Sookie 04 Dead to the World (13 page)

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Authors: Charlaine Harris

BOOK: Sookie 04 Dead to the World
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Packmaster,I thought. But who would be in a pack, this far out in the boondocks? Just Crystal? Then I remembered Sam’s veiled warning about the unusual nature of Hotshot, and I had a revelation.Everyonein Hotshot was two-natured.

Was that possible? I wasn’t completely certain Calvin Norris was a Were-but I knew he didn’t change into any bunny. I had to struggle with an almost irresistible impulse to lean over and put my hand on his forearm, touch skin to skin to read his mind as clearly as possible.

I was completely certain about one thing: I wouldn’t want to be anywhere around Hotshot on the three nights of the full moon.

“You’re the barmaid at Merlotte’s,” he said, looking into my eyes as intently as he’d looked into Crystal’s.

“I’mabarmaid at Merlotte’s.”

“You’re a friend of Sam’s.”

“Yes,” I said carefully. “I am. I’m a friend of Alcide Herveaux’s, too. And I know Colonel Flood.”

These names meant something to Calvin Norris. I wasn’t surprised that Norris would know the names of some prominent Shreveport Weres-and he’d know Sam, of course. It had taken my boss time to connect with the local two-natured community, but he’d been working on it.

Crystal had been listening with wide dark eyes, in no better mood than she had been before. A girl wearing overalls appeared from the back of the house, and she lifted the toddler from his nest of Duplos. Though her face was rounder and less distinctive and her figure was fuller, she was clearly Crystal’s younger sister. She was also just as apparently pregnant again.

“You need anything, Uncle Calvin?” she asked, staring at me over the toddler’s shoulder.

“No, Dawn. Take care of Matthew.” She disappeared into the back of the house with her burden. I had guessed right on the sex of the kid.

“Crystal,” said Calvin Norris, in a quiet and terrifying voice, “you tell us now what you done.”

Crystal had believed she’d gotten away with something, and she was shocked at being ordered to confess.

But she’d obey. After a little fidgeting, she did.

“I was out with Jason on New Year’s Eve,” she said. “I’d met him at WalMart in Bon Temps, when I went in to get me a purse.”

I sighed. Jason could find potential bedmates anywhere. He was going to end up with some unpleasant disease (if he hadn’t already) or slapped with a paternity suit, and there was nothing I could do about it except watch it happen.

“He asked me if I’d spend New Year’s Eve with him. I had the feeling the woman he’d had a date with had changed her mind, ’cause he’s not the kind of guy to go without lining up a date for something big like that.”

I shrugged. Jason could have made and broken dates with five women for New Year’s Eve, for all I knew. And it wasn’t infrequent for women to get so exasperated by his earnest pursuit of anything with a vagina that they broke off plans with him.

“He’s a cute guy, and I like to get out of Hotshot, so I said yeah. He asked me if he could come pick me up, but I knew some of my neighbors wouldn’t like that, so I said I’d just meet him at the Fina station, and then we’d go in his truck. So that’s what we did. And I had a real good time with him, went home with him, had a good night.” Her eyes gleamed at me. “You want to know how he is in bed?”

There was a blur of movement, and then there was blood at the corner of her mouth. Calvin’s hand was back dangling between his legs before I even realized he’d moved. “You be polite. Don’t show your worst face to this woman,” he said, and his voice was so serious I made up my mind I’d be extra polite, too, just to be safe.

“Okay. That wasn’t nice, I guess,” she admitted, in a softer and chastened voice. “Well, I wanted to see him the night after, too, and he wanted to see me again. So I snuck out and went over to his place. He had to leave to see his sister-you? You’re the only sister he’s got?”

I nodded.

“And he said to stay there, he’d be back in a bit. I wanted to go with him, and he said if his sister didn’t have company, that woulda been fine, but she had vamp company, and he didn’t want me to mix with them.”

I think Jason knew what my opinion of Crystal Norris would be, and he wanted to dodge hearing it, so he left her at his house.

“Did he come back home?” Calvin said, nudging her out of her reverie.

“Yes,” she said, and I tensed.

“What happened then?” Calvin asked, when she stopped again.

“I’m not real sure,” she said. “I was in the house, waiting for him, and I heard his truck pull up, and I’m thinking, ‘Oh, good, he’s here, we can party,’ and then I didn’t hear him come up the front steps, and I’m wondering what’s happening, you know? Of course all the outside lights are on, but I didn’t go to the window, ’cause I knew it was him.” Of course a Were would know his step, maybe catch his smell. “I’m listening real good,” she went on, “and I hear him going around the outside of the house, so I’m thinking he’s going to come in the back door, for some reason-muddy boots, or something.”

I took a deep breath. She’d get to the point in just a minute. I just knew she would.

“And then, to the back of the house, and farther ‘way, yards away from the porch, I hear a lot of noise, and some shouting and stuff, and then nothing.”

If she hadn’t been a shifter, she wouldn’t have heard so much. There, I knew I’d think of a bright side if I searched hard enough.

“Did you go out and look?” Calvin asked Crystal. His worn hand stroked her black curls, as if he were petting a favorite dog.

“No sir, I didn’t look.”

“Smell?”

“I didn’t get close enough,” she admitted, just on the good side of sullen. “The wind was blowing the other way. I caught a little of Jason, and blood. Maybe a couple of other things.”

“Like what?”

Crystal looked at her own hands. “Shifter, maybe. Some of us can change when it’s not the full moon, but I can’t. Otherwise, I’d have had a better chance at the scent,” she said to me in near-apology.

“Vampire?” Calvin asked.

“I never smelled a vampire before,” she said simply. “I don’t know.”

“Witch?” I asked.

“Do they smell any different from regular people?” she asked doubtfully.

I shrugged. I didn’t know.

Calvin said, “What did you do after that?”

“I knew something had carried Jason off into the woods. I just . . . I lost it. I’m not brave.” She shrugged. “I came home after that. Nothing more I could do.”

I was trying not to cry, but tears just rolled down my cheeks. For the first time, I admitted to myself that I wasn’t sure I’d ever see my brother again. But if the attacker’s intention was to kill Jason, why not just leave his body in the backyard? As Crystal had pointed out, the night of New Year’s Day there hadn’t been a full moon. There were things that didn’t have to wait for the full moon. . . .

The bad thing about learning about all the creatures that existed in the world besides us is that I could imagine that there were things that might swallow Jason in one gulp. Or a few bites.

But I just couldn’t let myself think about that. Though I was still weeping, I made an effort to smile. “Thank you so much,” I said politely. “It was real nice of you to take the time to see me. I know you have things you need to do.”

Crystal looked suspicious, but her uncle Calvin reached over and patted my hand, which seemed to surprise everyone, himself included.

He walked me out to my car. The sky was clouding over, which made it feel colder, and the wind began to toss the bare branches of the large bushes planted around the yard. I recognized yellow bells (which the nursery calls forsythia), and spirea, and even a tulip tree. Around them would be planted jonquil bulbs, and iris-the same flowers that are in my grandmother’s yard, the same bushes that have grown in southern yards for generations. Right now everything looked bleak and sordid. In the spring, it would seem almost charming, picturesque; the decay of poverty gilded by Mother Nature.

Two or three houses down the road, a man emerged from a shed behind his house, glanced our way, and did a double take. After a long moment, he loped back into his house. It was too far away to make out more of his features than thick pale hair, but his grace was phenomenal. The people out here more than disliked strangers; they seemed to be allergic to them.

“That’s my house over there,” Calvin offered, pointing to a much more substantial home, small but foursquare, painted white quite recently. Everything was in good repair at Calvin Norris’s house. The driveway and parking area were clearly defined; the matching white toolshed stood rust-free on a neat concrete slab.

I nodded. “It looks real nice,” I said in a voice that wasn’t too wobbly.

“I want to make you an offer,” Calvin Norris said.

I tried to look interested. I half turned to face him.

“You’re a woman without protection now,” he said. “Your brother’s gone. I hope he comes back, but you don’t have no one to stand up for you while he’s missing.”

There were a lot of things wrong with this speech, but I wasn’t in any mood to debate the shifter. He’d done me a large favor, getting Crystal to talk. I stood there in the cold wind and tried to look politely receptive.

“If you need some place to hide, if you need someone to watch your back or defend you, I’ll be your man,” he said. His green and golden eyes met mine directly.

I’ll tell you why I didn’t dismiss this with a snort: He wasn’t being superior about it. According to his mores, he was being as nice as he could be, extending a shield to me if I should need it. Of course he expected to “be my man” in every way, along with protecting me; but he wasn’t being lascivious in his manner, or offensively explicit. Calvin Norris was offering to incur injury for my sake. He meant it. That’s not something to get all snitty about.

“Thanks,” I said. “I’ll remember you said that.”

“I heard about you,” he said. “Shifters and Weres, they talk to each other. I hear you’re different.”

“I am.” Regular men might have found my outer package attractive, but my inner package repelled them. If I ever began to get a swelled head, after the attention paid me by Eric, or Bill, or even Alcide, all I had to do was listen to the brains of some bar patrons to have my ego deflated. I clutched my old blue coat more closely around me. Like most of the two-natured, Calvin had a system that didn’t feel cold as intensely as my completely human metabolism did. “But my difference doesn’t lie in being two-natured, though I appreciate your, ah, kindness.” This was as close as I could come to asking him why he was so interested.

“I know that.” He nodded in acknowledgment of my delicacy. “Actually, that makes you more . . . The thing is, here in Hotshot, we’ve inbred too much. You heard Crystal. She can only change at the moon, and frankly, even then she’s not full-powered.” He pointed at his own face. “My eyes can hardly pass for human. We need an infusion of new blood, new genes. You’re not two-natured, but you’re not exactly an ordinary woman. Ordinary women don’t last long here.”

Well, that was an ominous and ambiguous way to put it. But I was sympathetic, and I tried to look understanding. Actually, I did understand, and I could appreciate his concern. Calvin Norris was clearly the leader of this unusual settlement, and its future was his responsibility.

He was frowning as he looked down the road at the house where I’d seen the man. But he turned to me to finish telling me what he wanted me to know. “I think you would like the people here, and you would be a good breeder. I can tell by looking.”

That was a real unusual compliment. I couldn’t quite think how to acknowledge it in an appropriate manner.

“I’m flattered that you think so, and I appreciate your offer. I’ll remember what you said.” I paused to gather my thoughts. “You know, the police will find out that Crystal was with Jason, if they haven’t already. They’ll come out here, too.”

“They won’t find nothing,” Calvin Norris said. His golden green eyes met mine with faint amusement. “They’ve been out here at other times; they’ll be out here again. They never learn a thing. I hope you find your brother. You need help, you let me know. I got a job at Norcross. I’m a steady man.”

“Thank you,” I said, and got into my car with a feeling of relief. I gave Calvin a serious nod as I backed out of Crystal’s driveway. So he worked at Norcross, the lumber processing plant. Norcross had good benefits, and they promoted from within. I’d had worse offers; that was for sure.

As I drove to work, I wondered if Crystal had been trying to get pregnant during her nights with Jason. It hadn’t seemed to bother Calvin at all to hear that his niece had had sex with a strange man. Alcide had told me that Were had to breed with Were to produce a baby that had the same trait, so the inhabitants of this little community were trying to diversify, apparently. Maybe these lesser Weres were trying to breed out; that is, have children by regular humans. That would be better than having a generation of Weres whose powers were so weak they couldn’t function successfully in their second nature, but who also couldn’t be content as regular people.

Getting to Merlotte’s was like driving from one century into another. I wondered how long the people of Hotshot had been clustered around the crossroads, what significance it had originally held for them. Though I couldn’t help but be a little curious, I found it was a real relief to discard these wonderings and return to the world as I knew it.

That afternoon, the little world of Merlotte’s Bar was very quiet. I changed, tied on my black apron, smoothed my hair, and washed my hands. Sam was behind the bar with his arms crossed over his chest, staring into space. Holly was carrying a pitcher of beer to a table where a lone stranger sat.

“How was Hotshot?” Sam asked, since we were alone at the bar.

“Very strange.”

He patted me on the shoulder. “Did you find out anything useful?”

“Actually, I did. I’m just not sure what it means.” Sam needed a haircut, I noticed; his curly red-gold hair formed an arc around his face in a kind of Renaissance-angel effect.

“Did you meet Calvin Norris?”

“I did. He got Crystal to talk to me, and he made me a most unusual offer.”

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