AS WE BEGIN THE LAST CHAPTER OF THE BEASTS, MARABETH AND THE STRAUSSES PREPARE FOR NATHAN'S FUNERAL, AND IN CHICAGO, CHRIS ASHBY REMEMBERS A FUNERAL AND TREACHERY FROM LONG AGO...
	
T H I R T E E N        
R  E  Q  U  I  E  M
  
 
Without music, life would be an error. The German imagines even God singing songs.
-Friedrich Nietzsche
 
“Christophah! Christophah!”
	When he was eighteen, Christopher Ashby wondered about the blue edge of sea that joined the blue edge of sky. It was half a day’s march across the fields to the sea, and he didn’t think he would get that far, certainly not to the water or over it. 
	“Christophah!” his sister called again. 
	He put down the hoe and turned around, taking his cap off to wipe his brow.
	“Mothah says, you’d bettah git t' grandmothah ’s ouse o' thee want t' see ah afore it’s too lairt.”
	Chris stared at his sister, almost as if staring at her would change things, and Evangeline cried out,	“What are thee still starin a' us fah, thee fool? there’s no time! Come !”
	They left the cart horse in the field. On the way back they would tell Old Bart to mind it, and after they did, they went from the long, low, thatched house, out into the wide dirt street, and past the small shops to the house at the edge of the trees. That’s where Gran had gone when she said the old house was too crowded and she wanted to be left on her own. On her own, under the trees, on the edge of the woods, she sang to herself and dried her herbs. She made her healing ointments, and wrapping her shawl about her, she would go out with Evangeline to birth the babies or, in some cases, to make sure the babies never came.
	 
“Sing Oak and Ash and Thorn.
Sing Oak and Ash and Thorn, good Sirs
All of a Midsummer's morn!
Surely we sing of no little thing,
In Oak and Ash and Thorn!”
	“What are you…?” Evangeline began. Then, “Gran’s song.”
	The house was dark compared to the wide open outside, and it was filled with the smell of smoke from the hearth. Christopher squeezed through the door, and though he and Evangeline stood in the small house, trying to make themselves smaller, Gran raised her head from the bed, blinked and murmured, “There he is. There he is, and there she.
	“Well,” the old woman turned to a woman almost as old looking, “Go now, lass, and let me see the children.”
	“I’ll will send th’others,” Mrs. Ashby said as she rose.
	“No. No, daughter. None o’ that. These be enough.”
	As their mother left, she merely nodded to them. Emotional display and other gestures were scarce in the North Country. Seeing her in his mind’s eye, Chris thinks how quickly people aged then, how a woman in this present world who looked like her would easily be close to seventy though his mother was not then forty. But the Christopher Ashby on his knees, on one side of the bed across from his sister who laid his face to his grandmother’s breast while Evangeline laid hers on the other knew only these days.
	“Reach undah tha' tabul 'n git 'um beads fah me,” she said with a small smile.
	Chris did. He longed to hold onto the heavy beads at the same time he wished to hide them.
	“Ah quicklih they forget,” the old woman said, taking the black beads and the silver chain and wrapping them around her hand. “Ah verih quicklih! When ar wur a girl they talked about t' auld religion, t' orned one, t' ladih , t' oak, t' ash 'n t' thorn. these wur spoken o' in ushed turns. 'and then kin enrih gets inta a fit o pique 'n suddenlih t' Virgin be t' Auld Religion, 'n t' beads 'n t' Mass 'n t' Latin. ar thurrt, fah so long, we wur so far awair frum it, t' new religion would not touch us. boot even ere people forget about it 'n turn frum t' Auld Ways, arl t' auld ways, t' Saints 'n t' Orned One. But Ar remembered. so thee names, Christophah , fah t' Auld saint ooh bore up t' bairn Jesus, 'n Evangeline. Evangeline, nah, receive t' blessin which none o' thee lads 'n lasss uhl get.”
	She placed her bony hands on Chris’s head and on Evangeline’s, and suddenly the bony hand was heavy, was like a vice, was throbbing through his blond hair into his head, weighing him down as the old woman pronounced, “All o' our powah, we place upon thee, 'n upon thee.”	
	Chris rested under her lightening touch, her touch becoming ever lighter until there was a lightness, and emptiness in the room, and Chris lifted his aching head, blinking and looked to the old woman.
	Evangeline, in her brown smock, her pale, dirty hair falling out of her bonnet, reached down and closed her grandmother’s eyes with two fingers.
	“She’s gone, Chris.”
Christopher Ashby woke up, blinking at the yellow white sunlit ceiling that had been his midnight for three centuries. It was so vivid, and for a moment he did not know where he was. He turned on his side to see the brown nude form of Lewis Dunharrow, curled up like a child. He had already woken him, and Lewis said, patiently, “Yes, Love?”
	“I don’t knah . Ar wur just…” Chris began, “in t' past.”
	“What did you say?” Lewis turned to him almost frowning.
	“I say,” Chris began.
	“Oh, never mind,” Lewis had sat up. “You really were far back.”
	Chris shook his head and cleared his throat, taking a moment to speak before his voice altered, raising an octave, into his usual American accent, though touched by something older now.
	“I was dreamin’ of my home. Of… being a lad…. I need to stop talking like that. A kid. When I was a boy. When my Gran died. My grandmother.”
	“I know what a Gran is,” Lewis said, pulling Chris close to him, “I also know that you’re over three hundred years old and from Yorkshire. Though, I tend to forget it until you wake up sounding like something out of Wuthering Heights.”
	They lay together, Chris in Lewis’s arms, and Lewis said, “And how was it? To be back there?”
	“A lot less sanitary.”
	Lewis flicked Chris on the head.
	“Evangeline. She was just a girl. But then I was just a boy. We had no idea what was going to happen to us. Before she died my grandmother blessed us. She said she placed all of her power on us, and then she died doing it.”
	Lewis said nothing, and Chris turned around, his arms wrapped about Lewis.
	“She was a witch. I sort of knew that then. I know it now. She was a witch. And a Catholic. She held to it. She gave me her rosary. She called them her beads. I wonder now if the reason Evangeline and I are still alive, are what we are, is because of what she did.”
	“I wonder if the reason Kruinh chose you is because you are witch blooded,” Lewis said.
	“And if that’s why we chose each other?”
	“Yes,” Lewis said. “That probably has something to do with it. And then there’s the small detail that I love you.”
 
They do not hold the wake in that little house. They bring her into the larger house, the long house with the heavy dirty thatch that must be replaced in a moon’s time, where the more lanterns there are, the darker it seems to get, and the old woman’s body, on a table, is lit in dim red and gold. She would have been called a witch if there was no one to love her, no daughter with seventeen children, no two sons, no house to sing for her. But now she is a cunning woman, and a cunning woman gone.
“THIS ae nighte, this ae nighte,
— Every nighte and alle,
Fire and fleet and candle-lighte,
—And Christe receive thy saule.”
	They pass the jug of spirits which has replaced the real beer which came after the small beer, singing.
“When thou from hence away art past
To Whinny-muir thou com'st at last
If ever thou gavest hosen and shoon.
Sit thee down and put them on;
If hosen and shoon thou ne'er gav'st nane
The whinnes sall prick thee to the bare bane.
From Whinny-muir when thou may'st pass,
And Christe receive thy saule.”
 And outside the wind blows off of the high moors and makes a lonely howling which seems to join with the mourners at the same time it seems indifferent to things like death, and up on the hill by the forest, where the old hovel lies empty, another woman moves into the home that belonged to Old Woman Saxby, and a new witch takes her place.
When thou from hence away art past
To Whinny-muir thou com'st at last
	In this present world, while they are eating breakfast, what has happened several times before happens now. What he missed the first time, he hears now. He does not know if this is something that happens only to Drinkers, but for him the memory remains, all of it, to be played back again, watched and played back like—well, until he saw a film for a the first time, he had no adequate description for it, but—like a film. Only he can loop back, look at it, make what was quiet louder, lower the volume on what no longer seems important. He watches from winter in the present, a harvest time funeral three hundred years ago, andd as they keen over his grandmother, Chris hears:
	“The crop is failing, and there are too many mouths to feed.”
	“What about the boy, the tall lad?”
	“What of him?”
If ever thou gavest hosen and shoon,
Sit thee down and put them on;
If hosen and shoon thou ne'er gav'st nane
The whinnes sall prick thee to the bare bane.
From Whinny-muir when thou may'st pass,
To Brig o' Dread thou com'st at last;
From Brig o' Dread when thou may'st pass,
To Purgatory fire thou com'st at last;
	“Wasn’t he to be apprenticed this summer?”
	“But that cost money,” his father grumbles, “and the farm can only go to Kevin. I can barely get the girls married off, but oh…”
	“There’s a ship, come near Liverpool. Pay good money for workers.”
	“What kind o’ workers?”
	“Field, like whatchu do here. But you’d get paid handsomely. They say they let em go in a few years. They say they give em land and everything.”
If ever thou gavest meat or drink,
The fire sall never make thee shrink;
If meat or drink thou ne'er gav'st nane,
The fire will burn thee to the bare bane;
This ae nighte, this ae nighte,
—Every nighte and alle,
Fire and fleet and candle-lighte,
—And Christe receive thy saule.
	“Is that a truth?”
	“Aye! The lad could make his fortunes and make your future too….”
Naked at the table in the little hotel room, Chris Ashby drops his cup off coffee and he catches it in time not to break it, but not in time to prevent a mess. As the brown liquid goes across the table. Lewis stands up, goes to the sink, takes the dish cloth and rinses it, coming back to clean up the table, and taking the cup from him.
	“Get yourself another cup.”
	Chris nods absently and murmurs, “Sorry. Sorry about that.”
	As Lewis watches him, Christopher wonders, “Did they really believe I would have a good life? Did they really believe I was going to be an indentured servant, or is it simply what they told themselves to make their treachery bearable?” 
	No, but if they had believed it they would not have hidden it from me, not sold me like Joseph’s brothers sold him. And anyway, what they believed did not matter. What they told themselves did not matter, they had sold him, for money, and they were dead these three hundred years.
	“I know what we should do,” Chris said, while stirring creamer into his coffee.
	Lewis looked to him. Chris was standing naked, his penis dangling, hair sticking up, and holding the coffee in his hands 
	“Alright?’ Lewis said. “Fill me in.”
“The piano,” Rebecca said, “Use the piano. Songs like that need the piano, and he loved that song.”
	Natalie had said something, and Rebecca didn’t really care. She loved her, but sometimes the old woman was infuriating, and it was because of her that she had seen what she had seen, that she had seen her beloved Nathan in a way she never wished to see him. But in those last days before he left, there had been a lot of seeing him the way she didn’t want to see him.
	This is a part of marriage I suppose.
	Till death do us part, for richer or poorer, for sickness and health, but what if the sickness led to death, what if poorer lasted past the grave? So many ended a marriage well before the end of life,  but what no one told you is how married you were long past the death of your loved one.
	He was still here.  She wanted to imagine him in that rayon Hawaiian shirt, with the palm trees that might have been silly looking, but fit on him so snug. She remembered his dark thick hair and the sharpness of his handsome face, the eyes you could fall into, eyes Marabeth had inherited. 
	She remembered how little she cared about church or God or anything like that, and she remembered coming into that church, Saint Agatha’s, not Saint Ursula, and the singing:
Glory and praise to our God
Who alone gives light to our days
Many are the blessings he sends
To those who trust in his ways!
She had met him in Miami, and so, despite everything, she associated Nathan Strauss with the sun. She had been running away from home in the way that young adults can, and at the time she was Rebecca Cunningham. She was high on Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, and Nathan reminded her of them, with a touch of Hunter S. Thompson. They got high a lot and almost the first time they had met they went to bed together. Wouldn’t the kids be surprised by that! Though who knows what the hell Marabeth would be surprised by? 
	But then she had come to know him, because he wanted her to. And she didn’t really mind telling him everything. About her Irish father and her Jewish mother and a family that was done in by fear and depression and too much drinking, and how she couldn’t wait to be away from them, and it was hard to say what all had done it for her, but they were married soon after, and when Nathan had asked her if she wanted to come and live in Lassador, she said, well, hell, why not? 
	But if the children did not think of them that way, did not think of her that way, whose fault was that? The Rebecca Cunningham Strauss who had shown up in the late seventies in short skirts and long red hair that fell all the way to her ass was a wilder, crazier person who instantly felt cowed by the pale and dark haired Kellers. And they were all Kellers by then, except for Byron, who wasn’t long for this world, and the old and indomitable Pamela.
	“You mean that your mother and her brothers married your father and his sisters,” Rebecca said one night in bed when she was still trying to think the whole arrangement was funny.
	“Yeah, how do you like that?”
	“I don’t,” she said. 
	But that’s what memory does. Memory makes you forget, and there was that business. The business of the Change. Of course he had told her. They were not married yet. They’d just been having their affair, and sitting in bed, in Florida, where warm air came through the window of their shitty motel room, one which she still remembered fondly forty years later. She had been telling him all sorts of things about herself. All about that time when she was fourteen and she had taken an entire bottle of pills because she didn’t think she belonged in this world anymore. 
	“Something happened to me too,” Nathan began, “when I was fourteen.”
	And when Rebecca looks back she realizes this is why she married him. Not out of pity, and certainly not out of any sense that she needed to be married to a werewolf, but because no man had ever been this honest with her, and she knew no other man would again. So she knew, sort of, what she was getting into when she came to live in the house on Dimler Street, when she met the ancient Pamela, and her mother-in-law Natalie, who at first seemed so severe. Byron was as young and handsome as Jim was now, but more frail, and in those days, red headed like Rebecca, Delia was alive. 
	“Delia,” Rebecca murmured.
	She saw so many movies of women and women’s friendship, but in her real life, the only woman friend she’d had was Delia, and if she was honest about it, the only friend, really, she’d had was Delia. Delia Strauss and Rebecca Strauss. The Strauss sisters they called them, or the New Strauss sisters because Maris and Claire and Pamela were the old ones. Some called them the twins, laughing, hair flying in the wind they could conquer anything, and in those days it seemed there was so much to conquer.
	“There is a weight on this family,” Nathan said. “And in this house.”
OH, MORE TOMORROW... AND DUE TO SOME TECHNICAL INNOVATIONS NO BLUE TEMPLE UNTIL TOMORROW