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.”
“What’s that?”
“I’ll tell you some other time.” For the life of me, I couldn’t figure out how to phrase it. I looked down at my hands, which were busy rinsing out a beer mug, and I could feel my cheeks burning.
“Calvin’s an okay guy, as far as I know,” Sam said slowly. “He works at Norcross, and he’s a crew leader. Good insurance, retirement package, everything. Some of the other guys from Hotshot own a welding shop. I hear they do good work. But I don’t know what goes on in Hotshot after they go home at night, and I don’t think anyone else does, either. Did you know Sheriff Dowdy, John Dowdy? He was sheriff before I moved here, I think.”
“Yeah, I remember him. He hauled Jason in one time for vandalism. Gran had to go get him out of jail. Sheriff Dowdy read Jason a lecture that had him scared straight, at least for a while.”
“Sid Matt told me a story one night. It seems that one spring, John Dowdy went out to Hotshot to arrest Calvin Norris’s oldest brother, Carlton.”
“For what?” Sid Matt Lancaster was an old and well-known lawyer.
“Statutory rape. The girl was willing, and she was even experienced, but she was underage. She had a new stepdad, and he decided Carlton had disrespected him.”
No politically correct stance could cover all those circumstances. “So what happened?”
“No one knows. Late that night, John Dowdy’s patrol car was found halfway back into town from Hotshot. No one in it. No blood, no fingerprints. He hasn’t ever been seen since. No one in Hotshot remembered seeing him that day, they said.”
“Like Jason,” I said bleakly. “He just vanished.”
“But Jason was at his own house, and according to you, Crystal didn’t seem to be involved.”
I threw off the grip of the strange little story. “You’re right. Did anyone ever find out what happened to Sheriff Dowdy?”
“No. But no one ever saw Carlton Norris again, either.”
Now, that was the interesting part. “And the moral of this story is?”
“That the people of Hotshot take care of their own justice.”
“Then you want them on your side.” I extracted my own moral from the story.
“Yes,” Sam said. “You definitely want them on your side. You don’t remember this? It was around fifteen years ago.”
“I was coping with my own troubles then,” I explained. I’d been an orphaned nine-year-old, coping with my growing telepathic powers.
Shortly after that, people began to stop by the bar on their way home from work. Sam and I didn’t get a chance to talk the rest of the evening, which was fine with me. I was very fond of Sam, who’d often had a starring role in some of my most private fantasies, but at this point, I had so much to worry about I just couldn’t take on any more.
That night, I discovered that some people thought Jason’s disappearance improved Bon Temps society. Among these were Andy Bellefleur and his sister, Portia, who stopped by Merlotte’s for supper, since their grandmother Caroline was having a dinner party and they were staying out of the way. Andy was a police detective and Portia was a lawyer, and they were both not on my list of favorite people. For one thing (a kind of sour-grapey thing), when Bill had found out they were his descendants, he’d made an elaborate plan to give the Bellefleurs money anonymously, and they’d really enjoyed their mysterious legacy to the hilt. But they couldn’t stand Bill himself, and it made me constantly irritated to see their new cars and expensive clothes and the new roof on the Bellefleur mansion, when they dissed Bill all the time—and me, too, for being Bill’s girlfriend.
Andy had been pretty nice to me before I started dating Bill. At least he’d been civil and left a decent tip. I’d just been invisible to Portia, who had her own share of personal woes. She’d come up with a suitor, I’d heard, and I wondered maliciously if that might not be due to the sudden upsurge in the Bellefleur family fortunes. I also wondered, at times, if Andy and Portia got happy in direct proportion to my misery. They were in fine fettle this winter evening, both tucking into their hamburgers with great zest.
“Sorry about your brother, Sookie,” Andy said, as I refilled his tea glass.
I looked down at him, my face expressionless.
Liar,
I thought. After a second, Andy’s eyes darted uneasily away from mine to light on the saltshaker, which seemed to have become peculiarly fascinating.
“Have you seen Bill lately?” Portia asked, patting her mouth with a napkin. She was trying to break the uneasy silence with a pleasant query, but I just got angrier.
“No,” I said. “Can I get you all anything else?”
“No, thanks, we’re just fine,” she said quickly. I spun on my heel and walked away. Then my mouth puckered in a smile. Just as I was thinking,
Bitch,
Portia was thinking,
What a bitch.
Her ass is hot,
Andy chimed in. Gosh, telepathy. What a blast. I wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemy. I envied people who only heard with their ears.
Kevin and Kenya came in, too, very carefully not drinking. Theirs was a partnership that had given the people of Bon Temps much hilarity. Lily white Kevin was thin and reedy, a long-distance runner; all the equipment he had to wear on his uniform belt seemed almost too much for him to carry. His partner, Kenya, was two inches taller, pounds heavier, and fifteen shades darker. The men at the bar had been putting bets down for two years on whether or not they’d become lovers—of course, the guys at the bar didn’t put it as nicely as that.
I was unwillingly aware that Kenya (and her handcuffs and nightstick) featured in all too many patrons’ daydreams, and I also knew that the men who teased and derided Kevin the most mercilessly were the ones who had the most lurid fantasies. As I carried hamburger baskets over to Kevin and Kenya’s table, I could tell that Kenya was wondering whether she should suggest to Bud Dearborn that he call in the tracking dogs from a neighboring parish in the search for Jason, while Kevin was worried about his mother’s heart, which had been acting up more than usual lately.
“Sookie,” Kevin said, after I’d brought them a bottle of ketchup, “I meant to tell you, some people came by the police department today putting out posters about a vampire.”
“I saw one at the grocery,” I said.
“I realize that just because you were dating a vampire, you aren’t an expert,” Kevin said carefully, because Kevin always did his best to be nice to me, “but I wondered if you’d seen this vamp. Before he disappeared, I mean.”
Kenya was looking up at me, too, her dark eyes examining me with great interest. Kenya was thinking I always seemed to be on the fringes of bad things that happened in Bon Temps, without being bad myself (thanks, Kenya). She was hoping for my sake that Jason was alive. Kevin was thinking I’d always been nice to him and Kenya; and he was thinking he wouldn’t touch me with a ten-foot pole. I sighed, I hoped imperceptibly. They were waiting for an answer. I hesitated, wondering what my best choice was. The truth is always easiest to remember.
“Sure, I’ve seen him before. Eric owns the vampire bar in Shreveport,” I said. “I saw him when I went there with Bill.”
“You haven’t seen him recently?”
“I sure didn’t abduct him from Fangtasia,” I said, with quite a lot of sarcasm in my voice.
Kenya gave me a sour look, and I didn’t blame her. “No one said you did,” she told me, in a “Don’t give me any trouble” kind of voice. I shrugged and drifted away.
I had plenty to do, since some people were still eating supper (and some were drinking it), and some regulars were drifting in after eating at home. Holly was equally busy, and when one of the men who worked for the phone company spilled his beer on the floor, she had to go get the mop and bucket. She was running behind on her tables when the door opened. I saw her putting Sid Matt Lancaster’s order in front of him, with her back to the door. So she missed the next entrance, but I didn’t. The young man Sam had hired to bus the tables during our busy hour was occupied with clearing two tables pulled together that had held a large party of parish workers, and so I was clearing off the Bellefleurs’ table. Andy was chatting with Sam while he waited for Portia, who’d visited the ladies’ room. I’d just pocketed my tip, which was fifteen percent of the bill to the penny. The Bellefleur tipping habits had improved—slightly—with the Bellefleur fortunes. I glanced up when the door was held open long enough for a cold gust of air to chill me.
The woman coming in was tall and so slim and broad-shouldered that I checked her chest, just to be sure I’d registered her gender correctly. Her hair was short and thick and brown, and she was wearing absolutely no makeup. There was a man with her, but I didn’t see him until she stepped to one side. He was no slouch in the size department himself, and his tight T-shirt revealed arms more developed than any I’d ever seen. Hours in the gym; no, years in the gym. His chestnut hair trailed down to his shoulders in tight curls, and his beard and mustache were perceptibly redder. Neither of the two wore coats, though it was definitely coat weather. The newcomers walked over to me.
“Where’s the owner?” the woman asked.
“Sam. He’s behind the bar,” I said, looking down as soon as I could and wiping the table all over again. The man had looked at me curiously; that was normal. As they brushed past me, I saw that he carried some posters under his arm and a staple gun. He’d stuck his hand through a roll of masking tape, so it bounced on his left wrist.
I glanced over at Holly. She’d frozen, the cup of coffee in her hand halfway down on its way to Sid Matt Lancaster’s placemat. The old lawyer looked up at her, followed her stare to the couple making their way between the tables to the bar. Merlotte’s, which had been on the quiet and peaceful side, was suddenly awash in tension. Holly set down the cup without burning Mr. Lancaster and spun on her heel, going through the swinging door to the kitchen at warp speed.
I didn’t need any more confirmation on the identity of the woman.
The two reached Sam and began a low-voiced conversation with him, with Andy listening in just because he was in the vicinity. I passed by on my way to take the dirty dishes to the hatch, and I heard the woman say (in a deep, alto voice) “. . . put up these posters in town, just in case anyone spots him.”
This was Hallow, the witch whose pursuit of Eric had caused such an upset. She, or a member of her coven, was probably the murderer of Adabelle Yancy. This was the woman who might have taken my brother, Jason. My head began pounding as if there were a little demon inside trying to break out with a hammer.
No wonder Holly was in such a state and didn’t want Hallow to glimpse her. She’d been to Hallow’s little meeting in Shreveport, and her coven had rejected Hallow’s invitation.
“Of course,” Sam said. “Put up one on this wall.” He indicated a blank spot by the door that led back to the bathrooms and his office.
Holly stuck her head out the kitchen door, glimpsed Hallow, ducked back in. Hallow’s eyes flicked over to the door, but not in time to glimpse Holly, I hoped.