Shadows on the Wall Chapter 14: A Sea of Familiar Faces by Nicky PART ONE: The Present “In the great house of Collinwood on this night, an evil has been discovered. But the woman who has discovered it — a woman who’s life has been as unorthodox as anyone else’s on the estate — this woman may begin a strange and frightening journey into a past that is not her own.” (Voiceover by Grayson Hall) 1 Sobbing. A dry, rasping sound full of grief and hollow despair. A man? Surely a man. Julia groaned and tried to sit up, but ultimately fell back weakly against the mint-green satin pillows. She opened her eyes; the room, wherever it was, was dimly lit with candlelight, and she could that she was lying, uncovered, on a canopy bed. There was a pervasive aura of timelessness in the room where she now dwelt, as though someone had lovingly restored every atom of a time gone by. She could see a vanity in the corner with perfume bottles and a silver brush and mirror set laid out side by side. A pink ribbon, curling and brittle, lay discarded and forgotten. No, she decided, not forgotten. Obviously, whoever belonged to this room was not forgotten. Anything but. And still the sobbing went on and on. Julia finally managed to succeed, and rose into a sitting position with her weight resting on her right elbow. She peered into the gloom. It WAS a man, and his back was away from her, but she knew him instantly. It was Barnabas Collins, and he was staring up a the portrait of a woman that dominated the room. She was noble looking in a vague sort of way, with large, doey brown eyes and titian ringlets pulled back behind her head. Her hands were folded placidly in her lap. “Barnabas?” Julia whispered, and he stiffened, then turned to face her. His features by candlelight were soft; the flickering lumination did much to dispel the craggy, haunted features she had glimpsed just before he had begun to throttle her. “So you’re awake,” he said in a grating voice devoid of emotion. He seemed worn out, shrunken somehow. “I sent Willie to Collinwood to explain your absence.” He smiled grimly, and it was suddenly a ghastly parody of humanity, but Julia felt a pang of sympathy for him nevertheless. “You and I are to spend the evening going over my branch of the family’s history ... for your book, you see. We’ll pass a pleasant evening, and then you’ll return to Collinwood in the morning.” He scowled. “Except that you and I know there is no English branch of the Collins family, don’t we, Doctor.” “Why am I still alive?” Julia asked in a calm, rational voice that surprised her. Barnabas raised an eyebrow. “Your forwardness always surprises me, Doctor,” he said with a sad shake of his head. “Has it ever occurred to you that I may be offended by such a question?” Julia smiled wryly. “Has it ever occurred to you that I might have been offended by your attempted murder of me earlier this evening?” He sighed. “Touche.” He crossed the room and stood next to her, looming over her with his sad eyes and downturned mouth. His face was seamed but not wrinkled, and it only added to the air of mystery that surrounded him. I’m going to pierce the core of that mystery, Julia thought, and determination to succeed flooded over her again. “You were saved by a ghost, Dr. Hoffman.” Julia drew in a startled breath. “A — a ghost? A real ghost?” “Certainly not a false one,” Barnabas said, but there was no mirth in his voice. “Why would a ghost save me?” “Why indeed, Doctor?” Barnabas returned her question forlornly. “Why would she help you, spare you, unlike my other victims? Unless ...” And his voice quavered. “Unless she knows that my time is drawing near ... that the last vestiges of my humanity have fled and I am nothing but an animal ... a vicious, despicable beast ...” He put his hands over his face, stifling a sob, but his shoulders quivered and his chest hitched. “Barnabas,” Julia whispered softly, tenderly. “Barnabas, it’s all right. I’m fine. You — you didn’t kill me after all.” He dropped his hands and stared at her, disbelief marking every angle of his features. “It’s true. I understand, Barnabas. I saw how tortured you were the first night I met you. And when I finally realized the truth, I knew that you could never enjoy —” “How could anyone enjoy an existence such as this?” he snarled, and turned away from her, fuming. “I haven’t seen the light of day or felt the warmth of a human touch for almost two hundred years ... two hundreds years of isolation from others, two hundred years of darkness ... all because my father could not force himself to destroy me.” All the fury fell from his voice like shackles clattering to the floor, and he only looked tired. “Who was the ghost, Barnabas?” Julia asked softly. “I don’t think I should tell you,” he said petulantly. “I don’t think you understand enough to know.” “I understand more than you think I do!” Julia exclaimed, and clambered to her feet, where she stood for a moment, swaying, lightheaded, as all the blood rushed to her head. He turned to stare at her disinterestedly. “Barnabas, I knew what you were ... I came to your coffin, but not to destroy you! If I thought you were only a ... a loathsome animal to be put down, wouldn’t I have brought a stake and hammer with me?” He was watching her thoughtfully. “Why didn’t you, Doctor?” he asked, and his voice was almost tender. “Because I know I will succeed,” she growled fiercely. Despite herself she took one of his hands in hers, and in his surprise he didn’t draw away. She ignored the deathly cold that seemed to pulse from his flesh in waves and concentrated instead on staring into his eyes. “I can cure you, Barnabas. I can make you live again, give you back the life you never had.” Her eyes glowed with an emerald phosphorescence, and as though entranced, Barnabas couldn’t look away. “I can make you a normal human being again. All you have to do is trust me.” “Trust you?” he whispered. “Trust,” Julia said. “That’s all I ask.” “How can you cure me?” he asked curiously. “How can you even try?” “I have been studying cases such as yours all my life,” Julia said. “I never thought I’d find an actual specimen —” His face clouded. “I am not an experimental animal for your amusement, Dr. Hoffman,” he said, and his voice was icy. “I know, I know,” Julia said hastily. “I’m sorry. But Barnabas, don’t you see? I’ve managed to isolate a destructive cell in your bloodstream, and I’m convinced that it’s this cell that keeps you the way you are.” She was trembling with excitement. “If I could find this cell — isolate it — and ultimately remove it from your bloodstream ...” “I would be cured,” he finished for her, but then shook his head. “No,” he said savagely. “SHE would never allow it. She’d never let you cure me, bring me back from the hell she’s imposed upon me —” Confused, Julia asked, “She? Who is ‘she’? Who are you talking about?” “Never mind,” he growled. “How do I know that you’ll succeed? What methods would you use?” “Well,” Julia said, slipping into a clinical tone to mask the excitement that was now glowing within her, “the basis of your problem is the destructive nature of your blood cells. There’s an imbalance that causes more cells to be destroyed than replaced. My objective then is to alter the structure of your blood.” He gasped, then closed his mouth violently, hiding the emotion that had dawned on his face for that brief moment, and then his eyes were like flint again, like tiny, cold pebbles watching her unemotionally. “I would inject a new plasma into your arterial system.” He turned back to the portrait above the fireplace and stared at it for several moments before he turned back to her. His voice was soft, almost inaudible, as he said, “You begin to intrigue me, Dr. Hoffman. When can these experiments begin?” Soon, Julia thought, unable to prevent the smile that spread over her face like sunshine. I believe that someone can love him as he is; I’m willing to give him everything that I have, and I don’t care what the cost is. No, I don’t care about that at all. “We’ll begin them tomorrow night,” Julia said. “A new life is waiting for you, Barnabas, I promise you.” She didn’t notice the way he stiffened at her employment of that term, or how his brow knitted together with the stain of suspicion. 2 That’s right, Victoria ... my baby, my darling ... keep coming to me ... keep coming to me ... Entranced, Victoria Winters drifted through the halls of Collinwood, ethereal and ghostly. Her eyes were wide and blank and focused straight ahead of her, completely unseeing. All she could hear was that sonorous, compelling voice in her head directing her, commanding her, bidding her to follow. The West Wing, Victoria ... you know where to find me ... the West Wing ... keep coming ... “The West Wing,” Victoria murmured sleepily. Wasn’t that where David had been hiding the first night she’d arrived on the great estate? Surely it was. And Mrs. Stoddard had been so upset; even Dr. Hoffman had noticed. There was a secret there, she could sense it. A secret ... Yes, Victoria ... a secret ... a great and mysterious secret, a wonderful surprise ... come and find it ... come and find me ... “I’ll find you,” she whispered. “Just tell me where to look ...” She paused before the imposing hardwood door that led to all the secrets chained within the West Wing, forsaken by the family. But why? What lurked within that was so dangerous? You’ll find out, Victoria. Just ... just open the door ... The voice was stronger now, and she could detect an undercurrent of eagerness, and a voracious, all consuming hunger. She stopped, one hand on the latch, now uncertain. She shook her head. What am I doing here? she wondered, and a glissade of terror razored down her back. I should be ... be in — “Vicki?” Vicki cried out involuntarily and spun around, confronting a very startled Carolyn, who was watching her with one eyebrow raised. “What on earth are you doing out of bed at this hour?” “Carolyn,” Vicki breathed, a sigh of relief, and looked around her, bewildered. “I — I don’t know,” she said. “I don’t know how I came here.” And it was true. The memories of the voice were already dim and fading, part of a nightmare she didn’t care to remember. She laughed weakly. “I guess I was sleepwalking.” “You poor baby,” Carolyn fretted. “You must be freezing in that skimpy nightgown.” She threw her wrap over Vicki’s shoulders and began to lead her away. “Honestly, you must be scared out of your mind! I’d be a mess if I woke up at the door of the West Wing. At least I stopped you before you got any farther.” “Any farther,” Vicki whispered, and glanced over her shoulder. For a moment, she could have sworn — “Wait until I tell Mother in the morning,” Carolyn laughed. “She thinks I’M a kook; wait’ll she gets a load of you!” “Carolyn,” Vicki said hesitantly, and the other girl stopped, watching her curiously. “I ... I wish you wouldn’t tell your mother about this.” She smiled. “I don’t want her to worry, that’s all.” “All right,” Carolyn said, a puzzled frown marring her pretty features. She shrugged. “If you say so.” She squinted at Vicki in the dark as they tripped down the staircase to the second floor. “Hey,” she said, “maybe you ARE a kook.” “Yes,” Vicki said, and thought of the last thing she’d seen before Carolyn had led her away. My imagination, she thought, but wondered. The doorknob to the West Wing wasn’t turning, Vicki thought, but she was uneasy; it couldn’t have been turning, as though there was someone inside who ... who wanted out ... “Maybe I am a kook after all ...” 3 “She’s gone?” Cassandra asked a week later, delicately sipping the sherry a glowering Mrs. Johnson had set down before her. An unseasonable chill had set in earlier in the afternoon, and so Cassandra had instructed that a fire be built in the drawing, where she now reclined on that hideous olive green excuse for a couch in her favorite robe, black and flowing, with white lace cuffs and a smooth, rounded jewel pinned between her breasts that glowed with an internal, crimson flame. “Just like that?” “Just like that, darling,” Roger said, stroking her other hand and watching her attentively. Honestly, Cassandra thought with a moue of disdain, he’s like a fawning puppy dog. Perhaps I should have used a lower dose of love philter. “She’s gone forever, and she’s never coming back here.” He blinked. “That’s what her note said, at any rate.” Cassandra smiled deviously. Of course Laura had left no note — there hadn’t been time to do much of anything when she’d combusted into flames and was crisped into ashes in a matter of moments — but Cassandra had seen to it that a neatly addressed envelope, replete with a “dear John” letter of sorts, and even in the former Mrs. Collins’ handwriting — had been left in Roger’s bedroom, and of course the cottage had been thoroughly freed of Laura’s meager possessions and horrid excuse for a wardrobe. Black vinyl dresses? Cassandra had thought at the time, disgusted, before she’d melted it to ichor with a wave of her hand. “Splendid,” Cassandra said, and forced herself to kiss his cheek. “I know that she was a bother to you darling, and I don’t want anything to interfere with our happiness. I say, good riddance to bad rubbish.” “It’s all so sudden,” Roger said, puzzled. “She seemed so intent on taking David away with her, and then ...” He shook his head, and downed the rest of his brandy. “She absolutely disappeared. I’d almost suspect foul play if I hadn’t received that note from her.” Cassandra smirked. “Fowl” play is more like it, she thought, and allowed herself a mental giggle. Three sharp knocks in a row interrupted her reverie, and she frowned with a brief glance at the clock that hung on the wall. It was almost midnight. Who on earth came knocking at midnight? Roger was already rising to his feet, grimacing, one hand to the small of his back. He’s already an old man, Cassandra thought, irritated, but smiled prettily at him when he said, “I’ll get it, darling. You just sit there.” “Of course, darling,” she purred, and amused herself by levitating the sherry glass over to the bar, where it was magically filled, then returned by invisible agents to her outstretched hand. She could hear Roger padding in his slippers and robe to the front door, then she heard them open, and Roger said, “Yes? How may I help you?” The next voice that greeted her ears sent shivers down her spine, and she froze as a man’s voice, sleek and weasely, said, “Roger Collins! I’d recognize you anywhere! You are Cassandra’s husband!” No, Cassandra thought, and a blaze of anger melted the initial ice of her shock, this isn’t possible. What in Hecate’s name is HE doing here? “I am Roger Collins,” Roger said, stiff and pompous as always. “And who are you?” “Oh, forgive me,” the other man said. Cassandra sat where she was, frozen in fury, refusing to turn to look at him. It’s exactly what he wants me to do, she thought angrily, and I will not give into him again. “My manners are atrocious sometimes, simply atrocious.” His voice was hale and booming with a slight tinge of snide, just as it had always been, just as it had been the last time she’d seen him. That had been almost a hundred years ago, when her pose as Miranda DuVal had been deciphered by the head of the Collinsport coven she had been ordered by her Master to join. He had called himself “Evan Hanley” at the time, but she knew that wasn’t his REAL name, anymore than hers had been Miranda then or Cassandra now. Easy aliases, but that didn’t explain what he was doing here NOW when he should have died a hundred years ago. “I’ve looked forward to meeting you ever since I heard about the marriage,” the man continued. “My name is Nicholas Blair ... Cassandra’s brother.” “Cassandra’s ... brother?” Roger said, astounded. “Oh, do forgive me. Please, come inside.” “Thank you,” Nicholas said, stepping across the threshold. “What a lovely house you have here, Mr. Collins. Very European. I can almost sense the secrets that must have collected here over the centuries.” “This ... this is quite a surprise,” Roger said, and their voices drew nearer. They were about to enter the drawing room, and Cassandra would be expected to play along. Damn him, she mentally hissed, but rose to her feet and turned expectantly as Roger finished, “But an extraordinary surprise.” “Nicholas!” she exclaimed, and thought to herself, if anyone deserves an Oscar, it’s me. “Nicholas, what on earth are you doing here?” Which is exactly what I’d like to know, she thought. As always, Nicholas’ acting skills were impeccable; he dashed forward with the most ridiculous expression of affectoin on his face, and lugged her into a crushing embrace; she was smothering, and could smell mint and tobacco. “Cassandra, it’s so wonderful to finally see you again.” He drew back, still gripping her by the shoulders, and she could see the cold, malevolent glint in his eyes, that mocking, weasel smile. “I came here to see you and meet your new husband. Aren’t you glad to see your big brother?” “Ecstatic,” she said, fighting to keep the sarcasm out of her voice. If only I had my doll and pins, she thought, but bit her tongue. She and Nicholas had a long, complicated relationship dating back almost three hundred years and at least one previous incarnation. He had been a lawyer in the small Massachusetts town of Bedford when she had been a mere servant girl to the Collins family, the ORIGINAL Miranda DuVal, helpless, docile, and utterly without power. Nicholas had been Amadeus Collins’ personal lawyer for several years, and a devoted servant of the Black Lords of Chaos; after an attempted rape by the old bastard who employed her she had gone in tears to Nicholas and begged him for help. His refusal to help her infuriated her, and so she sought out the Powers of Darkness herself, but was killed before she was able to procure even the smallest talent. Her reincarnation as Angelique Bouchard in Martinique wiped clean most of her memories of her life as Miranda, but enough remained that she recognized Nicholas when he appeared to her again in the rainforest of Martinique, bringing with him that devil’s smile and proposing a devil’s bargain. When she had encountered him in 1897 while posing at Collinwood as Miranda DuVal, she found that, as a punishment for some past ineptitude, the Devil had erased his memories of his previous life and forced him to start over as Evan Hanley, a lawyer and a friend of Quentin’s. Obviously he had redeemed himself and was now forcing her into a charade as brother and sister, but the reason, or decided lack thereof, baffled her. His sense of humor was the same, she thought grimly, and offered her cheek for him to kiss. He did it with relish, and she repressed a grimace at the smacking sound he left in his wake. “Oh, Nicholas,” she gushed, “how are you?” “Fine,” he said, grinning his sharp white grin, “finer now that I know for certain that you’re all right.” Brow furrowed, a still befuddled Roger asked, “What do you mean by that? Why wouldn’t she be all right?” He laid a protective hand against her arm, and she gritted her teeth so as not to shrug it off. “Cassandra, dear, are you not telling me something?” “Oh, it’s not a terribly big deal,” Nicholas hemmed and hawed. “She just didn’t let me know in time for the wedding. I hadn’t heard from her in several weeks and thought it time to get in touch with her.” “But I called him first,” Cassandra interjected sweetly. “Yes,” Nicholas purred. “So you did. I came as quickly as I could.” He lifted her chin up with his index finger and stroked it with his thumb. “You shouldn’t do things like that now, Cassandra, especially since you’re married. This dropping off the face of the earth without so much as a note business has got to be finished. Why,” and his Cheshire Cat grin widened if possible, “what would your husband think if you should just vanish one day? You might never come back!” Dread filled her throat with black water, but she smiled confidently, and took Roger’s arm in hers and squeezed it tightly. “Of course I won’t do anything like that, darling.” She stared up at her husband with eyes of blue ice. “My brother’s always been very strict with me. It’s one of the reasons —” and she pierced Nicholas with her eyes — “I’ve always adored him since I was a child.” “Sometimes you’ve got to be strict with her, Roger,” Nicholas said. “She needs it.” Roger chuckled, and lovingly patted his wife’s arm. “I’ll remember that,” he said. Cassandra cleared her throat, capturing Roger’s gaze and then locking onto it with every hypnotic power at her command. “Darling,” she said softly, “why don’t you go upstairs and go to bed. You’re very tired, and Nicholas and I would like some time alone.” Roger blinked once, and smiled widely. “You know, I think I’ll go upstairs to bed. I’m very tired, and I think that you and Nicholas would like some time alone.” He kissed her cheek, shook his head once, and then dazedly wandered out of the drawing room and vanished up the stairs. Nicholas shut the double doors behind him, then turned to face Cassandra. She was utterly unsurprised to see that he was still smiling. “At the risk of sounding ... banal,” he sneered, “it’s a small world, isn’t it?” All pretense of sisterly love dropped like a stone from her face, and she crossed her arms and angrily crossed to the fireplace where she stood, leaning against the mantle and glaring into the flames. They flickered across her face and created a shadowed wonderland of planes and impossible angles surrounding her enormous, vicious blue eyes. “What are you doing here?” she snapped. “I didn’t send for you, and I don’t want you here. I command you to leave this place immediately, do you hear?” “But sister DEAR,” Nicholas growled, and seized her arm. His fingers dug painfully into the flesh, and she cried out as he spun her around to face him. He was no longer smiling, and his face was very white, and she saw that he was furious. Rage blazed in his steel-gray eyes in an inferno. “I am not some spirit for you to summon and banish at your will,” Nicholas said in a low, dangerous voice. “Then why are you here?” she dared to cry. I’m not afraid of him, Cassandra thought resolutely, and shrugged out of his grip, then rubbed her throbbing arm while staring at him sullenly. “I was sent by the Master,” Nicholas said, relishing the way she spun to stare at him, open-mouthed. He chuckled. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a look of shock on your face. Was it my news or merely because of me?” He winked at her lecherously. “There is no reason for the Master to have sent you,” Cassandra said. “I have everything perfectly under control.” “Do you?” Nicholas purred. “I wonder.” “What does that mean?” Nicholas examined one gloved hand with one eyebrow disinterestedly raised. “Your goal is to keep Barnabas Collins under your spell, correct?” She nodded suspiciously. “That’s why you’ve come up with this idiotic plan, posing as Roger Collins’ wife, changing your hair, when there are people on this estate who recognize you —” “I have admitted my identity to no one!” she cried defensively. “No one except Laura Collins, and I destroyed her.” She crossed her arms and beamed at him triumphantly. “So you did,” Nicholas said, bored. “What of Quentin Collins and Professor Stokes? Are you forgetting that Quentin is immortal now, and knew you as Miranda DuVal? Allowing your portrait to fall into their hands was one of the stupidest mistakes you ever made; equally stupid was allowing Quentin to retain his memories of you as Miranda ... and the fact that he knows your true name ... Angelique.” She opened her mouth to protest, but he continued. “And what of Barnabas himself? He recognizes you, Cassandra, and he’s plotting to destroy you.” His face darkened. “And that isn’t all he’s plotting.” “What do you mean?” she cried, dismay shrilling her voice. “You are familiar with Dr. Julia Hoffman?” “Of course,” Cassandra said impatiently with a dismissive wave of her hand. “She’s Elizabeth’s dried up old college friend or something. I haven’t paid much attention to her.” Nicholas rolled his eyes and groaned. “Oh, my DEAR, how you do disappoint me. So many opportunities, and all of them bungled. You never pay attention to the really important things. Instead you’re content to let them float by you. It’s no wonder your schemes never reach fruition. It’s TACKY, my dear, and a true witch is never, EVER tacky.” “How do you know so much about the people in this house,” Cassandra asked, “and what about Julia Hoffman? What does she have to with Barnabas?” “Let’s just say that I have my little tricks as well,” Nicholas said smugly. “As for Dr. Hoffman, right this moment she’s at the Old House with Barnabas Collins, discussing the possibility of a cure for his ... condition.” Horror forced a piercing exclamation from her mouth. “No!” Cassandra cried. “No, that isn’t possible! She doesn’t have the power to accomplish it!” “It has nothing to do with power,” Nicholas said, disgusted. “It has to do with knowledge and intelligence, two resources you are sadly lacking, my dear. I’m not sure if it’s possible, or if she’ll even succeed, but she stands in the way of your curse, Cassandra, and you canNOT allow that to happen.” She was absolutely furious. “I can handle my affairs myself, in my own way, Nicholas,” she snarled, “and I don’t need YOU here to help me ... or hinder me. Return to the Underworld Nicholas ... now!” He stared at her coolly, appraisingly, his mouth seeming to vanish altogether, and then reared back and slapped her. The cry of pain and anger left her mouth before she could repress it, and she stared at him coldly. “You’ll be sorry you did that,” she whispered huskily, alarmed to find that tears lingered on her eyelids. I won’t cry in front of him, she thought desperately; I won’t! I won’t! “I thought so,” Nicholas sighed with mock sadness. “You’ll have to be taught a lesson, my dear, and I’m the only one qualified enough to teach it to you.” “You have no power over me,” Cassandra cried defiantly. Her voice was shrill with panic and anger. “I order you to leave this house!” Nicholas stepped back from her, and suddenly the room was swept into shadow, save for one pulsing emerald light that illuminated his lizard-like features as he waved his hands mystically in the air, creating strange patterns and sigils that blazed with that same liquid green phosphorescence before fading away. “I summon a spirit from beyond the grave,” he intoned, “a man who died in this very house. A man who met his untimely death at the hands of a supernatural murderess ... come forth, wronged spirit! Return from the shades where you now dwell to exact your revenge!” “What are you doing?” Cassandra shrieked, her voice high and waving with terror. The temperature in the room had plummeted, and goosebumps shivered up and down her arms in a tide. Her eyes were wide and frenetically blue. Nicholas continued waving his arms, and the air before him began to shimmer and quake, and when a dark figure began to materialized Cassandra felt the chill of an icicle pierce her heart as she recognized him. “WITCH!” the ghost growled. Its eyes were savage, burning lumps of coal; it was dressed in a black frockcoat, and it held the specter of a guttering torch in its bonewhite fist. “You can’t be here,” Cassandra quavered, backing away with one warning hand held out. “You can’t be!” “Oh, he very much can,” Nicholas smirked. “You murdered him, after all, and isn’t it natural for him to desire vengeance?” Cassandra’s trembling hands tried to form the familiar witchpatterns, but nothing happened. “I command you with every power I have to return to the earth of which you are a part!” she screamed, but the ghost of Reverend Trask merely grinned at her ferociously. “In the name of Beelzebub —” “Your Master has no power over me!” the ghost of Trask thundered, and raised the torch, which now blazed with a fierce, supernatural light. “We shall see who’s master is stronger, your’s or mine!” “Nicholas,” Cassandra begged, “you can’t let him destroy me ... you can’t!” “What’s to prevent me?” he asked coldly. “Should I vanish like you have commanded me to, and leave you at the mercy of the good Reverend?” “No,” she sobbed as Trask advanced on her no. “No, you can’t!” “You condemned me to an untimely death,” the ghost of Trask boomed, looming over her. “I’m going to destroy you, witch, and pay you back for the agony you have caused in this world before I send you into the hellfire of the next!” Cassandra closed her eyes, and for a moment was swept back into her own past, when she was a lonely, terrified servant girl known then as Angelique. She had first met the Reverend Trask, an imposing man with haunted, shadowed eyes and a voice like crushed glass, with his black hair in a widow’s peak above his protruding forehead and his lips curled into a permanent sneer when he had arrived at the great house in January of 1796 at the bidding of Abigail Collins, the fanatical spinster sister of Joshua Collins, Barnabas’ father. Abigail was convinced that there was a witch at work in the new house, and she was equally convinced that it was Phyllis Wicke, the colorless, mewling governess to ten year old Sarah Collins, Barnabas’ little sister. Since she was such a strange creature she was a perfect scapegoat for Angelique’s own sorcery, and when Jeremiah Collins and Josette eloped, Phyllis was blamed for it. Unfortunately for Angelique, the good Reverend decided to question her as well. She recalled perfectly how he had stared down at her with those same cold, flinty eyes, and how nervous she had been under his gaze, how she had tried so hard not to fidget lest she give herself away. “You go to the woods alone,” he had challenged her, “to meet with Lucifer himself! You may as well admit it, girl ... I can see the truth in your eyes!” “Oh no!” she had wailed. “No, please! I go to the woods because it is quiet and peaceful, and I can be alone with my thoughts.” She bowed her head; the mountain of golden curls (how she missed them now!) were held tightly in place with the aid of a white mopcap. “Please, sir ... I go alone to the woods to be closer to my god.” “Your god,” the Reverend Trask sneered. “A false idol ... a god of murderers and thieves ... a god of witches!” “You mustn’t believe that,” she had sniffed. Tears burned in her eyes. “I beg of you!” He had studied her carefully, and she felt his gaze as though she were being branded with red-hot pokers. “Angelique Bouchard,” he had pronounced with great precision, “I condemn you as a witch and a consort of Satan. I shall bring you before the bailiff in Collinsport this afternoon and you will be tried for the witch you are.” His hand shot out and clutched her by the wrist; his fingers were like steel, but she refused to give him the satisfaction of hearing her scream. “Take your hands off me,” she had growled between gritted teeth. “You will not dare to speak to a man of God in such a manner,” Trask spat. “You are not a man of God,” Angelique chuckled. “You are a FOOL, Reverend Trask. You have the spirit of evil in you!” He slapped her across the face then, driving her to her knees. “Blasphemer!” he had screamed, and for one terrifying moment she was afraid that he would draw others to the drawing room, but no one heard his strangled cry of anger, and no one came to his aid. It was just as well; she would need to take care of him now, before he did anything drastic, but she had to do it quickly; if anyone caught them together they would suspect her as well, and she couldn’t have that. Not now, when she was so close to achieving her goal: becoming the bride of Barnabas Collins. “You cannot hold onto me anymore, Reverend Trask,” Angelique said slowly, “because my arm is burning hot.” He yelped at that moment and drew away, panting cool air onto his scalded hand that was already beginning to turn an angry red. He stared at her with wide, frightened eyes. “You are a witch!” he cried, pointing a trembling finger at her. “I was right! I was right!” “So you were,” Angelique said coldly, rising to her feet. “But you’ve never encountered a real witch before, have you ‘Reverend’.” She smiled mockingly. “You have no concept of the powers I have, but you’re going to learn. But it will the final lesson, Reverend Trask, because this lesson is fatal.” “When you speak,” Trask quavered in a high, reedy voice, “the devil speaks for you!” Angelique nodded. “Perhaps this is true,” she said. She raised her hand and thrust it forward. “Your heart,” she intoned, “is beginning to beat faster ... and faster!” “No!” Trask wailed, but his hands were pressed to his chest and he had already fallen to the ground. “No, you cannot do this to me! Not a man of God!” “You are mute,” Angelique swore. “You cannot speak!” Trask glared up at her with wide, bulging fish eyes; his face already darkened to a dull, beat red, and his feet thumped an angry tattoo against the carpet. “You’re going to die, Reverend Trask, but no one will ever find your body. You’re going to disappear without a trace.” Angelique closed her eyes and willed the flames of hell to rise within her; when she opened her eyes they were a depthless obsidian. Trask blanched, and all the color drained from his face, leaving it a blank, staring mask. She held out her hand and Trask jumped as though stung, and began to convulse. A pleasure of pure demonic pleasure spread over Angelique’s face as the Reverend Trask was engulfed in the flames of Hades; they spread rapidly, eagerly licking at him clothes and his flesh and his hair; his mouth opened and a spurt of flames danced on his tongue; his eyes burst into jelly; his hands became withered, charred claws. After several seconds only a smudge of ash remained on the carpet, and Angelique smeared it daintily beneath her heel until it was hardly noticeable. A sigh of relief escaped her lips. “Poor Reverend Trask,” she gloated. “Such an ignominious death. And no one will ever know the truth ... no one!” Her laughter rang out, evil and high and malicious, and filled the room with a cacophony of demented delight ... ... the same room wherein she now cowered from the ghastly spirit before her. His teeth were long and very white, and his eyes in death flickered with madness, just as the torch he wielded flickered at her menacingly. “You will be the one who is burned now, witch!” Trask cackled. “Burn ... burn, witch ... burn!” “NOOOOOO!” Cassandra shrieked, falling backwards. “Take it away, Nicholas, please! Take it away!” “Very well, my dear,” Nicholas said, pleased. “But we have an agreement, yes? You will allow me to stay at Collinwood without further issue so that I can do my job, and not interfere with whatever plans I may have. Agreed?” “Agreed!” Cassandra screamed. “Anything! Just take it away!” “Avant,” Nicholas said brightly, and snapped his fingers. The ghost of Trask whiffed out of existence like the flame of a candle before a strong October wind, leaving behind the faint trace of sulfur and the tang of smoke. Cassandra rose shakily to her feet, and brushed herself off. “That,” she snarled, “was completely uncalled for.” “But so necessary,” Nicholas said. “You can see that I haven’t forgotten the necessary precautions in dealing with you, hmmm, my dear Angelique?” “Yes,” she admitted grudgingly, her eyes downcast. “You poor dear,” Nicholas cooed. “This HAS been a trying evening for you, hasn’t it.” His voice became granite. “But it will be even more trying if you don’t fly to the Old House this minute and *deal* with Julia Hoffman. Is that clear?” “Quite clear.” Cassandra’s voice was sibilant. “Are you sure you should allow me to go on my own? I might bungle it, after all.” “Don’t test me, Cassandra,” was the equally sibilant reply. “You have only so many chances, and I warn you that I may change my mind at any second, and then I would be forced to summon the Reverend back. You wouldn’t like that, would you?” But he was speaking to an empty room. Cassandra had vanished into thin air. “Dammit,” Nicholas snarled. “I HATE when she does that.” 4 “I cannot believe that only a week has gone by,” Barnabas mused, his face lit by the flames in the fireplace; at Collinwood, Cassandra Collins was receiving a very unexpected visitor. In one hand he held his silver wolf’s head cane, and in the other a tiny cylindrical object, a glimmering golden music box that was obviously very old. He had been holding it all evening, since the last injection, and Julia was most curious about it. It played a beautiful tune, a tinkling, chiming minuet, and she was quite entranced by it. “It really is quite amazing.” “The fact that you can now see your reflection is considerably encouraging,” Julia agreed, and sipped at the tea a beaming Willie Loomis had prepared for her fifteen minutes before. “I have changed so much since the experiment began,” Barnabas marveled. “Do you feel it’s a change for the better?” she asked coyly, examining him, but he was still staring at the music box. “Of course,” he said simply, and chuckled. He turned to her, smiling like a small boy on Christmas. His cheeks were blooming with roses of health. “There, you see? I cannot remember the last time anyone made me laugh.” “I enjoy your laugh,” Julia said shyly, and he smiled at her. “I only wish there were some way we could hurry the experiment,” he said wistfully, and returned his gaze to the music box again. She stared at him, surprised. “I thought you were satisfied with the progress we’re making.” “Oh, I am!” he exclaimed. “I am very satisfied. I feel as though the life I was living is years behind me instead of a week. It’s such a gratifying thing to me ... not to feel the need for blood.” As a psychiatrist Julia had encouraged Barnabas to talk about what he referred to as “the curse” after each injection, and she was pleased that their impromptu therapy sessions had yielded such a closeness between them, and only in a manner of days! The suspicion and mistrust he seemed to feel for her had all but faded away; I must be careful, she thought now, not to do anything to endanger that trust. Barnabas was still very skittish, like a frightened horse, and she didn’t want to scare him away ... or provoke him to any madness that might be left over from his vampiric nature. “Do you realize how happy you’ve made me?” he asked now, and she almost dropped her teacup. “I don’t know how I’ll ever be able to thank you.” She coughed dryly into her hand, suddenly very nervous. “It would be ... pointless to now, anyway,” she said huskily, aware that he was studying her curiously, but she was suddenly afraid to meet his eyes. “We must wait until we achieve complete success.” “Of course,” Barnabas said, abashed. He lifted the lid of the music box, and the tinkling melody spilled forth, crystalline and soothing. Julia listened for a moment, entranced, then asked, “Where on earth did you find that?” He swallowed with apparent pain, and Julia wondered if she hadn’t made a grave mistake, but instead he replied softly, “I gave it to someone I knew a long time ago ... someone I loved very, very much.” “It’s beautiful,” Julia whispered, enthralled. “I intend to give it to someone soon,” Barnabas said. “Yes, as soon as possible ...” Ten minutes later, with Julia out the door and Barnabas settled comfortably in his chair before the roaring fire, he found that he could now sort his thoughts out. The sudden whirlwind of success (but not total success; he was keeping the possibility of failure in the back of his mind) had opened up a multitude of doors for him, and scattered all his plans for his future into the dust he should have been a hundred and fifty years ago. He was no longer sure what he wanted to do, or where he wanted to go. Staying at the Old House permanently was an attractive idea, but in his vampiric state not plausible. He would never age, for one thing, and while the rest of the family withered and died, wouldn’t they find it strange that good Cousin Barnabas looked eternally young? And there was David Collins, for another problem. Elizabeth and Roger had already regaled him with tales of David’s daring exploits while exploring the Old House and its adjoining property; what if he should stumble into the basement one day and discover Barnabas, at rest in his coffin? The thought was blood curdling. And yet, there was still one plan he had not abandoned, and that plan would begin to unfold very, very shortly. In fact, with several soft knocks on the front door, it had begun already. Barnabas rose gracefully from his seat and glided towards the door. He already knew who would be standing outside, and he was right. Victoria Winters smiled as he stepped from the shadows. “Mr. Collins, it was so nice of you to invite me here this evening. I couldn’t wait until dinner was finished.” She lowered her eyes, suddenly embarrassed. “I’m afraid I was a little rude. I didn’t excuse myself from the table. I’m setting a terrible example for David.” “Nonsense,” Barnabas said briskly, and stepped aside, his arm outstretched in a welcoming gesture, and Vicki gladly stepped across the threshold. “I have a present for you, my dear,” Barnabas said after she was comfortably ensconced in a chair across from his. The fire blazed between them, rustling and crackling mysteriously from time to time, and popping quite thunderously when a knot would explode, and then they would both jump. “A present?” Vicki cooed. “For me? Oh, Mr. Collins, you shouldn’t have.” “Oh, yes I should,” Barnabas said. “And you must promise to call me Barnabas from now on.” “Then you must call me ‘Vicki’,” she said. “’Vicki’,” Barnabas said, pronouncing it carefully, and then shook his head. “I’m still not used to that. Would you mind dreadfully if I referred to you as ‘Victoria’ from time to time?” “Oh, not at all,” Vicki chuckled. Thunder echoed outside the house, and Vicki turned her head uneasily towards it. “That’s strange,” she remarked. “I don’t recall a storm building when I left the house.” Thunder boomed again, rattling the ancient glass in the windowpanes. “We’ll have to see that you forget the storm for the time being, Victoria,” Barnabas said, his eyes gleaming. He rose from his chair and walked slowly over to the mantle over the fireplace, where he lifted a small, gleaming object into his hands, and then presented it grandly to a wide-eyed Victoria. She took the music box in her trembling hands and stared at it mutely. Awe shone off her face, a fact Barnabas was not unaware of. “It’s ... it’s beautiful,” she whispered, then looked to him with shining eyes. “Oh, Barnabas, I don’t know what to say!” “Open it,” he whispered, and closed his eyes as the haunting, familiar tune washed over him again. “It belonged to Josette DuPres,” he murmured, his eyes still half-closed. “My namesake, the original Barnabas Collins, gave it to her just before she died. She would listen to it for hours, and claimed that its music would haunt her heart for eternity.” “Josette,” Vicki whispered. “The woman who died at Widow’s Hill.” Barnabas bowed his head; tears trembled minutely in his eyes, but Vicki was enthralled in her own thoughts. “Elizabeth told me there’s something of a legend about her.” “Yes,” Barnabas said, his voice thick with pain. “I’ve read about her in the family journals,” Vicki said. “She came here from Martinique to marry my ancestor,” Barnabas said. She was as delicate and graceful as the flowers that bloomed in the gardens she kept. The original Barnabas met her there while on a business trip, and was ... quite taken with her beauty. Her feelings for him were tender as well. They realized they were in love, but it was too late, for Barnabas had already set sail for America.” He was staring into the distance, his eyes shadowed and haunted, and now Vicki saw the tears, and wondered. “They wrote letters, back and forth, for months, and with each one their love expanded until Barnabas finally proposed. She was to come to America to live forever ... until her untimely death shattered their dreams.” “What happened?” Vicki whispered, now thoroughly enthralled. “A ... a tragic accident,” Barnabas said, and his voice was a rose crushed underfoot, steaming in tropical heat. “She married his uncle, Jeremiah Collins. A mistake ... a terrible, terrible mistake. She fell from the cliffs at Widow’s Hill, just as you said. It broke my ... my ancestor’s heart.” Vicki found that tears now glistened in her own eyes, and she swallowed. “So sad,” she murmured, and took Barnabas’ hand unthinkingly in her own. “You’re very attached to your family’s history, aren’t you.” Barnabas blinked, returning to the present, and then smiled shyly. “Yes,” he said. He cleared his throat, and then lifted his eyes to hers, as brown and fathomless as his own. “Have ... have you ever been in love, Victoria?” “Once,” she said quietly. “And you?” “Once,” he admitted. They sat for a moment, both quiet, both lost in their thoughts and in each other’s eyes. Victoria opened her mouth to say something, and that was the moment the true horror began. At the same time the wind outside rose to a shriek, the flames in the fireplace between them blazed up and out, seeming to run in almost liquid streams up the brick and spread over the mantle. Barnabas watched in open-mouthed horror, and then turned to Victoria. She had slumped backwards in her seat, her eyes open and wide and staring. Barnabas felt his heart skip. For all appearances, Victoria Winters was dead. “Victoria!” he cried, and rose from his seat to rush to her side, but the room was filled with an unholy shrieking noise, as though the pits of hell had burst open and released an unholy choir to fill the earth with the shrieks of the damned. The unearthly wailing noise soon resolved itself into a devilish cackling, the laughter of a woman he recognized instantly, just as the flames reformed and shaped themselves into HER image, floating high above him, a demon of flame. She wore an empire-waisted dress, and her hair was a stream of ringlets in a corona around her head; her eyes were chips of coal and glowed a hellish red. Her mouth split open and issued that insane laughter until he thought his head would split. “Stop!” Barnabas shrieked. “Stop it, stop it!” “You would not come to me in life, Barnabas,” the fiery specter crowed, “so I have given you all eternity to change your mind.” “Angelique!” Barnabas hissed, baring his fangs. “What have you done to Victoria Winters?” “She is under my spell, Barnabas,” Angelique chuckled, “and she will awaken after we’re finished with our ... talk.” Her eyes gleamed like golden coins. “I had to see you again, for just a moment, so I could tell you what the future holds.” “I have nothing to say to you,” Barnabas growled. “Leave this house. Return to Collinwood ... return to your husband and the mockery you call a marriage.” Her lower lip trembled with fury. “You are a fool, Barnabas,” Angelique spat. “You think you know everything, but you are wrong, and you must be proven wrong. You think with the help of a doctor you can escape me, but you’re wrong Barnabas.” “So you know even that,” Barnabas snarled. “Is it not enough that you’ve returned? Must you torment me too?” “I live to torment you, Barnabas,” Angelique said. “I will torture you for the rest of eternity, as the curse dictates. Peace will never be yours as long as I exist on this earth.” “Then I will have to see that your time in this world is cut short,” Barnabas snarled. “You can’t hurt me again, Barnabas,” Angelique cackled. “I’m warning you, Barnabas. Cease these experiments or all will be lost ... everyone at Collinwood will die, starting with Victoria Winters ... and that dried up old doctor you’ve recruited to help you. You will see, Barnabas ... the dark and terrifying thing I conjure to stop you will turn your blood to ice!” Her voice rose to a shriek, an insane, triumphant declaration. “You leave Victoria out of this,” Barnabas glowered, but Angelique was already losing form and substance, and the flames began to retreat into the fireplace. “Lost, Barnabas,” her sibilant voice whispered from nowhere and everywhere. “Lost ... lossssssst ...” And as he stared mutely at Victoria, and as her eyelashes began to flutter, the sound of Angelique’s diabolical cackling filled the room like a screaming flock of ravens, black and thick, like currents of midnight water. 5 Julia stared mutely at the music box on Vicki’s bureau, and willed the tears that burned now in her eyes to evaporate. Her lower lip trembled and she thrust out her jaw in a belated attempt to halt the flood; her nose twitched once, and she turned away, hiding her face from Vicki, who was oblivious to the Doctor’s torment anyway. “Isn’t it lovely?” she was saying, and her voice indicated her own feelings for Barnabas. Julia felt a knife twisting into the knots of her stomach, and she knew that she was almost incoherent with jealousy. “Barnabas gave it to me last night.” “Did he?” Julia asked in what she was relieved to find was a relatively normal voice instead of the strangled squawk she expected to emerge from her throat, which was dry and parched as a desert. The tinkling sound of the music box’s minuet filled the room as Vicki lifted the lid, and Julia had to bite down on her cheek to stop from screaming. Her mouth tasted of dark copper, and she realized that she’d bitten down so hard that she was bleeding. Perfect, she thought bitterly; could this day get any worse? “It has such a beautiful legend attached to it,” Vicki sighed, cradling the box in both hands. Julia scowled, but managed to erase it by the time Vicki looked back up at her. “Have you ever heard of Josette DuPres?” Of course, Julia thought instantly, the woman Barnabas lov — almost married in the late 18th century. “Yes,” Julia said. “She’s mentioned in several of the family journals that Elizabeth and I have been perusing. She was a suicide, wasn’t she? Jumped from Widow’s Hill?” “Yes,” Vicki said. “It’s so romantic. A tragic love story. She came to marry Barnabas, but married his uncle instead, and no one seems to know why. Barnabas told me that not even Josette herself knew.” The governess’ eyes were hazy and far away. She leaned against the dresser, cupping her chin in her hand. “Perhaps that’s why she killed herself. Maybe her ghost still walks the night, searching for her lost lover ...” “That’s ridiculous,” Julia said, more sharply than she had intended, and Vicki blinked at her, startled. “Julia,” Vicki began cautiously, “is everything all right?” Julia rubbed her eyes, and then smiled weakly. “I’m sorry for snapping, Vicki,” she said. “It’s just ... I’m a little on edge. I’ve been treating Mr. Collins, Barnabas, that is, the past week for that eye condition he has, and I’m afraid the work’s been getting to me. Lots of late nights.” Vicki nodded. “I should probably go take a nap. If you’ll excuse me ...?” She walked briskly from the room, leaving a perplexed Vicki behind her, and made her way down to the library, where she stood frozen for nearly an hour before the flames in the fireplace. “Lost in thought, Dr. Hoffman?” Julia spun around to find Cassandra Collins staring at her from the doorway, a tiny smile playing inexplicably on her face. Her black hair was carefully coifed today (awfully heavy on the hairspray, Julia thought with irregular cattiness, but then again, why should that be different?), and she wore a stunning scarlet trapeze dress festooned with great gold buttons. Her bare arms were delicate and white like ivory. “You startled me, Mrs. Collins,” Julia said reproachfully. “Cassandra, please.” She was the epitome of friendliness and grace ... so why didn’t Julia trust her? “Cassandra, then,” Julia said carefully. “I’ve had ... a difficult morning, Cassandra. I’d like to be alone.” “Of course,” Cassandra said, abashed, and Julia almost believed that it was genuine. Come now, Julia, she admonished herself. It’s obvious the woman isn’t a golddigger — if she had been, she would have married Elizabeth — and she’s so much in love with Roger ... what on earth can you have against her? “It’s just that ... well ...” Cassandra seemed very nervous, and thus fanned the spark of curiosity Julia found aroused within her. “I’d like to ask you about ... Barnabas Collins.” Alarm bells went off in Julia’s head for no apparent reason. “Barnabas?” she asked gruffly. “What about him?” “You know him well, don’t you?” Cassandra’s tone was suddenly almost accusatory. “Yes,” Julia said reluctantly. “We’ve become good friends since he arrived here.” “Then perhaps you know why he’s been so hostile towards me,” Cassandra said tearfully. Her hands shook, and she knotted them together nervously until Julia thought her fingers would snap off. “I don’t know what you mean.” Julia was casual. Cassandra seemed on the verge of tears, and this surprised Julia as well. “He has accused me of all kinds of terrible things, and I just don’t understand.” She leaned forward confidentially. “Just between you and me ... he isn’t ... well ... crazy, is he?” Julia backed away from her, stiff and unyielding. Her eyes were chips of stone. “No, he certainly is not,” she said, and her voice was granite. Cassandra dropped her eyes and shuffled her feet guiltily. “I’ve crossed a line, haven’t I,” Cassandra said quietly, but Julia thought that she was watching her with hooded eyes ... mocking eyes, and she didn’t like it. Not one bit. “I’m sorry, Julia. I so want us to be friends. You’re the only one in this house who has showed me any kind of consideration. I would value your friendship so much. Please believe me.” She seemed so sincere, Julia thought, doubt niggling at her as she chewed on her lower lip, but in god’s name, why don’t I want to believe her? “Mr. Collins is in a lot of pain,” Julia said, somewhat inadequately. “He can’t be judged for some of the things he says.” She studied her for a moment, this beautiful young girl (surely she couldn’t be any more than ... oh, say ... twenty-one?) that had married into one of the most influential families on the East Coast. A harmless girl, of course, with her big blue eyes and dainty figure and neatly trimmed black curls. Nothing wrong with the picture, not a hair out of place, and yet something nagged at Julia, and she was annoyed that she couldn’t define it, so for the moment she simply ignored it. “Pain?” Cassandra asked, almost too eagerly for Julia’s liking. “Do you know what kind?” “You seem terribly interested,” Julia observed, and Cassandra reacted, drawing in a sharp breath, and then dropping her eyes again. She IS interested in Barnabas, Julia thought, surprised; of course, I should’ve seen it before. “Just concerned,” Cassandra said uneasily. “Are you ... treating him?” “Yes,” Julia said. “Really, Cassandra, I do have a lot to accomplish before —” “Of course, of course,” Cassandra said, then, impulsively, she drew Julia into a tight embrace, and Julia deeply inhaled the cloying scent of roses that hung about her in an almost tangible miasma. “Thank you, Julia, for being my friend. You won’t regret it, I promise you that.” She closed the door after her, leaving Julia alone with her thoughts. And yet, here she was again, standing alone in Vicki’s room like a thief, and this time the music box was in HER hands. I was so sure he was going to give it to me, she thought, and allowed a single tear to wind down her cheek. She sniffed miserably. Why should I expect him to love me? He still loves HER, Josette Collins, and he must see something of her in Vicki. Bitterness filled her mouth with bitter, brackish water, and she turned away from her expression in the mirror guiltily, terrified of the harridan’s face she had seen peering back at her with dark, empty eyes like gateways into an unimaginable midnight void. “If only I knew more about him,” Julia whispered. “If I knew him better I could help him more ... I could rid him of the curse permanently. How did it fall upon him? If I knew only that much, think of the progress I could make!” Unconsciously she was toying with the lid of the music box, allowing it to rise and then fall, but not enough so that the melody spun out. Yes, she though to herself. If I cure Barnabas he’ll owe me a great debt ... such a debt that, perhaps, he’ll forget all about Victoria Winters ... She realized then that the necklace she’d donned that morning (a simple silver chain with a rounded opal dangling from it, a gift from poor, unfortunate Tom) was no longer around her neck. Dammit, she thought. Where on earth could it have gone? It was better for Julia that she did not know that, at the precise moment she was toying with Josette’s music box, Cassandra Collins was poised in the drawing room, curled up on the hearth and staring into the flames so that they danced in her wide, icy eyes. In one hand she held a pin; in the other a doll made of clay ... with Julia’s necklace wrapped tight around its tiny, fragile neck. “You are Julia Hoffman,” she addressed the doll, and held it high above the flames. “You are in my hands, just as this clay doll is in my hands, and I hold just as much power over you, Doctor. I can touch my finger to the clay, and wherever I touch you will burn, for my power was given to me by the Devil himself, and you will know it soon!” In Vicki’s room Julia sighed, and then examined the music box that she cradled so possessively. It was obviously very old; the gilt had chipped and faded in some parts, but it was still intricately lovely. Such a beautiful melody, she thought wistfully, and lifted the lid. And in that instant was thrust into a blackness darker and colder than any midnight she had ever known. In the drawing room, Cassandra gasped as the doll twisted in her hands, and fell to the hearth, where it crumbled into meaningless dust. She stared at it, open-mouthed, and dropped the pin in her haste to scramble away from the curling, writhing flames. She was poised watchfully, a safe distance away from the fireplace, panting. Something is wrong, she thought, confused. Something is happening that I have no control over ... It struck her then, and wide-eyed, she gasped aloud, “She’s gone ... Julia Hoffman ... has ceased to exist!” PART TWO: The Past “Collinwood is suspended now between the past and the present, because one woman has inexplicably begun a terrifying and dangerous journey into the past ... back to a foreign century, where she will uncover the darkest secrets the Collins family holds ... and, perhaps, the key to saving one man’s bleak existence ... and the future of the woman he loves ...” (Voiceover by Kathryn Leigh Scott) 1 Julia was in the void again, somewhere in a vast swirl of icy currents, with blackness pressing in on her from all around. I don’t remember, she thought, everything is broken ... I can’t feel anything ... where am I? She could hear an inhuman wailing noise all around her, a sighing as though a cacophony of spirits sang nameless, wordless hymns to some being that surrounded and enveloped them all. I must be dead, Julia thought deliriously; am I being punished for some transgression? Is this hell or only purgatory? “No, André, I don’t think it wise for Josette to leave the house today.” A woman’s voice, and so familiar, and suddenly Julia realized why without even seeing the speaker. She sounds exactly like me, Julia thought, amazed. What in the hell is going on? “Jeremiah has been dead for two weeks, and already Barnabas has married another. Her health is too fragile to even consider the possibility.” The woman (whoever she was) paused, as though listening to another’s response, and then laughed harshly. “You are soft, brother. Too soft I think. No, don’t ‘but Natalie’ me. I am Josette’s aunt, and I know what is best for her, even when you do not.” She’s talking about Josette, Julia thought, and had she possessed a body it would have trembled with excitement. The realization that she had somehow become a discorporeal entity bothered her less than might be expected; she only wished that her body, wherever it had been taken, would be returned to her at the end of this strange, strange journey, preferably unharmed. Whoever she is, her name is Natalie ... Josette’s Aunt Natalie. Julia pondered this for a moment, and then remembered La Contesse Natalie DuPres who had journeyed from Martinique with her brother André and his daughter Josette for the highly anticipated wedding to Barnabas Collins at the end of 1795. I’m getting closer, Julia realized; she could hear other things now, the quiet click as the door latched in Andre’s wake; the Countess’ exasperated sigh, and the rustle of the many skirts she must be wearing; even the relentless pounding of the rain against the windows. And suddenly she could SEE it, as though she were peering through a pane of frosted glass. It was hazy, but she could make out the regal-looking figure of a woman with a thick crop of auburn sausage curls in a fall around her face and shoulders. She wore an enormous sky-blue gown with white trim and cuffs and a black cape that flowed in a river from her neck and puddled on the ground before her. She had one eyebrow cocked and was staring haughtily at the door through which her brother must have just departed. It WAS Natalie DuPres, she was certain of it. There had been a tiny portrait of André, Natalie, and Josette given to Joshua and Naomi Collins as a gift for entertaining them while they awaited the wedding ceremony. Julia’s sense of amazement deepened. I’m seeing into the past, she thought; I’m actually glimpsing a window into the 18th century! Natalie straightened suddenly and shuddered, then looked around her. The nostrils at the end of her aristocratic nose flared, and she narrowed her eyes as she rose imperiously from her seat. “Who is in this room?” she called, turning from the left to the right. “I cannot see you, but I know that someone is here watching me. Who is it?” Julia felt a tremor of fear pierce her non-existent core. She can feel me, Julia thought, and was suddenly very unnerved. She tried to twist and turn in the blackness that intertwined her, and it was though she were unexpectedly shoved forward. She heard an enormous sound, as though a wall of glass had just shattered, and felt a blast of icy wind, and suddenly she was blinking and coughing ... and seeing the room into which she had just peered. Except that the Countess was gone. “Countess?” Julia called hesitantly, and then blinked. It was her voice ... and yet, it wasn’t either. The timbre was slightly lower, less frantic than Julia’s voice tended to be. It was a thicker tone, more carefully modulated with years of culture and training. She glanced down at her hands, and gasped. They were pale and thin, and emerged from a rustle of carefully embroidered white lace. This is impossible, Julia thought, and then laughed throatily; after all, what in this entire insane experience hadn’t been impossible? There was no mirror in the room, so Julia stepped to the window that overlooked the sprawling front lawn of what had to be Collinwood. She was on the second floor, in what was to become Carolyn’s bedroom. The sky was black with clouds, and Julia knew from experience that they would soon begin to spin precipitation; depending on the season it would be rain or snow. From the look of the world outside, Julia guessed that snow would soon fall. But it wasn’t the outside she wanted to concentrate. Dimly she could make out the ghostly flicker of her reflection. But it isn’t mine at all, she thought crazily. I’m not looking at my reflection. I’m looking at the reflection of Natalie DuPres through Natalie’s eyes. I’m inhabiting the body of another woman! A knock at the door forced her to spin around with a smothered cry; I can’t see anybody now, she thought, panic clawing at her breast, I don’t KNOW anything! The door opened without another knock, and a luminously beautiful young woman with round cheeks and a mountain of russet curls glided in. She was dressed all in black, with a black mourning veil pulled back from her face so that her enormous brown eyes could peer from behind black lashes at the world. Her face was pale and creamy, as befits a lady in her station, Julia decided, and knew even before she spoke who she was. “Aunt Natalie,” Josette Collins said, and her voice was reproachful. “Papa says you won’t allow me to tour the gardens this afternoon with Barnabas, and I don’t see any reason why I cannot.” Julia was absolutely speechless. Her mind raced. What had been the reason Natalie gave André before sending him away? Think, woman, think! “It will begin to snow soon,” she said without thinking, and Josette turned away petulantly and glared into the distance. Blessedly the rest of the information came to her. “You are in mourning, Josette, for your husband, and Barnabas himself has only just been married ...” She broke off, suddenly aware of the enormity of what she had just said, unaware that Josette had turned to stare at her curiously. Barnabas ... married? He had never let on! “Aunt Natalie,” Josette set, placing a hand on her aunt’s shoulder, “are you feeling all right?” The anger in her voice had evaporated and was replaced with concern. “You look quite pale.” Julia placed a trembling hand to her head, and began to improvise wildly. “To be honest, Josette,” she said in a small voice unlike the trumpeting voice of the woman she had just replaced, “I had a bad fall only a moment ago, just after your father left me. I’m afraid I struck my head rather fiercely against the window.” “Oh, no!” Josette cried, and rained a multitude of kisses upon her aunt’s “bruised” forehead. “My poor darling! Would you like me to call a doctor?” “I don’t think that will be necessary,” Julia said, affecting some of Natalie’s haughtiness, “but I really don’t feel very well. I ... I’ve been thinking some of the strangest things the past few moments.” She took Josette’s hand and squeezed it in her own. “My dear, at first I didn’t recognize you when you came in!” “Mon dieu!” Josette exclaimed, and fervently kissed Julia’s hand. “I wondered at the strange look you gave me when I entered the room. Natalie, I think that a doctor should be called.” “No, no,” Julia assured her, “I will be all right, I promise. Just ... please excuse any strange things I may sense, or any gaps in my memory.” Please buy it! Julia prayed, and was startled by another unsettling possibility that had just arisen. She couldn’t speak French. At all. What if Josette or André started babbling at her in what was supposed to be Natalie’s native tongue? If she did the natural thing and fell down in a faint, a doctor would surely be called, and then what? They wouldn’t commit her to a sanitarium ... would they? Did they even have sanitariums back then? But you’re living “back then”, Julia, she thought miserably, and you’re going to have to be very careful on your toes from now on, very careful indeed. This “amnesia” charade won’t hold up for very long. “I shan’t meet Barnabas in the garden,” Josette said resolutely, “if that’s really what you wish. Besides, you are right, Aunt Natalie. Barnabas is married now.” “So he is,” Julia said carefully, “and you must be a lady at all times, Josette. You must never be alone with him unchaperoned, is that clear?” Josette pouted. “Yes,” she said, doe-eyed and innocent. “But Aunt Natalie, he had something very important to tell me ... he thinks my life may be in terrible danger!” Her lips were pursed, and Julia saw that she was truly afraid. She scanned her mind for important dates, trying desperately to remember the day that Josette had died. Of course, it would do her no good if she didn’t know today’s date, she thought logically. “Josette,” she said slyly, “my memory is still a little addled. Could you remind me, please, of today’s date?” “Of course,” Josette said. “It’s the 8th of January, in the year of our Lord, 1796.” “Oh yes, yes,” Julia said. If she remembered correctly, then Josette’s death wasn’t scheduled for another two weeks or so. So what was Barnabas worried about? “I will see Barnabas this afternoon,” she announced, “in your place. What time did he say he would meet you?” 2 She saw him coming before he even noticed her, and, despite the thudding awful cliché behind her reaction, her breath was literally taken away. His hair was carelessly brushed across his forehead in a style that was very familiar to her (after all, she’d seen him only half an hour ago ... and two centuries away), but his face was ALIVE, blooming with life and health; his cheeks, suffering from the sting of the bitter wind, were blazing red; his brown eyes were moist, and he was shivering despite the heavy green Inverness cape he had pulled tightly around him. He clutched his silver wolf’s head cane in his right hand, and waved impatiently back and forth. Obviously, Julia thought clinically, he was VERY excited to see Josette. She had spent all that afternoon in her room, going through everything that Natalie possessed while, at the same time, making a desperate attempt to gather her thoughts. Why have I come back to this time? she asked; he had instantly disqualified the idea that this was all a dream. Obviously it wasn’t. No dream had EVER been this realistic, and besides, she already had three or four bruises on her arm (Natalie’s arm?) where she had pinched herself. If vampires were a possibility, Julia was forced to concede, then time travel was equally possible. The only thing that bothered her was the lack of her own body. Where had it gone? Was it still in 1967? And what had happened to Natalie DuPres? Julia had spent nearly an hour brooding over these and other disquieting questions before she had discovered Natalie’s journal, and oh, what a boon that had proven to be. It was quite up-to-date (the last entry had been the night before), and told her almost everything she needed to know about the Collins family. Natalie’s opinions were quite frank, and, blessedly, she had NOT written in French. Julia wondered briefly why that was, and decided that it was better not to look a gift horse in the mouth. She learned that Joshua Collins, Barnabas’ father, was a gruff, cold man, his wife Naomi, although sweet and a devoted mother to little Sarah, was a burgeoning alcoholic, and that Abigail Collins was a raving religious fanatic bordering on lunacy. It had been she who had summoned the Reverend Trask to root out a witch, although the Reverend himself (a man Natalie regarded as an utter charlatan) had vanished shortly after Jeremiah Collins’ death at the hands of his nephew. Julia had digested the entire situation with amazement. She had no idea so many terrible troubles had plagued the Collins family during this time. But she was left with an even darker question. How had Barnabas become a vampire? He was very reticent on the subject, making various, cryptic remarks about “the most evil force who ever lived”, a woman who “reaches out across the centuries now to destroy me”. Who was this woman? Did she have something to do with Cassandra Collins, who herself had an inordinate interest in Barnabas, while he held for her an unfathomable hatred and mistrust? Barnabas saw her now, and she straightened, preparing to play the part of the moralizing harridan. When he realized who exactly had come to meet him, Julia was quite disappointed to see that his face fell, and remembered that he saw Natalie DuPres (but, a nasty little interior voice prodded her, would it really make much of a difference? You’re not Josette, and you never will be, and that’s all that matters to him, now or ever.) “What are you doing here?” he asked, shock and suspicion mingling in his voice. Julia drew herself up importantly, and bowed her head. “Barnabas,” she said formally, “good evening.” “Countess,” Barnabas sighed tiredly, “where is Josette? I was supposed to meet her here.” “I know,” Julia said, more snippily than she really intended, and drummed her pointed, well-trimmed fingernails against the stone bench upon which she sat. Around her, the leafless bushes and twisted trees rustled secretly. “I deemed it inappropriate for her to meet you like this. After all, she is a widow and you are a married man. It is most improper.” “I think,” Barnabas growled, “that Josette is a grown woman, and she may see whomever she wants to whenever she wants to.” “I disagree,” Julia snapped. “Josette is my niece; I have brought her up since her mother died when she was but a child, and I have nothing but her best interest at heart.” Barnabas bowed his head, and she saw that his mouth had curled with shame. Relentlessly, she continued, “I am very interested in your marriage, Barnabas.” He lifted his head and stared at her with open-mouthed surprise. She tried to repress a smile; this is easier than I thought it was going to be! Be careful, Julia, that little warning voice piped shrilly. You’re on thin ice, and don’t forget it. She had no idea who “Angelique” was, but she had gathered that the woman (girl?) had been Josette’s maid (she was mentioned infrequently at the beginning of the journal, but the last few pages had been covered with quite a lot of torrid detail; most were vivid descriptions of Angelique’s enormous blue eyes, how Natalie hadn’t trusted them, and her blooming suspicion that witchcraft was indeed being practiced, and that the culprit had lived with them for years) since Josette herself had been a small child, and she had practically grown up in the DuPres household. She had accompanied the family to America for the wedding, and it was intended that she remain as a servant to the Collins family ... until tragedy flattened them all, making ashes out of their plans. Josette had married Jeremiah, and almost in retaliation Barnabas had married Angelique. “What about it interests you, Countess?” Barnabas asked, his eyes slitted. “I believe that your wife is not all she appears to be,” Julia said haughtily. “I believe that —” Barnabas was nodding. “I can say nothing about it, Countess,” he said urgently, and glanced over his shoulder. “But I’ll warn you in Josette’s stead. I want you to take her away, Countess, as quickly as you can. She is in terrible, terrible danger.” “I know,” Julia said. Barnabas gaped at her. “You ... you know?” he asked, then growled, “How is this possible?” She held out the Tarot cards she’d discovered on Natalie’s nightstand. “The cards have foretold the presence of a wicked woman in this house.” Barnabas was nodding impatiently. “I read them this morning and learned that there is a shadow over my Josette, and that I must protect her at all costs. I believe that this shadow has something to do with Angelique, and that you are in danger as well.” “In danger from what?” The new voice, almost feline in its femininity, was sharp, cruel, suspicious, and above all, instantly recognizable. Whereas Josette’s face and tone was similar to Maggie Evans, as Julia first laid eyes on the bride of Barnabas Collins, she knew that this was not serendipity, no chance coincidence of face and voice. The woman that married Barnabas Collins, the woman that now stood before them both with her lower lip trembling furiously, this woman was Cassandra Collins. Julia knew it, and suddenly understood. There IS a witch in this house, she thought; a witch in this house in this time, and a witch in the time I just left. “Angelique,” Barnabas said anxiously, and Julia wondered if he might faint, “I ... I happened to meet the Countess in the garden and we were just ... uh ... just discussing —” He broke off, and licked his lips. His face was the color of paper, ashen and set. “Yes?” Angelique asked, her voice thick with cloying sweetness. Julia didn’t buy it for a moment. She was even more beautiful than Cassandra, if possible, and she owed most of the difference to the hundreds of ringlets that were arranged carefully atop her head, the most brilliant golden color Julia had ever seen. She was delicate in an olive empire-waisted dress and a gray cape thrown over it; an enormous white ring encircled her finger, and Julia recognized it instantly. After all, hadn’t she just seen it on Cassandra’s hand only a few hours before? “I must say, Countess, that I’m quite intrigued by your suppositions. If my husband is in danger, I should like to know from what.” Julia’s chin was thrust out furiously, and she resisted the urge to bark out what she knew to be true at her newly found enemy; to do so would be extremely hazardous, and, more likely, deadly as well. If Angelique is a witch, Julia thought, (and I have no doubt that she is), then my life could be in danger as well. And what if Natalie’s body is killed? Will I change time? And will I even be able to return to 1967? “The plague,” she said carefully and deliberately. “There have been rumors of the plague in the village. Ben Stokes brought the news this afternoon. The village is in an uproar.” Which was true. Julia had met Ben Stokes only half hour ago, as she’d left her room on the way to meet Barnabas in the garden. He was an enormous bull of a man, with a thick crop of dark brown hair, a mouth that seemed to take up the lower half of his face, and shoulders that seemed several feet across. Julia had seen the resemblance to the Professor she knew in 1967 instantly, and knew at once that he was an ancestor. Angelique drew a pale hand to her throat and swallowed. “Dear me,” she said, and her voice was still choked with faux sweetness. “That IS terrible news. Barnabas?” she said, turning to her husband and clutching his arm. Barnabas squirmed, and Julia knew at once that he knew the truth about her as well. That’s what he wanted to communicate to Josette, Julia thought grimly, but he’s afraid to actually name her as the witch. She’s probably made all sorts of terrible threats. “Barnabas, we should take our honeymoon right away ... leave tomorrow! We can sail to Paris and return by early summer, and by then all these whispers about a plague will —” “No,” Barnabas said curtly, and shrugged her arm off. He bowed stiffly to Julia, and said, “Thank you for the warning, Countess. I’m going into Collinwood now to see my Mother.” His eyes flitted to Angelique’s, but he said nothing, and left them alone. Angelique watched him go. Her mouth hung open, and she closed it with a “snap”, then glared after him. “I should follow him,” Angelique hissed, barely able to control her rage. “I don’t want him to see his Father. You of all people know the horrible things that Joshua Collins has said against me.” “Me?” Julia asked with genuine surprise, and Angelique turned to look at her suspiciously, her golden ringlets bouncing with the jerk of her head. “Of course,” Angelique said, then cocked her head. “He’s been rude to you since the moment you entered this house ... well, he’s been just as rude to me! He’s threatened to disinherit Barnabas, you know, if he married me!” Julia hadn’t known that; Natalie had omitted that detail in the course of her journalizing. “Joshua Collins is a proud man,” she said strongly, and Angelique nodded. “You would do well to stay away from him too.” “I have no intention of running afoul of him tonight,” Angelique declared, and stalked off in the direction of her husband. Julia watched her go, and followed her until she was out of sight. 3 “That was incredibly unwise, Barnabas,” Angelique hissed an hour later. Thunder roared outside, and lightning illuminated the tiny servant’s room in the West Wing of Collinwood where they now stood. It had been Angelique’s old room, occupied after the family had decided to move to Collinwood when the Old House seemed infested with evil spirits and bad memories. She had lived in it for a very short time, but she still kept a few of her ... tools available there. That was how Barnabas had caught her now, stealing into her old room and removing one of the floorboards to reveal a tiny box. There were two wax dolls in the box, connected at the mouth and at the hips; one was obviously a man, with a dark brown lock of hair attached, and the other a woman, with a red ribbon pinned at the head. Barnabas’ had ripped them from her hands before she could so much as utter a cry, and now he stood above her, shaking them at her. “I think it was unwise of you to return to this room,” Barnabas grinned at her blackly. “I had my suspicions, but no real proof of your witchery.” He held the dolls aloft. “But now I do. Enough proof to condemn you for the witch you are. They’ll hang you on Gallow’s Hill, and Josette and I will dance on your grave.” Angelique’s eyes spit blue sparks, and her hands clenched into fists. “You sent her away, didn’t you. You went to warn her about me this afternoon, didn’t you!” Her voice rose to a shriek. “You needn’t deny it! I can tell by your face. What did you tell the Countess about me?” He smirked at her. “Nothing,” was the answer. Her face darkened until it was almost dusky with her rage. “You’re lying,” she spat. He ignored her, and instead caressed the dolls. “So,” he said softly, “this is how you did it. This is how you bewitched them.” He lifted his eyes to her, and she saw that what she had mistook for quiet pensiveness was actually a boiling rage that threatened to spill from his eyes and consume her. “This is Josette’s ribbon, isn’t it?” When she didn’t answer he shook them in her face and screamed, “ISN’T IT!?” “Yes,” Angelique whispered, and turned away from him. “It’s hers.” He stared at her with disbelief. “You’ve ruined all our lives. Josette ... we were to be married ...” Angelique whirled to face him and screamed, “Don’t you speak her name! Don’t you ever speak her name again in this house!” “I love her!” Barnabas roared back, and Angelique flinched. “Why can’t you accept that?” “Because I do not wish for it to be so,” was the sibilant response. Angelique was panting, and she slammed one curled fist against the bureau, hard enough to crack the wood. She seemed not to feel the pain, and stared angrily into the distance. “’Yes, Mademoiselle Josette, no Mademoiselle Josette,’” she mimicked. “She thought she ordered me for all those years, but I gave her a life ... one that she loathed so much ...” She choked on her own poisonous words, and turned to him with a tiny smile. “For once I would have something that belonged to her.” “You are disgusting,” Barnabas moaned. Angelique recoiled as though slapped. For a moment she seemed confused, unsure of herself. “No, Barnabas!” she cried, and rushed to him, trying to embrace him, but he pushed her savagely away. She stared at him with hurt glistening in her cold blue eyes. “I love you, Barnabas! Everything I did was for love of you!” “How can you say that?” he snarled. “Jeremiah is dead because of you!” “I never wanted him to die!” she cried. “Oh, you must believe that. I wanted for him and Josette to go away ... far, far away ... so that we could be alone ... together, without Josette’s interference.” She stared at him pleadingly. “Barnabas, please. When we met in Martinique you saw a woman, not a witch.” He glared at her. “That witch is still in your heart. You destroyed all our lives, and yet you have no regrets.” “I have my regrets!” she protested, but he wasn’t listening to her. “The night that Josette arrived ...” His eyes stared off into the distance, reliving one of the most terrifying moments of his life. “I began to choke ... I almost died ...” “You did almost die,” Angelique admitted quietly. “But then I took the spell away, and you lived again. I couldn’t watch you die, Barnabas. I loved you too much for that.” “The word rots on your lips. You’re not in love with me,” he snapped. “How can I love you? How can I love someone so evil, so devious, so calculating? You played with us all like dolls. Josette hates me! She will never return to Collinwood, now that Jeremiah is dead. And if she knew who really killed him —” Angelique’s head jerked up. “But she will never know,” she pronounced, “because if you tell her, Josette will die the most horrible death imagineable.” She smiled diabolically. “Do you want me to conjure a vision of her death, Barnabas? It would be very easy. It would not be real, but it could become real very easily.” “I will have no more of your tricks,” he growled. “I can make Josette hate you,” Angelique swore, standing before him and spitting the words into his face. Her eyes blazed at him. “She will despise you if I will it to be so!” “So be it,” Barnabas said. “But as long as she is on this earth I will never love another. And that is the fact of it.” “That’s not what you said in Martinique,” Angelique said darkly. “That’s not what you whispered in my ear.” “That was different,” Barnabas said, and for the first time there was guilt in his voice. “I ... I didn’t know how Josette felt for me. And when she went to France, I thought I’d never see her again.” “Lies,” Angelique spat, and stalked away from him. “All lies!” “Angelique,” Barnabas said carefully, and his eyes never left the place on the wall where they were fixed, “I will allow you to leave Collinwood tonight if you swear never to return. Father will see that the marriage is annulled. I’m going to give you a thousand dollars,” Barnabas said, “and then I’m going to allow you to pack all of your things and be on the train out of Collinsport by tomorrow morning. You’ll go to Boston of course, and from there you can go anywhere in the world.” His voice was so tender, she thought, agonized, so very tender. But I’ll never hear that tenderness again. “And then what?” she asked. “I’ll go to Josette,” he said, “and I’ll explain everything.” He raised the wax figurine wrapped in Jeremiah’s missing handkerchief. “When she sees this, she’ll understand.” “And you’ll marry, I suppose,” Angelique mused. “I will try to win back her respect,” Barnabas said, “and then her love.” “And if I refuse your offer? If I refuse to give you up and decide to remain the mistress of Collinwood?” “Then I will take these dolls to the bailiff in Collinsport,” Barnabas said in that same, calm infuriating tone, “and they will hang you for the witch you are.” “No,” she said, and there was no fear, no anger, and no hatred in her voice. The word slipped from her lips coolly, with no emotion couching it whatsoever. She darted forward so quickly, with the speed of a viper, that Barnabas really didn’t know what was happening. She leaped forward, her hand outstretched, and he saw that she clutched a little knife that she’d used to carve the doll with. But he was quicker than she, and clutched her wrist, grinding the delicate bones with his enormous hand. She struggled valiantly, the knife reaching for his chest, reaching hungrily, awaiting the splash of blood that would feed its hunger and her own as it would plunge into his chest. Thunder crashed beyond them, shaking the great house to its foundation, and in the moment that Barnabas twisted her arm, the knife plunged into Angelique’s breast — and into her heart. He stared down at her, his face washed out and blank. Her eyes were looking upwards, wide and blue, and when they focused on him it seemed as though she were smiling. “You think I’m dying,” Angelique whispered, and a bubble of blood formed between her lips. A moment later it burst, and a crimson dribble ran down her chin. “But a true witch can never die. The Master protects his handmaidens well. But mark well my face, for you will see it again.” She swallowed, but it did nothing to ease the painful dryness in her throat. Her chest burned, and one hand idly caressed the haft of the blade that grew like a great terrible blossom from between her breasts. “I set a curse on you, Barnabas Collins,” Angelique croaked, managing to raise her right-hand index and middle fingers and thumb in a crooked gesture. Her voice grew shill with an anger that began to blaze in her heart, even as her lifeblood was pumped out in a scarlet gush. “You will never rest. And you will never be able to love anyone, for whoever loves you will die. That is my curse, and no one will undo it!” Her eyes glared furiously into the darkness beyond Barnabas' head. She’s dying, he thought with relief. She’s dying . “You will live with it through all ... through all ...” Her eyes closed, and she sank back onto the floor. “Eternity ...” she wheezed, then her mouth closed, and a great spasm ran the length of her body. Her hands clenched into a fist, and then relaxed and lay limply at her side. Her eyes still glared, and her mouth hung slack, but Barnabas knew that she was dead. Finally, blessedly dead. She is dead, Barnabas thought, and knelt beside her. He stood up hurriedly, unconsciously wiping the scarlet that stained his hands onto his black breeches and took several steps backward. Her body must not be discovered, Barnabas thought, and ran from the room. The next work of the next several hours brought Barnabas late into the morning, and when he finished, it was only an hour until dawn. But he stared at the new brick wall and smiled. She’s gone forever, he thought. No one will find her body, and they’ll never question why the room has been bricked up. His smile grew. It’s well known that Angelique wanted to forget her past life, and this room bothered her especially. Why wouldn’t she wanted it bricked up and forgotten? “Barnabas,” Julia said from the doorway, “you cannot do this.” “Countess,” Barnabas said, and his voice was dead. “What did you see? How much do you know?” “All of it,” Julia said. She had indeed been lurking without the room for the entire conversation, afraid to interrupt, afraid that changing the natural flow of time would trap her forever in a giant cat’s cradle. She had followed Barnabas, just as he was following Angelique back to her old room, and had overheard everything that had transpired ... including the curse. I couldn’t stop it, Julia thought wildly, but was pacified by another, calming thought: suppose that, whatever strange forces sent me back here, they never intended me to do that? Suppose I’m just here to watch, to observe how these events originally played out? I know what I’m dealing with, should I return to the present; I know that Cassandra is really Angelique Collins, and that she is a witch, and that she’ll resent my experiments should she discover them. I know the REAL Barnabas, the gentle young man he was before the curse, and that is to my advantage as well. “Then you know what she was,” Barnabas said grimly. “She will rest peacefully behind that wall for the rest of eternity, and no one will ever know.” Julia gestured helplessly, and longed for a cigarette. “What will you tell your father? Your mother?” “Father already thinks she was a golddigger,” Barnabas said, and added sadly, “How I wish that were true. It would be so much simpler ...” His voice trailed off, and he shrugged. He’s in shock, Julia thought clinically; if only there was something I could administer her. Alas, she realized, all her sedatives were in her black bag in her room ... one hundred and seventy-five years in the future. “I’ll tell them that she took a thousand dollars and ran off in the night. They’ll want to believe that.” “You won’t tell them ... what she was?” the faux Countess asked. “I hadn’t thought about it,” Barnabas said. “I will tell Josette, of course. I want her to know ... I want her to know that I always loved her, even when I thought she’d betrayed me.” Julia felt something stir and crack within her. My god, she marveled, he really does love Josette. He really and truly does. An uncomfortable feeling, too close to shame for comfort, stirred like a serpent in her belly. I was going to use the experiments to force Barnabas to marry me, she thought sickly. What was I thinking? “I will back up whatever statements you care to make,” she said tightly, so that he would not discern the tears that threatened to crack her voice and leak from her eyes. “Thank you,” Barnabas said wearily. “Can you leave me alone for a moment, Countess? I ... I want to clean up.” “Of course,” Julia said, and left him, pausing at the staircase only for a moment. There eyes met — his were dark and haunted, and Julia knew that they hadn’t been when he’d met her in the gardens, and she also realized that they were the same eyes she had confronted a week before, at the Collinwood in her time. I want to help him, she thought desperately, and then, resolutely, and I WILL help. As god is my witness, I will give Barnabas Collins the life he never had. He watched the Countess go, and then faced the room that held the earthly remains of his wife the witch. He still couldn’t fully understand or believe the events that had transpired in the past hour or so. It all seemed so unreal. Was he really a murderer? Was Angelique really dead? Was it still possible that this was some insane dream? No, he decided, this was no dream, and Angelique was most assuredly dead. With her death, I am free, he thought, and allowed himself a tired smile. From now on I will look only to the future ... a future with my Josette. Something stirred behind him, some sound that made him pause and stare ahead with the hair on the back of his neck prickling and his skin tingling. Something is watching me, he thought, something is staring at me. Suddenly the entire house seemed much too quiet. I don’t want to turn around, he thought irrationally, I don’t want to see it, I don’t want to, I don’t want to ... But when the screaming began, the shrill, terrified screams like those of a woman in pain ... or anger ... he had to turn around. He couldn’t help it. The bat that roosted above the doorway lifted its enormous head and blinked its ruby eyes. It screamed again, its fangs glistening, sharp as knitting needles, then it fluttered its wings and simultaneously let go of the doorway. Six feet, Barnabas thought in dazed horror, its wingspan is at least six feet ... But then it was flying directly at him, screaming and screaming and screaming, and he tried to throw his hands forward to ward it off, but it was no use. It struck him, knocking him to the floor, and he could smell it. The scent of the bat hung around it like a shroud; the odor of garments smothered in dust, the frigid essence of a tomb, the wilting stench of decomposition. His head struck the floor sharply, but before he could cry out, the bat’s mouth latched onto his neck. The pain that flared in his throat in a great red sheet as it sank its deadly fangs into the flesh and ripped apart his jugular vein in a gout of red, numbing his entire body as fire coursed in his veins. It’s drinking me, he thought hysterically, and tried vainly to beat it off, it’s drinking my blood, oh my GOD ... Gradually his attempts became weaker and weaker, and soon his hands, the warmth and feeling departed, fell limply to the ground and lay there, like dead fish. His mouth gaped, and the only sound he could hear was the ghastly sucking sounds. Foul spit mingled with his blood and ran in a great puddle on the floor. At last it stopped. The bat lifted its head, releasing its fangs quickly and painlessly, and began to beat its great wings. A moment later, it had vanished entirely. But before the shroud of darkness fell and death overcame Barnabas Collins, he seemed to hear a woman whispering ... whispering ... The curse, my husband ... the curse, Barnabas Collins ... the curse ... Julia heard the screams as she was descending the staircase, and a wave of whitehot fear descended over her in a smothering pall. I never should have left him alone, she thought dazedly, and was running back up the stairs even as she heard the startled cries from below. She saw him as she threw open the door to the West Wing, and uttered a shrill scream of horror. He was crumpled next to the newly bricked up room, but that wasn’t what had elicited such a scream of shock. Her fear had been provoked by the disgusting, monstrous bat that crouched over him with blood leaking from its jagged fangs, its feral eyes glaring at her redly. It shrieked again, then launched itself off of Barnabas’ body, directly at her. She fell back, screaming hysterically (six feet, she thought, over and over; its wingspan was at least six feet), but when she opened her eyes, the bat had gone. There was no trace of it. Barnabas moaned, and Julia dropped to the ground next to him. Already her tears had spilled off her face and mingled with the blood running in freshets from the huge tear in his throat. His eyes stared upwards, but she knew they saw nothing. “Oh, Barnabas,” she choked, and took his hand. “Angelique,” he whispered. “She ... she sent a bat ...” “Don’t try to talk, Barnabas,” Julia sobbed. “Please ...” “Aunt Natalie?” It was Josette, calling from the doorway leading to the West Wing. “Aunt Natalie, I heard screams ...” Then Josette saw the tableau spread out before her, a picnic from a nightmare, and with her own piercing shriek she fell to the ground next to Barnabas, planting kisses on him. “No, Barnabas!” she moaned. “No, you cannot die ... not now ... not now that we have each other again.” Barnabas tried to smile, and lifted one dead-white hand to her face, and stroked the smooth curve of her cheek. She took it in her hand and kissed it fervently. “I shall love you forever,” he whispered, and then his eyes closed, and he fell backwards, and Julia knew that he was dead. TO BE CONTINUED BY THAT DEVIOUS MADMAN, GOTHY GOTH!!!