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The Blood, Continuing where we left off with The Beasts

IN THE WEEKEND PORTION, THE REVELATIONS COME FAST AND HEAVY. DAN AND LAURIE COPE WITH LOREAL'S DEPARTURE AND MORE OF PAMELA'S STORY IS REVEALED



“Where do you wanna go?” Dan asked.
He was driving. They could have gone back to Lassador, or they could have gone back to Chicago, taken up in this whole strange adventure, suddenly, he almost felt discarded.
And Laurie, sounding discarded, said, “It doesn’t matter.”
“Well, you do have to go back to work.”
“I don’t really ever have to go back to work if I don’t want to.”
Dan said nothing as they drove over the unvaried countryside, and finally Laurie said, “I’m sorry. I’m just…”
“I know,” Dan said.
“So much work for us all to be together, and now she’s gone.”
Laurie sighed and put his hands, leaning back and pressing his shades on.
Dan only said, “I know.”
“I feel… strange,” Laurie said.
They drove, and Dan thought how strange was the only word for their current feeling. The moment Loreal had come it was as if there was more room, not less, to live in, and it wasn’t that they were incomplete without her, but… no, it was that. And now, with her gone, they’d have to find a new completion. And on top of that, the strange way he had felt all morning but, damn, he had to get a better word than strange.
On that last night, they’d all been together in that bed, impassioned, but the desire had given way to sleep, the need to be together in every way possible given way to the need to rest in one another’s arms. Dan regretted that he hadn’t had Loreal one last time. That they hadn’t had each other one last time.
Laurie looked at him sadly, pulling off his glasses so that Dan smiled to look at those deep brown eyes.
“Where do you wanna go, baby?”
“I’m driving to Chicago,” Dan said. “Let’s just be alone there for a few days.”
Dan felt Laurie’s hand between his legs, felt Laurie’s hand close on him.
“Shit,” he murmured.
“You were already hard before I touched you,” Laurie said. “You were pitching a tent like n other.”
Laurie kept stroking him while Dan drove.





Before the black jeep parked on the side of the winter road there was a green sign that said,

Chicago, next right exit.



Under the white sky and in the midst of naked trees, where no cars passed, the door of black jeep open, Dan Rawlinson, naked as the day he was born, fucked Laurie Malone on the side of the road. Teeth clenched as his hips smacked against Laurie’s, he just kept hissing, “Fuck fuck fuck fuck fuck fuck,” as he pushed his dick deeper into him.
The white earth studded with brown stalks said nothing, nor the chapped grey winter road. No birds, no engines, no cars could be heard in that silent landscape, only the satisfied sounds of two hot blooded creatures who cared nothing for the cold, or Laurie as he cried out, “Fuck me! Fuck me! God! God, that’s it!”
…And the slight creak of the springs of the Jeep, while Dan, hands on Laurie’s shoulders, plowed him.



CHAPTER

E L E V E N


DAS ENDE
IHRES
BUCHES



Yet she shall be known & I never.


-The Book of the Law



I had not been pregnant in twenty-six years, and back then it was with Steiger. Now I took the train down south carrying Steiger’s child in my body. Before I had not known where to go, but this time I never thought twice about going to Augustus. He received me and I was nearly ashamed, but he said, “What is the matter?”
“You are unchanged,” I said.
“Nothing is unchanged,” he replied.
He told me of his children, and I was surprised for I had not known him to have any.
“My brother had the children until now,” Augustus said, “and it was I who watched over the family. Susanna and I had a child once, and now we have had others. But Susanna and I no longer see eye ot eye, and she has decided to age. It will be slow, for she is as old as I. It will not happen right away, but it is her decision.”
I did not say anything as pat as, she must have her reasons, especially since I thought, if there was a way to stop from aging, I would have. But perhaps, in some way it had stopped for me.
“It has not stopped, “Augustus said truthfully. “It has done something, but it has not stopped. How is that you are with child, Pamela?”
Once he had asked, it did not occur to me to lie to him. I began at the beginning, with Germany and Friedereich coming to a wolf in the woods to beget me, and though, often, his eyes showed interest, Augustus was beyond condemnation or puerile shock, so when I had told my tale, he said, “and Steiger has no idea.”
“Nor must he ever,” I said. “How could one live with such knowledge?”
I remained in that lush southern land my whole pregnancy, and when the child was born, Augustus said, “You know, you need never return there. You could stay here if it suits you.”
It did suit me, and I did wish to stay but I said, “I may come back. I would be pleased to come back, but for now I feel I am needed. There are certain things to be worked through and I am not entirely sure anyone is ready to work them through yet who is not me.”
I was on a train fourteen hours and returned to Lassador in the night. It had never even occurred to me to hide the baby. It was a delight to keep her to my breast. I was full of milk and loved to suckle her, and her hair was red, much like Caroline’s. I thought to live in the coach house, the place where, really, Jimmy and Natalie should live, and I was setting myself up there, and putting the baby to bed when I decided to cross the yard and enter the townhouse. It was empty except for my sister Claire and her son, and she said, “They’re all at the hospital. Caroline isn’t well at all.”
“Caroline?”
“She went into labor.”
“Tonight?’
“Yes, Pam!” Claire nearly shouted.
“What hospital?”
“St. Joseph.”
“I’ll borrow your car.”

I took the baby with me. I did not trust Claire to watch her, and could not leave her in the carriage house, and it was a different time, a time when, if an old woman showed up to the hospital asking for someone sick and she had a baby, there would be someone to take the baby and watch it, some place she could put the child. So I went up, and here is all the family, weeping and strange, and here is Steiger looking heartbroken, and see, I go into the room, and Caroline is not merely sick. She is drained of color. Caroline is dead, and it is all too much, and they say, and look, the baby died too, and its hair was red like hers, and they take me into a room too large where there is, like some grave and sweet doll, a baby, like gray porcelain lain on a table, its blue veins showing through white skin, and then, like a miracle, to a family so distraught, no magic worked at all, hardly any, I produce a living, lustrous red headed child and put it in Steiger’s arms and say, “Here is your baby. This is your baby, see? The baby who died is taken away and buried, and that baby was never named, but I have the Negro preiest put water on its head and name it, make it ready for heaven. This is that same night, and I take my red headed baby from the weeping Steiger’s arms. He is so grateful. I take my daughter and Steiger’s daughter to my breast and continue to milk her.
“Delia is your name,” I croon to her. I thought of it in the warm air of the south. “Delia Frey.”




“Well, goddamn,” Marabeth put the book down.
It was so far removed from anything she had known about these people. Steiger she had known her whole life, but as a very old man. Pamela, she had known, but she had been an ancient woman. Grandmother… but Grandmother was always old and there had been no knowledge of her grandfather. Caroline, as the record told, had always been dead and Delia…
But I knew Delia. I knew poor mad Delia. She was Mother’s best friend. She was… she is Jim’s mother. Her own mother was Caroline Dashbach who died in childbirth. She was… But… it wasn’t possible.
“But it changes everything. It explains everything,” Marabeth said, conscious that she was walking around in the motel room talking to herself.
“That’s why Jim never had the change. Why he’s different from Kris.”
All of their lives, Jim was their first cousin, the son of their Uncle Byron—someone Marabeth just barely remembered—and their Aunt Delia, the daughter of Steiger Frey, their grandfather’s best friend. But if this journal was true, and it was, then Delia was not just the daughter of her grandfather’s best friend. No, Delia was…
“Pamela’s daughter, the granddaughter of Friederich.”
And, and now she had to bend her mind, a child of deep incest, begotten by Pamela on Steiger who was not simply her grandfather’s best friend, but…
Pamela’s son. Friederich’s son. Delia was Friederich’s granddaughter twice over. Pamela’s daughter, Pamela Strauss’s daughter, and her granddaughter.
“And niece,” Marabeth murmured with a shudder.
“She was always so kind ot me,” Jim had said about Pamela. “I was never afraid of her. She used ot take me on her knees and tell me stories…”
Jim was Pamela’s grandson. He was Pamela’s great grandson, her soul scion. He was the only one of Freiderich Strauss’s descendants who was….
But her mind did not go to incest.
“He is the purest descendant of Friederich. He is the only descendant of Pamela, several times over. He is… the only one of us who comes from the mating of Friederich and the wolf that created Pamela.”
It was the reason Delia had died insane, probably, but it was also the reason Jim of all the men in the family without the female female barrier, did not change, did not manifest the curse… or the ability.. in the same way.
Marabeth reflected that what she was thinking was so very German. A little too twentieth century German.
“He is the purest one of us all.”

It never occurred to her not to tell him. She went down the hall before she let the thought of protecting him come. Too many people were kept from knowing things because people wanted ot protect them. She rapped on the door and then thought, God, I hope he and Seth weren’t—
But the door opened, and though Seth looked sleepy, he smiled at her. He was a good guy. He was.. yes… just what Jim needed. Jim was sitting up in bed and he pulled a tee shirt on and came out of the covers, joining them.
“You guys have to read this,” Marabeth said, entering the room, and putting the book down on the bed.
“What?” Jim began. “Is it that important?”
“Yes. And you need to read it yourself. How far did you get?’
“Good God, Mara, until I had to stop., It’s more than I really ever wanted to know, but…”
“But where did you stop?”
“I dunno. When Grandma got married to Granddad Jimmy.”
“Well, then you have to get to 1953.”
“1953?”
Marabeth nodded.
“When your mother was born.”





THE BOOK OF PAMELA STRAUSS


THE YEAR THAT DELIA was born was full of happiness and sadness. Of course, Caroline was gone ,and this was a great sorrow for Katherine and for Natalie. She and Natalie had been close, and from then on, Natalie would never have such a close friend. But the truth is, I cannot say that Steiger was overly moved by her death. He was sad. Sadness was there. I do not mean to make him seem worse than he was. But he had Delia, who was the pride of his lfie, and after all, his true daughter, and he knew that I would care for her. I was glad to do it.
Steiger was the only one who could keep Jimmy from his drinking. Steiger did not seem to suffer from the dreams Jimmy did, and there were times when Jimmy either forgot or chose to forget to take his pills, and then he was locked in the basement causing terror to all above. Kristin and Byron were just babies, and I thought that life in the house on Dimler Street would always be like this, alternating between the joy of the baby, whom Natalie loved like a second mother, and the sadness and occasional terror of Jimmy and his fits of drunkenness, and then the times when he descended into being a monster.
Jimmy’s rages subsided in Steigers arms. Steiger, having brought a child into the world and been married once, never felt the need to be married again. Whatever complicated business had gone on in the two marriages, now Jimmy came to Steiger the way I came to Friederich. Steiger and Delia had moved into the coachhouse, and Jimmy would spend his nights there.
But Natalie was Jealous, and what woman would not be. In her way she feared Steiger, or respected him, and she said nothing around him, but one night when he was gone, I heard her screaming at Jimmy, “Your sisters don’t go through this with my brothers. Caroline had to live like this. That’s why she died! That’s why she was so full of sorrow. How dare you shame me this way, always running off to him! How dare you.”
When Steiger came back, Jimmy went to him, but only for a little while. He came back changed, and a few days later Steiger announced that he and Delia were moving.
“We are going to do a bit of traveling, see the country. I’ve seen the world, but not much of the country, and this little lady should experience the same thing.”
I could have killed Natlaie for taking my son and granddaughter, ah, my daughter, from me. I almost did. I contemplated it. And she had separated Jimmy from his best friend, all to have a man who could never really be hers. She paid for it however. With Steiger gone ,there was no sobriety, many fights, thrown furniture, though no black eyes, and the medicine was gone, that is to say, Jimmy refused to take it and so the rest of the family did not come during the full moons when Jimmy was chained below, screaming.
Natalie came to me in 1955 and I was put out with her.
“What do you want?’
“Pamela, I am pregnant.”
“With whose baby?”
“Jimmy’s!” she almost shrieked. “What kind of question is that?”
“A very good kind considering my brother is as mad as a hare. Or a wolf? Didn’t you see that when you married him?”
“She didn’t answer, and I said, “So it is Jimmy’s”.
“Yes?”
“You’re married to a homosexual werewolf and still you manage to have children, while Claire, married all these years to a man who loves her has only one son. Marriage is a mystery.”
“I don’t know what to do.”
“You’ve had two children already, I’m sure you know just what to do.”
Was she coming to me woman to woman? Even if she had not known that Steiger was my son and that Delia was our daughter, even if she had not known how much I loved them, she knew that I loved them, and what was more she surely must have known I had ltitle sympathy for her current situation. Was she looking to me to ask if she should have the baby?
“I’ve heard that you know of… herbs… ways.”
“You want to kill your baby.”
“I don’t WANT to kill my baby.”
“You are coming to me, having he audacity to ask me to kill your baby.”
“I don’t want to do this. Have a child that could be like Jimmy. It’s bad enough Byron will be! I don’t want to do this! I don’t want to do this!”
She kept screaming until I slapped her.The second time I slapped her because I wanted to hit her. She sank down in the old chair in the corner of my room and I said, “Stop your crying. Go back and have your baby. He is a Strauss. He will not be like Jimmy or Byron. Jimmy was weak. He was always weak. You knew that when you married him. And Byron is deficient,” Natalie’s eyes flashed, but hadn’t she been the one to say she wanted an abortion.
“Byron is…not right in his head. Go back and have this baby. He will be different.”
I think that all that summer and autumn, as Natalie grew, her womb was filled with sadness and sorrow. She swelled with misery. There was no joy in her pregancy, and the truth is, Jimmy was barely lucid for it. The January night that Nathan Friederich James Strauss was born, I was in the room with Natalie and with my younger sisters. We lifted the child and held him to us, counting his toes and kissing his feet, and the sorrow in Natalie seemed to lighten. Her brothers were in the house as well, waiting to see their nephew, but no one said anything about Jimmy, who was passed out drunk in the library.
“I always thought I could own Jimmy,” Natalie confessed, “that if I just had him to myself he would be a proper husband. But now I see that isn’t so.”
As she drifted off to sleep she said, “Pamela, bring Steiger and Delia home.”

LATER TONIGHT: THE WEEKEND PORTION OF CHAPTER TWO OF ROSSFORD: THE CHRISTMAS PARTY
 
That was a very interesting portion indeed. I always like hearing more of Pamela's story so that was good. Its sad that Loreal left, I wonder if she will come back? I will have to wait and see I guess. Great writing and I look forward to more in a few days! Have a wonderful weekend!
 
TONIGHT ONE STORY ENDS AS ANOTHER BEGINS


Of course, outside of the house on Dimler Street, life for the Keller Strauss family went on. The next big happening took place in 1960. Maris came to the house, shaken, and sat down in her chair in the living room, trembling and drinking glass after glass of bourbon. Nathan was moving around the hosue with his brother and sister and Delia, and Natalie looked at him, then at her sister-in-law.
“If you don’t start speaking, I’m not going to let you have another drink, Maris.”
“Ed’s in the basement,” Maris said.
“Ed was Edward Keller Junior, the oldest of my father’s grandchildren, and Maris said.”He had told me he wasn’t feeling well, but I didn’t think. I was so foolish. And we are always watching him.”
“So he’s made the change,” I said.
And Maris nodded.
“Well, when you say down in the basement…” Natalie began.
“Edward’s father built the same thing in his basement that he built in Father’s for Jimmy. He said there was a chance of it happening. We all knew there was a chance of it happening, but I thought,” Maris shrugged, “maybe because I was a woman, maybe it would skip or something. Maybe it wouldn’t have happened.
“Well, then this means we have to watch out for Fred too,” I said.
“I can’t believe we’re having this discussion,” Maris said, taking the bottle of bourbon out of Natalie’s hand.
“We should have had it a while ago,” I said. “And we will have to send a bottle of the elixer to the house for him.”
“Pamela,” Natalie said.
I looked ot my sister-in-law.
“We need to tell Claire so she can be safe from Fred.”
“If it happens to Fred,” Maris said.
“It’s going to happen to all of them,” Natalie said, matter of factly. “It’s even going to happen to my boys. There’s no point denying it. There’s no point denying anything. We just have to be prepared.”
Natalie was right, of course. Fred went through the Change the next year, and the next came Dillard, Maris’s second son. We were on the watch for Byron, a boy who was, in many ways, more sickly looking than his father had been that age. But if Byron was a sickly child, then Jimmy was sickly as a man. In the end, even Steiger couldn’t keep him from drinking. The sorrow that tore through Natalie began to tear through Steiger, and I had heard him telling Jimmy, “Delia is my daughter. If you’re going to be drunk, you can’t be drunk in the coach house around her.”
“This house is mine, Everything here is mine. If you want to make rules about a house, you’d better get your own.”
Jimmy tried to fight Steiger, but Steiger only took one wrist, and then the other and stood sadly watching Jimmy try to struggle against him in his drunkenness. One morning in 1962, Jimmy went to the coach house, weeping, and not incredibly stable, and the next morning, Steiger came in white faced and stricken,
“Delia’s asleep,” he whispered to me. “Delia’s in bed. I can’t wake her up. She’s got school at eight anyway. She’s got school, and we’ve got to get her to school. School is what matters. School is all that matters.”
“Steiger!” Natalie interrupted, “what’s going on?”
“Oh,” Steiger looked at her as if he’d just waken up. “Oh, what’s going on? Jimmy’s dead. He’s dead in my bed upstairs in the coach house. My brother, my best friend, my broken best friend. He’s dead, Natalie. Your husband is dead.”
This was the first Strauss funeral we’d ever had. You would have thought it would be father or even me, .Aall of us Strausses and Kellers escorted him to Saint Ursula, traveling in a line of black cars, behind Jimmy’s hearse which moved with a slow elegance Jimmy had never possessed in life.All of Germantown, including the families who had moved to the south side, were present. There was the picture of my brother as a soldier, smiling and proud on his flag draped casket, and for a time our grief was public.
But then we retreated to our necessary privacy. No sooner had Jimmy been buried, than Kristin went into the first of her depressions, and Byron made his first change. That very first time he stayed locked in the basement and Friederich, shouting only in German, would not let anyone go to him.
“Get out of the way you stupid old man,” Natalie snapped, reaching out to slap him across the face. But it was her brothers who pointed out that they must wait till the next morning to give Byron the elixir. Amazingly, Natalie had been pregnant again, but she miscarried a child who was so new the sex could not be determined. In the midst of this, Steiger came to me.
“Pamela, I feel like I will kill myself if I stay here.”
I didn’t make him ask. I simply said, “Go and do what you need to do and return to us when you can. Leave Delia here. We will care for her.”
“No one in this house is fit to care for anyone,” Steiger said.
“I am,” I said, “I am, and Delia will be like my very daughter. In fact, I will move into the coach house with her. Now go.”
Steiger leaned forward and embraced me, and I could smell his cologne and the sun in his hair.
“Go,” I said, and he whispered into my ear, “Pamela, you have always been a mother to me.”
I, who never cry, wept for a day after Steiger left, and that same evening, I moved into the coach house to be with Delia and pay little attention to the madness in the large house on Dimler Street.

For reasons I could not discern, Freiderich took to hiding Byron’s elixir. I think he wanted to see Byron become strong as a wolf, and then I also think a part of him enjoyed locking his weak grandson, who reminded him so much of Jimmy, in the basement. Every month, for those three days we had to go through the drama of Freiderich, an increasingly old and unlovable man, trying to find the elixir and hide the elixer and, at last, I kept one bottle under lock and key and Natalie kept another the same way.
But the trouble began the year that Nathan made the Change. For him it happened earlier than we thought. He was only eleven, and it was 1967, When he made the change, Freiderich did not call any of us. There were signs. He could have. And by the time we came it was to the sounds of growling and snarling. It was Natalie who understood even as I did. Friederich had chosen to transform and fight Nathan. Even I could do very little and I had left Delia in the house, But it was Natalie who made the dseicsion. She had never seen Frieerich transform, but she knew I had, and looking from a dark almost black slender wolf to a grizzled white one, nipping at him and drawing blood, she said, “The old one is Friederich, right?”
I nodded dumbly,
And then, just like that, Natalie pulled out her pistol, and before I could say anything, she shot him in the head, and with a whimper, Friederich fell over. The young wolf was caught unawares, and stood blankly staring at Natalie and she said, unmoved. “Go. Through that door. Go down into that basement.”
Was it that Nathan knew his mother, or was it that she was the great granddaughter of Frau Inga, and that witch blood was coming through her. Natalie had always been an amazing if infuriating woman, and now she said, “Come, my baby. Come, my baby, and we’ll fix you tomorrow. I will have just the thing for you tomorrow, but tonight you need this. Come with me.”
She led her son downstairs, and as if he were a puppy, Nathan made snuffling noises. I could hear them. Down below, sadly, Natalie harnessed her own son and stayed with him. Up above, in the living room, I stood with Katherine, and we looked at the great form of Friederich Strauss, still large in his old age, his mouth open and his eyes open, a great red black bullet hole in his temple. How old had he been? I imagined him as at least thirty years older than me, He was certainly well past eighty. For sixty years his presence had swallowed all the light from this house and overshadowed every woman and child in it, and now he lay dead on the floor, his life ended by a mother who would not see an old man who had become increasingly evil harm her son.
That night, while Natalie stayed below with her son, above my sisters and her brothers arrived at the house. They came with Mr Stenger the mortician. Maris and Claire said very little, and white haired Katherine sat in her chair, wrapped in a shawl. None of them had ever loved Friederich. He had been the monster of their lives, and now he was gone. He had been the man who had come in and sucked all of Katherine’s life away. That very night she went into the library, and pulled down the portrait of him. She took it to the attic and locked it away. That was her only commentary on the death of Friederich Strauss.
And I, who had been his partner for all of my life, his lover even, the mother of his son, how did I feel? I wished that Steiger had been there. I wished that I could tell him that this man was his father. I wished that I could tell Deali that this family was hers, that she was no guest, and that, no matter how she felt about Friederich, he was her grandfather the same as he was all of these others. And we were not a small family now. My sisters had several children, many of them girls, and we would have to watch out to see how their children faired, what were the new rules of this genetic family game?
Friederich was buried out of Saint Ursula’s, and the procession was long. I wished, vaguely, that some people could remember what things had been like sixty years ago, before the war, when Germantown was still filled with Germans and the language and the pride, not that ugly Nazi pride, but true pride, and the Blacks of Williams Street were just beginning to build their beautiful church. I wished they could remember a time when to the south and the east there was forest and Friederich Strauss had been, if a monster, also a savior, when he had been broad and tall and handsome, and come in and married Dr. Dashbach’s daughter and the world had been wilder. But Germantown was old and tarnished now, and so many people had left, and the street names had changed and half the beer factories were empty husks. Even though the sun was shining the day my father was buried, everything seemed bleak and black, and that was probably because of all our bleak and black clothing.
“Aunt Pam,” Edward asked me, “Are you coming?”
“I am coming in a little bit,” I told him. “I will remain here a while.”
He nodded and went down the hill to leave me with the fresh grave of my father, and the headstone of my brother Jimmy.
“I hope none of them forget,” I said to myself, and then I heard a voice speak to me.
“Do not let them.”
I looked up, and for a brief moment, there was Hagano, standing before me, and before I could step forward, he was gone. It was the last time in my life I, who was now an old woman, well into my seventies, would see him. And then I realized I was indeed an old woman, and this was why Edward had looked at me anxiously and was now waiting on me to come down the hill.
I came.

HERE ENDS
THE BOOK
OF
PAMELA STRAUSS


MORE TOMORROW NIGHT
 
Wow a very interesting and sad end to Pamela's writing. Lots going on and I am sure I will read this portion again. Great writing and I look forward to more tomorrow! I hope you had a great Sunday!
 
Oh, Matt it was a lot, and I couldn't fi d another place to stop posting except for at the very end. Of course Pamela can only tell or know so much. But there is more to come and more surprises. I had a very good Sunday and now I'm wishing you a cheerful Monday.
 


T W E L V E

LONG LEES




All words are sacred and all prophets true; save only that they understand a little; solve the first half of the equation, leave the second unattacked. But thou hast all in the clear light, and some, though not all, in the dark.


-The Book of the Law



This was the hottest water Laurie had ever been under. Laurie continued to lather soap onto the sponge and wash Laurie’s body. Often they stopped under the water and just held each other. It was a long time before they came out and toweled each other, saying nothing. And then Laurie took him by the hand and they went to bed. They stretched out side by side. This high up in a place this expensive there was very little noise to hear. The sky coming through the curtains was blue, and the furnace made a gentle whir.
“What time is it?” Laurie asked.
“I don’t think it’s even ten o’clock,” Laurie told him. But he didn’t turn to look. He just pulled Laurie to him.
Laurie yawned. Dan chuckled a little. They drifted into a half sleep.
The half sleep turned into kissing and hugging, fondling.
“You’ve never been inside of me,” Laurie said.
“But you just…”
“You won’t hurt me if you do, Laurie,”
His hand traveled down Laurie’s body.
“I want you to be in me, and I want you to come when you’re in me. Is that alright?”
Laurie was already trembling. His penis was already firm. They linked limbs and hands and kissed. They made love and sucked each other. Somehow the escape from death, the saving in the middle of the rape, made everything more intense. Laurie was afraid that this wasn’t smart. But then it made sense that the way Laurie would recover from being attacked, for actually being forced into sex, would be to have sex. There was something so intense about him that Laurie was afraid until he found the intensity in himself. He had never been in Laurie before. While Laurie lay on his back, Laurie sat down on him, drawing him inside, and they both made a startled noise. His buttocks were so firm and perfectly round, so very tight, and hot, the set of his face so beautiful, his blue eyes black in the half light of this room. They opened and closed, like his mouth did.
Laurie whispered, “It’s so good. You’re so good. Don’t be gentle.”
“I want to be.”
“I want you to let go. I want you deep.”
They turned over. He wanted Laurie’s body pressed to him as close as possible, their fingers linked, Laurie’s mouth on his throat. He wanted to be drilled. He wanted his savior and his protector and his lover to lose control. And he did, and then they were both shouting and gasping and crying, and for once the orgasm took them at the same time, Laurie pressed deep inside of him, shooting in him, Laurie clamping tight on his penis, Laurie’s mouth biting his throat, moans escaping their mouths as they shook and the world shook with them.
They lay like that, gasping, both still hard, shaking a little from the wonder, Laurie flexing his insides, feeling Laurie still there, though the boy lay on his back, beside him, eyes opening and closing.
“No wonder people are so afraid of love and sex,” Laurie said. “You don’t know if you’re coming or going.”
Laurie’s stomach rose and fell, still exhausted. From the light brown cloud of hair, his penis, damp and red, was still stiff. Laurie moved so that their bodies were pressed together and they were kissing and hugging and holding, and making love all over again. When it was over Laurie said, “I’ve never done it twice in a row. You’re right. I don’t know if I’m coming or going. I feel…”
It had been this way with Chris, Laurie remembered. He had gone to a place where he didn’t know how he’d felt. It was past regret or fear or happiness. Or even joy. He was on the edge of something.
He stopped.
“What?”
Together they both said, “Someone is here.”
They weren’t afraid. They were vampires, and Laurie could smell human life.
“Dress,” he told Dan, and climbed out of he bed, pulling on trousers and then reaching into his closet to pull on a grey silk shirt.
Barefoot he came into his living room.
“Lynn,” he said.
“You’ve been gone a long time,” Lynn Draper said. She was standing in the middle of the living room in a big, heavy coat.
“I know,” Laurie said. “We didn’t part on good terms. And some things have come up. Some terrible things.”
“And you’re a vampire.”
Dan, Dan, please don’t come out. Stay in the room.
Laurie was not sure if he was wishing, or speaking, but a moment later, in his mind he heard: Duh.
They had became empaths.
“Yes,” Laurie said.
Lynn nodded.
“There’s so much to explain, I know,” Laurie began.
“I’ve been pregnant for about two months,” Lynn said.
“Yes,” Laurie was rubbing his hands together and he licked his bottom lip more nervous than any blood drinker should be.
“Then,” Lynn opened her coat, exposing a huge, rounded belly, “What is this?”




As they approached the house, Lewis said, “You can gasp. You can be amazed. I forgot it looked like this myself.”
“I haven’t been here in years,” Loreal said.
When Marabeth looked at her, she said, “I wasn’t raised here. I was raised with Mom and the lived with Grandma Susanna.”
Susanna Dunharrow’s house had been beautiful, but it was still very much a house, a large house, an old house, but a house. Long Lees, the home of Augustus Dunharrow, was reached through a path that meandered through shaggy moss covered willows and ended in a long white mansion with a great Roman porch, stretching two stories before it.
“It looks like the White House,” Jim Strauss murmured.
“It looks better than the White House,” Kris said.
“It looks like Tara,” Marabeth said, “in Gone With the Wind.”
“Except with no slaves,” Chris Ashby noted.
“Oh, it’s just the opposite,” Lewis said. “It’s Tara after the slaves took over.”
“What?” Kris Strauss looked at him.
“I’m sure Augustus will tell you everything. I’m sure he’ll want to.”
Chris had stopped the great yellow van, and asked Lewis where they should park.
Lewis looked back at Seth and Seth said, “Technically, this house belongs to Lewis—”
“What?” Lewis began.
“Owen told me. As head of the family Long Lees is actually yours. “
“Well,” Levy piped up, “in that case I guess we can park anywhere.”
“He’s right,” Lewis said, clapping the boy of the head, “It’s not like Augustus has put up a real drive.”
Lewis turned to Chris and Levy, “Com’ on, family, let’s go.”
Seth had already gotten out of the bus with Jim and they were going toward the front porch.
“Loreal didn’t grow up here?”
“No,” Seth said. “My grandparents did, but not my dad. Her brother Ethan did. He lives here, and her older sister Eve lives here too.”
As they were approaching the porch, Jim saw a young man who looked like Loreal, and said, “There is Ethan.”
“He’s not the most hospitable guy,” Seth said without looking, “so don’t be too offended by whatever he says.”
Lewis and Loreal, Chris and Kristian were coming behind them, and Jim began climbing the porch steps, following Seth. He was surprised by how broad the steps were and how strong, for he had expected a squeak and heard none. As he came onto the porch, Loreal’s brother, younger looking in fact than Loreal or Lewis, was sitting there smiling at them, his brown eyes wide and shining and not entirely trustworthy, and the boy said in a tenor voice, “Well, you’ve come at last. We’ve been waiting for you.”
Before Seth could speak, Jim, who always covered his fear by pressing himself forward, thrust out his hand and said, “Ethan, I’m James Strauss, and I’m glad to meet you. Is your grandfather anywhere about?”
The boy smirked at him and murmured, “I’m James Struass and I’m glad to meet you,” and then looking up at him, still smirking, the boy clapped his hands together and laughed and Jim thought how he’d like to kick this kid in the teeth. He stood up and said, “My grandfather…” shaking his head. “My grandfather died before the Declaration of Independence was signed.
“I assume you are looking for Augustuss Dunharrow,” the boy’s look changed.
He tilted his head and smiled at Jim, extending his hand in a leisurely gesture.
“I,” he said, “am Augustus Dunharrow. And you must be Pamela’s grandson. You have the look of her if not her wisdom. Come into my home.”

“I am not as old as your esteemed companion,” Augustus said to Lewis, when they were in the parlor, “but you are right to stare, for I am older than twenty.”
“You are…” Loreal began, looking at her grandfather.
“He could be your brother,” Chris Ashby said, almost frowning.
“He could be my baby brother.”
“It’s only temporary,” Augustus shrugged. “Soon enough I will age back up. A little. It comes and goes. When I get really old I look like… Lewis.”
“Thank you,” Lewis gave Augustus a jagged smile. “Since jokes are all you have, feel free to use them.”
“They’re not all I have,” the boy—Augustus Dunharrow—said.
“They’re all you have that aren’t mine,” Lewis said, sitting down in an old high backed chair.
“You insolent shit!” Augustus suddenly snarled, stepping forward before Christopher could catch his wrist. “Everything you inherited came from me. I founded this family. Everything in this house is from the sweat of my brow.”
“And the blood of others,” Lewis returned.
He sat up, “You should never have made yourself look like a child next to me. It only confirms that, after all, I am the head of the clan and I am your elder.”
Augustus opened his mouth and Lewis said, “The transfer was made when I became Master. My memories returned. I am not the little boy you remember in childhood. I am Malachy. I am the uncle who taught you so long ago. I am also Malek. Look in my eyes. See me there. You know it’s true. Don’t you?”
The young man, his lips trembling either with fear or anger, looked into Lewis, and as his eyes widened, Augustus admitted, “It is true. I see it. Very well.”
“Have the servants bring us refreshment,” Lewis said to his uncle. “We aren’t staying long. There are places we have to go. But we are staying a few nights. Before we leave you to your solitude, there are a few things we need from Long Lees.”




In the large bed, with the fan twirling overhead, Marabeth glanced at the large book turned on its face where Pamela had spoken her last words. It was so strange because even though often, she had been shocked by the things her aunt had said or done, Pamela had been, for some time, a constant companion, alive again, and now her words were gone.
She was holding the old envelope she had been using as a book mark and now she she looked at it, blinking and smiling a little, not with happiness so much has irony. The envelope was old and wrinkled and covered in scribbles. On the other side of it was Caleb’s handwriting: FUCK YOU, erased. He had been such a miserable husband. It was the last letter she had written. He had apparently read it. There were, inkspots where he had either cried of spilled drops of water. She remembers licking those spots to see what they were because she just had to know. And they were definitely salt. She wondered then and wondered now, if it was possible that you could love someone strongly, but athe love just not be enough, and she opened the letter the had not really even thought about, and began reading


This is not a love letter. This is not a letter of falling in love. Remember when we were first falling in love? This is a letter after the love, when what was so very fragile cracked like an egg and spilled our love and our hearts and our hurt all over the ground.
I can’t have you go to bed thinking that the things I said about you are how I feel. We have done each other poorly in the last few days. You need space. I always wanted to take away some of your burdens, not add to them. I wanted to build you up, not tear you down in the awful way I did. No matter what I said last night, what I said earlier is still true. I believe in you, even if you have a hard time believing in yourself. You’re a good person, even if you don’t always feel like it, even if—and I contributed to this—you feel like you don’t measure up. I knew you were stressed and uncertain and a whole lot of other things. Whatever shadows you have, I wish I could take them away, but of course, I can’t. I don’t need you to respond to this, I didn’t understand how you felt about yourself until you said something, or how really under pressure you felt. I didn’t write immediately last night, because I wanted you to have space, and the only reason I’m writing now is because I don’t want those words to be the last words you hear from me. If the space you need is to never speak to me again, well then, that’s too bad, but I accept it. So let these be the words because as much as I wish you were in my life the way you were, you have things to deal with. Unfortunately, sometimes the only way to be a friend is to be one at a distance. You’re not flawless or anything like it. You’re not the villain I made you, or the villain you seem to agree you are. I know you did your best. You did do right by me, Caleb. You did as right as you were able.

She wasn’t entirely sure that was true, but by the time she had written this, she had eviscerated her ex husband so thoroughly that she had to give hims something. It was when they were ending that she realized how weak he was and what a lioness she could be. She knocked him over just by breathing. She understood that now. Her very existence next to Caleb had been too much, He had been a douchbag though, and she was glad to be rid of him.
But what of Jason? Jason McCord who had filled up her bed the last night she was here, long and tall, the heat of his body and the scent of him like baking bread in her bedroom. She couldn’t help but wonder where they were headed the more she tried not to. She looked at her phone. There were messages from him. Better to check them, call back, think of the man in her future, and not worry so much about her past.
 
I wonder what is going on with Lynn's pregnancy? It will be interesting to find out. Lots going on and this story is still exciting to read for me. I hope Marabeth finds happiness whether its with Jason or someone else. I know from experience that dwelling on the past isn't always a good thing. Great writing and I look forward to more soon!
 
It really is a lot going on, and I'm glad you havent got tired of of our strange magical friends. I dont think they'll be back till Wednesday. I'm so glad you enjoyed and you're completely right about Marabeth and her dwelling on the past. However, now that I think of it she's spent two books dwelling on her family's past so maybe a little reflection on her own is due?
 
TONIGHT LOREAL ASKS ABOUT HER FATE, AND MARABETH LEARNS OF A NEW JOURNAL THAT COMES CLOSE TO HOME



Marabeth got up early in the morning and put on a cotton dress she hadn’t believed she’d be able to wear. It was blood red and she told herself she looked like Snow White.
“But a sexy one,” she murmured. “Not that stupid bitch from the movie.”
No, no, she was like the real Snow White, the one who made her wicked stepmother dance around in shoes of iron pulled fresh from the forge. But why think of that when there was all of this land to be lost in? And as she walked about she marveled because, as large as the house on Dimler Street was, the house they were so proud of, its land ended at the coach house in the alley, and the two houses on the other side. This land with its rolling hills and thick green grass, with its streams sparkling in the sunlight, seemed not to end, seemed to be more land than was necessary for one plantation house. There were, to be sure, a few other houses, brick and stone, not wood, and then forest hemmed everything in, far in the distance. It seemed, to Marabeth, like at once point in time there was more on this tract of land, and the more had been replaced by this guarded wilderness.
And it was guarded, Marabeth ws sure of that, looking at the river moving slowly through the the screen of spagnum moss, Marabeth was sure that no one who was not wanted came here. Past the not so distant shore she could see islands.
“How are you finding it?”
Msrabeth turned around and said, “If the air was colder, and I was more myself you would have made me scream, Lewis.”
“I didn’t mean to.”
“It’s so quiet here,” Marabeth said. “It’s so… I sort of understand what Pamela meant.”
“I never read the journal. What did she say?”
“That this place was enchanted. It was different from everything else. She said that Augustus told her she should just stay.”
“Well,” Lewis looked around, “it is enchanted. After a fashion. You might say that it has a permanent magic circle around it. We are in the South, after all, for a very long time it wasn’t a safe place for Black people to live. May not be safe now. Augustus saw that unwanted people, white people, kept clear of his lands, and his lands were wide. Dunharrows were not the only people who lived here. But this was a Black country. And those islands out there, they always have been. It was our land.”
“There’s a story in there.”
“Yes there is.”
The way Lewis said that did not invite Marabeth to press further. But she said, “I miss Pamela. I miss the journal. I knew it was ending. Somehow I thought it would continue, but, I imagine, she was quite old. I imagine she had told everything. She was pretty old when she finished it. I mean, She stopped at the death of her father, my great grandfather. Do you know that evil old man lived until 1967? It’s like we just missed each by about thirteen years?”
“Well, then there’s only thirteen years to fill in,” Lewis said.
“There’s so much I don’t know,” Marabeth said.
Then she said, “And yet, you know what? I don’t care. Not at the moment. I haven’t been much but a cipher for a while. My best friend’s boning my cousin, who I never thought of as that interesting, but he’s a werewolf who ties himself up in a dungeon. Jim and Seth are having a life together. But me? I’m just reading this book, and I’ve been deep in it. And when I finished it, I began thinking about my life.”
“And?’
“About my disastrous love life. About my shitty ex husband.”
Lewis nodded with a half a smile.
“About the sensation of someone leaving you, someone who goes away and you’re telling him to stay, to make an effort. You’re angry at being left. You’re angry at him breaking his promises so easily, just shrugging them off, and going, just not being worth anything. And the mo
ment he’s gone, almost the moment he’s gone, you realize… you’re relieved, because the truth is he wasn’t that great. The truth is he took away from your life. He didn’t add to it. The truth is it was hard with him. And now life is lighter, and there a little part of you that is… not great. But,.. do you know what that’s like?”
“There were a lot of people before Christopher,” Lewis said. “So… yes.”


“Marabeth.”
She had re entered the great house, and was surprised, because she had not thought the old sorcerer even knew her name. But then, he had known Jim one sight.
His hand had been perched on an enormous globe, and now, as he approached her, it turned a little.
“Are you finding your stay restful?”
He seemed older now, but that was only, she was sure, because she knew he was older. His voice was settled, but he still looked the same age as Loreal, and Marabeth said, “Yes. Quite.”
“Your aunt loved this house,” he said, holding out his hand for Marabeth to walk with him. They came through the great room he had first received them in, and all around it were portrats of men and women with his face, but also, curiously, white people as well, most in powdered wigs, long dead, she supposed.
“It was after your aunt stayed here the first time that she wanted a painting of her made. She had a beautiful green gown on in that, her hair was still golden, and her blue eyes were so very fierce, so beautiful.”
“That painting is in our library. There was one of my grandfather too.”
“That one I knew nothing about,” Augustus said. “But hers was made by the artist Gerard Guyome.”
“I know that name.’
“The name Guyome… Or Guillaume, probably,” Augustus said. “His brother was the architect who built a church in your neighborhood.”
“Saint Agnes.’
“Yes.” Augustus nodded.
“”They say he jumped off of a building and killed himself.”
“The line between genius and madness is, alas…” but Augustus simply left his sentence hanging.
“Is it true?” Marabeth said, “That you build that church to be a witch’s temple?”
“If you have that question in your mind, then you already know the answer.”
“Loreal thought you would tell her where the Maid is.”
“Maid?” August narrowed his eyes. “Maid, Loreal? What is that to you. Is that the reason you’ve come here, for Loreal?’
“I came here for answers.”
“But your answers. Right, mon petit?’
When Marabeth said nothing, Augustus shrugged and said, “Well. Come, follow me.”
“My aunt Pamela said she had spoken to Hagano, and… well, Hagano is—“
“I know who Hagano is,” Augustus said.
“She said he explained things, but she did not explain it in her journal.”
“No, no,” Augustus, said, pushing a door open and entering into a cool room with muted light coming through white curtains. It was much larger than the Strauss library, and lined with more books than she had ever seen. As he crossed the deep red carpet, Augustus seemed to know exactly where he was going.
“She wrote that journal she wrote late in life,” Augustus said. “She sent me a letter before she died. About you. Pamela said she saw a great power in you. In your cousin Deborah as well, But the Hagano journal,” Augustus grunted as he stood on the tips of his toes and pulled down an old pale green folio, “that was much older.”
He handed it to her, and when she looked at him, he said, “Go ahead, Open it.”
She did and the first thing she saw was a list of names.
“Nathan Freiderich James Strauss, January 18th, 1956, James Nicholas Friederich Strauss, September 25th, 1928. Friederich Wilhelm Strauss, June 19th,1880, Studlitz Bavaria, the product of Romula Steinmeir and Nicholas Wilhelm Strauss. Nicholas Wilhelm…”
Marabeth stopped talking and looked down the list of names.
“It is your family tree,” Augustus said, “as dictated by Hagano.”
“Till when?”
“Why ask me? See for yourself.”
Marabeth’s eyes went down the page and turned it until she went to the first name.
“Leinghelde the Skinfast, Easter Friday in Springtime, Anno Domini…”
“Yes.”
“It says the year 496.”
“Yes,” Augustus answered.
“Shit.”
And Marabeth read on, “Daughter of Mechtild the Burgund and the Saxon Berserker Stedefeld, commonly called…. Hagano.
“Well,” Marabeth shrugged, “This tells everything.”
“It does not tell everything,” Augustus said, and his face seemed almost sad. He handed her another sheaf of letters not nearly as organized.
“I don’t know if he meant to take these and left them, or if he wanted them to stay here, but I kept them. Even though I sent Eve with the first journal, I kept these for the day you would come.”
They were not labeled, and so Marabeth had to read what looked like an attempt at a journal.
“Today I’m fourteen and… no, let’s start out with, My name is Nathan B Strauss, and this is the year 1970…”
She stopped, her voice cracking.
“You have to understand,” Augustus said, “It was some time before I assumed he had died.”
Her eyes were so wet she could barely see, and Augustus said, “I will leave you to yourself.”
As Marabeth rapidly nodded, she saw, hazily, Augustus nod and leave the room, closing the doors firmly behind him.
 
That was a very interesting portion! It looks like Marabeth is going to learn even more about her families past. I look forward to hearing what those letters say. Hopefully Loreal will get answers about her fate. That was some great writing and I look forward to more soon! I hope you are having a nice night!
 
HERE IS THE REST OF THE WEEKEND PORTION. DON'T GET GREEDY, THERE'S NO MORE TILL SATURDAY.

TONIGHT AUGUSTUS DROPS SOME MORE TRUTH BOMBS, KRUINH HAS SOME WORDS TO SAY, AND MARABETH OPENS UP A NEW JOURNAL AND LEARNS SOME SHIT SHE MIGHT NOT HAVE BEEN READY FOR



“Do you know the truth of who you are?” Augustus asked, flatly.
Seth said nothing, but he touched Jim’s hand.
“Yes,” Jim said. “And… you do too?”
Augustus nodded, and said, “Your mother was born here. I never knew she died. Not until your Uncle Nathan came here.”
“Then… he did come here.”
“But you knew that. He came for answers.”
“And what happened?”
“Answers are not enough,” Augustus said. “I could tell him about the past, but he needed more than answers. He needed peace.”
“I wonder if he’s found it.”
“Why wonder,” Augustus said, turning to Seth. “Ask your lover.”
Before Jim could turn to him, Seth said, “He is at peace. He wasn’t, but he is.”
“If he had reconciled himself to his gift he might have known peace,” Augustus said. “You are the grandson of Freiderich, the youngest one. And you are the only grandchild of Pamela. You are the only one descendant from Friederich’t mating with the wolf. No, do no look at this as distasteful. You have the greatest link to the old blood. You must make use of that power.”
“What?”
“To put yourself into the body of an animal,” Seth said, “see through their eyes, move in their flesh.”
Jim frowned.
“Can that even be done?”
“It can be done,” Augustus said, “And it can be done by you.”
“I… I don’t think I’d like it.”
“You mean you would be afraid to,” Augustus said.
Jim thought of protesting, but before he could, Augustus said, “You would be a fool not to fear. But fear is no excuse to do all you can.
“Warg. Take someone you trust, your cousins. Warg with them, and find a witch who will lead you.”
Jim looked to Seth who said, “If you’re looking for a witch, you’ve come to the right place.”

They knocked, and though it was a formality, Lawrence Malone appreciated it. When he called for them to come in, Anne came first, followed by Kruinh and Sunny and last entered Tanitha with Dan. Laurie had not wanted Dan to hide, but thought he would be a bit much for Lynn to take, and she had taken so much already. He had not worried what Dan would do. Dan had slithered through the vents and out of the building with a lack of effort he could never have employed when mortal.
“I have a mission for you,” Kruinh said to Laurie, “and Dan and Tanitha as well. You must go to Rosamunde in England.”
Laurie opened his mouth and gestured to Lynn, who had been drinking a cup of bouillon and now looked at the company of blood drinkers with apprehension.
“We know,” Anne said. “In fact, this is the reason we are here. To watch after Lynn and her baby. I have to say,” she looked to Lynn and to her rounded dome of a belly, “this is a most unusual circumstance.”
When Lynn opened her mouth again, it was Kruinh who said, “Everything these days is unusual, even for us. Now, Lawrence, you must ready yourself to go, and Lynn, I leave it to you to decide. Will we stay here with you, or will you come with us.”
Lynn had never met this man who seemed kind, and reminded her very much of Lewis Dunharrow who was, apparently, a witch. And she had the same sense that she had around Lewis Dunharrow, that when this man offered you too options, refusing them and choosing a third was off the table.
Lynn nodded and said, “I will come with you.”




Today I am fourteen and no. Let’s start out with, My name is Nathan B Strauss, and this is the year 1970. I want to be a good person, but I’m not, and that’s why I think I’m starting this. I had told my mom that I want to be a priest, but I don’t think I will, and I don’t think it’s even possible. Things happen to me. Things have been happening to me since I was eleven. The first time it happened to me, my grandfather died. I’m not explaining this very well. I can’t. I know if I write it down it’s safe. But I’m afraid to write it down. When it’s in my head it’s not real, when it’s in my head it’s just a sickness, but if I write it down it’s real.

I am a werewolf, and so it my dad. So is my brother, but he just turned. He’s very, very weak and Mom thinks he’s going to die. My family comes from Germany. My Grandfather was a werewolf. The night I became one for the first time I was eleven and my grandfather tried to kill me. He turned into one and tried to fight with me. I always hated him. The only thing I remember about that night was my mom killing him and then speaking to me. That’s all I remembered. My Grandfather is dead. He’s been dead for three years. I hated him so much. Everyone did. I hope he goes to hell. I hope he’s burning there right now. My mom killed him. I love her.

Today I committed a sin. I pray all the time. I feel Jesus I want to be good. Maybe I don’t want to be a priest. But I want to be holy.

I’m only fourteen and I lost my virginity in the carriage house.


I don’t want to talk about it, but I can write about it. I feel like have to. It’s only safe right here, and it keeps going through my mind. I think I wouldn’t write about it, but I’m afraid it’s going to happen again, that I can’t control myself. It happened in the upstairs. It was supposed to happen in Aunt Pam’s place, the carriage house, but I said no to that, and we went upstairs to the third floor where no one ever goes. My body felt so strange and I almost didn’t understand what happened. I felt weird and I felt sinful. But it felt good too. I’m so afraid I’m going to sin again like this. My cousin Mary Anne is real holy and goes to Mass all the time. She was just sitting around in the house smiling one day, and I asked her what she was smiling about. She says, “Can I tell you a secret, Nathan?”
I think to myself her secrets have got to be better than my secrets, so I say, yeah. She says, “I really love Jesus. I just love him so much.”

It happened again and this is how it happened. The first time I mean, not this last time.
Steiger is my uncle, only he’s not really my uncle, and sometimes he’s here but sometimes he’s not. He was my dad’s best friend, almost like a brother, and my aunt Pam loves him. My grandfather did too, and he didn’t love anybody! Anyway, Steiger’s daughter, Delia lives with Pam in the carriage house. She has red hair, really pale, almost orange, and really pale skin, and anyway, we’re in the carriage house, and she always wears dresses, never pants, and says, that’s how girls used to dress, and so she is sitting across from me and she opens her legs and she doesn’t have any underwear and she says, “Do it to me, Nate.” And my head starts to hurt and my mouth is dry and I’m shaking and feeling weird, but I’m hard too. And then she says it again, and she gets on the floor.
“Pam’s not coming back all day. Do it to me.”
I tell her I’m not doing it to her in this house. We can do it upstairs. Part of me is thinking maybe I won’t have such a boner if we walk back to the house and up the steps. It won’t throb and hurt the way it does and want to do what it wants to do if we get some time to think about it. But when we get upstairs I put her on the floor and just start doing it to her and she keeps telling me to do it do her harder, and then the feeling comes, I’ve never had it before. It makes me so dizzy. It’s like the Change, but it’s better, and I’m panting and she’s saying, “You did, it Nathan. Thank you, Nate.”


Marabeth touched her head.
Had he thought crossing it out would make her unable to read this?, And then there was this? Her father and Jim’s mother? Marabeth remembered Delia. She was red headed, fiery headed in contrast to her mother’s thick, lustrous hair. Delia was all air and fire, she could hardly stay on the ground. In the end it was as if she had flown out of that window, but that day gravity caught her at last.
And Delia and her father? Delia and her father? She didn’t like to think of Nathan this way, and when she wondered why, she realized it wasn’t simply that she didn’t want to think of him sexually, she didn’t want to think of him as ashamed, embarrassed, a boy out of control and full of guilt.
Can I not think of him as Father? Can I think of him as someone else? Just a boy?

No, but he is Father. The only reason I’m reading this is because he is my father?

And so she read.
 
I wonder what Laurie's mission is. I am very interested to see. The new writing Marabeth is reading is fascinating. Nathan led a whole other life before Marabeth knew him. Great writing and I look forward to more in a few days! Have a wonderful weekend! :)
 
sorry for not responding the other night, i actually was sitting down to do it, and then fell asleep



T H I R T E E N

F L Y I N G





But ye, o my people, rise up & awake!


-The Book of the Law





We’re doing it everyday. I’m not proud of it. I keep praying to be pure, to not be like this. It would be different if I was older or had a proper girlfriend, but I feel slutty and dirty. But I can’t stop doing it with Delia, and when I tell her it’s wrong she just laughs.
Here’s the thing, Delia’s only thirteen. So she’s still a little girl, which makes it feel like I’m really wrong for doing it, cause I’m fourteen and I should be better than this. I tell her I’m going to be better than this, and then she touches me in these ways, and we do it again. I did it to her in Aunt Pam’s house and she was putting her hands on me when I was doing to to her and telling me, Nate that feels so good, you feel so good, and then I lost control and started going really fast and just emptied in her.

The other night Mary Anne was getting dressed for the movies so her boyfriend Jackson could pick her up. She’s so pretty and I wish I could meet a girl like her. She’s always laughing and smiling. She says they’re going to see the movie Brother Sun, Sister Moon. It’s supposed to be about Saint Francis. Her mom, Aunt Maris, saw it, and said she didn’t approve and that there’s a point where Francis gets naked. Mary Anne doesn’t care a lick about what her mom says or how Maris always disapproves of stuff. She just laughs and says, “Well, then, I’m definitely going!”
When she comes back, she comes back alone. Jackson has gone home, she explains. She is a little sad, but mostly happy.
“Mary Anne,” my Grandmother Katherine says, “what has come over you?”
Mary Anne smiles like a blond angel.
“I saw Saint Clare, how lovely she was. How she followed Saint Francis. And how free he was. And then there was this part where he cut her hair, after she decided to follow Jesus, and it all came away like gold thread, and she was smiling, and he was smiling, and she was free. And I started crying, and Jackson looked at me like I had lost my mind. But I felt free too. I’m going to become a nun,” she said. “I’m going to follow Jesus.”


Jesus, can’t you make me good? Please Jesus, make me follow you and get my act together, stop doing nasty things. Let me be like Mary Anne.

Aunt Pam is gone and her little house is so pretty. It’s surrounded by flowers and Steiger painted it before he left again. I pretend I’m just going to check on Delia, but I’ve got a boner. My boners always hurt so bad. It’s like their (sp) reaching out and they don’t get better until I put them in Delia until I’m with her. My heart even starts thumping and my head hurts a little sometimes. It’s like my whole body is messed up until stuff starts to happen.
But when I get in the house I already hear the noises. I don’t know why I keep going upstairs. I go into the living room and I can’t believe it. It’s Granger, my older cousin. He’s almost eighteen, and bigger than me and his pants are down and he’s on the floor doing it to Delia, and for a moment they don’t see me, and then they stop, and Delia starts laughing and Grange looks embarrassed and he gets mad and says, “Get out.”
But Delia says, “No, don’t tell him to get out. Let him stay. Keep going.”
Grange looks at her and she says, “Keep going Grange.”
And then he does. He does it till he finishes and I’m hard and my head is spinning and then she tells me, “You might as well too,” and by now, I kind of have to, and so I get down on the floor and do it to her too, and when it’s done she laughs and goes to the bathroom and me and Grange sit in the living room not looking at each other, feeling really stupid.
He says, while the water’s running, “When she says do something, it’s like you have to. It’s like you’re under her spell.”
I don’t say anything. My underwear is sticking to me cause I’m still dripping and I feel more gross than I ever have before.
“You been doing to to her for a long time too?” Grange asks me. I don’t answer him. I get that the same way I need to not talk, he needs to talk.
Before the water shuts off, Granger says, “You think she’s doing it to all of us? All the guys in the family?”
“I don’t know, Grange,” I say.
“I kinda hate her,” Granger says.

You’d think that would make me stop, but I keep going to her and she keeps coming to me. Sometimes I see Granger coming out of Pamela’s house, and sometimes he sees me. And we just nod to each other. We’re both ashamed, but neither one of us can stop. I just want something normal with a normal girl who isn’t having sex with all of my cousins.
One day it isn’t Grange, but Byron who I find.
They aren’t on the floor. They’re in a bed and later on Byron tells me in a real quiet voice about how she really loves him and how she’s so innocent. That same night Delia visits me and says, “Don’t you tell Byron any different. He’s going to be my husband. I’m going to marry him. He’s going to make me a Strauss.”

This Sunday, after Mass, we all went to the house on Williams Street and Grandma Keller made us a huge German dinner. Its our farewell to Mary Anne, and there was all of this crying, and then the next morning, Aunt Maris came back with Grange because Uncle Bill couldn’t bear to drop her off at the convent.
Granger came up to me and said, “Nate, when we dropped her off, Ma asked when Mary Anne could call home and the Mother Superior said in a few weeks. When Mom said, what if she needs to speak to her mother, the old bitch just said, “I’m her Mama now.”
I looked surprised and Granger said, “I’m tired of feeling bad about what I do. I hate priests and I hate nuns and I hate God.”

I wonder if Granger really means that. For my sixteenth birthday, Steiger comes back and he says, he’s taking Delia with him. She goes into fits and starts screaming, but he doesn’t seem to care. They’re moving to Washington.

I keep looking to the house. There’s no Delia there. There’s no hold over me. I feel sane again. Uncle Steiger taking her away was the best present I could get.

”She’s coming back for me,” Byron says. “she’s coming back for me again, and I’m going to marry her.”

It seems like Mary Anne went into the convent yesterday. I heard Aunt Claire saying to my little cousin Kate, ‘We’re going to see Mary Anne marry Jesus.”
Her convent is three hours away. We drive like we’re a funeral part or something, one car behind the other almost. Me, Byron, Kristin and Mom pile in with Aunt Maris and Uncle Bill. Their kids are all grown. Soon I will be too. Soon I’ll be going to college. Byron went to college and didn’t come back so hot. He’s with us now. Aunt Pamela rides in the backseat and she says, “If only Delia was here. If Delia and Steiger were here that would be a thing.”
I think it certainly would be a thing, and I’m sure glad they’re not, not that I don’t love Uncle Steiger, but when Uncle Steiger is around, then so is Delia and when Delia is around I don’t feel right. And she was doing stuff with Grange, and Grange is Mary Anne’s brother. He wouldn’t want to see his sister become a nun while he could still feel Delia on him.
The church where the nuns stay is beautiful. It doens’t look like Saint Ursula’s at all. It’s bright with red brick and white pillars and sort of like Saint Agnes where the Blacks go to church, up the street. That’s what Mom says, “It’s just like Saint Agnes.” At Saint Ursula’s the mass is as heavy as it can get. It’s a lot like it was before the Pope changed everything and people could understand what was going on. I have to admit, I actually like it the old way, with all the Latin and all the mystery. And the church used to be so dark you could hardly see.
But in Mary Anne’s church, everything is bright, and there is a nun with a guitar singing,

“ Make me a channel of your peace,
where there is hatred let me show
your love.”

All the girls come in their wedding dresses, and Mom points out Mary Anne. Most of them have veils on and this one girl has some red kind of Indian dress on. Mary Anne looks so pretty and the priest gives her a candle and says something about she is called to follow the Lamb withersoever he goes. I keep whispering, withsoever, withersoever. Then all the girls are led away, and Aunt Pam says they’re going to have their hair cut off, and then they come back all in black with black crowns of throns on their heads and they kneel and then they lay on the floor, and then the black veils come off and the white ones go on and everyone is singing.

Back home at Saint Ursula’s, I ask Father Gerlach if I could become a priest. He says that these days most orders like priests to have a college degree so I should think about that. I don’t have a taste for college or anything like that. I just saw the most amazing thing in the world. I want to be a part of it. I want to do something or be something that other people aren’t.

Even as I think that I remember that I am something that other people aren’t. It’s not like Mary Anne, who won’t have babies and who doesn’t have to take the medicine. I am a monster. Kind of. Even when I don’t want to feel it clawing in me, I can still feel it, sort of, in the inside of my throat, like a cough,, leaping to get out. The Wolf.

I had a dream. I was running through the woods, and I was the wolf and there was another wolf with me. He was whiter than white and had blue eyes, and when he changed he was tall man, blond, like my grandfather must have been once upon a time. But he was young and wild with a necklace of teeth about his throat. And I said, “Who are you?”`
He said, “The Wolf.”
Then he said, “Be the Wolf.”
I woke up covered in sweat.

I have decided to not take the medicine anymore.


TOMORROW NIGHT THINGS CONTINUE IN ROSSFORD
 
That was a great start to the chapter. Looks like Delia might cause some problems between the guys if any of them gets jealous. I am liking learning more about the history of this family. Great writing and I look forward to more Rossford tomorrow night!
 
I wonder what Laurie's mission is. I am very interested to see. The new writing Marabeth is reading is fascinating. Nathan led a whole other life before Marabeth knew him. Great writing and I look forward to more in a few days! Have a wonderful weekend! :)

Up until now, all that we've known is that Delia was troubled, and that Delia is Jim's mother and she commited suicide. Recently we also learned she was Pamela's daughter (and granddaughter ad niece and.... its complicated). But now we are meeting this troubled creature for the first time. I was going to say about Nathan and Laurie from the other night: we will just have to wait to see what Laurie is off to do, not only is Marabeth meeting a different side of her father, but she is meeting her father period. She only knew him as a parent, and how much she knew about him is hard to tell, but this is going to definitely be some squeamish reading for a kid.
 


TONIGHT MARABETH LEARNS ABOUT HER FATHER, AND SHE LEARNS A FEW OTHER IMPORTANT THINGS TOO...



Marabeth sits in the study, and she hears the clock ticking. The shadow’s lengthen. The door opens.
“Marabeth?”
“Loreal,” Marabeth says to her pretty new friend with the cinnamon hair.
“Grandfather says dinner is almost ready.”
She could smell it. It smelled like fried pork chops or maybe chicken, a really Southern meal, or at least a Black one? What else was she smelling? Rolls, macaroni, certainly something she’d never get on Dimler Street or know to make for herself. This was a cause for joy, she reminded herself.
“Thank you, Loreal. I’ll be there soon.”
As the door closed, Marabeth says, “Good things tonight. Only good things.”
But when she looks down at the journal again, the hand has changed. It is still her father’s, but it is shakier now.



I feel better now that I’ve stopped. The medicine and everything. They don’t know. They’d be so terrified. I’m going to go out into the woods or something. I need to go to the mountains. Maybe I can ask Grange to help chain me up in that basement the way they used to do with Dad? I don’t remember Dad. Just that he was weak and crazy, but maybe he wouldn’t have been so crazy if they had let him be himself. I feel more myself than ever. Every day of my life I feel like I’m in this fog, and I feel gross and sick. I feel so sad, like I’m under this wet blanket. Now I feel powerful and crazy. If Delis was here I would fuck her silly. I’d fuck her till her eyes came out of her head, till she was dead, and then I’d leave her on the floor and keep fucking her to teach her. The colors are so bright. I can’t stop myself from doing crazy stuff. But it’s better you know, better than how I usually am.
Most of the time I hate who I am . I hate my whole life. I try to feel better about things, but it’s like it’s no use. I try to look on the bright side, but nothing’s really bright, and I think about going to other people, to tell them, but they seem just as messed up as me. The truth is, half the time I want to die. Even now, I want to die.
You know what it’s like? It’s like I’ve got this pain, and the pain is all over. It’s in my head, it’s between my eyes, it’s in my back, it’s behind my eyes. Sometimes I feel like I could cry, and like there is no light. There’s the sun, and the lamps and all of that, but they’re like lights in paintings or on TV. There is no real light, not in me, not in anyone. Sometimes I wish I could die. And I can die, that’s true. I could jump out of the fucking window and go splat. But I don’t do it. I could take the gun Mom used to kill Grandfather, but I don’t use it. Because I’m a coward. Sometimes, I wish that Grandfather had killed me. Sometimes I think about teeth in my neck, ripping out my throat and it almost makes me giggle, to think of getting out of this life, and getting out of it in such a way. It’s not that I’m poor. I’m not poor or oppressed or anything like that, and yet, life is so hard. I feel like somedays I can hardly get out of bed .



Marabeth closes the book. She’s with him again. She’s with her father. He is a boy in an awful place, someone almost young enough to be her son if she’d gone that route, but here he is, with her again, and she doesn’t want to leave him. Her heart is with him and she wishes he could somehow know that back in the early 1970s. But now she can smell the food, smell the butter and the heat and the bread and the coffee and she knows they are waiting, and she is powerfully hungry. Laying the book down she tells him, “I’ll be back.”


“Warg?” Kris Strauss said.
“Yes,” Augustus said.
“When Kris blinked and looked at Marabeth, it was Seth who said, “Actually, it’s a wonderful idea.”
“Thank you,” Augustus inclined his head to Seth who thought that his uncle wasn’t being entirely sarcastic.
“But how…?” Kris began, “ I mean, I’m not sure it’s an entirely good idea.”
“I don’t think there is such a thing as an entirely good idea,” Merebeth said. “Not now, and not for us. I think there’s just doing what we have to do.”
“What is it anyway?” Kris turned to Augustus, “Exactly?”
“It is when you place yourself inside of another animal, so you can see through its eyes. In time you could even become the other animal. You may be lost in them, or you may ask their permission to take them over, Use them as your vehicle.”
“Like…” Kris frowned, “a witch’s familiar.”
“It is the very same thing as a witch’s familiar,” Augustus said.
They were all sitting around the dinner table, the remains of toothsome pork chops and apples baked in a skillet with butter and sugar and cinnamon until their skins carmelized, spicy stuffing, sweet pork roast for those who didn’t want chops or just wanted more pork, buttered rolls, macaroni glossy and golden with three types of cheese, sweet, sweet, sweet potato pudding loaded with spices. Lewis was half a sleep in a chair, drinking coffee and offering no advice.
Is there…. An animal we could try this with?” Jim Strauss began.
“None in this house,” Augustus said, .“but the whole world is full of animals. It would be best if you let Seth help you.”
“When should we try this?”
“Somewhere between the pork roast and pecan pie,” Lewis said.
They turned to him as, beside Chris Ashby, he took a toothpick and picked his teeth. It was Levy who translated, smiling broadly,
“No time like the present.”
Lewis nodded.



They sat on the porch and Marabeth was feeling a little foolish.
“We just have to wait for an animal,” Seth was saying. But soon he looked up and said, “Ah, there they are.”
“What?” Kris began.
“Up there.”
“But those are birds.
Seth looked at him.
“Were you waiting for a wolf?”
Kris realized he had been.
“For this bit:” Seth began, “you might want to try us all holding hands. I know it sounds silly and all, but--”
“Jim had immediately caught Seth’s hand, and Marabeth caught Jim’s and Kris took hers.
“Now just close your eyes and see if you can follow me.”
Seth’s eyes were on the crows flying into the trees and he followed one in particular. As he followed it, the bird became bigger and bigger, no. He was coming closer and closer to it. Now Kris almost shouted, for the crow was diving directly at him and then, just like that, it was as if he was on the crow’s back. And then, he no longer saw the crow. He saw the trees beneath, and one tree approaching and he looked across to see another crow and realized that he was in the the first crow, looking from behind its eyes.
The black eye of the crow beside him, winked, and without knowing how he knew, he understood that, whatever Seth had done, Kris had found his own crow, and the crow standing beside him was… Marabeth. Was inhabited by her. They could not speak to each other, but they recognized each other in their minds. Up the tree pattered two brown squirrels and the first, running up the limb to Kris, its long tail out, said, “You’ve done it!”
“Jim?” Kris’s mind came from the crow.
“Yes,” the squirrel nodded and turned to the second squirrel, who was sitting on two legs, preening its paws and ears. “And this is Seth.”
That brown squirrel winked at him.
“But how?”
“We leapt from the birds and into the squirrels We asked if they minded us… borrowing them. They didn’t, but we can’t stay for long because I’ve never asked where a squirrel goes when I’m inhabiting its body, but I have the feeling that the answer might just be… my body.”
Seth laughed. “We could get back and find our human bodies trying to climb trees and store nuts. We should go.”
“But… you did this so fast, So naturally.””
“Jim is a natural,” was all Seth said. “He is practically a witch.”
Kris looked to Marabeth and said, “Are you ready?’
But she was no longer in that crow. A starling sat ahead of him, and it leapt up and Kris thought, “I’m the last to get this.”
“But you got it,” the Starling said. “Seth is right. It’s time for us to go.”

She could barely get into the bath. After she had flown after Seth, darting into the crow, into the squirrel, into a starling, swirling across the warm air and back into her body, Marabeth wanted to tell everyone in the house about the joy she’d experienced. Her body thrilled with joy and she thought, “This is why I have never felt like anyone else. This is what I am, where I belong.”
She was wide awake now, sitting up in bed, and she did not want to turn back to her father’s journal but she thought, here, right now, the way I am, this could be the best way to read.



All the blood.
All the Blood.
Jesus help me.
Help me Jesus!
So much blood.
Going to hell.
I am a demon.
I’m going to hell. If there is any justice, I have to go to hell. All of those people are gone because of me. I thought I was safe, but it doesn’t matter. When I woke up, so much blood. So much blood. The bodies weren’t even a mile away. No one deserved that. No one. I killed those people. If I’d taken the medicine it never would have happened. Before I thought I’d be a coward for not killing myself, now I know I’d be a coward if I did. I’ve to live with this. I’ve just got to live with it.



I WANT TO DIE I WANT TO DIE I WANT TO DIE I WANT TO DIE I WANT TO DIE I WANT TO DIE I WANT TO DIE I WANT TO DIE I WANT TO DIE I WANT TO DIE I WANT TO DIE I WANT TO DIE I WANT TO DIE I WANT TO DIE I WAN
Two couples, both in their thirties… six kids, mauled to death. No one can trace it to me, of course, It was done by a wild animal, a confusion cause wild animals like that aren’t in Ohio.

I can’t help thinking my family must know.

I went to Dr. Stengler. I told him I needed as much of the medicine as possible. He asked why and I said I was leaving. He told me that from now on life would be better because the medicine was now pills, no bad taste, no drinking whole shot glasses of gross shit. But does the feeling go away and does what I am go away? I was so happy when I wasn’t taking it or, if not happy, alive. But the price those people paid.
Anyway, I told him I’m going to Florida, going to get some sun and live in a place with color, a place that’s far away from Lassador and everything I’ve known.
 
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