THE BEASTS: CONTINUED
THE JOURNAL OF PAMELA STRAUSS
AND SO IT WAS THAT WE LEFT Columbus. We took the train which was a much longer trip than it is these days, and at last we arrived in Lassador. We came to Williams Street, as it is called now, which was then called Kaiser Wilhelm, and arrived at the largest house I had ever seen, Painted in many colors, it was a many roofed and turreted old Queen Anne, that place which came to be called Keller House, but at the time was stilled called Nueberghaus, and a servant let us into the parlor. There a woman dressed severely, but kind in face, received us.
“Pamela, Friederich, welcome.”
And so Ada Keller brought us into her home, and out new life as the Strausses of Germantown began.
Meine liebe Pamela, das Kind, das ich an meiner Brust hielt, kann es wahr sein, dass Sie eine erwachsene Frau sind? Mama hat mir eine Nachricht geschickt, dass du mit deinem Vater kommst. Das Haus ist hergerichtet, und wenn Sie möchten, habe ich Platz für eine Assistentin, denn ich bin Hebamme und Heilerin wie Mama. Gregory, mein guter Ehemann ist ein Waldarbeiter und würde gerne Ihren Vater an seiner Seite haben. Alles ist in Bereitschaft. Anbei zwei Fahrkarten und ein Zug von Columbus nach Lassador. Ich freue mich sehr auf Ihre Ankunft.
Dein,
Ada Keller
IN THE DAYS FATHER went out with Ada’s husband. He was an American. His parents had come from Bavaria, but his whole life was here. He was, as they say, close to the earth, a woodsman and a hunter. You must not imagine the city as it is now. Germantown was the edge of downtown, and east of it there were woods and wildness. Among the rivers and streams there were animals to trap, and Friederich worked by day alongside Albert. At night, he did his own wook, soon making Albert very rich. I had thought I would work as a maid, but Ada soon said, “I only want to you studying. You have a quick mind, and you could be a teacher in one of the schools.”
She showed me to a great room filled with books, high ceilinged, like the library I would possess one day. There was an old globe in it, and Ada said, “My husband’s father was from Bavaria, but his mother was a Schiller. They were one of the great families here. They held this house for three generations. Old man Schiller owned two beer factories. Their fumes built this house. Enjoy their wealth.”
There was always a great blazing fireplace, and in the library was a massive bearskin rug. The bear stared at me fiercely, and firelight shone on its teeth, and here Ada would make me lock myself away with tea and cakes and read.
One evening she said to me, “My Pamela, this is for you.”
They were red, leatherbound books, and I asked, “What are they?”
“Stories of us.”
There was Kant, and Goethe. There was Nietzsche even, and scores of Wagner and thick old records for their phonography. There was Parzifal and Siegfried, and Ada took three slim books down for me and said, “Begin here.”
And so I looked on their simple spines and read one word.
VOLSUNGASAGA
“This was a long walk,” the boy now called Levi said,
“Well, the moment you showed up, flying ceased to be an option.”
“You can fly?” Levy said.
“He can,” Lewis pointed to Chris who was walking ahead of them, touching the security door to the apartment building Laurie lived in, and then pushing it open and holding it for them.
“Why is that?”
“He’s a vampire. I’m not.”
“Really? How did he meet you?”
“I’m actually right here, guys,” Chris said.
“The lobby was covered by black flagstones and shining under modern chandeliers. There was someone at the front desk who ignored them as they went to the elevators.
“Yeah,” Levy said, turning to Lewis, “but how did you guys meet?”
“At a club,” Lewis said.
“A vampire club.”
Chris, touched the elevator button and hands folded behind him, watched the lights play up and down each floor.
“A regular club.”
“Well, a gay night club,” Lewis said. “But as gay night clubs go, a pretty tame one.”
“You all are…” Levy put a hand over his mouth.
“I thought it might be a bit much for him,” Chris noted, still observing the light descending down the numbers.
As the elevator doors opened, Lewis shrugged. “He just saw you kill someone and knows you’re a vampire, how could us being a couple be too much?”
“It’s cool,” the boy assured him. “I’ve just never seen that.”
“No one was asking your permission,” Lewis told him as they entered the lift. “And I’m sure you have seen it, even if you didn’t know it.”
The elevator raced up quickly, and Chris turned to Levy and, nodding at Lewis said, “He’s a witch.”
“What?” Levy’s eyes popped put.
“Really?” Lewis looked at Chris.
“Well,” Chris shrugged, “I’m tired of him just staring at me. Now he can stare at you too.”
“So you can fly?” Levy said.
“It doesn’t even work like that.”
“He did ride the back of a giant wolf, though,” Chris said.
“You’re not helping.”
“Wasn’t trying to,” Chris gave him a sickening smile as the elevator slowed and the doors began to open.
“I thought a male witch was called a warlock. Or a wizard,” Levy asked.
“I’m a witch,” Lewis said.
“Is that because you’re gay?”
“No,” Lewis said, patiently. “It’s because all witches are called witches. Warlocks are nonsense and bullshit and a wizard is. Well, not real. Well, sort of real, but it’s a long story.”
Christopher rapped on the plain door, but didn not wait for an answer before enteromg :auries apartment and as the boy said, “Wow!” Lewis murmured, “Why were we always having him over to our place if his place looked like this?”
But his place was full of people, all men and sleepy eyed woman with hair down her back, and they looked from Chris to Lewis to the boy and finally the one at the front of them with chocolate colored hair and wide brown eyes said, “Guys, what’s up with the kid?”
Lewis shrugged. “Christopher killed his stepfather, so he’s sort of ours now.”
“What the fuck?”
Levy stepped forward, grinning and extended his hand.
“I used to be L’varion, but now I’m Levy Matthews.”
Dan stared at him, and then shook his hand.
“Hey, kid.”
“This is Dan Rawlinson, Lewis said, placing his hand on Levy’s shoulder,” and as an older man came behind Dan, he said, “and this is the Lord Kruinh, head of the House of the Kertesz.”
“Pleased,” the boy held out his hand.
Kruinh seemd unfazed and shook it, nodding, “Pleased to meet you Levi. Levi, you seem to have not eaten or rested. Daniel is my lieutenant,” which Lewis noted Kruinh pronounced leftenant, “he can escort you to more comfortable places while our meeting is underway.”
“Oh,” Levy observed, nodding, “Grown folks business. I get it.”
“I gotta watch him?” Dan said.
“You have to watch him,” Kruinh insisted, mildly.
“Are you all witches too?” Levy asked.
“You don’t believe in keeping secrets do you?” Kruinh looked from Chris to Lewis.
“Under the circumstances it was sort of impossible,” Chris said.
“What were the circumstances?”
“He killed the boy’s stepfather in front of him,” Lewis said.
Kruinh looked sharply at Chris, but Lewis said, “In all fairness, the man was about to murder the boy. He saved his life.”
“Well, that’s different,” Kruinh noted. “Inconvenient. But different.”
Kruinh told Levy, “We are nosferatu.”
“What’s that?”
“Vampires,” Lewis said.
Even Kruinh looked taked aback by Lewis’s baldness, and the boy looked at Dan Rawlinson.
“You’re vampire?”
“Yeah,” Dan said. “How’d you liked that?”
“I dunno,” Levy shrugged. “You seem too goofy looking to be a vampire.”
Dan frowned and said, “Com’on, kid.”
The rest of them came into the living room, and Laurie walked forward and embraced them. There were others Lewis had never met, Stanley, and Kirk, which seemed awfully ordinary names, and then Rommel and Lemuel and, among them a woman called Alexandra, and Laurie said, “Now we can finally begin.”
But just then there was a knock at the door.
“Was there another?”
Laurie frowned and looked around the room, and the one called Stanley said, “I’ll get it.”
He moved to the door and opened it, and a moment later a new figure came in and it was Lewis and Laurie who said at the same time, “Loreal!”
“What are you doing here?” Laurie demanded.
“I’m here to be part of this,” Loreal said. “From now on,” gesturing to a chair which, to Lewis’s surprise, one of the vampires brought her. “From now on I’m here to be part of everything.”
Laurie kept staring at her.
“It’s alright for you to fly across the city into my room, but I can’t come here? It’s alright for you be part of my family meetings, but I’m not part of yours? Either I’m part of you or I’m not. Make the decision now.”
Laurie kept looking at her, and then he turned to look at Kruinh, who was still seated in a high wingbacked chiar. The Drinker lord nodded regally and said, “Lady Loreal, welcome into our number. Long have we been absent of witchly council, and now we have two.”
He gestured to Loreal and then to Lewis before saying, “Let the council begin.”
“So whaddo you do?” Levy asked, lying on his back, bouncing the glass ball up in the air as he lay on the bed in the guest room..
“Me?” Dan said.
“There’s no one else in this room,” Levi said. “Unless there are ghosts too, and I can’t see them.”
“Uh, no,” Dan said, “to my knowledge there are no ghosts.”
“Well,” the boy said, “it seems like there’s everything else.”
Dan reached out and caught the ball Levy was negligently tossing. Because Dan was clear on the other side of the room, it looked like his hand had stretched all the way out and Levy sat up and blinked at him.
“Just quick movements,” Dan explained. “And you can’t walk into someone’s house and use their expensive shit as toys. Especially when they’re vampires.”
“But you guys are like… nice vampires.”
“Did Chris seem nice when he did what he did?’
“When he offed my mom’s boyfriend? Yeah. That was pretty nice for me.
“So, “ Levy said, “are you all like in the movies? Nice, friendly. Misunderstood, But… you know?”
“We have a code,” Dan said. “All Drinker clans have a code. For how and who is allowable to kill. Or else everyone would be dead ,and there would be no morality.”
“There’d also be no food,” Levy said.
“Huh?”
“It’s not all just you being nice. If every vampire killed every person, then all the food would be gone. Or can you all drink other stuff, but you just like humans?”
“A drinker can only take human blood,” Dan said, straddling his chair.
“I never thought of that. What you said. About the rules.”
“Well,” the boy shrugged. “People never make up rules just to protect other people.”
And then Levy said, “So what did you say it is you do?”
“I’m Kruinh’s Lieutenant. Or, as he calls it, leftenant.”
“I still don’t know what that means.”
“I’m his right hand man.”
“Right hand vampire.”
“I’m still a man. I’m just a man who’s a vampire.”
“It’s probably wrong to ask people how they became vampires.”
“Yes, Kid, it is.”
“But you weren’t always one. Were you?”
“No, I was just a normal guy. And I met Kruinh years ago. And then, later, when it happened to me, Kruinh and his family stepped in and took care of me.”
“And now here you are,” Levy turned on his side, looking at Dan.
“Here I am,” Dan agreed.
“Babysitting me.”
“Well, I guess so.”
“What are they all talking about?”
“I’m not really sure.”
“I thought you said you were the Lieutenant.”
“I’m the Lieutenant, not the secretary.”
“I think Kruinh just calls you that cause he knows you wanted a title. You don’t seem like a Lieutenant.”
Dan raised an eyebrow.
“I’m just saying. You seem like a nice guy who happens to be a vampire.”
“I can be tough when I need to be.”
“I bet,” Levy said. “So can I. But that’s not really the same thing as being a monster.”
Levy lay on his back and said, “I’m hungry. Can the Lieutenatnt take us to get something to eat?”
“Oh, yeah. Food.”
“I guess you all don’t eat.”
“I eat, but because it’s fun. Not because… I mean, I can forget about it for a long time. I’ll take you to McDonalds.”
“Is that the only thing in Chicago that’s open now?”
“That I’m willing to go to?” Dan said. “Yeah.”
Levy got off the bed and Dan stood up.
“So,” Levy said. “What’s more powerful? A vampire or a witch?”
“Honestly, Kid? Until a few weeks ago I thought witches were just teenage girls in tight uniforms who hated Catholic school and sat in their room wearing black and reading Tarot cards.”
“Then you didn’t know… about Lewis?”
“I think that’s what the meeting is about,” Dan said, at last.
Levy looked at him as Dan handed him his coat.
“I think there are a lot of things out there, that people believe are just stories, and I think that up until now we all just thought we were the only story that was real, and now we’re sort of…. Matching up the lines.”