Authors: Lara Parker
were the one who gave Dr. Blair permission to set up a labora-
tory in Rose Cottage, and now the poor man has committed
suicide on our property. Slicing his own throat with one of his
surgical instruments. It’s positively horrendous.”
David spoke up. “I told you Dr. Blair was a total maniac.
But you wouldn’t listen. Th
at’s because your solution to any
problem, Father, is to ignore it.”
Jackie rose to her feet in the foyer and without looking back
crossed to the door and reached for the handle.
“Where are you going?” Barnabas whispered.
“He doesn’t want me here,” she said softly.
“As you wish. But, you need not be afraid. You who have
faced the gallows without fl inching.” He observed her more
critically and saw that she was unkempt, her hair in knots and
her fi ngernails grimy, even though her pale eyes glowed like
pieces of the moon. He hesitated, and then gestured to the stair.
“Why don’t you go up to one of bathrooms and make yourself
presentable?”
She looked at him quizzically.
“Th
e Collins family dotes on appearances.”
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Jackie climbed the treads slowly and stopped on the landing.
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Shining though the massive window of stained glass were mias-
mas of colored rays, and she caught her breath, afraid to draw in
the poisonous mist that pervaded Collinwood. Collinwood!
Th
e very name made her ache with longing. Her chest tightened
and she thought she might faint. She turned to look back at
Barnabas still standing in the shadows, and he gave her an en-
couraging nod. Her gaze fell upon the Oriental carpet covering
the stair, the bronze statue of the wild horse on the sideboard,
and the portrait of Barnabas that hung beside the entrance. Be-
hind her the vibrant colors of the stained glass poured onto the
parquet fl ooring of the vestibule, dancing sun motes that fl ashed in rainbow prisms.
Th
e long hallway led her to a room she knew well. It had
been Josette’s room where she has burned with jealousy as she
waited on her mistress and longed to become Barnabas’s true
bride. Her jaw tightened as she struggled to stop tears from
fl owing, but the lump in her throat make her neck ache. Now
the room belonged to Elizabeth, and only a few days ago she
had stood at this very spot and been pampered and clothed in
silk and lace by three laughing girls. Walking past the four-
poster with its crocheted canopy, she entered the bathroom,
steeled herself, and raised her eyes to the mirror, afraid of what
she would see. But Angelique was not there, only Jackie’s own
refl ection, pallid and frail. She turned on the tap, waited until it grew hot, then dipped her hands before splashing her face. Mist
clouded the glass.
Her attention was caught by a group of photographs on the
wall beside the mirror, all of Elizabeth in her many fi lm and
theater roles. Radiant smiles and sultry gazes captured her many
moods, but one small photo seemed especially poignant. It was
of Liz in her fl apper days, wearing a dress of silver fringe, her
cheek up against that of another breathtaking girl child in a
shimmering shift. Leaning in to look closer, Jackie gasped and
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chills crept up her back. It was a picture of her— transformed
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into a beauty— after Liz had made her over into the “cat’s meow.”
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Barnabas entered the drawing room, imperious in his black
cloak and grasping his silver- headed cane. “What hap-
pened in here?” he asked, looking around in surprise.
Quentin spoke dryly. “Th
ere is a wolf in the vicinity and it
appears that it broke in and wrecked havoc.”
David turned from where he was standing beside the secre-
tary. To Barnabas, he seemed older than his sixteen years. “Fa-
ther,” he said, “at least let me tell you how I feel.”
“No, you may not. You have thoughtlessly created another
embarrassing situation, and you should be sensitive enough to
understand the diffi
culty. We can’t have a young girl your age
living in the same house.”
“Oh, no, no, no,” chimed in Quentin from the corner of the
room. “Nothing must besmirch the holy sanctifi ed Collins
name!” David smiled and looked to the door.
“Well it’s not as though there was no
room
,” off ered Carolyn, who was in her usual seat on the fi replace rail. She wore a beige
cashmere sweater and there was a blue ribbon in her long golden
hair. “We could open up one of the many wings.” She made a
dismissive gesture with her hand, rose, and walked toward the
hallway, then turned. “If you’re so worried about
propriety
, Jackie can sleep in my room, and I’ll be her chaperone. Th
at way no one
in the village will talk.” She giggled and glanced back over her
shoulder to where she thought Jackie was waiting.
“Carolyn, go to your room. Th
is is not your aff air.”
“Whoa . . . pretty harsh there, Uncle Dear. Th
is is about
me, too, and it would be lovely to have a real friend. It’s always
been so lonely here.”
Roger ignored her. “I’m referring to your coming exams,
David,” he insisted. “You have already missed weeks of study.
And your education is more important than running a boarding
house.”
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“She can’t stay in the Old House alone,” said David. “She’s
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too vulnerable. Th
ere are strange things going on, as you well
know, something is out there—”
“Not our responsibility.”
David remained calm. “You’re saying you wouldn’t feel re-
sponsible if something happened to her and you could have
protected her?”
Roger harrumphed. “My dear boy, please be reasonable. We
have enough to worry about here at home. We cannot take in
strays.”
“Strays! Th
is is a human being, not a dog. Th
is is,” and he
paused, “someone I love.”
Roger drew in his chin. “David, don’t be diffi
cult. You’re
much too young to know what love is.”
David’s cheeks reddened. “And do you know what it is, Fa-
ther? Does anyone in this family know what love is? Because I
have never seen it in this house.” He was digging the fi ngernails of one hand into the palm of the other.
But Roger muttered, “Th
at’s not fair— I may not be overly af-
fectionate, but that doesn’t mean I don’t want the best for you—”
“Did you love my mother?” David’s voice was harsh. “Did
you protect her? Where is she now, thanks to your indiff erence?”
Barnabas had never seen David be intentionally cruel. He
hoped it wasn’t the strain of cruelty that ran in the Collins family.
Roger was stunned. He glared at David, but his lips trem-
bled. “Be careful before you say things you will regret.”
“What I was about to say,” David continued, “was that if she
cannot stay here until we hear from her mother, then I will move
out and live at the Old House, where I can keep her safe—”
“David, you are my son and I am telling you it would not
be respectable—”
“Respectability be damned! Yes, I am your son, but I can’t
live in your shadow forever. When I am master here, we won’t
have all this secrecy.”
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Roger’s face blanched with annoyance.
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“When you speak of secrecy, you don’t know what you are
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saying. Th
ere are things you don’t understand. You don’t know
the family history. You’ve been sheltered, protected—”
“You mean that we were bootleggers during Prohibition?”
Roger’s eyes lifted under his brows, showing white beneath
the irises. He set his jaw. “Where did you hear that?”
“I know more than you think, Father. I know that innocent
people died to keep the family business afl oat. And before that,
we traded in slaves.”
Roger was visibly disturbed. “Wherever did you get such
ridiculous ideas?”
“I also know there is a curse.”
“A curse?” Roger placed a shaking hand on the mantel.
“And if it is ever to be lifted, it must be exposed.”
“Intercourse with the outside world has always led to disas-
ter,” Roger said in a wavering tone.
“I aim to change all that.”
Barnabas could sense an almost imperceptible squaring of
David’s shoulders. Listening to the discussion, he was aware of
that shift when a child moves into a new phase of early adult-
hood. At some point the child becomes the father of the man.
David had already marched into the foyer. A moment later he
returned with Jackie, her hand in his.
“David, this is not proper!” cried Roger, his eyes widening.
He grew fl ustered and spoke to Jackie. “My dear, I’m sorry you
have to be subjected to this family argument, but— But I’m sure
you understand— you are much too young—”
Ignoring him, David led Jackie to the velvet settee where she
sat hesitantly, now at the center of the family, and she looked
from face to face with an expression of humility and hopeful-
ness. At that moment, the light shifted, and Jackie was caught in
a ray of sunshine. Elizabeth drew in her breath almost as though
she was seeing her for the fi rst time. Jackie’s dark hair fell about her scrubbed cheeks and her skin glowed. Her delicate features,
her luminous eyes, were obvious to everyone. Even David was
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amazed.
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“I knew you would say that, Father, but you must accept the
fact that I— At some point, I will be in charge of the estate. I
should be allowed some decisions, after all, as I will be the only
Collins left.”
Roger looked from Jackie’s face to David’s, his irritation
ebbing in her presence as he struggled with his doubts. “And
you, young lady?”
She lifted her pale eyes to his and David thought he saw
Roger tremble, but his father maintained his composure, his
hands clasped in front of him as he looked down at her sternly.
She spoke in a soft voice. “Mr. Collins, I will respect your
authority and I will do nothing without your permission.” She
gazed at him steadily, and he seemed to vacillate.
“Th
en I can trust you?”
“Of course.” Her eyes were hypnotic.
“Oh, well, then I suppose it is decided,” said Roger abruptly.
“And what ever will happen to the Old House? Shall we leave it
to fall to rack and ruin once again?”
Barnabas spoke up. “I will be more than happy to remain
there.”
“Barnabas, you would make that sacrifi ce?” asked Roger.
“As a matter of fact, I prefer it. Th
e Old House feels more
like home!”
Roger looked around in bewilderment and David realized
his father was the only one still in the dark. Except perhaps for
his aunt Elizabeth. She looked to the corner of the room, where
Quentin had been sitting silently the entire time.
Th
e tall man rose to his feet and came forward, using his
cane to prevent his knocking into the furniture. His smooth
and chiseled face was partially hidden by dark glasses tucked
over his sideburns, but he managed to fi nd his way to the side-
board where the sherry was kept. Th
e decanter of claret had
seized the sunlight as well and it glowed with a ruby radiance.
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With habits long ago mastered, Quentin was able to pour him-
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self a glass, which he lifted in homage to the family before
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toasting in Jackie’s direction. “Welcome my dear, to the Great
House. I understand— that is, David has informed me— that
you are a rather talented paint er.”
“Yes, that’s true,” she said, smiling. “Although . . . I am still
a student.”
Quentin tossed the sherry down in one gulp and turned to
pour himself another. “I may have a project for you,” he said
grimly. “One that might give you great satisfaction. A portrait
that needs restoring.”
“I’ll be happy to look at it,” she said, glancing at David.
Elizabeth rose and walked to where Quentin was standing
near the window, and she put her palm tenderly on his arm.
Roger left hurriedly, claiming business, and David and Carolyn
went to prepare a room for their new guest. Jackie was left alone
with Barnabas, and she looked up at him somewhat guiltily
when he approached her.
“Well done, my dear,” he said. “You have made a coup.”
“Do you disapprove?” she asked.
“No, not at all, and now there is nothing to do but make the