Dark Shadows (1966-1971) was a soap opera with an emphasis on the supernatural that has garnered a cult following in the years since it left the air. The introduction of Barnabas Collins (Jonathan Frid) catapulted the series to enormous success, capturing the public's imagination in a way that continues to endure today. This online fanzine will provide a place for rare photos, articles, stories, artwork, and other multimedia as a tribute to the magic and mystery that is Dark Shadows.
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Thursday, December 31, 2015
Thursday, December 24, 2015
Shadows on the Wall Chapter 130
CHAPTER 130: What Friends Are For
by Nicky
Voiceover by John Karlen: “Tragedy
has struck again at the great house of Collinwood. As the Enemy of this and all worlds readies
for its final assault, it falls to the rest of the inhabitants of the house and
the town below it to gather their own forces.
But are the ties that bind them together strong enough to save them … or
will they all be destroyed?”
1
“How
are we friends, you and I?” Angelique
inhaled the smoke sharply from the cigarette Julia had handed her, stone-faced,
five minutes ago or so, as they stood on the Collinwood terrace. The sky was leaden above them and sharp
crystal shards of snow spun lazily down; the moon was full somewhere up there,
and though the clouds obscured it, both women knew that, somewhere, Chris and
Sebastian were out there, fanged and deadly, though Sebastian insisted that the
training they had been working on together was working out, that Chris claimed
to remember little bits and patches while he was transformed. Angelique watched the dragon-tail of smoke
blown from her mouth caught by the wind and swirled, tattered, and shredded,
until it joined the patterns of snow and was lost. She glanced over and Julia was looking at her
now, unblinking, those great almond eyes guarded and wary, and Angelique felt a
tremor. She was relieved; feeling, any
feeling, was a relief to her in the wake of the return of her powers. She even allowed herself a smile. “It doesn’t seem very likely, does it. I’ve tried to kill you, you’ve tried to kill
me, and yet …”
“And
yet, here we are,” Julia said quietly.
She was not smoking; in fact, the cigarette she’d retrieved from her bag
and given Angelique wasn’t exactly stale, but it certainly wasn’t fresh.
“Yes,”
Angelique murmured. “Here we are.”
The
wind moaned, and they both looked up at the sky where, for a moment, a sliver
of the moon revealed itself. Julia
shivered, despite the thick winter coat she wore and the blue wool sweater
beneath it. Warmth, Angelique thought,
and Julia suddenly blinked and gasped, then narrowed her eyes. “Why did you do that?” she said.
“What
do you mean?” But she knew. Of course she knew.
“I’m
warm,” Julia growled. “As if someone draped
a blanket over me.”
“I
didn’t,” Angelique said, “not exactly.”
“Don’t
lie to me.”
Anger
lapped inside her somewhere, rough as a cat’s tongue, and now her own eyes
narrowed. “I’m not,” she said. She forced herself to take a breath, to push
the anger away. Because who knows, she
thought with a stab of fear, what else would materialize unexpectedly because
her emotions, as always, were connected to the magic. “These powers, Julia … I didn’t have them for
so long, and to suddenly have them back …”
Julia
glared at her, then softened, relaxed.
“I’m sorry,” she said at last. “You
… startled me, that’s all.”
“I
startle myself, sometimes.”
They
chuckled together.
“Doesn’t
it ever seem extraordinary,” Angelique said, “that, despite everything, that
after everything we’ve been through together, that we are able to stand here,
just you and I, and not kill each
other?”
“The
thought,” Julia said dryly, “has crossed my mind.”
“And
yet we haven’t.”
“No. We haven’t.”
Somewhere,
out there in the darkness of the woods, a howl rose up toward the moon, and
less than a second later another joined it.
Both women reacted; Julia leaned over the stone railing of the terrace
and dug in with her gloved fingers. But
the howls were of joy; they both realized that, of triumph: over death, over murder, over the power of
the Beast. They were Animals now, not
Beasts. They have triumphed over their
baser nature, Angelique realized.
Through the power of love.
It
should’ve been ridiculous, trite … but it was true. She knew it was true. True love conquers all, she thought, and
wanted to laugh. But she didn’t.
“Do
you think we stand a chance?”
Angelique
stubbed out the cigarette and flicked it, uncaringly, into the darkness, where
it sank and vanished into the snow that was gathering in drifts on the terrace. She turned to face Julia completely, and
folded her arms over breasts. “Do you
want an honest answer?”
“I
know you’ll give me one.”
“Of
course I will.” She smiled her old
sphinx-smile. “The answer is no. I don’t think we will. The Enemy has grand ambitions, we know that
much. I’ve had grand ambitions before
myself; so have we all. But Collinwood
is cursed, and the shadow of that curse hangs over everyone under this roof,
affecting all our choices, our outcomes.
And the shadow is long. Very
long.”
“Curses
can be broken.”
“True. But both the Dagger of Ereshkigal and the
Amulet of Caldys are lost to us.”
“But
don’t you think,” Julia said, drawing, in her excitement, patterns in the air
with her hands, “don’t you think that, perhaps, the curse will affect the Enemy
as well? Bring all its plans and schemes
crumbling into destruction?”
Angelique
considered this. “It’s possible,” she
said at last, and with some reluctance.
“Anything is possible, I’ve learned.”
“I
want it all to be over,” Julia said. Her
excitement fell and faded as quickly as it had come. Her shoulders slumped, and she shivered
again, despite the magical, invisible blanket Angelique’s powers had draped
over her. “I want to be able to rest.”
“In
the darkness,” Angelique said carefully, “in the utter nothingness that will
await us after the Enemy succeeds, I suppose there will be rest.”
“Or
we won’t know any better.” Julia
sighed. “Oh, Angelique,” and she reached
out suddenly and seized one of Angelique’s hands in her own and held it
tightly, “I don’t want to die, I don’t, I don’t!”
“No,”
Angelique said. She glanced uneasily out
at the darkness that lay against them, pressing all the time, and choked with
heavy snow. “I don’t either.”
2
Angelique
and Julia were outside somewhere, Quentin knew; Carolyn was upstairs,
meditating, she claimed, learning to deal with the spirit of Leticia Faye that was
now a part of her, just as if she’d always been there; Chris and Sebastian were
out, transformed, in the woods; who knew about Audrey and Willie; who knew
about the Enemy; who knew about Valerie, who knew, who knew. Quentin sipped at the brandy Barnabas had
poured for him, then watched, carefully, his cousin pacing before the
fire.
“We’re
missing something,” Barnabas said for the millionth time. “I don’t know what it is, but it’s out there,
something, some mystical object, some spell, some incantation that we have to
discover, something that will stop the Enemy once and for all!”
“Mm
hm,” Quentin mumbled, and sipped at his brandy.
“Angelique’s
powers are back, I’m restored, you’re healed,” Barnabas said, glaring into the
fire, “so we have a chance, we must!”
“Mm
hm,” Quentin said.
“We
are not without powers!”
“Mm,”
Quentin said, “hm.”
“Quentin,”
Barnabas growled, “if you’re just going to stand there –”
“As
opposed to what, cousin? Stalk before
the fire? Smoke cigarettes? Or struggle not to smoke them? Or screw my brains out? I’ve thought about that. About all of it. And I prefer,” and he swirled gently the
tumble in his hand, “this.”
“We
can’t just give up. We can’t just lie
down and take it.”
“No,”
Quentin said, sighing, “because that doesn’t work either. I’ve tried it. It’s not even fun.”
“You
are useful to us,” Barnabas said softly.
He crossed over to Quentin and laid a hand on his shoulder. “You are, you know.”
“Am
I?” Quentin chuckled humorlessly. “Do you really think so? What talents have I offered to our merry band
of saviors? I can’t even transform into
the wolf any longer so Sebastian can train me to not kill the people I
love. And Eliot …” His hand trembled minutely for a moment, and
the liquid splashed in the glass. “And
Eliot is dead. So much for any chance of
redemption he could offer me.”
“Is
that what you want?”
“I
don’t know,” Quentin sighed. “I don’t
know what I want. That’s been my trouble
for the past century.”
“Don’t
you think you could have it now?
Redemption?”
Quentin
lifted his shoulders, then lowered them.
His face remained sardonic, exhausted, weary. And young.
Eternally, eternally young.
“You
can, Quentin. Help me. Help us. It isn’t too late.”
“Isn’t
it?” Quentin tried to smile, but his
lips wouldn’t hold it.
“Yes,”
someone said, sneering, from the drawing room’s double doors. “Yes, I’m afraid it is.”
Quentin
saw, smiled, and sipped at his brandy while Barnabas’ head whipped up and he
glared at the intruders who now stood in the doorway.
“Get
out of here,” Barnabas snarled.
“Oh,
I’ll do no such thing,” Nicholas Blair said, smiling his typical feline
smile. Maggie Evans stood beside him,
her hair jet black, her skin the color of salt, almost perfect expect for the
place where the beauty was marred by the jagged black sigils that marched over
her face and down her arms, bare despite the cold and the snow outside, and as
chalk-white as her face.
“You
burned,” Barnabas growled.
“Numerous
times,” Nicholas smiled. “They never
take. Surely your experiences with dear
Angelique have proven to you how inefficient fire is, despite numerous old
wives’ tales to the contrary.”
Quentin
looked up. His eyes met Maggie’s and
widened slightly. Her face, however,
remained perfectly staid, unemotional.
Her eyes, glistening black pools of oil, seemed fixed, staring somewhere
up and to the left. “Maggie,” Quentin
whispered, but she didn’t move, didn’t react at all.
“Yes,
Mr. Collins,” Nicholas purred. “Your
Maggie. Well, the woman who was your Maggie, once upon a time. She’s mine now, as you can tell.” He kissed her on that snow-white cheek;
again, she didn’t move, didn’t react.
Those cold, dead eyes – shark’s eyes – stared into nothing. “Mine, for the rest of eternity.”
“Maggie,”
Quentin said. “Maggie.”
“What
do you want, Blair?” Barnabas snarled.
“Why,
what’s mine, Mr. Collins!” Nicholas lay
one hand, sheathed in a glove the color of the placid sea, against his
breast. “This house, and everything in
it.”
“That
will never happen,” Quentin said. He
rose from the chair to his full height, and stood at Barnabas’ side.
Nicholas
smiled, removed his hand from his chest and thrust it out before him. His eyes flashed hellish obsidian for a
moment, and Quentin flew backward and struck the wall behind him. “And I’m surprised that you haven’t learned
that never means nothing in this house,” Nicholas purred, “and it never
has.” He chuckled.
“Maggie,”
Quentin said, picking himself up from the floor and wiping away the tiny trail
of blood that had escaped from his right nostril, “Maggie, help us. You can help us. You know you can.”
Maggie
said nothing. She stared; she might have
been a porcelain doll, life-sized. Only
the sigils, the magical symbols that were as black as her eyes, continued to
move and slither over every inch of her exposed flesh.
“She
can’t, not unless I tell her to,” Nicholas grinned. “Such is the power of my
pact with the Master. I sacrificed her,
you see, on the Black Altar.”
“You
monster,” Quentin roared, and hurled his tumbler at Nicholas’ head.
Maggie’s
hand moved like a flash, lifted into the air, and held her palm up flat, and
the tumbler, divested of the brandy Quentin had sipped only moments before,
froze in mid-air, held only inches away from Nicholas’ face as if held by an
invisible hand. Maggie raised her index
finger and slowly spun it, and the glass shivered, cracked, then crumbled all
at once into dust and vanished from sight.
“If
I’m a monster,” Nicholas said, “I’m not the only one.”
“You
have no claim on this house,” Barnabas said, “or on this family.”
“But
I do.” His sharp smile grew
sharper. “As you’ll see, Mr. Collins,
the one with the most power can claim whatever he wants.”
“But
you aren’t the one with the most power.”
Angelique emerged from the shadows in the corner of the room, green
witchlight glowing off her porcelain features.
She smiled, and silver and black sparks danced on her fingertips as she
raised her hands threateningly. “I am,”
she said, and tossed her hair back proudly.
“We
shall see, my dear,” Nicholas said, and nodded his head in Maggie’s
direction. Before Angelique could move,
Maggie and Nicholas had locked hands; they leveled their free hands at
Angelique, who froze, immobilized. “The
Master has turned his favor back to me,” Nicholas said, “as you can see. To me, and my beautiful bride.” Angelique’s face twisted, grew red with the
effort she expended to break through the spell, but she remained frozen in
place.
“I
won’t let you –” Barnabas growled, fangs bared, but Maggie turned her head the
slightest, the barest inch, and he froze in place as well.
“You
have no say,” Nicholas said cheerfully.
“None of you, none of you have any
say. And you won’t, ever again.” He took Maggie’s hand and kissed it. “Collinwood belongs to us … and soon, the
Master will rule from this most powerful seat … as it was meant to be.”
3
Quentin
blinked; he was not standing in the drawing room any longer, not watching
Nicholas Blair kiss his former lady love with his disgusting weasel lips. He looked around, but there was nothing to
see – merely a void, endless gray nothingness.
But
he wasn’t alone.
“Hello,
Quentin,” Maggie said. Her voice was thick
with sweetness and rang through the nothing around them like bells. She was restored to the way she’d been when
they had first started dating, what felt like a million years ago: her auburn hair was pulled back into a
ponytail, and her eyes were liquid and brown and human. Her hands were clasped delicately before
her. “I’m sorry to bring you here like
this, but I didn’t see any other way.”
“Not
a problem,” Quentin said. “I wasn’t
doing much good back there.” He touched
his nose and looked at his hand, which was stained with a maroon smear. “As you saw.”
“We
only have a moment. Less than a
moment. He’ll notice that something isn’t
right soon.”
“I
don’t understand this. I don’t
understand how we’re here, why you’re helping him again –”
“I
don’t want to help Nicholas,” Maggie said.
“You must know that.”
“I
don’t know anything anymore.”
“He
came to my house tonight. I thought he
wanted to kill me.” A tremor quirked her
mouth in a bitter half-smile. “I wish he
had.”
“He
performed the Black Mass instead.”
“He
did. Binding me to him for the rest of
eternity.”
“Oh
Maggie.” Quentin felt something hot and
painful claw its way from his chest into his throat. “I’m –”
“You
don’t have to apologize. I’m not an
innocent in all this. We both know
that.”
“I’ll
fix it,” Quentin said. “I’ll find a
way.”
“You
can’t,” Maggie said, smiling sadly now.
“There is nothing you can do.”
“Oh
my god,” Quentin cried and covered his face with his hands.
Maggie
removed them gently and peered into his eyes.
“I didn’t say there was nothing anyone can do. Just you, by yourself.”
“There’s
hope, then!”
“Of
course.” She laughed. “There’s always hope. Your friends back there have forgotten
that. Do you think the Enemy is going to
destroy all the worlds? Do you think the
forces that govern those worlds will allow that?”
“They
haven’t done anything to stop it so far.”
“Don’t
be an idiot. That’s why you’re
here. That’s why you’re all here.”
“And
… and you?”
She
dropped her eyes. “I don’t know. I’m not a clairvoyant. But I want to help. And I think I can. If we can just get through this next moment.”
“That’s
how the story always goes, isn’t it?”
“Nicholas
must be stopped.”
“I
knew that.”
“And
we can’t stop him.”
“Who
can?”
Maggie’s
eyes flashed. “Someone … someone we must
contact, you and I …” She took his hand;
it was real, he felt it, despite the fact that he knew – he knew – that they were still in the
drawing room, Angelique and Barnabas were both frozen, and Nicholas was about
to do god-knew-what to them all. “I need
your help,” Maggie said.
If
I can touch her hand, Quentin thought, if I can touch her –
He
kissed her. She was real, or real enough;
he could feel the soft, familiar crush of her lips against his, the weight of
her breasts against his chest, her taste, the way she had always tasted –
They
broke away. She was smiling. “Just like that,” she said, and they were
swept away.
4
Willie … Willie Loomis …
“Who
is it?” Barnabas’ most faithful servant
leaped to his feet. He’d been dusting
the drawing room of the Old House with plans to sweep it immediately after;
Audrey was out somewhere, prowling through the night, and he didn’t want to
think too hard about what she was prowling for;
after that, Willie planned to wrap the little present he’d found for Barnabas
while he was tidying a few days before in the attic. A diary, old, tattered, crumbling into
tatters, but still readable: the diary
of Sarah Collins, Barnabas’ little sister.
There’d been so much trouble lately, and Willie figured Barnabas would
welcome the gift. It was, he figured,
the least he could after Barnabas had been so kind to him.
And
now this voice, ringing through the drawing room, a disembodied voice, but one
that was so familiar …
Willie
felt goosebumps rise all over his body.
There
was a figure materializing; no, there were two.
“Quentin!”
Willie cried, then clutched at his face, digging deep grooves into his
cheeks. “No! No, you’re a ghost! You’re a ghost!”
Quentin
Collins stood before him, but he wasn’t … he wasn’t complete. Willie could see
the fireplace behind him, the tongues of the flames licking away at the wood
Willie had chopped himself a few hours before.
And beside Quentin stood Maggie Evans, and she was as insubstantial as
Quentin. “We’re not ghosts, Willie,”
Quentin said. His voice echoed
strangely, as if it came from somewhere far away. “Maggie is using her powers, and she can’t use
them for long, so you have to listen to us, and do exactly what we tell you …
now.”
Willie
squinted. “You sure you ain’t a
ghost? Maybe you’re dead and you just
don’t know it.”
Quentin
rolled his eyes. “Willie, I’m not a
ghost. If you don’t listen to me right
now, we will all die, and then we’ll be ghosts together, and I swear to god, I
will find a way to kick your ghost ass!”
Willie
sighed. “Fine,” he said. “Fine, fine, fine. Let me just finish up this
dusting, and then I –”
WILLIE.
Maggie’s eyes were black;
strange black marks stood out prominently all over her face; snarls of black
electricity crackled between her fingers.
And
she had grown fainter, harder to see.
They both had. The spell,
whatever it was, was breaking.
“All
right!” Willie said at last. His voice
was resigned. “Tell me what you want me
to do.”
5
“Let’s
start with you, my dear Angelique,” Nicholas said, grinning his whippet’s
grin. Beside him, Maggie was a perfect
statue, unmoving, unblinking. At
Barnabas’ side, Quentin was as frozen as the witch and the vampire. “The Mask of Ba’al has made you ridiculously
powerful, and perhaps I’m the just the teensiest bit jealous that you used it –” His face darkened momentarily. “- and destroyed it before I could take its
power for myself.”
Angelique’s
lips moved minutely; her hands had managed to clench into fists. But it wasn’t enough. Her eyes remained wide and crystal blue.
“My
dear Maggie’s powers are stronger than ever,” the warlock said, “and the only
thing really holding you back now. Of
course they won’t last long – you are
amazingly powerful, after all; don’t think I’ve forgotten that – which is why I’m
going to destroy you now.” His eyes were
plunged suddenly into blackness, as if night had spilled out and over
them. “Ignis,” he said, “intende.”
Angelique
couldn’t even throw her head back to shriek as the fire rose up around her,
ferocious tongues that licked at her, seared her, burrowed into her.
She
was on fire. She was blazing – her hair
was a golden corona of flames now – and there was nothing any of them could do.
“Take
her, Master!” Nicholas cried feverishly.
“Take her back to the fires of hell, where she belongs!”
Beside
him, Maggie’s eyes widened slightly; they were human again, soft and brown; her
lips curled into the smallest of smiles.
Angelique
was a skeleton wrapped in flames. Only
her eyes remained, cold and blue and blazing with fury.
“Yes! Yes!
Yes!” Nicholas shrieked. Ecstasy overtook him; his hands were fists
and they pumped at the air. “Take her! Take her now, Master! Take –”
Blood
in an amazing black spray burst from his mouth.
The
flames around Angelique froze, hanging in mid-air.
His
eyes bulged. His fists relaxed.
He
turned, slowly, his mouth agape.
“Surprise,”
Audrey said, framed in the door. She
smiled, revealing her fangs.
“You
– you –” Nicholas tried to say. Another
gout of blood burst from his between his lips.
Angelique
released a howl of anguish and, released from Nicholas’ spell, sank to her
knees. The fire was gone, as if it had
never been. Barnabas rushed to her side,
but she waved him away with an impatient hand that was already regaining the
flesh that had, only moments ago, been seared away.
Audrey
held up the Dagger of Ereshkigal, shining with Nicholas’ blood. Before his furious eyes, she licked the blood
away.
“The
last surprise,” she said, and plunged the Dagger into his throat, pulled it
out, and stabbed his chest, deep, deeply into his heart.
Choking,
snarling, Nicholas clawed at Audrey, his eyes black again. The magic was working. His wounds were healing.
Behind
him, Maggie, still smiling, raised her finger again, and again she spun it
gently.
Nicholas
froze. Caught in the snarl of Maggie’s
spell, he couldn’t blink, couldn’t continue to heal himself. He could only watch helplessly, furiously.
Slowly,
her hips swaying, Maggie walked to Audrey.
Silently, she held out her hand.
Audrey’s
eyes met hers and widened.
Her
lips twitched into a smile.
She
handed her the Dagger without a word.
“N-no,” Nicholas managed to wheeze.
Maggie
turned to him, and held the Dagger aloft.
“Good
night, sweet prince,” Maggie purred, and swung her arm in an arc.
The
Dagger sang as it sliced the air, shone with all the points of its reflected
firelight, and neatly separated Nicholas’ head from his body. It was dust before it struck the floor; his
body, stuttering to its knees, joined it a moment later. Dust, dust, all became dust.
Gasping,
Angelique rose shakily to her feet. Her
body glowed with silver energy that grew gradually brighter and hotter, until
it was the pink of the sunrise. Her skin
glowed the same rosy pink, the bloom of health as it was all restored to her,
as if she had never been burned.
Audrey
stood where she had when she had entered the room, unnoticed by them all. Behind her, a cautious Willie Loomis joined
the others. “I did it,” he said, voice
quavering. “Just like you told me,
Quentin. Maggie. I brung her for you. Just like you asked. Did I do right?”
“You
did perfectly, Willie.” Maggie’s voice
was soft and lilting. Her eyes were
brown and human again, but the dark magical symbols continued to march up and
down the length of her body.
“Perfectly
indeed, baby,” Audrey said. She wrapped
her arms around him and kissed him full on the mouth. “You done good. Real good.”
Maggie continued to hold
the Dagger aloft. “Now,” she said, and
balanced one of the remaining drops of Nicholas’ blood on the tip of her
finger, then watched as other streams ran up and down the blade, “what do we do
with you?"
TO BE CONTINUED ...
Labels:
Angelique,
barnabas collins,
julia hoffman,
Maggie Evans,
Nicholas Blair,
quentin collins,
shadows on the wall,
Willie
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