The Sookie Stackhouse Companion

The Sookie Stackhouse Companion by Charlaine Harris Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Sookie Stackhouse Companion by Charlaine Harris Read Free Book Online
Authors: Charlaine Harris
didn’t call Eric.”
    I was a little shocked. “I wouldn’t do that, Quinn.”
    “You didn’t protest too much when Bill showed up at your house and beat the hell out of me the last time I tried to talk to you.”
    Eric had ordered Bill to intervene, since he’d banned Quinn from his area. “Excuse me,” I said sharply. “You’ll remember I was knocked unconscious! What happened to putting personal issues aside? You got Sam’s number? You got the same cell as you did?”
    We swapped phone numbers before Quinn returned to the building. I had to face the fact that there was nothing to keep me from driving back to Bernie’s house. As I negotiated the streets of Wright, I found myself looking at each person I passed. Who was our friend? Who was our enemy?
    A lightning bolt of a thought hit me. I was almost all human. I could legitimately claim this wasn’t my fight.
    No, I couldn’t. I’d be as bad as Deidra’s bridesmaids.
    I’d been Sam’s friend for years, and his family was human, too. I’d already taken a side, and there was no point in reviewing it.
    I pondered Quinn’s appearance. His story had amazed me. He’d gone to a huge amount of trouble and inconvenience to rendezvous with me here in Texas, and he’d only been acting on a tip.
    I’d had a brief but ardent relationship with Quinn before I’d broken up with him—awkwardly and painfully—over family issues . . . his family issues. I’d been feeling guilty ever since, though I still thought I’d made the wise decision. Quinn seemed to think we had more to discuss, and possibly he was right, but I wanted to get through one crisis at a time.
    I looked at the dashboard clock when I parked in front of the house. I’d been gone only forty-five minutes. I sure felt a lot more than forty-five minutes older. I got out and crossed the yard to the front door.
    As I came close to the damn sign, I ripped it out of the ground. Moving with a lot more velocity, I strode over to the neighbor’s house. Jim Collins was looking out of his open front window when I jabbed the stake into his dirt. Well, yee-haw. “You damn murderer ,” I said, and then I made myself walk away before I climbed through the window to choke Collins.
    His creased face had been shocked and almost frightened, and for a blinding second I’d felt sorry that he didn’t have a weak heart. After seeing the pathetic heaps of blood and fur, I would have enjoyed the sensation of scaring him to death.
    I didn’t knock on Bernie’s door since I was staying there, and once I was inside, I went right to the kitchen at the back of the house. Sam, Bernie, and Craig were all there. They looked eerily alike as I appeared in the kitchen: apprehensive, upset, unhappy.
    “All the dogs at the shelter are dead,” I said. “They were shot.”
    Sam rose to take a tentative step toward me, and I could tell he wanted to offer me comfort. But I was too angry to accept it, and I held the palm of my hand toward him to let him know that.
    “I moved the sign into Jim Collins’s yard,” I said. “That man’s a murderer.” My rage deflated just a little.
    “Oh, Sookie,” Bernie began, sounding both alarmed and a little reproachful, and I held up the same palm to her.
    “It was him,” I said. “He was not the only one, but it was him.”
    She sat back and looked at me with more objective attention than she’d given me since I’d met her. “And you know this how?” she said.
    “He’s condemned by his own words, from his own brain.”
    “Sookie can read minds, Mom,” Sam said, and after a second’s thought, Bernie flushed a dull red. She had thought a few unflattering things about me. I’m a big girl; I can live with that. It wasn’t like I hadn’t heard plenty of similar things before.
    “Shapeshifters are hard to read, if that makes you feel any better,” I offered, and I sat down at the table with a thud. As the rage oozed out of me, it left an empty space, an aching hole. I looked

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