Sookie Stackhouse 8-copy Boxed Set (109 page)

BOOK: Sookie Stackhouse 8-copy Boxed Set
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Witches with nearly the physical power of vampires—that seemed a very dangerous combination. I kept thinking of women when I thought of the coven that had moved into Shreveport, and I kept correcting myself. Men, Holly had said, were in the group.
I looked at the clock at the drive-through bank, and I saw it was just after noon. It would be full dark by a few minutes before six; Eric had gotten up a little earlier than that, at times. I could certainly go to Shreveport and come back by then. I couldn’t think of another plan, and I just couldn’t go home and sit and wait. Even wasting gas was better than going back to my house, though worry for Jason crawled up and down my spine. I could take the time to drop off the shotgun, but as long as it was unloaded and the shells were in a separate location, it should be legal enough to drive around with it.
For the first time in my life, I checked my rearview mirror to see if I was being followed. I am not up on spy techniques, but if someone was following me, I couldn’t spot him. I stopped and got gas and an ICEE, just to see if anyone pulled into the gas station behind me, but no one did. That was real good, I decided, hoping that Holly was safe.
As I drove, I had time to review my conversation with Holly. I realized it was the first one I’d ever had with Holly in which Danielle’s name had not come up once. Holly and Danielle had been joined at the hip since grade school. They probably had their periods at the same time. Danielle’s parents, cradle members of the Free Will Church of God’s Anointed, would have a fit if they knew, so it wasn’t any wonder that Holly had been so discreet.
Our little town of Bon Temps had stretched its gates open wide enough to tolerate vampires, and gay people didn’t have a very hard time of it anymore (kind of depending on how they expressed their sexual preference). However, I thought the gates might snap shut for Wiccans.
The peculiar and beautiful Claudine had told me that she was attracted to Bon Temps for its very strangeness. I wondered what else was out there, waiting to reveal itself.
5
C
ARLA RODRIGUEZ, MY MOST PROMISING LEAD, CAME first. I’d looked up the old address I had for Dovie, with whom I’d exchanged the odd Christmas card. I found the house with a little difficulty. It was well away from the shopping areas that were my only normal stops in Shreveport. The houses were small and close together where Dovie lived, and some of them were in bad repair.
I felt a distinct thrill of triumph when Carla herself answered the door. She had a black eye, and she was hungover, both signs that she’d had a big night the night before.
“Hey, Sookie,” she said, identifying me after a moment. “What’re you doing here? I was at Merlotte’s last night, but I didn’t see you there. You still working there?”
“I am. It was my night off.” Now that I was actually looking at Carla, I wasn’t sure how to explain to her what I needed. I decided to be blunt. “Listen, Jason’s not at work this morning, and I kind of wondered if he might be here with you.”
“Honey, I got nothing against you, but Jason’s the last man on earth I’d sleep with,” Carla said flatly. I stared at her, hearing that she was telling me truth. “I ain’t gonna stick my hand in the fire twice, having gotten burnt the first time. I did look around the bar a little, thinking I might see him, but if I had, I’d have turned the other way.”
I nodded. That seemed all there was to say on the subject. We exchanged a few more polite sentences, and I chatted with Dovie, who had a toddler balanced on her hip, but then it was time for me to leave. My most promising lead had just evaporated in the length of two sentences.
Trying to suppress my desperation, I drove to a busy corner filling station and parked, to check my Shreveport map. It didn’t take me long to figure out how to get from Dovie’s suburb to the vampire bar.
Fangtasia was in a shopping center close to Toys “R” Us. It opened at six P.M. year-round, but of course the vampires didn’t show up until full dark, which depended on the season. The front of Fangtasia was painted flat gray, and the neon writing was all in red. “Shreveport’s Premier Vampire Bar,” read the newly added, smaller writing under the exotic script of the bar’s name. I winced and looked away.
Two summers before, a small group of vamps from Oklahoma had tried to set up a rival bar in adjacent Bossier City. After one particularly hot, short August night, they’d never been seen again, and the building they’d been renovating had burned to the ground.
Tourists thought stories like this were actually amusing and colorful. It added to the thrill of ordering overpriced drinks (from human waitresses dressed in trailing black “vampire” outfits) while staring at real, honest-to-God, undead bloodsuckers. Eric made the Area Five vampires show up for this unappealing duty by giving them a set number of hours each week to present themselves at Fangtasia. Most of his underlings weren’t enthusiastic about exhibiting themselves, but it did give them a chance to hook up with fang-bangers who actually yearned for the chance to be bitten. Such encounters didn’t take place on the premises: Eric had rules about that. And so did the police department. The only legal biting that could take place between humans and vampires was between consenting adults, in private.
Automatically, I pulled around to the rear of the shopping center. Bill and I had almost always used the employee entrance. Back here, the door was just a gray door in a gray wall, with the name of the bar put on in stick-on letters from Wal-Mart. Right below that, a large, black, stenciled notice proclaimed STAFF ONLY. I lifted my hand to knock, and then I realized I could see that the inner dead bolt had not been employed.
The door was unlocked.
This was really, really bad.
Though it was broad daylight, the hair on the back of my neck stood up. Abruptly, I wished I had Bill at my back. I wasn’t missing his tender love, either. It’s probably a bad indicator of your lifestyle when you miss your ex-boyfriend because he’s absolutely lethal.
Though the public face of the shopping center was fairly busy, the service side was deserted. The silence was crawling with possibilities, and none of them was pleasant. I leaned my forehead against the cold gray door. I decided to get back in my old car and get the hell out of there, which would have been amazingly smart.
And I would have gone, if I hadn’t heard the moaning.
Even then, if I’d been able to spot a pay phone, I would’ve just called 911 and stayed outside until someone official showed up. But there wasn’t one in sight, and I couldn’t stand the possibility that someone needed my help real bad, and I’d withheld it because I was chicken.
There was a heavy garbage can right by the back door, and after I’d yanked the door open—standing aside for a second to avoid anything that might dart out—I maneuvered the can to hold the door ajar. I had goose bumps all over my arms as I stepped inside.
Windowless Fangtasia requires electric light, twenty-four /seven. Since none of these lights were on, the interior was just a dark pit. Winter daylight extended weakly down the hall that led to the bar proper. On the right were the doors to Eric’s office and the bookkeeper’s room. On the left was the door to the large storeroom, which also contained the employee bathroom. This hall ended in a heavy door to discourage any fun lovers from penetrating to the back of the club. This door, too, was open, for the first time in my memory. Beyond it lay the black silent cavern of the bar. I wondered if anything was sitting at those tables or huddled in those booths.
I was holding my breath so I could detect the least little noise. After a few seconds, I heard a scraping movement and another sound of pain, coming from the storeroom. Its door was slightly ajar. I took four silent steps to that door. My heart was pounding all the way up in my throat as I reached into the darkness to flip the light switch.
The glare made me blink.
Belinda, the only half-intelligent fang-banger I’d ever met, was lying on the storeroom floor in a curiously contorted position. Her legs were bent double, her heels pressed against her hips. There was no blood—in fact, no visible mark—on her. Apparently, she was having a giant and perpetual leg cramp.
I knelt beside Belinda, my eyes darting glances in all directions. I saw no other movement in the room, though its corners were obscured with stacks of liquor cartons and a coffin that was used as a prop in a show the vampires sometimes put on for special parties. The employee bathroom door was shut.
“Belinda,” I whispered. “Belinda, look at me.”
Belinda’s eyes were red and swollen behind their glasses, and her cheeks were wet with tears. She blinked and focused on my face.
“Are they still here?” I asked, knowing she’d understand that I meant “the people who did this to you.”
“Sookie,” she said hoarsely. Her voice was weak, and I wondered how long she’d lain there waiting for help. “Oh, thank God. Tell Master Eric we tried to hold them off.” Still role-playing, you notice, even in her agony: “Tell our chieftain we fought to the death”—you know the kind of thing.
“Who’d you try to hold off?” I asked sharply.
“The witches. They came in last night after we’d closed, after Pam and Chow had gone. Just Ginger and me . . .”
“What did they want?” I had time to notice that Belinda was still wearing her filmy black waitress outfit with the slit up the long skirt, and there were still puncture marks painted on her neck.
“They wanted to know where we’d put Master Eric. They seemed to think they’d done . . . something to him, and that we’d hidden him.” During her long pause, her face contorted, and I could tell she was in terrible pain, but I couldn’t tell what was wrong with her. “My legs,” she moaned. “Oh . . .”
“But you didn’t know, so you couldn’t tell them.”
“I would never betray our master.”
And Belinda was the one with sense.
“Was anyone here besides Ginger, Belinda?” But she was so deep into a spasm of suffering that she couldn’t answer. Her whole body was rigid with pain, that low moan tearing out of her throat again.
I called 911 from Eric’s office, since I knew the location of the phone there. The room had been tossed, and some frisky witch had spray painted a big red pentagram on one of the walls. Eric was going to love that.
I returned to Belinda to tell her the ambulance was coming. “What’s wrong with your legs?” I asked, scared of the answer.
“They made the muscle in the back of my legs pull up, like it was half as long. . . .” And she began moaning again. “It’s like one of those giant cramps you get when you’re pregnant.”
It was news to me that Belinda had ever been pregnant.
“Where’s Ginger?” I asked, when her pain seemed to have ebbed a little.
“She was in the bathroom.”
Ginger, a pretty strawberry blonde, as dumb as a rock, was still there. I don’t think they’d meant to kill her. But they’d put a spell on her legs like they’d done to Belinda’s, it looked like; her legs were drawn up double in the same peculiar and painful way, even in death. Ginger had been standing in front of the sink when she’d crumpled, and her head had hit the lip of the sink on her way down. Her eyes were sightless and her hair was matted with some clotted blood that had oozed from the depression in her temple.
There was nothing to be done. I didn’t even touch Ginger; she was so obviously dead. I didn’t say anything about her to Belinda, who was in too much agony to understand, anyway. She had a couple more moments of lucidity before I took off. I asked her where to find Pam and Chow so I could warn them, and Belinda said they just showed up at the bar when it became dark.
She also said the woman who’d worked the spell was a witch named Hallow, and she was almost six feet tall, with short brown hair and a black design painted on her face.
That should make her easy to identify.
“She told me she was as strong as a vampire, too,” Belinda gasped. “You see . . .” Belinda pointed beyond me. I whirled, expecting an attack. Nothing that alarming happened, but what I saw was almost as disturbing as what I’d imagined. It was the handle of the dolly the staff used to wheel cases of drinks around. The long metal handle had been twisted into a U.
“I know Master Eric will kill her when he returns,” Belinda said falteringly after a minute, the words coming out in jagged bursts because of the pain.
“Sure he will,” I said stoutly. I hesitated, feeling crummy beyond words. “Belinda, I have to go because I don’t want the police to keep me here for questioning. Please don’t mention my name. Just say a passerby heard you, okay?”
“Where’s Master Eric? Is he really missing?”
“I have no idea,” I said, forced to lie. “I have to get out of here.”
“Go,” Belinda said, her voice ragged. “We’re lucky you came in at all.”
I had to get out of there. I knew nothing about what had happened at the bar, and being questioned for hours would cost me time I couldn’t afford, with my brother missing.
Back in my car and on my way out of the shopping center, I passed the police cars and the ambulance as they headed in. I’d wiped the doorknob clean of my fingerprints. Other than that, I couldn’t think of what I’d touched and what I hadn’t, no matter how carefully I reviewed my actions. There’d be a million prints there, anyway; gosh, it was a bar.
After a minute, I realized I was just driving with no direction. I was overwhelmingly rattled. I pulled over into yet another filling station parking lot and looked at the pay phone longingly. I could call Alcide, ask him if he knew where Pam and Chow spent their daytime hours. Then I could go there and leave a message or something, warn them about what had happened.
I made myself take some deep breaths and think hard about what I was doing. It was extremely unlikely that the vamps would give a Were the address of their daytime resting place. This was not information that vampires passed out to anyone who asked. Alcide had no love for the vamps of Shreveport, who’d held his dad’s gambling debt over Alcide’s head until he complied with their wishes. I knew that if I called, he’d come, because he was just a nice guy. But his involvement could have serious consequences for his family and his business. However, if this Hallow really
was
a triple threat—a Were witch who drank vampire blood—she was very dangerous, and the Weres of Shreveport should know about her. Relieved I’d finally made up my mind, I found a pay phone that worked, and I got Alcide’s card out of its slot in my billfold.

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