Authors: Lara Parker
Dark Shadows: Wolf Moon Rising
He had meant to make it his purpose to unearth the Collins
mysteries, and he had begun the morning fl ush with curiosity
and excitement. Now this Blair was stealing his fi re, and threat-
ening Barnabas at the same time.
“But why should we share our family secrets with you, even
if there were any?” said his cousin in a petulant tone.
Blair looked directly at Carolyn, and his appraisal of her in
her short dress was more than obvious. His voice dropped an
octave, almost as if he were fl irting.
“I understand why you are cautious. In fact, I expected it
from the younger members of the family. But, my dear, I mean
you no harm. On the contrary, I only want to bring a little ex-
citement into your lives. Wouldn’t you like that?”
He had struck home. “But why us?” she said with a note of
defi ance.
Blair turned his attention back to the family.
“Did it ever occur to you that these many misfortunes you
have endured are no fault of your own, were precipitated by no
misdeeds or miscalculations, but are the result of a curse placed
on the family long ago?”
“A curse? What ever do you mean?” asked Elizabeth ner-
vous ly.
“A curse that manifests in various ways, but refuses to be
dislodged. An illustrious ancestry such as yours deserves its place in the New En gland accounts of great families, rather than to
be hidden away in shame.”
“Th
at’s all very well,” said Roger sternly, “but we have no
intention of sharing our family history with a complete stranger.
Our misfortunes, and I’m not saying we have any, are no busi-
ness of yours.”
“Even if I uncover evidence that could defame your name
even further? Th
e papers love scandals, especially among the
rich.”
Roger’s face grew red. “Exactly what are you threatening us
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Blair continued, unabated. “I propose a trade. You allow me
to investigate your family, cooperate with my inquiries, and I
will do everything in my power to clear your name and release
you from your unfortunate enchantment.”
“How would you propose to do that?”
“Th
e fi rst thing I would like to try is a séance. Th
e dead
have more to tell us than the living. Besides, they can be rather
amusing.”
“Oh my dear man, don’t be absurd.” Roger shrugged and
turned away again.
“Why do you say that? Do you deny that some of you have
taken part in such mystical journeys in the past? Th
e fact is, ser-
vants who worked in this house and witnessed the proceedings
have found their tongues loosed at the local Blue Whale, and
many a laugh has been had at your expense.” In the foyer Willie
cast a worried look in Mrs. Johnson’s direction before staring at
the fl oor.
Quentin came forward. “Whom in the past would you try
to contact?”
“Stop it, Quentin! I refuse to hear any more of this gib-
berish.”
“Come, come Roger, you know as well as I do that there
have been séances held in this very room. Why deny it. Th
e man
obviously knows a lot about us.”
“To our disadvantage, I’m sure.”
“For my own reasons,” Blair continued, “I would like to
journey to the year 1929, where I might make contact with a cer-
tain Jamison Collins, your father, Roger.”
“And may I ask why?”
“Something occurred, during the Depression, that could
clarify everything.”
“Nineteen twenty- nine,” repeated Quentin, and David no-
ticed that he was staring at Elizabeth. She caught his eye, stood,
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and turned away. Her reaction was so unusual that David
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thought there must be some secret between them and he studied
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her more closely, but her face was calm and without expression.
Nathanial Blair spoke to him directly, jolting his musings.
“So, David, do you accept the challenge? How would you
like to help me fi nd the vampire? You are young and strong and
well suited to become a detective.”
“A what?” He turned to look at Blair, who was now staring
at him with a mischievous smile, more like a smirk, which gave
David an uneasy feeling. Or maybe it was his high forehead and
pronounced widow’s peak. Th
ere was nothing about the man on
the surface that seemed suspicious; on the contrary, he was su-
premely pleasant, but David felt an odd distrust. Blair’s enthusi-
asm seemed forced, and there was a neediness about him that
made David uncomfortable.
“Surely you know of these valiant types,” Blair said in his
fl at voice, “young men with goodness and strength, who have
an uncanny power to rid the world of evil. Heroes, I think they
are called.”
“I have no idea what you are talking about,” said David. “You
are completely wrong about us. Th
ere are no ghosts, goblins, or
vampires in our family and you are insulting us to say so.”
Blair raised his eyebrows. “Your anger surprises me. Perhaps
you have something to hide. Someone you are trying to protect.”
David’s heart jumped when he thought of Jackie. “I don’t.
And I resent your accusations. Who do you think you are, burst-
ing in here with no invitation and assuming gossip about us is
true?”
“Do you doubt my sincerity? Or my credentials?”
“Yes. I think you are a fake.”
“David, you mustn’t be rude.” Elizabeth spoke in calming
tones. “Mr. Blair has only said he wanted to be of help.”
“I can see what he wants. He wants to write a book about the
supernatural and tell a lot of lies about us. He wants to portray us as weirdoes in order to make money, and—”
Quentin broke in. “David may have a point. You may be a
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charlatan taking advantage of a reclusive family, but we have
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a way to test your expertise. I will take part in your séance, Mr.
Blair. When do you propose to stage it?” His face was bruised,
David was certain, and his eyes bloodshot.
“Why, this week, or next. At your con ve nience,” answered
Blair, ignoring David’s cold stare.
Quentin glowered back at him and said, “I would choose as
soon as possible, and”— he drew closer to Blair and spoke in a
low voice—“I have a question for you, Dr. Blair. If you discover
this vampire you believe exists and manage to do what ever you
do with him, trap him, arrest him—”
“Stake him.”
“Th
en what will you do? Turn his body over to the authori-
ties?”
Blair chuckled, a dry sound in his throat. “Hardly. Like the
curious doctor that I am”— almost a whisper—“I will perform
an autopsy.”
Roger led Blair out, and David was on his way to the stairs
when he heard Quentin say something to Elizabeth. Curi-
ous, he drew back and paused behind the door to listen. Th
rough
the crack he could see that everyone else had left the room and
Quentin was standing behind Elizabeth, quite close to her,
speaking to her in a quiet voice and in a tone that sounded oddly
intimate. “A séance,” he said, leaning in toward her. “Back to
1929. Shall we take part, Elizabeth?” He reached for her hand,
but, looking quickly around, she drew it away.
Still, she smiled at him, a wistful expression tinged with
humor, a warmth David had never seen before in her face. “A
séance? What would that possibly mean to us?”
“How can you ask that?” said Quentin, his tone still secre-
tive. “Don’t you remember? A man and a girl who believed they
had found the world when they found one another.”
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David had never heard any expression of love spoken in his
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family, so he was not sure he was hearing one now. He eased
closer to the crack, hoping to hear more.
“Would you come?” Quentin whispered.
“But that’s foolish. Th
e purpose of a séance— however ab-
surd that is— is to make contact with the dead, not to escape into
the past.”
“But you know it can happen. We could slip through. Tell
me you aren’t intrigued.”
“Quentin, you must let all that go. Th
ose . . . lovers disap-
peared into the pages of memory.”
“On the contrary, they are as alive as yesterday.”
“All changed.”
“No, she is still here. Th
e girl who ruined me forever for any
other woman.”
“Please. Don’t speak of it. Th
ere have been a hundred lovers
since then.”
Quentin’s voice was tender. “And only one I will never for-
get.”
David was intrigued. Who did Elizabeth mean by
lovers
?
Intrigued now, David leaned in closer and watched Quen-
tin walk to the window and stare out at the falling snow. “I re-
member that night, the excitement of it all. Th
e trees in bloom,”
he said, “the ground strewn with petals that had fallen like
snow? Th
e night of your nineteenth birthday after the ball in the
east wing. Th
at part of the house now shut away? Don’t you re-
member the music? Th
at marvelous car?”
David was startled when Elizabeth rose, her voice breaking
into a sob. “I remember the heartbreak, the horrible things that
happened, the sacrifi ce—” She took a breath as though it pained
her. “You know I am old now.”
“No older than I.”
“But look at you! Whereas for me the years have taken their
toll, you . . . you seem to remain always in the fl ower of youth—
dashing, fi t.” She looked at him helplessly, but then her
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expression clouded over. “Although this morning I must admit
you seem exhausted. Are you ill?”
Quentin turned to her, his features drawn. “Elizabeth, I
must talk to you. I need your guidance. My life has taken a bad
turn.”
But Elizabeth, growing restless, looked over to see David
standing in the foyer, and she rose and withdrew hurriedly, re-
marking in her formal manner, “I must go through my mail,
Quentin. Please excuse me.”
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E i g h t
It was after midnight and the fl attened moon hovered outside
of David’s window when he was awakened by a soft knock
on his door. It was his aunt Elizabeth in a long white night-
gown, her hair hanging down her back like a girl’s. She was
carry ing a candle and the fl ame’s pale glimmer fl ickered across
her worried features.
“David,” she said, “could you come with me? Th
ere is an odd
noise downstairs.”
Groggy, but pleased to have been called on to help, David
followed her into the hall. He stood with her for a moment lis-
tening, and then he heard it, too.
Th
ere was a pounding like a heartbeat deep within the
house, as if someone or something was trying to break in. When
all was silent, he waited, until he assumed the sound had been
his imagination, but then a shudder passed through the walls,
and the pounding began again.
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“Do you hear it?” she asked in a shaky voice.
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“Yes.” David was only in his pajamas, and he began to
shiver.
“What do you think it could be?”
“Perhaps someone at the door? Let’s go down.”
David ventured into the dark hallway determined to fi nd
the source of the sound. His aunt followed him down the long
corridor from her bedroom to the stair, her robe fl owing about
her ankles, her feet bare on the parquet fl oor.
Someone was at the entrance; he thought it might be some
stranger in need of shelter or aid, due to an accident perhaps. For some reason he was trembling, and he told himself not to be
afraid as he tiptoed down the stair in the dark to the landing, and paused to listen again.
Th
e pounding continued, muffl
ed but insistent.
When his aunt descended to the landing, a blast of cold air
whipped her robe away from her gown and extinguished her
light.
“Stay there,” said David, “and I’ll have a look.”
Th
e front door had been fl ung open by the wind, and snow
had blown over the threshold and carpeted the foyer. It was like
ice on his bare feet as David walked to the double doors and
looked out. He waited for the pounding to begin again, but the
air was blanketed in a deep silence. Th
ere was only the stillness