,
glaring alternately at Tom and Audrey, ran up the stairs to the Old House’s
second floor and her bedroom.
“What
does Roxanne want with it?” Barnabas said.
“Roxanne
wants nothing,” Tom snickered. “Who cares for Roxanne? There’s a new power in town, man.”
Barnabas
narrowed his eyes but said nothing.
“Look,
I don’t know anything about this Enemy you all have been worrying about. And I don’t care. Eventually –”
And he looked to Julia and grinned his bone-white, nightmare grimace, “—
eventually I’ll claim Julia for my
bride.”
“I’m
going to give you peace, Tom,” Julia said calmly. She was a hurricane inside. Her mouth, however, was thin and did not
tremble; her chin was thrust forward, a warrior’s. “I swear it.”
“I
don’t want peace,” Tom spat, and
playfully licked Willie’s throat. But
his eyes were only for Julia. “I want you.
And I’m going to have you.”
“Here,”
Angelique said from the bottom of the stairs.
Her face was white and her eyes were wet with the tears she’d shed, but
she strode forward nevertheless and thrust out the little metal charm. Tom plucked it from her grasp; a bare moment
later and he was gone.
Audrey
was at Willie’s side in an instant, and helped him as he stumbled on liquid
legs to the seat she had vacated. She
stroked his hair and kissed his forehead and cooed, “It’s okay, baby, it’s all
right, I promise, everything is okay now.”
“We
will regret this,” Angelique said stonily; her eyes ranged over the other four,
who could only return her gaze helplessly.
“All of us. I promise you that.”
2
Gerard flexed his fingers at the same moment he opened
his eyes as widely as he could, and relief flooded through him. He was able to see his fingers, firstly, and
secondly, he had fingers to flex and a body that could feel relief.
At first, there had been
nothing. A void. He could still feel, however; whatever the witch-bitch had done to him, it still
allowed him to feel the blistering Arctic cold of that place. He hated to think of it. It was worse than whatever Leticia Faye had
done to him in 1840; it made his body clench and spasm just to think of it.
And it had been eternal.
The
Candle of the Seven Secrets, of course, and he had been a fool to forget about
it. But she couldn’t have used it! he
had wailed to himself when enough of his personality, his mind, his essence, had drawn together and begun to
coalesce; she has no power!
Obviously
she had enough.
He
shivered. He wasn’t alone.
He
concentrated; concentrated; listened.
A
sound. Some sound.
Stiles
was lying on the altar where he had sacrificed so many in the name of his
Master; the stone was cold (but not the icy cold of the void) beneath him, and
uncomfortable. I’m naked, of course, he
thought, and was able to grin his fiend’s grin for a moment; that bitch
couldn’t even leave me my clothes.
What
was that sound?
Sobbing. It was the sound of someone – man? woman? –
in pain, in agony.
“Hello?”
Gerard croaked.
Stilessssss…
The
Master’s voice.
You fool.
Stiles
dragged himself from the altar, grimacing, and padded about the room. He was in Rose Cottage again, he saw; where
was the Master? A shard of guilt slashed
at him. Not strong enough to
materialize, he thought, and a small sob escaped his mouth. Because of me. Because of my failure.
Yes, Stiles.
Your eternal failure.
This,
followed by another sob.
Stiles
frowned. So it was the Master who was sobbing? Was that even possible?
“Master?”
Stiles whispered. “Are you …” He licked his lips at the absurdity of what
he was about to say. “…okay?”
A
blast of force lashed out at him and knocked him across the room. He slammed into the far wall and slid, dazed,
to the floor. Once upon a time it had
been carpeted; now, only remnants remained, spotted, stained black and
rust. “Master,” he croaked, “please …
forgive me …”
Another
groan of anguish.
Something
flickered into being before him.
A
woman. Long dark hair, agonized eyes.
NO!
She
winked out like a candle flame.
“Master?”
Stiles tried again. “Please?”
Several
faces appeared before him at once, glowing brightly for a second or two, then
fading away, only to be replaced by another:
Joshua Collins, glaring sternly; Millicent Collins, vapid and insane;
Harriet Collins, seaweed caught in the shag of her hair; Jeremiah Collins,
eyeball protruding; Josette, same; Abigail Collins; Naomi Collins; Judith
Collins; Charity Trask; Roger Collins; and finally, her hair a white hag’s
bloom and her hands twisted claws, came Victoria Winters, who glared at Stiles
with shark-black eyes.
It
was this incarnation that remained, that walked toward him confidently.
Stiles
cringed backward as it advanced, and tried to sink into the wall. He squeezed his eyes tightly and prepared for
the pain.
When
it didn’t come, he opened his eyes half-way.
Victoria
Winters, human, restored to her former youth and beauty, was kneeling beside
him. She stroked his face, and his flesh
hummed at her touch. “You left me,” she
said without guile or recrimination.
He
flushed and bowed his head. “I didn’t
mean to.”
“I
know,” the thing that looked like Vicki said.
“You were trying to help … me.” A
large crystalline tear gathered in the corner of one of her eyes and shimmered
down her cheek.
Stiles
watched this all in amazement. It
couldn’t be real. The Master had never
exhibited such emotion in the past.
Emotion was weakness; Stiles knew that.
To feel … to care …
“But
I do,” Vicki whispered. “Feel … and
care. Don’t you understand, you stupid
man? That’s why I’m doing this. It isn’t to rule
over a shattered world, a ruined void.
Nothing as mortal as that
particular ambition.”
“I
don’t understand.”
“Of
course you don’t. You sold your humanity
a long time ago. I never had any to begin
with.” It laughed then, a jagged,
unhealthy sound. “To begin with. Now I am infected
with it.”
“Master,”
Stiles whispered, and dared to touch the face of the woman before him. She was so beautiful, so innocent
looking. Stiles wished he could have
known her in life. The woman at
Collinwood right now, that Alexandra, was only a shadow compared to Victoria
Winters.
“Please,”
it said, and took his hand. It burned
with icy cold. The Master’s touch was
leech-like; it stole warmth and vitality from all around it. That was the
Master’s nature; it had no form of its own, so it could only take. “I don’t want to be like this anymore,” it
sobbed.
“You
don’t mean that.”
“I
do!” Its head flashed up, and fire
blazed for a moment in its eyes. “Oh, but
I do! These feelings, these thoughts
– they aren’t mine!”
“The
people,” Stiles guessed, “the people whose form you take …”
The
Vicki-thing nodded her/its head. “Them,”
it said, “but more than that.”
“The
girl.” Stiles ground his teeth together.
“The
girl,” sighed the Vicki-thing. “She
haunts me.”
“I’m
here to help you, Master,” Stiles said eagerly.
“Please. Let me.”
“Help
me do what?” The voice was Vicki’s, but
the emotion was real, Stiles could tell.
Its eyes were full of agony, large dark pools of pain. It laughed its jagged, infected laugh
again. “All I can do is destroy. I have hunkered here all these months, and I
have thought.” It sighed. “I thought about this world, all the worlds
that are out there, and they are infinite,
you know –” Stiles nodded like a good boy; he hadn’t known “— and I thought
about how I want to end them. Just end
all of them. Forever. All dark.
All, all, all darkness.”
“Yes,”
Stiles said, clapping, relieved that the Master was sticking to the original
plan. “Yes, let’s do that.”
“You
fool,” Vicki said sorrowfully. “You will cease to exist when the worlds
do. And …” Its face creased with pain again. “And so will I.”
Stiles
cocked his head, dog-like. “That’s
impossible.”
It
said nothing. Derision flashed in its
eyes at his stupidity. “When there is
nothing, there is nothing. I am
at this moment; I exist.” It smiled.
“I am human in that respect. I
seek to survive at all costs. Such is
the drive of the human race. It’s why
they’ve covered the planet in their filth.
It’s why demons hate them. They
supplanted us; they have form, they have life
…” Its face twisted in agony. “And we envy that, of course. We would have form, we would have life.” Tears ran down its face again. “But I want to destroy it all! I am like a greedy child at a birthday party
that isn’t mine; if I can’t have the cake, all
cake, I don’t want anyone else to have it either. I will ruin all the worlds because I don’t
understand what – who – I really am.”
Stiles
said nothing.
At
last the Vicki-thing sighed. “It’s
okay,” she/it said. “I don’t fully
understand either. Am I infected by the
girl’s feelings and thoughts, even now, three centuries later? Or are they my thoughts and feelings? Or
does it matter?” It wiped away the
tears, which faded and disappeared into nothing before they struck the
floor. They weren’t real, Stiles
thought, because this form wasn’t real.
Vicki
stood up, fading and shifting as she went.
Now she was Professor T. Eliot Stokes, grinning his rather jolly
grin. His shirt front was stiff and dark
with dried blood. “I suppose in the end
it doesn’t matter,” it said. “If I do
destroy all the worlds, I stop feeling.
All of this goes away. It’s so
much easier that way. I firmly believe
this.”
“Yes,”
Stiles agreed, but cautiously.
“I’m
afraid of what will happen after,” Stokes said, considering. “I’m afraid of the nothing.”
“No
more pain,” Stiles said. “That’s what I
keep thinking. No more pain. I … I hate
pain.”
“Ironic,
since you bring so much of it to others.”
Stiles
nodded. “For you,” he said. “All for you.”
The
Stokes-thing was silent for a moment.
“You are a good servant,” it said.
“More than valuable. You have
proven your allegiance to me time and time again. You want this oblivion as much as I do, don’t
you.” Stiles nodded fervently. Stokes shivered, then shrugged, almost
bewildered. “So be it.” He lifted his head and roared, “Do you hear
me? It’s coming! The end!
For all of us! FOR ALL OF US!”
and for a moment he was that girl again, her eyes wet with tears, shaking,
shaking, then nothing.
You are a good servant, Stilesssssss.
Gerard
Stiles grinned.
A
tiny, dime-sized hole appeared in his forehead, just above his nose, between
his eyes. They lifted, as if surprised.
Then
he collapsed.
“Now
why,” Carolyn Stoddard said joyfully, the pistol still hot in her hand, “didn’t
we think of that before?”
3
Quentin
moaned. He couldn’t help himself. He didn’t like making sounds when he was with
a woman, but this just felt so … damned … GOOD!
He
had never been the victim of a vampire before.
He had often wondered, as he worked beside Barnabas, what it would feel
like if he offered his throat to his cousin, just to see what sensation the
vampire’s bite – hey, let’s call a spade a spade – what the vampire’s kiss would bring. Did it hurt?
He sometimes thought that it had to
hurt; those fangs were nothing to joke about; wouldn’t it feel like a dog sinking
its sharp-sharp teeth into one of the more sensitive areas on the body? But he had seen the bite in action; he watched those women as they writhed at
his cousin’s touch. He would get hard
just thinking about it.
He
was hard now. Valerie’s fangs were in
his throat, back in the old familiar wounds, nuzzling, worrying them, and it
didn’t hurt at all. Well, maybe a little bit; a token sting, and then this
… this bliss. So much more intense than
just simple sex, Quentin thought dreamily, and stroked her hair as she slurped
his blood; this was true
connection. Valerie existed inside his
mind now, black and exciting, an evil flower that bloomed within him with each
sunset. She wouldn’t allow him to make
love to her in the human way, even when he told her she could bite him during
the act itself; she was so old-fashioned about some things, Quentin thought
mournfully, but then, when she entered him, none of it mattered.
Drain
me, he thought, exhilarated, drain me, kill me, make me yours.
“No,”
Valerie whispered, and he moaned again, but with loss this time, as he always
felt loss when she withdrew. “No, I
won’t.”
“Won’t?”
She
shook her head sadly. “I won’t make you
what I am. I won’t do that to anyone.”
“I
want to be yours.”
Her
smile was bittersweet. “That will
change,” she said. “You don’t know now;
that’s the nature of this particular beast.
But you won’t want me anymore once you die and … and return.”
She shuddered, and delicately wiped a tiny crimson pearl from the corner
of her mouth. Her fangs were still
visible; he throbbed at the sight of them.
“You will despise me, just as I despise my maker.”
“Barnabas?”
“And
Roxanne,” Valerie nodded. “They will pay
for what they have done.” Her eyes
flashed red, and then returned to their very Angelique-blue/green/gray. “And for that. That desire for vengeance. I hunger for it as much as I do for
blood. I never did in life, you know. I was always afraid. I wanted my husband to protect me, and when
they locked him away, no one else would do it.
So I cowered, afraid.”
“But
you aren’t afraid anymore.”
“The
one good thing about this curse,” Valerie said reflectively. “The only
good thing. But it doesn’t matter. I don’t want
this life.”
“What
do you want?” He gave her his best
crooked smile, that sexy Quentin Collins special that drove all the women
mad. He added a quirked eyebrow. “Me?”
“You
are so like him,” Valerie whispered,
and traced circles on Quentin’s naked chest.
“But no, my darling. I don’t want
you. Not like that.” She closed her eyes and stretched for a
moment, then rose. She was as naked as
he was, and he watched her backside appreciatively as she slid into the
diaphanous blue-white gown she always wore.
She gazed back at him with wicked eyes.
“I want extinction. Only
extinction.”
Quentin’s
mouth opened and then closed.
“Then
please,” a pleasant voice said, “allow us.”
Valerie
hissed, a terrible cheated sound, and her face scrawled into a hateful
grimace. The wooden bolt flew from the
bow Alexandra March held in one firm hand and would have struck home, but
Valerie was quicker than that. She had
already begun to fade, her body losing form and substance until it was little
more than gauze, and the wooden arrow sailed harmlessly through her. Then she was gone.
Quentin
wailed. He couldn’t help himself, and it
wasn’t a terrifically manly sound, but he wailed nonetheless. She was gone,
his dark goddess, and when would he ever see her again?
“Oh,
Quentin,” Chris Jennings said sadly, and came forward with a blanket he had
pulled from the bed where Quentin slept, usually fitfully, while Valerie lay in
her daytime death-coma. They would destroy
her coffin now, he thought bleakly, burn it, and she’d have to find a new place
to rest. Quentin sat numbly as Chris
wrapped the blanket around him. He
turned to Nathan Forbes, who stood slightly behind a grim-looking Sebastian
Shaw in the doorway, and said, “You were right, Nathan. Good work.”
“Yes,”
Sebastian growled. “Good work.”
“We
have to get him to Julia,” Chris said, concern wrinkling his forehead. He stared into Quentin’s eyes. “Gramps?” he said gently. “Gramps, you in
there?”
“She’s
gone,” Quentin said. His voice was flat
and dead. “She’s gone, gone, gone.”
“Julia
will have to begin the injections,” Nathan said helpfully. “The same ones she gave me when I …” He saw the steely looks that both Chris and
Sebastian gave him, and smiled sheepishly.
“Never mind,” he said.
“Vampires,”
Alex said disgustedly. “Why are there so
many goddamned vampires around this place?”
4
Angelique
folded her hands placidly before her, opened the dresser drawer, and
squinted. It was empty … or it seemed to
be.
“Appear
to me,” she whispered. She was stripped
of her powers again, but that didn’t matter. The spell she cast while inhabiting the body
of Valerie Collins in 1840 waited for those three words, and indeed, as she
watched, pleased, the empty drawer began to glitter and flash, and within
seconds, the antique hand mirror she had placed there and then enchanted grew
back into reality. “Yes,” she whispered,
then lifted the mirror, face-down, as it had been that night a hundred and
thirty years ago (though in reality, it had only been a few days for her), and placed it, still face-down, on
the top of the bureau.
Then
she turned and examined the room.
Josette’s room, or so it had been when she first came to this country
(as Angelique, you mean, she reminded
herself; a silly thing, reincarnation, when you came right down to it). But now it’s mine, she thought grandly, and a bit sadly. Barnabas hadn’t been able to look at her, not
really, since their return from the past.
He’ll never look at me the way I want him to again, she thought, not
after what I did to him. Again.
This
stupid room, she thought furiously, a tribute to her, a dead woman.
I have to make things right.
And
so she would.
She
was terrified, she realized. Her lips
were dry, cracking, and so she licked them.
Didn’t help.
“Angelique,”
she whispered, and looked around the room.
No candle, no fire to transmit her thoughts; neither would have
helped. She would have to rely on her
doppelganger’s powers and pray that the creature would listen. “Come to me.
Come to me this night. Appear to
me in this room!”
And
when the green witchlight flared in the far corner of the room, and Angelique
saw herself standing there, her arms wrapped confidently around herself, she
felt that spear of terror pierce her again.
If I fail tonight, Angelique thought, despite herself, I will be
returned to darkness.
As will we all.
“If
you fail?” the Angelique-goddess said sweetly in her chiming, silvery
voice. “At what?”
Angelique
raised the mirror.
“At
this,” she said.
TO BE CONTINUED ...
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