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Sookie Stackhouse Boxed Set (Books 1-8) - Charlaine Harris [592]

By Root 6376 0
I’d learned that the Weres were prone to fertility problems, and I assumed that the Pelts had given up on having their own little Were, and had adopted a baby that was at least some kind of shape-shifter, if not their own kind. Even a full-blooded fox must have seemed preferable to a plain human. Then the Pelts had adopted another daughter, a Were.

“Sookie,” Father Riordan said, his Irish voice charming but unhappy, “Barbara and Gordon showed up on my doorstep today. When I told them you’d said all you wanted to say about Debbie’s disappearance, they weren’t content with that. They insisted I bring them here with me.”

My intense anger at the priest receded a bit. But another emotion filled its place. I was anxious enough about the encounter to feel my nervous smile spread across my face. I beamed at the Pelts, caught the backwash of their disapproval.

“I’m sorry for your situation,” I said. “I’m sorry you’re left wondering what happened to Debbie. But I don’t know what else I can tell you.”

A tear ran down Barbara Pelt’s face, and I opened my purse to remove a tissue. I handed it to the woman, who patted her face. “She thought you were stealing Alcide from her,” Barbara said.

You’re not supposed to speak ill of the dead, but in Debbie Pelt’s case, that was just plain impossible. “Mrs. Pelt, I’m going to be frank,” I told her. Just not too frank. “Debbie was engaged to someone else at the time of her disappearance, a man named Clausen, if I remember correctly.” Barbara Pelt nodded, reluctantly. “That engagement left Alcide at perfect liberty to date anyone he liked, and we did spend time together briefly.” No lies there. “We haven’t seen each other in weeks, and he’s dating someone else now. So Debbie really was mistaken in what she thought.”

Sandra Pelt bit her lower lip. She was lean, with clear skin and dark brown hair. She wore little makeup, and her teeth were dazzlingly white and even. Her hoop earrings could provide a perch for a parakeet; they were that big. She had a narrow body and expensive clothes: top of the mall chain.

Her expression was angry. She didn’t like what I was saying, not one little bit. She was an adolescent, and there were strong surges of emotion in the girl. I remembered what my life had been like when I’d been Sandra’s age, and I pitied her.

“Since you knew both of them,” Barbara Pelt said carefully, not acknowledging my words, “you must have known that they had—they have—a strong love-hate relationship, no matter what Debbie did.”

“Oh, that’s true,” I said, and maybe I didn’t sound respectful enough. If there was anyone I’d done a big favor to in killing Debbie Pelt, that person was Alcide Herveaux. Otherwise, he and la Pelt would have been tearing each other up for years, if not the rest of their lives.

Sam turned away when the phone rang, but I glimpsed a smile on his face.

“We just feel that there must be something you know, some tiny little thing, that would help us discover what happened to our daughter. If—if she’s met her end, we want her killer to come to justice.”

I looked at the Pelts for a long moment. I could hear Sam’s voice in the background as he reacted with astonishment to something he was hearing over the telephone.

“Mr. and Mrs. Pelt, Sandra,” I said. “I talked to the police when Debbie vanished. I cooperated with them fully. I talked to your private investigators when they came here, to my place of work, just like you’ve done. I let them come into my home. I answered their questions.” Just not truthfully.

(I know, the whole edifice was a lie, but I was doing the best I could.)

“I am very sorry for your loss and I sympathize with your anxiety to discover what’s happened to Debbie,” I continued, speaking slowly so I could pick my words. I took a deep breath. “But this has got to end. Enough’s enough. I can’t tell you a thing other than what I’ve already told you.”

To my surprise, Sam edged around me and went into the bar, moving fast. He didn’t say a word to anyone in the room. Father Riordan glanced after him, startled. I became even more anxious for the Pelts

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