Chapter 9: Underneath My Lucid Skin

Catherine awoke from a dream of caverns and mirrors and Winslow. It was late in the tunnels, or very early; the roar of the subway trains had ceased completely and there were only a few muted taps on the pipes. She blinked, trying to remember the shards of the dream, but they'd scattered and all she had was the sense that some important matter had been settled, some weight made less difficult to carry. And what had Winslow had to do with it, anyway?

She smiled and realized that the warm weight she felt on her lower body was Vincent's own legs intertwined with hers and holding her close. His hand rested on her belly and as Catherine stretched, his hand tightened, not painfully, but enough to hold her secure. "It's okay," she murmured, stroking the rough silk of his hair, as she had for the hundredth time since they'd brought him out of that cave. "I'm here." Only then did his hand—and the tension in his neck and shoulders---relax just a little.

"It's good you are, child," said a voice from the doorway and Catherine started.

It was Narcissa. Narcissa, who never left her own chambers. "Hello, Narcissa," Catherine said, sitting up and pulling her shawl off the back of the nearest chair. Vincent nestled further against her in his sleep but did not waken.

"Ah, you wonder why I'm here, child, yes?" As Narcissa came further into the chamber, Catherine marveled again at how well she seemed to know her way around, despite being such an infrequent visitor. Narcissa didn't bump into anything even though the chamber was dark, and Catherine wondered at the old woman's ease, given that she'd barked a shin against an object or two in the night.

"Well, yes...but I'm glad you came," Catherine said. And it was true; Father might have little patience for the old sorceress, but Catherine knew Vincent counted her as a dear friend.

Narcissa sat down in Vincent's old carved chair, her bangles and beads jangling against the wood. "I come because you want to know where he is."

Catherine's eyes widened. How had she known? "Yes. I'm worried for him." And that was nothing more or less than the simple truth. During the day, she could be positive and strong for his family and friends, but at night, the ever-present sense in their bond that Vincent was on some unfathomable mental journey made her fear for him. What if he wandered so far that he couldn't return?

"He needs you, like birds need air and fish need water. He will return, child," Narcissa said, her voice soft and soothing, nothing of the dotty old woman of Father's tales in her manner. "But his journey is not ended. He must face and defeat the Evil One before he can return."

"Paracelsus is dead," Catherine said, remembering the horror of the scene that night in Father's chambers, the body stretched out, disemboweled over Father's desk, a corner of his vile mask hanging slack from Paracelsus' chin. And Vincent himself, catatonic in his shock and grief.

"His body, yes. Quite dead, thrown down the Abyss," Narcissa said, a grim twist of satisfaction in her words. "But his evil lives on."

Father would have scoffed, but Catherine was quite sure Narcissa knew the answer. "What can I do to help him?"

"You are his anchor, child. He'll need you to pull him from the darkness."

"Vincent pulled me from death once using our bond," Catherine said. "How am I to reach him, wherever he is? I haven't his abilities."

Narcissa opened her hand. Lying on her palm, startling against her dark skin, were cowrie shells. "What do these look like to you?"

Catherine shivered at the brief memory of the nightmare of madness she'd endured at the hands of the voodoo cult, and Vincent's hand, crushing the shell and scattering it over the balcony wall, its power over her ended. "Shells," Catherine said, shaking off the feeling.

"So they are," Narcissa said with a chuckle. "But in the hands of another, they can tell the future." She placed the cowrie shells in a frayed fabric pouch at her waist. "People and things can exist on many levels. Your Vincent is here, but his mind is somewhere else."

Catherine nodded. "I sense that through our bond."

Narcissa smiled. "He chose well. It is good you know such things. You are his lodestone, the light he travels to in the darkness, but you are also here. When the time comes, child, you will have to meet him on his level to bring him home. And then you will know how."

Three years ago, before meeting Vincent, Catherine would have disregarded the old woman's words as so much mumbo-jumbo, but experience---and a few encounters with Kristopher Gentian---had taught her that the world was not always as it seemed. "I understand," she said, and Narcissa smiled a fond, knowing smile that told Catherine that perhaps she really did. Father might snort in derision of the very idea of multiple planes of existence, but she had the evidence of their bond, and she trusted the bond more. "Can you help us?" Catherine asked.

"What is to be, I cannot interfere with," Narcissa said. "I once sent your Vincent to demand truth from a madman because I knew he would destroy the Evil One."

Catherine gasped. Narcissa had known Paracelsus was Below...and had done nothing, because it was Vincent's fate to destroy him? Just as she began to speak, Narcissa held up a hand. "Child, it was no easy thing. I have known your Vincent from a young child, when he would evade Father's attentions and visit me in my chamber. I was never a 'crazy old woman' to him. But I had seen what was to happen, and it was not my place to interfere. The Evil One, Father had tried to destroy and failed, too many times. The Evil One destroyed himself with his words, and that was meant to be." Her head tilted and the sightless eyes darted towards the entrance. "The Father comes. Remember my words, Catherine. To save him will take everything. And you will know what must be done."

She stood then, in a rattle of beads and bangles, and the slightly dotty aura that had been completely missing during their conversation came back just as Father's shadow crossed the threshold. "Ah, Catherine, I thought I heard voices...oh, hello, Narcissa. What brings you so far?"

Narcissa shook the bag of cowrie shells at her waist. "The shells told me I was to come."

Catherine bent her head and smothered a grin at Father's chagrined expression. "The shells...I see," Father said, though he clearly didn't. "Well...good. It's good to see you."

"I must return. The spirits are calling me," Narcissa said, and Catherine choked on a laugh. With her face still half-shadowed, Father couldn't possibly see Narcissa's roguish wink. And in a flutter of fabric, she was gone.

"Catherine, dear, you're coughing. Do you need anything?"

Catherine managed to shake her head. "No, Father. Just a...tickle in my throat."

***

Vincent opened his eyes to the shadowed interior of Father's chamber. A faint sense of unease skittered through his awareness...something was wrong...something was very wrong.

"It's too clean," the Other said. "Can't you smell it?"

Vincent inhaled, opening his mouth slightly. He smelled it then, the lingering scent of harsh cleaners rough on his throat and in his nose. And all of a sudden, he knew. "Oh, no, no, no...." he moaned, head in his hands.

"Yes," the Other said. "This is Father's chamber after we killed Paracelsus."

Nausea twisted in his gut, the pain of the festering wound of memory biting into his heart. Vincent raised his head to stare at his dark twin. "I cannot relive this."

"You may have to," the Other replied, though not without compassion. "This is the cliff he pushed you over. You were meant to think you killed Father."

"I thought I had, until he unmasked himself," Vincent whispered. "I thought I had killed my own Father."

"Did you really?" his twin asked. "How could you have? There were signs, Brother. Paracelsus was a good actor, true, but no one is that good. How could you really not know?"

That was something to consider. He had known, through Catherine, that Stephen Bass---a man he'd never met---was insane, but he'd not noticed the most obvious signs that it was not Father he'd killed. "I don't know how I missed it," Vincent said, memory unwinding and time snapping back...

***

Vincent had stalked into Father's chamber that night, reeling from the news that Paracelsus was his father, that Anna was his mother, that he was no abandoned child but just an orphaned one. But Paracelsus, of all people---Paracelsus, who'd killed Lou and tried to kill Narcissa, who'd killed 50 people above by selling his poison, who had once been Father's friend until some unknown tragedy had severed their relationship. Vincent had been conscious of a widening tremor deep inside himself from the moment he'd pushed aside the moss on Anna's tomb and the crevasse of horror, of shocked realization, of hurt and angered fury, showed no signs of narrowing. Why? Why had Father not simply told him? There were other orphaned children Below and no one would have held the crimes of the father against the child. Why? Vincent asked that question in a thousand different forms growing up, but tonight, he meant to have an answer.

He was peripherally aware of Catherine in the chamber, but for the first time since he'd met her, he was not as aware of her as he was of Father, garbed again in the clothes of Below and looking for all the worlds like his life, at least, had not changed. "Anna...was John Pater's wife," Vincent snarled.

Catherine looked from him to Father, clearly more than a little nervous. Did she sense the widening chasm within him too? Vincent wondered. "I'll wait in your chamber," she said. Vincent didn't respond as she left.

Father had returned to his habitual seat behind his desk as Vincent stalked forward. "Is it true, then? Was Paracelsus...my father?" Even saying the words left a bitter nausea in his mouth. That he could have come from such a man, a man of such horrific deeds that even grown adults whispered his name with fear...

Father didn't respond. "What have you done?" Vincent asked.

Incredibly, Father seemed completely insensate to Vincent's anguish and that rocked him further. Always before, he had reached out with a careful touch, a hug, or a kiss when Vincent had felt such pain, but now...it seemed he didn't want to touch him. Not at all. Am I such a monster now, because my father was one? Vincent wondered. And felt the inner chasm increase, cracking and splitting along the lines of Father's avoidance of touch.

At length, Father spoke. "It was done out of love."

That Father could claim that now, with thirty-odd years of misdirection and outright lying behind him, was utterly unsatisfying. "The greatest crimes," Vincent spat, "are always committed in the name of love."

Father didn't immediately respond to this either, and a faint sense of unease rose in Vincent's consciousness. Something was...off, just a shade wrong, and his mental sense of Father was not quite right either, but with the final unexplored truth of his origins hanging just outside his reach, he pushed the impressions aside and waited, impatiently. Father spoke then, looking out into the middle distance. "At the time, it seemed so obvious. But now... Dear God, sometimes I feel so lost--"

The words were bitter in Vincent's mouth. He felt lost? He? He had not just found out that his father was a ruthless murderer. When had this become all about Father's pain? What about the people who had been harmed by his lies? "Tell me," Vincent said, the steel under the words giving no doubt that it was no request, but a command.

And so he did, a tale of a good woman killed by the succubus in her womb. Vincent had howled then, an agonized roar of pain and fury and shame that seemed to begin from deep within the chasm in his soul. And when the faint smell of sulfur and dampness reached his nose, perhaps the sulfur was from the fires of his own personal hell...and the moisture only the scent of his own tears.

***

"I know how," the Other said. "Paracelsus knew, had always known, that your one weakness---if you can call it that---was your curiosity to know, finally, how we came to be. And that was the weapon he used to nearly destroy us. There were plenty of signs that it wasn't really Father we spoke with---the smell of sulfur and dampness, his complete indifference to our pain, his slight stoop when he walked---but your pain and anger almost completely blocked our empathic sense of him. You did not know as you would have had you been fully in your right mind." The Other narrowed his eyes and something feral and wild glinted darkly. "But I did. I knew it was Paracelsus. I'm the one who killed him, not you. And I'd do it again with a smile on my face."

This was the side of the Other Vincent had feared for over twenty years; the killer, the avenger. "For words? Just words?"

"For those kinds of words, yes," the Other said, the feral light darkening the blue eyes. "They were weapons, as surely as any knife or gun."

"I thought it was Father!" Vincent said, the words forced from him in a torrent. It was what he'd wanted to say all the long hours after he'd awakened, when both Catherine and Father had tried to convince him that he must have known it was Paracelsus all along. They didn't understand, they could not understand. He had killed a man wearing his father's face in cold blood, for no more than words. And he hadn't known it wasn't Father until Paracelsus had unmasked himself.

"Some part of you knew," his twin said, pacing the confines of the room. "I knew, and as we've both established, I'm you. You were angry with Father for keeping the 'truth' from you, but deep inside, you knew that monster wasn't Father, because I knew. Father may be a lot of things---and he has lied to us in the past---but he'd never say anything that vile." The Other tilted his head. "And you'd not have believed any of it if Father had just told us the truth in the first place---told us about Anna, her death and why Paracelsus was really exiled. So don't go assuming Paracelsus' death is entirely your fault. Father left us vulnerable by not telling the full truth."

Vincent nodded, turning the thought over in his mind. It was not a new idea; there had been inconsistencies in Father's stories of Paracelsus almost from the first time Vincent had heard the name. Father was capable of lying, of long-term misdirection; Devin was a prime example. "I wonder why he never told me the full truth," Vincent said.

The Other sighed. "He wanted always to protect us. And he also wanted to protect himself. But...you may just have to ask him to find out the real reason."

Vincent nodded. "I killed a man in cold blood," he said, feeling again the shattering horror when Paracelsus had unmasked himself. "Never mind that that man was Paracelsus. How do I forgive myself for that?"

"People die for less reason every day," the Other said. "Good, decent people too. Paracelsus was none of these; he was more a monster than we ever thought of being. Call it self-defense if you must; you surely know that he'd not have stopped, not ever, if we hadn't acted."

Vincent was startled to feel his twin gather him close in a rough, brotherly hug. "Regret the necessity if you must, but don't regret the action. Paracelsus was as much a threat as ever and that threat is---mostly---ended."

Vincent drew back. "Mostly?"

"His evil lives on, in your world and this one. To stop it...will require both of us, whole and healed." The Other tilted his head in an oh-so-familiar gesture. "Can you handle that? Taking me in, accepting me as part of yourself that is necessary and needed?"

"You're me," Vincent said, grinning and exposing all of his teeth. "How can I not?"

 

 

Chapter 10: Eternity in an Hour

Catherine rolled over in her sleep, seeking the warmth of a furry body close to her own. She turned to nestle against him and realized he wasn't there. "Vincent?" she asked, alarmed. Since they'd brought him out of that cave, he'd never moved out of the bed, never so much as come fully awake. Where could he have gone?

"You look so lovely when you sleep," a voice said from the doorway and she turned her head.

It was Vincent, except it wasn't. The light from the single candle normally glinted red-gold in his hair, but this Vincent's hair was black. Only the blue eyes, the blue of the summer skies he'd never seen, were the same. Catherine looked from the empty space next to her to the man standing in the chamber entrance. "Who are you?"

"I'm him. He's me. I'm what he calls 'the Other.'" The Other spread his hands and Catherine noticed the fur was darker. "It's complicated."

Catherine tilted her head, studying him. She'd heard Vincent personify his darker self, the one he blamed for his killing rages, as "the Other," but she'd never thought to see him standing before her. "It'd have to be," she said. "So. You're him. Where is he...where is my Vincent?"

"Here," the Other said. "Safe. But Catherine, we have to talk."

"I’m not dreaming, am I?" she asked.

The Other smiled, and it was that smile, more than anything, that told Catherine she was dealing with someone almost completely unfamiliar. Her Vincent could and did smile, but rarely was he so relaxed. "You are, more or less. But so is Vincent. This is…the netherworld. The place between, if you will."

"You’re not carrying a pocket watch, are you?" Catherine asked.

The Other shook his head. "No. Nor am I about to announce that I’m late. This is all quite real, Catherine."

She nodded. "All right. Where is he? What’s been going on?"

And as the Other began to speak, to tell her of the journey through the underworld, what he and Vincent had learned, Catherine found herself fascinated by this other Vincent. He was no mindless being, no homicidal killer. As she watched his hands move as he talked, it occurred to her that this was a more emotionally naked version of her Vincent, without most of the insecurities and defenses that her Vincent had accrued over a lifetime. When he finished, there was silence for a time as Catherine processed all he had told her. "All that pain, all those years you were carrying that around, and I never knew."

"I think you’ll find that much has changed, Catherine," said a familiar voice and suddenly, there was her Vincent, bright and golden, emerging from the shadows next to his twin. She launched off the bed and threw herself into his arms. "Oh, god, I missed you. I thought you were---"

"Lost?" Vincent smiled down at her, and the smile was that of his darker twin’s, open and loving and joyful. "Not all who wander are lost, Catherine."

"Quoting Tolkien," Catherine said through her tears. "Now I know you’ll be all right." She turned her head, noticing that the Other had disappeared. "Where…what happened to your twin?"

"He’s…me, as I am him. We’ve accepted each other."

And that, Catherine knew, was no simple thing. For years, Father had referred to his son as if he were two different beings, the light and the dark, but it had taken illness and his breakdown for Vincent himself to truly accept the darker side of his own nature. "You’re healed and whole," she said and Vincent nodded.

"Yes," he replied, "perhaps for the first time since…well, I can’t remember. But yes, he is a part of me." Vincent gazed down at her, blue gaze intent. "Are you…how do you feel about that?"

"It’s what I wished for you always, that you would accept yourself," she replied. "You don’t have to be perfect or a paragon, you just have to be…you."

Strong arms enfolded her and he breathed out once, the hair on her head ruffling. "I have been…incredibly stupid at times, Catherine. And I’m sorry for all the times I didn’t tell you what you mean to me, for all the times I shut you out. I love you. I need you." And gently---ever so gently---Catherine felt his mouth touch hers.

When he finally released her, Catherine pushed her hair out of her face and grinned up at him. "Wow. Apology accepted."

Vincent laughed then, the soft breathy laugh she’d so rarely heard and it kindled her own. Finally, finally, he was whole. Sobering, Catherine sat down on the bed and leaned against him as he sat next to her. "Do you know what will happen next?"

"I believe some sort of test," Vincent replied, gathering her close. "Catherine, the way before us is still uncertain, and given a choice, I would have---"

"Tried to protect me?" Catherine asked, smiling. "I know. But I’m here, now. You…the Other, I mean, he told me what you’ve been through so far. How much worse can it be?"

Vincent shook his head, blue eyes darkening. "Catherine. Paracelsus is here."

"How can that be?" she asked. "He’s dead. Narcissa told me his body was thrown into the Abyss."

"Was it?" Vincent asked. "I didn’t know. But nevertheless, his spirit is Below. I can…sense him. He’s here. Somewhere. Waiting." He tilted his head. "You met with Narcissa?"

Catherine nodded. "Just before I woke up here. Wherever here is. She came to warn me, I think, that your ordeal wasn’t over."

"She’s right. I don’t think this is quite over yet," Vincent replied. One corner of his mouth quirked in what she recognized as a wry smile. "Did Narcissa send Father’s blood pressure through the roof again?"

"Yes," Catherine said, giggling helplessly. "I’m afraid she lost him when she told him the cowrie shells told her to come and visit me."

"It’s quite possible they did," Vincent replied. "Narcissa’s ways of knowing are…unique to her. I’ve never known her to be wrong, though."

Light flickered in the doorway, and a woman with hawk's wings stepped through it. Catherine remembered the Other's recollections and knew instantly who the woman was. "Greetings, Ma'at," Vincent said.

Catherine felt the woman's golden eyes on her, studying her. "So. This is your chosen, Vincent?"

"She is," Vincent said, pulling her close.

"Then come," Ma'at said, her feathers rustling slightly. "It begins." She extended one large wing and with a slightly bemused look, Catherine followed Vincent to stand under it. There was a snap and the roll of thunder and time stopped.

***

They were in a dark room, clogged with shadows and sounds that echoed. "This is no place in the tunnels that I know of," Vincent said, holding her hand. "I can see no exit. Or entrance."

"Then how'd we get in here?" Catherine asked. She couldn't see a thing but she could feel Vincent's smile through their bond.

"Ma’at," Vincent said. "Who else?" He was standing close enough that the threads of his hair brushed her face. "You seem nervous, Catherine."

"Oh, well, I can’t imagine why," Catherine replied dryly. "In the last hour, I’ve encountered the Other and an Egyptian goddess and now I’m with you in a room we can’t leave. There’s nothing at all unusual about that."

Vincent chuckled. "I didn’t say that," he said. She felt one warm hand touch her cheek. "But please, try not to worry. We’re together."

Catherine smiled. "That we are." She nestled against him, feeling the reassurance of the strong slow beating of his heart. "I truly thought I’d lost you when I went into that cave."

"I know," Vincent said. "I’m sorry. I never wanted to make you afraid."

"I’ve never been afraid of you, Vincent. Only for you. And…well, that’s the price you pay for loving someone. Besides, you’re worth it."

He didn’t protest, didn’t turn her words aside as he would have before. Vincent merely pulled her close and said against her hair, "Thank you."

There was the creak of a door and a thin sliver of light and a dark figure stepped forward. Catherine felt the jolt of Vincent’s surprise through their bond in the instant before he spoke. "Phillip?" Vincent stammered, sounding as thoroughly stunned as she’d ever seen him. "Is it really you?"

"My ghost, but yeah, man, it’s me," Phillip said.

"What are you doing here?" Vincent asked.

"’All the world is a stage,’" Phillip said. "Isn’t that Shakespeare’s line? Well, my role is to take you on your next journey through our little drama." He sighed. "Unfortunately, Paracelsus isn’t much of a script-writer."

"He holds you captive?" Vincent said.

"Yes…and no," Phillip said. "I’m nearly 20 years dead, Vincent, and my spirit has long since gone on to… well, you’ll find out one day, but not today." There was a flash of a smile and Catherine felt Vincent relax just a bit. "But I’m here because your memory of me held you captive…and Paracelsus would like to see you stay ‘bound by chains you forged in life.’ He’s evil, man."

All of a sudden, Phillip noticed Catherine. "I’m sorry. You must be the lovely lady I kept telling Vincent he’d find one day. Nice to meet you."

It felt odd to be shaking hands with a ghost, but she’d drunk cappuccino with Kristopher Gentian. After that weirdness, nothing else quite compared. "Nice to meet you too," Catherine replied, releasing his hand, startled to find it was warm.

"So you're a memory?" Vincent asked. "My memory of you?"

"Pretty much," Phillip said. He looked Vincent up and down. "Paracelsus thought you'd feel more guilty, more ashamed. I'm glad to see you don't."

"I had some...help...seeing that I couldn't have prevented your death," Vincent said.

Phillip laughed. "Yeah, that Other of yours, he don't mince words much."

"I've noticed," Vincent said dryly. "It's not a bad talent to have."

"No," Phillip replied, smiling, "that it isn't." He paused, as if listening to some inward voice. "That Ma'at, she don't say much but you get her point just the same...anyways, I'm to tell you what's to happen next. You will meet some people along the way and there will be things you must do for them---or to them----to finish your task." He folded his arms. "Now, this is just me telling you this, not Ma'at. You have to destroy Paracelsus. You have to get his heart up on that scale of Ma'at's. You understand me?"

Vincent nodded, and Catherine wondered at the sense of calm purpose she felt through their bond, at the measured, leashed power that had settled over him like a cloak. She had known there would be changes when Vincent finally made peace with himself, but she had not expected this serenity. "I understand," Vincent replied. "Is there anything else you can tell me?"

Phillip smiled. "Only this: no matter what, I never blamed you. You were my friend and I was proud to go out defending my home. Just so we part with that straight."

"You're leaving?" Vincent asked.

"I'm a memory, Vincent. I've never truly left you, have I?"

"No," Vincent said. "I never forgot you."

"So you know I can't be gone, not really." Phillip glanced towards the door, which had once again appeared. "That's all I can say, man. Just...don't forget what I told you, okay?"

"I won't," Vincent replied, and he and Catherine watched as Phillip left and the door disappeared, leaving them in darkness.

"Now we wait, I guess," Catherine said, sitting down on the floor and crossing her legs underneath her, drawing Vincent down to sit beside her. She tilted her head seeing his vague outline in the darkness. "You've changed."

She couldn't see Vincent's smile, but Catherine felt its warmth through their bond. "I've had to, Catherine. Does it surprise you?"

"A little," Catherine replied, smiling in return. "When Phillip mentioned destroying Paracelsus...you accepted it. Like a warrior."

"I am," Vincent said, and the growl riding under his words was unmistakeable. "I will not let Paracelsus accomplish in death what he could not in life. It's not my fate to be a protector, Catherine. It's my choice."

Catherine nodded, remembering his anguished, guilt-ridden torment after the Outsiders, after the times he'd killed to protect her, his fears of his other, hidden nature overpowering. "You feared the Other. And now you don't?"

"I don't," Vincent agreed. "Catherine, you must understand this. I don't like the times I've had to kill. I would prefer to do it much less, but I don't regret what I've done. I saved your life, and the lives of people Below, because I was able to defend you all." His hands, strong and warm, cupped her face, the claws gentle against her skin. "How can I regret the outcome?"