Authors: Lara Parker
journey to visit my sister, but I have returned.”
Julia was poised on the landing, one hand on the banister,
and David blinked in amazement. He had always thought of
her as rather old- maidish- looking, but today she seemed almost
radiant. She was wearing her tweed suit, which complemented
her eyes, and her auburn hair was pulled back severely in a tidy
bun. She tipped her head in her superior manner.
“What seems to be the problem, David?”
“It’s Antoinette, Jackie’s mom. Th
ere’s something the mat-
ter with her. She’s dizzy and weak, and she just fainted.”
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“I’d be more than happy to go over and take a look at her.
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Let me get my bag.”
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She turned to climb the stair but stopped where a sharp ray
of sunlight pierced the stained glass window, casting a multicol-
ored rainbow on the balcony. She hesitated, and at that moment
Blair crossed the fl oor and held out his hand.
“Excuse me, Dr. Hoff man, before you go, may I introduce
myself? Dr. Nathanial Blair. I was here earlier, but we failed to
connect. I wonder if I might ask you something before you
leave. As a fellow physician and scientist.”
She turned slowly and looked down on Blair. Her eyes were
copper colored. “Why yes, of course. What is it?”
“Th
ere’s been an unfortunate murder in the basement—”
“Oh no . . .”
“And I believe it to be the work of a vampire.”
Julia made a hissing sound and pursed her lips as she jerked
her chin upward. “Th
ere are no such things.”
“But that is where you are wrong. Th
ere are vampires. And
I believe there is one living here, in this house.”
Julia fi xed Blair with a stony stare, as though she were mea-
sur ing his capabilities. “And what makes you so sure?”
“We have found the coffi
n and inside it was a dead body,
obviously an old victim, and this.” He held up a triangle of dark
cloth.
“What is it?”
“I believe it is part of the vampire’s clothing.”
Julia stared, her face impassive. “I really fail to see—”
“And then there is the new victim, the exterminator’s son.
First of all the head was—”
Roger interrupted. “Excuse me, Dr. Blair, but the details
are not necessary.”
“Alright. I’m simply relating the facts. And the proof.”
“Yes, and what is the proof?” Julia was becoming haughty.
“Th
e body was completely drained of blood.”
Julia waited, then said, “And this is the basis upon which
you make this ridiculous claim?” before turning her back.
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“Could it have been coyotes, Dr. Blair?” asked Elizabeth.
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Lara Parker
“Th
ere have been reports of a large and unusual band in the
forest around the graveyard.”
Carolyn looked up, her face stricken. “Several nights ago I
could swear I heard a wolf howling.”
“Well actually, Miss Collins, that’s the report I plan to
make,” off ered the sheriff . “Th
at it was a wolf. Wandered down
from the Canadian border.”
“How could it have gotten in?”
“Th
ere’s a window at the back of the basement—”
Blair broke in. “I simply want to say, to the sheriff and to
you all, that I mean to get to the bottom of this. And if any of
you know anything and are not telling me, when I do fi nd the
vampire— and I will fi nd it, be certain of that— I will report
that you are harboring a fugitive.”
“I resent your threats,” said David in sudden anger. “What
are you doing here? In our house.”
“I was invited—”
“Yes, I asked him to come,” said Quentin, “to . . . conduct
a— that is, another, séance.”
“And now he’s calling the shots? How does he get to do
that?” David’s outburst caused uncomfortable murmurs among
the family members, but Blair was calm.
“David, I’m here to help—”
“Don’t try to pull that on me. Nobody just
helps
. Everybody wants something and you’re no exception. You want to
use
us.”
He walked over and stood face- to- face with Blair. “Th
is is a
private family with problems that are ours alone. Do you under-
stand?
Ours alone.
You need to leave us in peace.”
Julia reappeared in a long coat, scarf, and gloves. “David?”
“Yes, sorry, Julia.” David turned to Roger. “Father, I don’t
understand why you put up with this kind of intrusion. All this
silly talk about vampires. Honestly. Tell him to go away and
write his book somewhere else.”
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Julia slipped into Jackie’s bedroom where the girl was asleep
next to her mother and removed the coat, gloves, and scarf
she had worn to protect herself from the cold, and the sun. She
looked over at Jackie questioningly.
“She took her medication,” off ered David. “It always puts
her out.”
“I see.”
Antoinette moaned and opened her eyes. “Dr. Hoff man?”
Julia leaned in and took Antoinette’s wrist in her hand.
“Yes,” she said. “How are you feeling?” She looked at her watch.
Antoinette jerked her arm away. “No. I don’t want you to do
that.”
But Julia was already leaning in with her stethoscope. “Just
relax. I’m here to help you,” she said. “How long have you been
feeling dizzy?”
Antoinette raised herself up and tried to get out of bed. But
she fell back again and groaned. “You are very pale,” said Julia
as she inserted the thermometer. “Have you been eating well?”
But again Antoinette had lost consciousness.
Julia looked at the thermometer and turned to David.
“I think it may be an infection. She has a high fever. Does
she have a wound anywhere? Or a cut?”
David hesitated, afraid of what he might reveal. “Uh . . . on
her neck.”
Julia drew back Antoinette’s hair and exposed the two
puncture wounds, well used and enfl amed. Almost inaudibly,
she caught her breath.
“I think,” she said evenly, “it may be sepsis. Possibly life
threatening. I should take her to the hospital.”
“We can call an ambulance.”
“No. I’m going in today already and I can check her into
Emergency. Since I am a physician registered there, it will be
quicker.”
Jackie slept peaceably, her eyelashes fl uttering in a dream.
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“Do you want me to come with you?” asked David, a little
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Lara Parker
reluctantly since he did not want to leave Jackie. She looked so
innocent and vulnerable, her migraine fi nally tamed.
“You really are a fi ne young man,” said Julia, replacing her
instruments in her bag. “Your father must be proud. Everyone
in the family should be. You will be the one who inherits the
estate and I believe you will serve it well. Unless of course you
jeopardize your future in an inappropriate marriage.” She looked
meaningfully toward Jackie; then, after gathering up her medi-
cal case and pulling on her heavy coat, she placed a hand on
Antoinette’s shoulder.
“Can you help me take her to my car?”
There was no road, but a vague snowy path through the
woods beneath the dark trees. As Julia drove she felt she
was entering a tunnel and then a cave. Th
ere was no sun, only a
pale orb in a sky grayed over with clouds, and when she stepped
from the car, it would have no power to burn her.
Th
ere was a stream here, but it was long buried, not even
the sound of trickling beneath the ice. Th
ere was a lake, but it
was a burnished gray sheet, wisps of fi ne ice dust whirling
across it. A mallard with a green head, separated from his fl ock,
chased his shadow across the frozen ice, caught it, and let it go.
And then the snow began to fall again.
Julia sat behind the wheel and watched fl urries spinning in
the trees. Her mind was a vortex of pain. She looked over at the
woman dying beside her on the seat of the car. Bitterly, she
stared as long as she was able at the emaciated, but still beauti-
ful face, the heavy blond hair, the closed eyes deep in their
sockets. She saw the resemblance to Angelique, the high brow
and the small chin. Th
en she convulsed and, her body heaving
with sobs, she wept but shed no tears.
When she opened the door to the passenger side, Antoi-
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nette fell out, her arms and shoulders fl opping onto the snow,
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her legs still in the car. Her head fell back and revealed her
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neck, the orifi ces gleaming crimson. She was still breathing but
Julia could see she would die soon. She could save her in only
one way— share her own blood— and that she would not do.
Another vampire? Never.
Reaching up under Antoinette’s arms, she pulled her from
the car until she lay sprawled in the snow. Her green dress and
scarlet coat were riotous against the white earth. Her yellow
hair spread like a stain. She moved one leg cramped beneath her
and her eyes fl uttered as she groaned, then opened them just in
time to see Julia descend, incisors fl ashing.
But she was a fi ghter and did not go easily. Finding some last
resource of strength, she cried out, scrambled from beneath Julia’s embrace, and lurched to her feet. She ran like a wounded doe,
crazily lunging and limping, thrashing through underbrush,
clawing her way in the drifts. Once she turned and throwing up
her hands pleaded, “No, please . . . Oh, God,” before spinning
and leaping again just out of Julia’s grasp. When Julia fi nally
brought her down she still would not give over, but fought for
her life with what little she had left, fi nally sinking her own
teeth into Julia’s hand over her mouth that was pushing back her
head and exposing her wounds. When helplessness came, she
heard words she did not understand,
You will never have him!
Never!
And then darkness closed in.
Barnabas managed to fl y, jerkily, tree, to tree until he reached
the cemetery. He opened the wooden door to the small
snowbound crypt and plunged his hands into the dark interior.
Frantically he felt over the stones and scratched his palms
across the dirt fl oor.
Impossible! Th
e painting was not there. With clumsy
thrusts, he scooped the leaves from the fl oor and cursed the rats
that scrambled over his fi ngers. Th
e crypt was empty! He had
seen the painting less than three weeks ago. He had uncovered it
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and held it in his hands, trembling under its power. He had
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Lara Parker
witnessed its dev ilish transformations, and out of anger and
disgust he had ripped it in half against the stone.
He sat back, bewildered and panicked. Who had taken it
away? Who even knew it had been hidden in this insignifi cant
vault? He remembered hearing boys in the woods. Had they
been out robbing graves? Not likely in this weather. Perhaps
Quentin had been drawn to it since there was every reason to
imagine that it would call to him. If it were now in Quentin’s
possession, then he had no more need to worry. Th
at could be
the only explanation.
He was disappointed, robbed of closure. Nights of torture
had led to this uncertainty, not knowing if the werewolf would
come again to attack on the full moon. He rose and stood in the
graveyard, wondering what to do next. A fi ne snow was falling
so lightly, every fl ake hung in the air. Th
e woods were fi lled with
mist, the ground was powdered, and every tree was feathered. In
the dazzling haze it was hard to make out familiar shapes. Th
e
air was fi lled with tiny points of light and all was lost in a glittering fog.
He heard an automobile moving slowly along the road be-
side the graveyard, and at the thought of someone alone in the
twilight, his hunger returned. Wrapping himself in his cloak,
he hung back and watched as the car stopped and sat for many
moments while the snow fell upon it like sugar from a sifter. Th
en
a shadow of a woman emerged slowly and clumsily and dragged
something from the passenger’s seat before she disappeared. Th
e
snow whispered its own silence, as ominous as death.
He waited, breathing in fl akes, wondering what had be-
come of her. Th
e car stood darkly, barely visible.
“Good eve ning, Barnabas.”
He wheeled at the voice. So familiar. His heart plunged.
“Julia! My God!”