Sookie 04 Dead to the World (9 page)

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Authors: Charlaine Harris

BOOK: Sookie 04 Dead to the World
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“Stackhouse,” I said.

“Ms. Stackhouse here to see you,” Crispy said into an intercom.

“Oh, good!” Alcide sounded very happy, which was a relief.

Crispy was saying into the intercom, “Shall I send her back?” when Alcide burst through the door behind and to the left of her desk.

“Sookie!” he said, and he beamed at me. He stopped for a second, as if he couldn’t quite decide what he should do, and then he hugged me.

I felt like I was smiling all over. I hugged him back. I was so happy to see him! I thought he looked wonderful. Alcide is a tall man, with black hair that apparently can’t be tamed with a brush and comb, and he has a broad face and green eyes.

We’d dumped a body together, and that creates a bond.

He pulled gently on my braid. “Come on back,” he said in my ear, since Ms. Crispy was looking on with an indulgent smile. I was sure the indulgent part was for Alcide’s benefit. In fact, I knew it was, because she was thinking I didn’t look chic enough or polished enough to date a Herveaux, and she didn’t think Alcide’s dad (with whom she’d been sleeping for two years) would appreciate Alcide taking up with a no-account girl like me. Oops, one of those things I didn’t want to know. Obviously I wasn’t shielding myself hard enough. Bill had made me practice, and now that I didn’t see him anymore, I was getting sloppy. It wasn’t entirely my fault; Ms. Crispy was a clear broadcaster.

Alcide was not, since he’s a werewolf.

Alcide ushered me down a hall, which was nicely carpeted and hung with neutral pictures-insipid landscapes and garden scenes-which I figured some decorator (or maybe Ms. Crispy) had chosen. He showed me into his office, which had his name on the door. It was a big room, but not a grand or elegant one, because it was just chock-full of work stuff-plans and papers and hard hats and office equipment. Very utilitarian. A fax machine was humming, and set beside a stack of forms there was a calculator displaying figures.

“You’re busy. I shouldn’t have called,” I said, instantly cowed.

“Are you kidding? Your call is the best thing that’s happened to me all day!” He sounded so sincere that I had to smile again. “There’s something I have to say to you, something I didn’t tell you when I dropped your stuff off after you got hurt.” After I’d been beaten up by hired thugs. “I felt so bad about it that I’ve put off coming to Bon Temps to talk to you face-to-face.”

Omigod, he’d gotten back with his nasty rotten fiancée, Debbie Pelt. I was getting Debbie’s name from his brain.

“Yes?” I said, trying to look calm and open. He reached down and took my hand between his own large palms.

“I owe you a huge apology.”

Okay, that was unexpected. “How would that be?” I asked, looking up at him with narrowed eyes. I’d come here to spill my guts, but it was Alcide who was spilling his instead.

“That last night, at Club Dead,” he began, “when you needed my help and protection the most, I . . .”

I knew what was coming now. Alcide had changed into a wolf rather than staying human and helping me out of the bar after I’d gotten staked. I put my free hand across his mouth. His skin was so warm. If you’re used to touching vampires, you’ll know just how roasty a regular human can feel, and a Were even more so, since they run a few degrees hotter.

I felt my pulse quicken, and I knew he could tell, too. Animals are good at sensing excitement. “Alcide,” I said, “never bring that up. You couldn’t help it, and it all turned out okay, anyway.” Well, more or less-other than my heart breaking at Bill’s perfidy.

“Thanks for being so understanding,” he said, after a pause during which he looked at me intently. “I think I would have felt better if you’d been mad.” I believe he was wondering whether I was just putting a brave face on it or if I was truly sincere. I could tell he had an impulse to kiss me, but he wasn’t sure if I’d welcome such a move or even allow it.

Well, I didn’t know what I’d do, either, so I didn’t give myself the chance to find out.

“Okay, I’m furious with you, but I’m concealing it real well,” I said. He relaxed all over when he saw me smile, though it might be the last smile we’d share all day. “Listen, your office in the middle of day isn’t a good time and place to tell you the things I need to tell you,” I said. I spoke very levelly, so he’d realize I wasn’t coming on to him. Not only did I just plain old like Alcide, I thought he was one hell of a man-but until I was sure he was through with Debbie Pelt, he was off my list of guys I wanted to be around. The last I’d heard of Debbie, she’d been engaged to another shifter, though even that hadn’t ended her emotional involvement with Alcide.

I was not going to get in the middle of that-not with the grief caused by Bill’s infidelity still weighing heavily on my own heart.

“Let’s go to the Applebee’s down the road and have some coffee,” he suggested. Over the intercom, he told Crispy he was leaving. We went out through the back door.

It was about two o’clock by then, and the restaurant was almost empty. Alcide asked the young man who seated us to put us in a booth as far away from anyone else as we could get. I scooted down the bench on one side, expecting Alcide to take the other, but he slid in beside me. “If you want to tell secrets, this is as close as we can get,” he said.

We both ordered coffee, and Alcide asked the server to bring a small pot. I inquired after his dad while the server was puttering around, and Alcide inquired after Jason. I didn’t answer, because the mention of my brother’s name was enough to make me feel close to crying. When our coffee had come and the young man had left, Alcide said, “What’s up?”

I took a deep breath, trying to decide where to begin. “There’s a bad witch coven in Shreveport,” I said flatly. “They drink vampire blood, and at least a few of them are shifters.”

It was Alcide’s turn to take a deep breath.

I help up a hand, indicating there was more to come. “They’re moving into Shreveport to take over the vampires’ financial kingdom. They put a curse or a hex or something on Eric, and it took away his memory. They raided Fangtasia, trying to discover the day resting place of the vampires. They put some kind of spell on two of the waitresses, and one of them is in the hospital. The other one is dead.”

Alcide was already sliding his cell phone from his pocket.

“Pam and Chow have hidden Eric at my house, and I have to get back before dark to take care of him. And Jason is missing. I don’t know who took him or where he is or if he’s . . .”Alive.But I couldn’t say the word.

Alcide’s deep breath escaped in a whoosh, and he sat staring at me, the phone in his hand. He couldn’t decide whom to call first. I didn’t blame him.

“I don’t like Eric being at your house,” he said. “It puts you in danger.”

I was touched that his first thought was for my safety. “Jason asked for a lot of money for doing it, and Pam and Chow agreed,” I said, embarrassed.

“But Jason isn’t there to take the heat, and you are.”

Unanswerably true. But to give Jason credit, he certainly hadn’t planned it that way. I told Alcide about the blood on the dock. “Might be a red herring,” he said. “If the type matches Jason’s, then you can worry.” He took a sip of his coffee, his eyes focused inward. “I’ve got to make some calls,” he said.

“Alcide, are you the packmaster for Shreveport?”

“No, no, I’m nowhere near important enough.”

That didn’t seem possible to me, and I said as much. He took my hand.

“Packmasters are usually older than me,” he said. “And you have to be really tough. Really, really tough.”

“Do you have to fight to get to be packmaster?”

“No, you get elected, but the candidates have to be very strong and clever. There’s a sort of-well, you have a test you have to take.”

“Written? Oral?” Alcide looked relieved when he saw I was smiling. “More like an endurance test?” I said.

He nodded. “More like.”

“Don’t you think your packmaster should know about this?”

“Yes. What else?”

“Why would they be doing this? Why pick on Shreveport? If they have that much going for them, the vampire blood and the will to do really bad things, why not set up shop in a more prosperous city?”

“That’s a real good question.” Alcide was thinking hard. His green eyes squinted when he thought. “I’ve never heard of a witch having this much power. I never heard of a witch being a shifter. I tend to think it’s the first time this has ever happened.”

“The first time?”

“That a witch has ever tried to take control of a city, tried to take away the assets of the city’s supernatural community,” he said.

“How do witches stand in the supernatural pecking order?”

“Well, they’re humans who stay human.” He shrugged. “Usually, the Supes feel like witches are just wanna-bes. The kind you have to keep an eye on, since they practice magic and we’re magical creatures, but still . . .”

“Not a big threat?”

“Right. Looks like we might have to rethink that. Their leader takes vampire blood. Does she drain them herself?” He punched in a number and held the phone to his ear.

“I don’t know.”

“And what does she shift into?” Shape-shifters had a choice, but there was one animal each shifter had an affinity for, her habitual animal. A shape-shifter could call herself a “were-lynx” or a “were-bat,” if she was out of hearing range of a werewolf. Werewolves objected very strenuously to any other two-natured creatures who termed themselves “Were.”

“Well, she’s . . . like you,” I said. The Weres considered themselves the kings of the two-natured community. They only changed into one animal, and it was the best. The rest of the two-natured community responded by calling the wolves thugs.

“Oh, no.” Alcide was appalled. At that moment, his packmaster answered the phone.

“Hello, this is Alcide.” A silence. “I’m sorry to bother you when you were busy in the yard. Something important’s come up. I need to see you as soon as possible.” Another silence. “Yes, sir. With your permission, I’ll bring someone with me.” After a second or two, Alcide pressed a button to end the conversation. “Surely Bill knows where Pam and Chow live?” he asked me.

“I’m sure he does, but he’s not here to tell me about it.” If he would.

“And where is he?” Alcide’s voice was deceptively calm.

“He’s in Peru.”

I’d been looking down at my napkin, which I’d pleated into a fan. I glanced up at the man next to me to see him staring down at me with an expression of incredulity.

“He’sgone?He left you there alone?”

“Well, he didn’t know anything was going to happen,” I said, trying not to sound defensive, and then I thought,What am I saying?”Alcide, I haven’t seen Bill since I came back from Jackson, except when he came over to tell me he was leaving the country.”

“But she told me you were back with Bill,” Alcide said in a very strange voice.

“Who told you that?”

“Debbie. Who else?”

I’m afraid my reaction was not very flattering. “And you believedDebbie?”

“She said she’d stopped by Merlotte’s on her way over to see me, and she’d seen you and Bill acting very, ah, friendly while she was there.”

“And youbelieved her?” Maybe if I kept shifting the emphasis, he’d tell me he was just joking.

Alcide was looking sheepish now, or as sheepish as a werewolf can look.

“Okay, that was dumb,” he admitted. “I’ll deal with her.”

“Right.” Pardon me if I didn’t sound very convinced. I’d heard that before.

“Bill’s really in Peru?”

“As far as I know.”

“And you’re alone in the house with Eric?”

“Eric doesn’t know he’s Eric.”

“He doesn’t remember his identity?”

“Nope. He doesn’t remember his character, either, apparently.”

“That’s a good thing,” Alcide said darkly. He had never viewed Eric with any sense of humor, as I did. I’d always been leery of Eric, but I’d appreciated his mischief, his single-mindedness, and his flair. If you could say a vampire had joie de vivre, Eric had it in spades.

“Let’s go see the packmaster now,” Alcide said, obviously in a much grimmer mood. We slid out of the booth after he’d paid for the coffee, and without phoning in to work (”No point being the boss if I can’t vanish from time to time”), he helped me up into his truck and we took off back into Shreveport. I was sure Ms. Crispy would assume we’d checked into a motel or gone to Alcide’s apartment, but that was better than Ms. Crispy finding out her boss was a werewolf.

As we drove, Alcide told me that the packmaster was a retired Air Force colonel, formerly stationed at Barksdale Air Force Base in Bossier City, which flowed into Shreveport. Colonel Flood’s only child, a daughter, had married a local, and Colonel Flood had settled in the city to be close to his grandchildren.

“His wife is a Were, too?” I asked. If Mrs. Flood was also a Were, their daughter would be, too. If Weres can get through the first few months, they live a good long while, barring accidents.

“She was; she passed away a few months ago.”

Alcide’s packmaster lived in a modest neighborhood of ranch-style homes on smallish lots. Colonel Flood was picking up pine cones in his front yard. It seemed a very domestic and peaceable thing for a prominent werewolf to be doing. I’d pictured him in my head in an Air Force uniform, but of course he was wearing regular civilian outdoor clothes. His thick hair was white and cut very short, and he had a mustache that must have been trimmed with a ruler, it was so exact.

The colonel must have been curious after Alcide’s phone call, but he asked us to come inside in a calm sort of way. He patted Alcide on the back a lot; he was very polite to me.

The house was as neat as his mustache. It could have passed inspection.

“Can I get you a drink? Coffee? Hot chocolate? Soda?” The colonel gestured toward his kitchen as if there were a servant standing there alert for our orders.

“No, thank you,” I said, since I was awash with Applebee’s coffee. Colonel Flood insisted we sit in the company living room, which was an awkwardly narrow rectangle with a formal dining area at one end. Mrs. Flood had liked porcelain birds. She had liked them a lot. I wondered how the grandchildren fared in this room, and I kept my hands tucked in my lap for fear I’d jostle something.

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