“But I’d have to face …”
“Jannalynn. I know. But that’l be later. Alcide’l keep you safe for now. I can cal him.” I held up my little phone.
“You got his cel number?”
“I do.”
“You cal him, Sookie. You tel him I’m trying to meet with him. You give him my cel number, and you tel him to cal me when he’s by himself. And that’s a big thing. He has to be by himself.”
“Why can’t you cal him?”
“It’d be better if it came from you,” he said, and that was al I could get him to say. “You got my cel number, right?”
“Sure.”
“I’m leaving now.”
“Tel me who kil ed that girl!” If I could have yanked the answer out of him with tweezers, I would have.
“You’d just be in more danger than you are now,” he said, and then he was out of the room and onto his bike, and then he was gone.
This had al occurred with such speed that I felt as though the room were shivering after he left. Dermot and I stared at each other.
“I have no idea why he was here instead of in Shreveport where he belongs. I could have held him,” Dermot said. “I was just waiting for a signal from you, Great-Niece.”
“I appreciate that, Great-Uncle. I guess I felt like that just wasn’t the right thing to do,” I muttered.
We sat there in silence for a moment. But I had to explain to Dermot about the night before.
“You want to know why Mustapha showed up here?” I asked, and he nodded, looking much more cheerful now that he was going to get some background. I launched into my narrative.
“No one knew her, and she hadn’t come with anyone?” He looked thoughtful.
“That’s what they al said.”
“Then someone sent her, someone who knew there would be a party at Eric’s. Someone ensured she could walk in and not be chal enged because there were strangers at the house. How did she get past the guard at the gate?”
These were al pertinent questions, and I added another one. “How could anyone know in advance that Eric wouldn’t be able to resist taking blood from her?” I sounded forlorn, and I could only hope I didn’t come across as self-pitying. Unhappiness wil do that to you.
“Obviously she was selected because she had two-natured blood of some variety, and then she enhanced that with the smel of fairy. We know too wel it’s enticing to the deaders. Since Mustapha’s phone cal made you late and, therefore, Eric was more wil ing to yield to temptation,”
Dermot said, “Mustapha must have had some hand in what happened.”
“Yeah. I figured that out.” I wasn’t happy about this conclusion, but it fit the evidence.
“He may not have known what would happen as a result, but he must have gotten instructions from someone to make you late.”
“But who? He’s a lone wolf. He doesn’t answer to Alcide.”
“
Dermot was real y operating on ful y charged batteries today. I was having a hard time flogging my tired brain into keeping up with him.
“That’s the key, of course,” I said. “His friend Warren. Warren himself would have no reason I can think of to want to harm Eric, who, after al , provides Mustapha’s livelihood. But I think Warren’s being used as a lever. Someone’s taken Warren, I think. They’re holding him to ensure they have Mustapha’s cooperation. I need to think about al this,” I said, yawning with a jaw-cracking noise. “But right now I just have to sleep some more.
You going over to Hooligans?”
“Later,” he said.
I looked at him, thinking of al the questions he’d never answered about the strange accumulation of the fae at a remote strip club in Louisiana.
Claude had always told me it was because they’d al been left out when Nial closed the portals. But how had they known where to come, and what was their purpose in remaining in Monroe? Now was not the time to ask, since I was too exhausted to process his answers—if he would give me any. “Okay then, I’m taking a nap,” I said. It was Sunday, and Merlotte’s was closed. “Just let the answering machine take the cal s, if you don’t mind.” I switched the ringer volume down even further on the kitchen phone and would do the same in the bedroom.
I took my cel phone into my bedroom and cal ed Alcide. He didn’t answer, but I left him a message. Then I plugged in my cel phone to charge. I dragged my weary body into my bedroom. I didn’t even take off my clothes. I fel over the bed and fel asleep.
I woke two hours later feeling like something a cat spit up. I rol ed onto my side to look out the window. The light had changed. The air conditioner was fighting the afternoon’s worst heat, which shimmered in the air outside. I sat up to look out the window at the dry grass. We needed rain.
More random thoughts floated through my muzzy head. I wondered how Tara was doing. I didn’t know what “effaced” meant. I wondered what had happened to Mr. Cataliades. He was my “sponsor,” apparently the otherworldly equivalent of a godparent. I’d last seen the (mostly) demon lawyer running through my yard being