Authors: Lara Parker
“Jesus Christ!” he said. “It’s a werewolf!”
Jackie stared unblinking and then said softly, “Th
e painting
is under a spell.”
“And it guards a pretty heavy secret. No wonder he wanted
it back.”
“I saw that wolf,” Jackie said, “the night we found Barnabas.
Could that have been what attacked him?”
“I don’t know,” said David, “but this could mean Quentin is
dangerous— a threat. If that’s really him, Jackie, he’s a dissem-
bler. He’s a member of my family. And he’s a werewolf.”
Jackie just nodded her head and her fi ngers closed on Da-
vid’s arm.
“We have to fi nd out what it all means,” he said simply, and
he thought, but didn’t say, that it meant his family lived under an evil curse. A vampire, and now a werewolf. A wave of darkness
swept through him.
Not knowing what else to do with it, but reluctant to leave
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it there, they covered the leering visage with the blue satin and
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put the painting in the back seat of the car. Snow fl urries blasted
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the windshield when David turned the key and the engine
rumbled to life.
He was surprised to hear Jackie say, “I don’t want to go
back,” as they started down the road.
“I know. Th
ey’ll probably take the car away from us as soon
as they see it.”
“What shall we do with that?” She glanced toward the back
seat.
“I say we throw it in the swimming pool. With the other
ghosts. Let them fi ght it out.”
She watched the snowfl akes roiling in the headlights. “Maybe
it’s not it,” she said softly.
“Maybe, but how many paintings do you think there are
fl oating around?”
“What do you know about werewolves?” Jackie said.
“Only folklore. Th
ey change on the full moon. And
something about silver bullets.”
She looked over at him. “How about we throw it into the
sea?”
“Good idea. Let’s toss it off Widow’s Hill and that’ll be the
end of it.”
She sighed and stared out the window. “You know we can’t
do that. Th
e painting is under a spell. It’s something supernatu-
ral. We have to fi gure it out. We’re the ones who found it. We’re the ones who could uncover the secret.” She watched the trees
fl ash by her window; then she sighed. “But it isn’t ours. We
should just give it to Quentin.”
“You’re right. Of course we should.”
“But fi rst I could try to repair it. I have paints.”
“You would touch that hideous thing?”
She smiled. “I’m not afraid. I’m an artist.” She paused, then
giggled. “And I’m a witch, remember?”
A reckless urge pulsed through his body and he stepped on
the accelerator, easing the car into third gear and picking up
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speed. It had stopped snowing and the headlights cast their
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Lara Parker
golden stream down the tunnel beneath the trees like a corridor
of fl ame. Th
e radio was playing again, and this time he recog-
nized Gershwin’s
Rhapsody in Blue
pouring in a rich horn melody out of the speaker.
David gripped the wheel and watched as the trees fl ew by
and the speedometer crept up to fi fty, then beyond. He knew
how fast the car could go and he had a fl eeting thought of Pha-
eton in the chariot of the sun, the enormous engine rumbling,
the galloping horses beneath the hood, and he knew he should
pull in on the reins, that the car was not used to his hand on the
wheel, but thoughts of danger slipped to the back of his mind
and the idea that nagged at his consciousness was that they
might never be here again. Th
e music rose to a crescendo of
golden clarinets just before he hit a wide sheet of ice and felt the wheels slip. Jackie cried out, “David! Stop! Don’t hit them!”
Th
ere were shapes up ahead moving in the headlights, and
pairs of red eyes fl ared in the beams and glowed in the darkness
like burning coals.
He jerked his foot off the gas, but the car had already begun
to spin. He felt the wheels break loose and the body slide side-
ways. It rocked a little, drifted, then turned again, until, with a rumbling shudder, it crashed into a huge drift of snow. He heard
Jackie scream as he lurched forward and hit his head on the
dash.
When he came to, Jackie was out of the car and standing in
the headlights. She seemed to be in shock. Th
e coyotes slunk si-
lently around her, as if they were protecting her, tongues hang-
ing out, tails twitching, curious and restless, waiting for some
sign from her. Th
ere must have been at least ten of them circling,
moving out of the dark through the beams and disappearing
again in the blackness.
His head throbbed. “Jackie?”
She turned to look at him. “Are you okay? Are you hurt?”
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Her eyes were shining orbs of silver, the pupils huge and dark.
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He could barely make out her expression, but there was some-
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thing unsmiling and demonic in her stare, and a chill sliced
through him. She was so still and barely breathing, and she be-
gan to hum softly, vibrating as she glared not at him but through
him, her eyes focusing on something behind the car. Her face
was suddenly older; her skin was white as marble, and she re-
minded him for a moment of the statue of the angel in the cem-
etery. She looked lost and distant, and he suddenly thought of
Orpheus who had been so impatient, Orpheus who had rescued
his Eurydice, won her freedom from death, only to lose her
again when he looked back to see whether she was behind him.
He had been impetuous and willful, he had failed her just when
he had saved her, and she had been swallowed back up into the
Underworld.
Fearing the worst, he climbed out of the car and winced
with a pain in his chest as he approached her. She reached for
him and took hold of his arm, dug her fi ngers into his fl esh,
stared deep into his eyes with an anguished look, and whispered,
“Barnabas . . .” And again, this time in a tone so wretched it
made his heart clench, “Where is he? Where is Barnabas?” be-
fore her eyes glazed over and with a whistling of breath she
slipped to the ground.
“Jackie . . .” He leaned over and pulled her to him. Her limp
body fell against his, and he watched helplessly as the coyotes
slunk off into the trees. Th
en, his throat tight with sobs, he car-
ried her to the car and lifted her inside.
His hands shaking so much he could barely hold on to the
wheel, he mumbled a prayer under his breath, “Oh, please God,
please help me, please get us out of here,” and reached for the
key. Th
e engine rumbled to life and the gears complained as he
let out the clutch and put the car in reverse. To his surprise, they slid out of the snowdrift and back onto the road. Jackie was
asleep on the seat, her head against his knee, and all he could
think was how stupid he had been to imagine he could do this,
take the car when he was only sixteen and didn’t really know
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how to drive, and bring it home safely. He had speeded
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Lara Parker
recklessly, and he raged at himself, furious and terrifi ed that he had hurt her and that she would never recover. Th
is time he
drove slowly, methodically, with as much care as he was capable
of, easing slowly down the road, the car rolling on the soft snow,
the trees fl ickering by the windows, and the half moon gleaming
high in the sky, so bright he could not bear to look at it. He could see the lights of Collinwood in the distance and he wondered
what he should do next, drive back to the barn and hide the car,
take Jackie inside where he could phone a doctor to get some
help, or just drive on into Collinsport to the hospital. He was
about to settle on the last idea when he heard her moan, and
slowly she sat up.
“Where are we?” she asked in a groggy voice.
“We’re home,” he said. “Are you okay? Are you hurt?”
She didn’t answer.
“Jackie?”
She was staring out the front window as they glided toward
the Great House, her expression one of amazement. He looked
up as well and was shocked by what he saw. It was Collinwood,
but not the Collinwood he had known all his life.
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T w e l v e
The moon was defi nitely on the wane. A rocking crescent in
the eve ning sky gleamed like a silver bowl on a lavender
table. Quentin sat staring out the back kitchen window and
agonized over his plight. Th
e candles on the table had melted to
blackened stubs, and the fl oor was strewn with the provocative
images of the tarot. He looked down at his hands and saw that,
out of frustration, he had ripped— with his lengthening nails— a
jagged tear in one corner of the tablecloth.
Th
e séance had been a failure. Having placed his faith in
this obsequious doctor— or this Specialist in the Occult, as Na-
thanael Blair liked to be called— Quentin was disgusted with
himself, but at this stage of the game he had felt he had no-
where else to turn. A séance seemed the perfect solution to his
dilemma, and a medium was necessary if contact were to be
made. It had seemed a simple request, especially of one who had
bragged so obnoxiously about his earlier experiences with sé-
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ances, describing in tedious detail the successes he had already
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Lara Parker
achieved— conversations with Th
omas Edison, for example, Al
Capone, and even Jack the Ripper. To reach back in time and
summon an acclaimed but hardly distinguished paint er seemed
an absurdly simple proposal.
Quentin could not help but imagine that Charles Delaware
Tate, born in 1865, would have been fl attered to be called up out
of the grave, even if he had gone mad. He had probably not
spoken to a single soul since his death.
And Quentin’s portrait had been his most brilliant achieve-
ment.
Of course, hidden beneath his stated objective, Quentin
had harbored a profound desire to be whisked back in time, to
be young with the young Elizabeth, to see her as she was when
he fi rst met her, to suff er in every brilliant detail their love aff air again. But he knew without her there in the room that would
not be possible, and she had stubbornly refused to take part.
Nevertheless, this incompetent fool— this brother of Nicho-
las Blair, and ineptitude seemed to run in the family— had bun-
gled the whole thing. Contact had been made but with whom
remained a mystery. No paint er, no painting.
Th
ey had retreated to the library, the curtains had been
drawn, the candles lit. A phonograph record was still turning
listlessly on the Victrola, and in fact the perfect musical accom-
paniment had been discovered in the collection of old recordings
kept in the Jackson Press— Caruso in fi ne form singing lustily
from
Rigoletto
.
He and Blair had reached across the table, grasped one an-
other’s hands, and even though the ceremony bordered on the
absurd, he had to admit the chanting had been impressive. Th
ey
had chosen a date— 1929, a year when Quentin knew Tate had
been at the height of his fame and residing at Collinwood, much
older than when he had completed Quentin’s portrait, and al-
though mad, still in possession of his technical skills.
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Th
ere had been no response. Th
eir summoning chants had
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spiraled down into the vortex of time and disappeared.
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Th
en, against his better judgment, Quentin had suggested
that Blair call up Magda the Gypsy, a diffi
cult woman whom he
had every reason to fear, but one who was certain to know
where Tate could be found if she decided to cooperate. Quentin
had not expected to reach her, but after they had summoned
her, there had been a spark, and he had taken heart. Th
e table
had vibrated, the candles had been extinguished by a breath, the
room had darkened, and a specter had made its presence known
with a low moan. Whispers had danced across the leather spines
of the old books and a marvel had occurred: a secret panel had
opened in the bookcase and revealed a hidden corridor. Th
e
shadowed hallway had been abandoned, but out of it had gusted