Sookie Stackhouse 8-copy Boxed Set (271 page)

“Not necessary, Mr. Carmichael.”
“Please, call me Cope.”
“Um-hmmm. Okay, let me get your scotch.”
I didn’t know a single malt scotch from a hole in the ground, but Sam did, of course, and he gave me a shining clean glass with a very respectable shot of it. I serve liquor, but I seldom drink it. Most folks around here drink the real obvious stuff: beer, bourbon and Coke, gin and tonic, Jack Daniel’s.
I set the drink and cocktail napkin on the table in front of Mr. Carmichael, and I returned with a little bowl of snack mix.
Then I left him alone, because I had other people to tend to. But I kept track of him. I noticed Sam was keeping a careful eye on Amelia’s dad, too. But everyone else was too involved in their own conversations and their own drinking to give much mind to the stranger, one not nearly as interesting as Claude and Claudine.
In a moment when I wasn’t looking, a vampire joined Cope. I don’t think anyone else knew what she was. She was a real recent vamp, by which I mean she’d died in the past fifty years, and she had prematurely silver hair that was cut in a modest chin-length style. She was small, maybe five foot two, and she was round and firm in all the right places. She was wearing little silver-rimmed glasses that were sheer affectation, because I’d never met a vampire whose eyesight wasn’t absolutely perfect and in fact sharper than any human’s.
“Can I get you some blood?” I asked.
Her eyes were like lasers. Once she was really giving you her attention, you were sorry.
“You’re the woman Sookie,” she said.
I didn’t see any need to affirm what she was so sure of. I waited.
“A glass of TrueBlood, please,” she said. “Quite warm. And I’d like to meet your boss, if you would fetch him.”
Like Sam was a bone. Nonetheless, she was a customer and I was a barmaid. So I heated a TrueBlood for her and told Sam he was wanted.
“I’ll be there in a minute,” he said, because he was getting a tray of drinks ready for Arlene.
I nodded and took the blood over to the vampire.
“Thank you,” she said civilly. “I’m Sandy Sechrest, the new area rep for the King of Louisiana.”
I had no idea where Sandy had grown up, but it had been in the United States and had not been in the south. “Pleased to meet you,” I said, but not with a whole lot of enthusiasm. Area rep? Wasn’t that what sheriffs were, among their other functions? What did that mean for Eric?
At that moment Sam came to the table, and I left because I didn’t want to look inquisitive. Besides, I could probably pick it up from his brain later if Sam chose not to tell me what the new vampire wanted. He was good at blocking, but he had to make a special effort to do it.
The three engaged in a conversation for a couple of minutes, then Sam excused himself to get back behind the bar.
I glanced at the vampire and the mogul from time to time in case they needed something more to drink, but neither of them indicated a thirst. They were talking very seriously, and both of them were adept at maintaining a poker face. I didn’t care enough to try to latch onto Mr. Carmichael’s thoughts, and of course Sandy Sechrest was a blank to me.
The rest of the night was the usual stuff. I didn’t even notice when the new king’s rep and Mr. Carmichael left. Then it was time to close everything out and get my tables ready for Terry Bellefleur to come in and clean early in the morning. By the time I really looked around me, everyone was gone but Sam and me.
“Hey, you through?” he said.
“Yeah,” I said after another look around.
“You got a minute?”
I always had a minute for Sam.
Chapter 16
He sat in the chair behind his desk and tilted it back at the
usual dangerous angle. I sat in one of the chairs in front of the desk, the one with the most padding in the seat. Most of the lights in the building were out except the one that stayed on over the bar area and the one in Sam’s office. The building rang with silence after the cacophony of voices rising over the jukebox and the sounds of cooking, washing, footsteps.
“That Sandy Sechrest,” he said. “She’s got a whole new job.”
“Yeah? What the king’s rep supposed to do?”
“Well, as far as I can tell, she’ll travel the state pretty much constantly, seeing if the citizens have problems with any vampires, seeing if the sheriffs have everything in order and under control in their own fiefs, and reporting in to the king. She’s like an undead troubleshooter.”
“Oh.” I thought that over. I couldn’t see that the job would detract from Eric’s. If Eric was okay, his crew would be okay. Other than that, I didn’t care what the vampires did. “So, she decided to meet you because . . . ?”
“She understood I had associations in the regional supernatural community,” Sam said dryly. “She wanted me to know she was available to consult in the event ‘problems arose.’ I have her business card.” He held it up. I don’t know if I expected it to drip with blood or what, but it was only a regular business card.
“Okay.” I shrugged.
“What did Claudine and her brother want?” Sam asked.
I was feeling very bad about concealing my new great-grandfather from Sam, but Niall had told me to keep him a secret. “She hadn’t heard from me since the fight in Shreveport,” I said. “She just wanted to check up, and she got Claude to come with her.”
Sam looked at me a little sharply but he didn’t comment. “Maybe,” he said after a minute, “this will be a long era of peace. Maybe we can just work in the bar and nothing will happen in the supe community. I’m hoping so, because the time is coming closer and closer when the Weres are going to go public.”
“You think it’s soon?” I had no idea how America would react to the news that vampires were not the only things out there in the night. “You think all the other shifters will announce the same night?”
“We’ll have to,” Sam said. “We’re talking on our website about it.”
Sam did have a life that was unknown to me. That sparked a thought. I hesitated, then plowed ahead. There were too many questions in my own life. I wanted to get at least some of them answered.
“How’d you come to settle here?” I asked.
“I’d passed through the area,” he said. “I was in the army for four years.”
“You were?” I couldn’t believe I hadn’t known that.
“Yeah,” he said. “I didn’t know what I wanted to do in my life, so I joined when I was eighteen. My mom cried and my dad swore since I’d been accepted to a college, but I’d made up my mind. I was about the stubbornest teenager on the planet.”
“Where’d you grow up?”
“At least partly in Wright, Texas,” he said. “Outside of Fort Worth. Way outside of Fort Worth. It wasn’t any bigger than Bon Temps. We moved around all during my childhood, though, because my dad was in the service himself. He got out when I was about fourteen, and my mom’s family was in Wright, so that’s where we went.”
“Was it hard settling down after moving so much?” I’d never lived anywhere but Bon Temps.
“It was great,” he said. “I was so ready to stay in one place. I hadn’t realized how hard it would be to find my own niche in a group of kids who’d grown up together, but I was able to take care of myself. I played baseball and basketball, so I found my place. Then I joined the army. Go figure.”
I was fascinated. “Are your mom and dad still in Wright?” I asked. “It must have been hard for him in the military, with him being a shifter.” Since Sam was a shapeshifter, I knew without him having to tell me that he was the first-born child of pure-blooded shapeshifters.
“Yeah, the full moons were a bitch. There was an herbal drink his Irish grandmother used to make. He learned how to make it himself. It was foul beyond belief, but he drank it on full moons when he had to be on duty and had to be seen all night, and that helped him maintain. . . . But you didn’t want to be around him the next day. Dad passed away about six years ago, left me a chunk of money. I’d always liked this area, and this bar was up for sale. It seemed like a good way to invest the money.”
“And your mom?”
“She’s still in Wright. She married again about two years after Dad died. He’s a good enough guy. He’s regular.” Not a shifter or any kind of supernatural. “So there’s a limit to how close I can get to him,” Sam said.
“Your mom’s a full-blood. Surely he suspects.”
“He’s willfully blind, I think. She has to go out for her evening run, she says, or she’s spending the night with her sister in Waco, or she’s driving over to visit me, or some other excuse.”
“Must be hard to maintain.”
“I would never try to do that. I almost married a regular girl once, while I was in the service. But I just couldn’t marry someone and keep that big a secret. It saves my sanity, having someone to talk to about it, Sookie.” He smiled at me, and I appreciated the trust he was showing. “If the Weres announce, then we’ll all go public. It’ll be a great burden off me.”
We both knew there would be new problems to face, but there wasn’t any need to talk about future trouble. Trouble always came at its own pace.
“You got any sisters or brothers?” I asked.
“One of each. My sister is married with two kids, and my brother is still single. He’s a great guy.” Sam was smiling and his face looked more relaxed than I’d ever seen. “Craig’s getting married in the spring, he says,” Sam went on. “Maybe you can go to the wedding with me.”
I was so astonished I didn’t know what to say, and I was very flattered and pleased. “That sounds like fun. Tell me when you know the date,” I said. Sam and I had gone out, once, and it had been very pleasant; but it was in the midst of my problems with Bill and the evening had never been repeated.
Sam nodded casually, and the little jolt of tension that had run through me evaporated. After all, this was
Sam
, my boss, and come to think of it, also one of my best friends. He’d clicked into that slot during the past year. I got up. I had my purse, and I pulled on my jacket.
“Did you get an invitation for the Fangtasia Halloween party this year?” he asked.
“No. After the last party they invited me to, they might not want me to come back,” I said. “Besides, with all the recent losses, I don’t know if Eric’ll feel like celebrating.”
“You think we ought to have a Halloween party at Merlotte’s?” he asked.
“Maybe not with candy and stuff like that,” I said, thinking hard. “Maybe a goodie bag for each customer, with dry roasted peanuts? Or a bowl of orange popcorn on each table? And some decorations?”
Sam looked in the direction of the bar as if he could see through the walls. “That sounds good. Make a thing of it.” Ordinarily we only decorated for Christmas, and that only after Thanksgiving, at Sam’s insistence.
I waved good night and left the bar, leaving Sam to check that everything was locked tight.
The night had a cold bite to it. This would be one of the Halloweens that really felt like the Halloweens I’d seen in children’s books.
In the center of the parking lot, his face turned up to the sliver of moon, his eyes closed, stood my great-grandfather. His pale hair hung down his back like a thick curtain. His myriad of fine creases were invisible in the moonlight, or else he’d divested himself of them. He was carrying his cane, and once again he was wearing a suit, a black suit. There was a heavy ring on his right hand, the hand gripping the cane.
He was the most beautiful being I’d ever seen.
He didn’t look remotely like a human grandfather. Human grandfathers wore gimme caps from the John Deere place and overalls. They took you fishing. They let you ride on their tractors. They groused at you for being too pampered and then they bought you candy. As for human great-grandfathers, most of us hardly got to know ours.
I became aware of Sam standing by my side.
“Who is that?” he breathed.
“That’s my, ah, my great-granddad,” I said. He was right there in front of me. I had to explain.
“Oh,” he said, his voice was full of amazement.
“I just found out,” I said apologetically.
Niall stopped soaking up the moonlight and his eyes opened. “My great-granddaughter,” he said, as if my presence in the Merlotte’s parking lot was a pleasant surprise. “Who is your friend?”
“Niall, this is Sam Merlotte, who owns this bar,” I said.
Sam extended his hand cautiously, and after a good look at it, Niall touched it with his own. I could feel Sam give a slight jerk, as if my great-grandfather had had a buzzer in his hand.
“Great-granddaughter,” Niall said, “I hear you were in danger in the fracas between the werewolves.”
“Yes, but Sam was with me, and then Claudine came,” I said, feeling oddly defensive. “I didn’t know there was going to be a fracas, as you put it, when I went. I was trying to be a peacemaker. We were ambushed.”
“Yes, that’s what Claudine reported,” he said. “I understand the bitch is dead?”
By which he meant Priscilla. “Yes, sir,” I said. “The bitch is dead.”
“And then you were in danger again one night later?”
I was beginning to feel definitely guilty of something. “Well, that’s not actually my norm,” I said. “It just happened that the vampires of Louisiana got overrun by the vampires of Nevada.”
Niall seemed only mildly interested. “But you went as far as dialing the number I left you.”
“Ah, yes, sir, I was pretty scared. But then Eric knocked the phone out of my hand because he thought if you came into the equation, there’d be an out-and-out war. As it turned out, I guess that was for the best, because he surrendered to Victor Madden.” I was still a little angry about it, though, even after Eric’s gift of the replacement phone.
“Ahhh.”
I couldn’t make head nor tail of that noncommittal sound. This might be the downside of having a great-grandfather on site. I’d been called on the carpet. It was a feeling I hadn’t had since I was a young teen and Gran had found out I’d skipped taking out the trash and folding the laundry. I didn’t like the feeling now any more than I’d liked it then.

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