Sookie Stackhouse 8-copy Boxed Set

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Sookie Stackhouse 8-copy Boxed Set Page 133

by Charlaine Harris


  “Yes,” he said. “You.”

  That left me with nowhere to go, conversationally.

  I kept on going and unloaded the glasses from my tray so absently that I almost dropped one. I couldn’t think of when I’d been so flustered.

  “Business or personal?” I asked, the next time I was close.

  “Both,” he said.

  A little of the pleasure drained away when I heard about the business part, but I was left with a sharpened attention . . . and that was a good thing. You needed all your wits honed when you dealt with the supes. Supernatural beings had goals and desires that regular people didn’t fathom. I knew that, since for my entire life I have been the unwilling repository for human, “normal,” goals and desires.

  When Quinn was one of the few people left in the bar—besides the other barmaids and Sam—he stood and looked at me expectantly. I went over, smiling brightly, as I do when I’m tense. I was interested to find that Quinn was almost equally tense. I could feel the tightness in his brain pattern.

  “I’ll see you at your house, if that’s agreeable to you.” He looked down at me seriously. “If that makes you nervous, we can meet somewhere else. But I want to talk to you tonight, unless you’re exhausted.”

  That had been put politely enough. Arlene and Danielle were trying hard not to stare—well, they were trying hard to stare when Quinn wouldn’t catch them—but Sam had turned his back to fiddle around with something behind the bar, ignoring the other shifter. He was behaving very badly.

  Quickly I processed Quinn’s request. If he came out to my house, I’d be at his mercy. I live in a remote place. My nearest neighbor is my ex, Bill, and he lives clear across the cemetery. On the other hand, if Quinn had been a regular date of mine, I’d let him take me home without a second thought. From what I could catch from his thoughts, he meant me no harm.

  “All right,” I said, finally. He relaxed, and smiled his big smile at me again.

  I whisked his empty glass away and became aware that three pairs of eyes were watching me disapprovingly. Sam was disgruntled, and Danielle and Arlene couldn’t understand why anyone would prefer me to them, though Quinn gave even those two experienced barmaids pause. Quinn gave off a whiff of otherness that must be perceptible to even the most prosaic human. “I’ll be through in just a minute,” I said.

  “Take your time.”

  I finished filling the little china rectangle on each table with packages of sugar and sweetener. I made sure the napkin holders were full and checked the salt and pepper shakers. I was soon through. I gathered my purse from Sam’s office and called good-bye to him.

  Quinn pulled out to follow me in a dark green pickup truck. Under the parking lot lights, the truck looked brand spanking new, with gleaming tires and hubcaps, an extended cab, and a covered bed. I’d bet good money it was loaded with options. Quinn’s truck was the fanciest vehicle I’d seen in a long time. My brother, Jason, would have drooled, and he’s got pink and aqua swirls painted on the side of his truck.

  I drove south on Hummingbird Road and turned left into my driveway. After following the drive through two acres of woods, I reached the clearing where our old family home stood. I’d turned the outside lights on before I left, and there was a security light on the electric pole that was automatic, so the clearing was well lit. I pulled around back to park behind the house, and Quinn parked right beside me.

  He got out of his truck and looked around him. The security light showed him a tidy yard. The driveway was in excellent repair, and I’d recently repainted the tool shed in the back. There was a propane tank, which no amount of landscaping could disguise, but my grandmother had planted plenty of flower beds to add to the ones my family had established over the hundred-and-fifty-odd years the family had lived here. I’d lived on this land, in this house, from age seven, and I loved it.

  There’s nothing grand about my home. It started out as a family farmhouse and it’s been enlarged and remodeled over the years. I keep it clean, and I try to keep the yard in good trim. Big repairs are beyond my skills, but Jason sometimes helps me out. He hadn’t been happy when Gran left me the house and land, but he’d moved to our parents’ house when he’d turned twenty-one, and I’d never made him pay me for my half of that property. Gran’s will had seemed fair to me. It had taken Jason a while to admit that had been the right thing for her to do.

  We’d become closer in the past few months.

  I unlocked the back door and led Quinn into the kitchen. He looked around him curiously as I hung my jacket on one of the chairs pushed under the table in the middle of the kitchen where I ate all my meals.

  “This isn’t finished,” Quinn said.

  The cabinets were resting on the floor, ready to be mounted. After that, the whole room would have to be painted and the countertops installed. Then I’d be able to rest easy.

  “My old kitchen got burned down a few weeks ago,” I said. “The builder had a cancellation and got this done in record time, but then when the cabinets didn’t arrive on time, he put his crew on another job. By the time the cabinets got here, they were almost through there. I guess they’ll come back eventually.” In the meantime, at least I could enjoy being back in my own home. Sam had been tremendously kind in letting me live in one of his rent houses (and gosh, I’d enjoyed the level floors and the new plumbing and the neighbors), but there was nothing like being home.

  The new stove was in, so I could cook, and I’d laid a sheet of plywood over the top of the cabinets so I could use it as a work station while I was cooking. The new refrigerator gleamed and hummed quietly, quite unlike the one Gran had had for thirty years. The newness of the kitchen struck me every time I crossed the back porch—now larger and enclosed—to unlock the new, heavier back door, with its peephole and deadbolt.

  “This is where the old house begins,” I said, going from the kitchen into the hall. Only a few boards had had to be replaced in the floor in the rest of the house, and everything was freshly cleaned and painted. Not only had the walls and ceilings been smoke-stained, but I’d had to eradicate the burned smell. I’d replaced some curtains, tossed out a throw rug or two, and cleaned, cleaned, cleaned. This project had occupied every extra waking moment I’d had for quite a while.

  “A good job,” Quinn commented, studying how the two parts had been united.

  “Come into the living room,” I said, pleased. I enjoyed showing someone the house now that I knew the upholstery was clean, there were no dust bunnies, and the glass over the pictures was simply gleaming. The living room curtains had been replaced, something I’d wanted to do for at least a year.

  God bless insurance, and God bless the money I’d earned hiding Eric from an enemy. I’d gouged a hole in my savings account, but I’d had it when I needed it, and that was something for which I could be grateful.

  The fireplace was laid ready for a fire, but it was just too warm to justify lighting one. Quinn sat in an armchair, and I sat across from him. “Can I get you a drink—a beer, or some coffee or iced tea?” I asked, conscious of my role as hostess.

  “No, thanks,” he said. He smiled at me. “I’ve wanted to see you again since I met you in Shreveport.”

  I tried to keep my eyes on him. The impulse to look down at my feet or my hands was almost overwhelming. His eyes really were the deep, deep purple I remembered. “That was a tough day for the Herveauxes,” I said.

  “You dated Alcide for a while,” he observed, in a neutral kind of voice.

  I thought of a couple of possible answers. I settled for, “I haven’t seen him since the packmaster contest.”

  He smiled widely. “So he’s not your steady?”

  I shook my head.

  “Then you’re unattached?”

  “Yes.”

  “No toes I’d be stepping on?”

  I tried to smile, but my effort was not a happy one. “I didn’t say that.” There were toes. Those toes wouldn’t be happy piggies. But they didn’t have any right to
be in the way.

  “I guess I can handle some disgruntled exes. So will you go out with me?”

  I looked at him for a second or two, scouring my mind for considerations. From his brain I was getting nothing but hopefulness: I saw no deceit or self-serving. When I examined the reservations I had, they dissolved into nothing.

  “Yes,” I said. “I will.” His beautiful white smile sparked me to smile in return, and this time my smile was genuine. “There,” he said. “We’ve negotiated the pleasure part. Now for the business part, which is unrelated.”

  “Okay,” I said, and put my smile away. I hoped I’d have occasion to haul it out later, but any business he would have with me would be supe-related, and therefore cause for anxiety.

  “You’ve heard about the regional summit?”

  The vampire summit: the kings and queens from a group of states would gather to confer about . . . vampire stuff. “Eric said something about it.”

  “Has he hired you to work there yet?”

  “He mentioned he might need me.”

  “Because the Queen of Louisiana found out I was in the area, and she asked me to request your services. I think her bid would have to cancel out Eric’s.”

  “You’d have to ask Eric about that.”

  “I think you would have to tell him. The queen’s wishes are Eric’s orders.”

  I could feel my face fall. I didn’t want to tell Eric, the sheriff of Louisiana’s Area Five, anything. Eric’s feelings for me were confused. I can assure you, vamps don’t like feeling confused. The sheriff had lost his memory of the short time he’d spent hiding in my house. That memory gap had driven Eric nuts; he liked being in control, and that meant being cognizant of his own actions every second of the night. So he’d waited until he could perform an action on my behalf, and as payment for that action he’d demanded my account of what had passed while he stayed with me.

  Maybe I’d carried the frankness thing a little too far. Eric wasn’t exactly surprised that we’d had sex; but he was stunned when I told him he’d offered to give up his hard-won position in the vampire hierarchy and to come live with me.

  If you knew Eric, you’d know that was pretty much intolerable to him.

  He didn’t talk to me any more. He stared at me when we met, as if he were trying to resurrect his own memories of that time, to prove me wrong. It made me sad to see that the relationship we’d had—not the secret happiness of the few days he’d spent with me, but the entertaining relationship between a man and a woman who had little in common but a sense of humor—didn’t seem to exist any more.

  I knew it was up to me to tell him that his queen had superseded him, but I sure didn’t want to.

  “Smile’s all gone,” Quinn observed. He looked serious himself.

  “Well, Eric is a . . .” I didn’t know how to finish the sentence. “He’s a complicated guy,” I said lamely.

  “What shall we do on our first date?” Quinn asked. So he was a good subject changer.

  “We could go to the movies,” I said, to start the ball rolling.

  “We could. Afterward, we could have dinner in Shreveport. Maybe Ralph and Kacoo’s,” he suggested.

  “I hear their crawfish etouffee is good,” I said, keeping the conversational ball rolling.

  “And who doesn’t like crawfish etouffee? Or we could go bowling.”

  My great-uncle had been an avid bowler. I could see his feet, in their bowling shoes, right in front of me. I shuddered. “Don’t know how.”

  “We could go to a hockey game.”

  “That might be fun.”

  “We could cook together in your kitchen, and then watch a movie on your DVD.”

  “Better put that one on a back burner.” That sounded a little too personal for a first date, not that I’ve had that much experience with first dates. But I know that proximity to a bedroom is never a good idea unless you’re sure you wouldn’t mind if the flow of the evening took you in that direction.

  “We could go see The Producers. That’s coming to the Strand.”

  “Really?” Okay, I was excited now. Shreveport’s restored Strand Theater hosted traveling stage productions ranging from plays to ballet. I’d never seen a real play before. Wouldn’t that be awfully expensive? Surely he wouldn’t have suggested it if he couldn’t afford it. “Could we?”

  He nodded, pleased at my reaction. “I can make the reservations for this weekend. What about your work schedule?”

  “I’m off Friday night,” I said happily. “And, um, I’ll be glad to chip in for my ticket.”

  “I invited you. My treat,” Quinn said firmly. I could read from his thoughts that he thought it was surprising that I had offered. And touching. Hmmm. I didn’t like that. “Okay then. It’s settled. When I get back to my laptop, I’ll order the tickets online. I know there are some good ones left, because I was checking out our options before I drove over.”

  Naturally, I began to wonder about appropriate clothes. But I stowed that away for later. “Quinn, where do you actually live?”

  “I have a house outside Memphis.”

  “Oh,” I said, thinking that seemed a long way away for a dating relationship.

  “I’m partner in a company called Special Events. We’re a sort of secret offshoot of Extreme(ly Elegant) Events. You’ve seen the logo, I know. E(E)E?” He made the parentheses with his fingers. I nodded. E(E)E did a lot of very fancy event designing nationally. “There are four partners who work full-time for Special Events, and we each employ a few people full- or part-time. Since we travel a lot, we have places we use all over the country; some of them are just rooms in houses of friends or associates, and some of them are real apartments. The place I stay in this area is in Shreveport, a guesthouse in back of the mansion of a shifter.”

  I’d learned a lot about him in two minutes flat. “So you put on events in the supernatural world, like the contest for packmaster.” That had been a dangerous job and one requiring a lot of specialized paraphernalia. “But what else is there to do? A packmaster’s contest can only come up every so now and then. How much do you have to travel? What other special events can you stage?”

  “I generally handle the Southeast, Georgia across to Texas.” He sat forward in his chair, his big hands resting on his knees. “Tennessee south through Florida. In those states, if you want to stage a fight for packmaster, or a rite of ascension for a shaman or witch, or a vampire hierarchal wedding—and you want to do it right, with all the trimmings—you come to me.”

  I remembered the extraordinary pictures in Alfred Cumberland’s photo gallery. “So there’s enough of that to keep you busy?”

  “Oh, yes,” he said. “Of course, some of it is seasonal. Vamps get married in the winter, since the nights are so much longer. I did a hierarchal wedding in New Orleans in January, this past year. And then, some of the occasions are tied to the Wiccan calendar. Or to puberty.”

  I couldn’t begin to imagine the ceremonies he arranged, but a description would have to wait for another occasion. “And you have three partners who do this full-time, too? I’m sorry. I’m just grilling you, seems like. But this is such an interesting way to make a living.”

  “I’m glad you think so. You gotta have a lot of people skills, and you gotta have a mind for details and organization.”

  “You have to be really, really, tough,” I murmured, adding my own thought.

  He smiled, a slow smile. “No problem there.”

  Yep, didn’t seem as though toughness was a problem for Quinn.

  “And you have to be good at sizing up people, so you can steer clients in the right direction, leave them happy with the job you’ve done,” he said.

  “Can you tell me some stories? Or is there a client confidentiality clause with your jobs?”

  “Customers sign a contract, but none of them have ever requested a confidentiality clause,” he said. “Special Events, you don’t get much chance to talk about what you do, obviously, since the clients a
re mostly still traveling beneath the surface of the regular world. It’s actually kind of a relief to talk about it. I usually have to tell a girl I’m a consultant, or something bogus like that.”

  “It’s a relief to me, too, to be able to talk without worrying I’m spilling secrets.”

  “Then it’s lucky we found each other, huh?” Again, the white grin. “I’d better let you get some rest, since you just got off work.” Quinn got up and stretched after he’d reached his full height. It was an impressive gesture on someone as muscular as he was. It was just possible Quinn knew how excellent he looked when he stretched. I glanced down to hide my smile. I didn’t mind one bit that he wanted to impress me.

  He reached for my hand and pulled me to my feet in one easy motion. I could feel his focus centered on me. His own hand was warm and hard. He could crack my bones with it.

  The average woman would not be pondering how fast her date could kill her, but I’ll never be an average woman. I’d realized that by the time I became old enough to understand that not every child could understand what her family members were thinking about her. Not every little girl knew when her teachers liked her, or felt contempt for her, or compared her to her brother (Jason had an easy charm even then). Not every little girl had a funny uncle who tried to get her alone at every family gathering.

  So I let Quinn hold my hand, and I looked up into his pansy-purple eyes, and for a minute I indulged myself by letting his admiration wash over me like a bath of approval.

  Yes, I knew he was a tiger. And I don’t mean in bed, though I was willing to believe he was ferocious and powerful there, too.

  When he kissed me good night, his lips brushed my cheek, and I smiled.

  I like a man who knows when to rush things . . . and when not to.

  3

  I GOT A PHONE CALL THE NEXT NIGHT AT MERLOTTE’S. Of course, it’s not a good thing to get phone calls at work; Sam doesn’t like it, unless there’s some kind of home emergency. Since I get the least of any of the barmaids—in fact, I could count the calls I’d gotten at work on one hand—I tried not to feel guilty when I gestured to Sam that I’d take the call back at the phone on his desk.

 

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