Sookie Stackhouse 8-copy Boxed Set (200 page)

BOOK: Sookie Stackhouse 8-copy Boxed Set
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“Why didn’t you change fully?” I asked, in a tiny whisper.
Because there wouldn’t be enough room for you in this space, babe. After I change, I’m seven feet long and I weigh about four hundred fifty pounds.
That will make any girl gulp. I could only be grateful he’d thought that far ahead. I looked at him some more.
Not grossed out?
Clete and the driver were exchanging recriminations about the phone incident. “Why, grandpa, what big teeth you have,” I whispered. The upper and lower canines were so long and sharp they were really scary. (I called them
canines;
to cats, that might be an insult.)
Sharp . . . they were sharp. I worked my hands up close to his mouth, and begged him with my eyes to understand. As much as I could tell from his altered face, Quinn was worried. Just as our situation aroused his defensive instincts, the idea I was trying to sell to him excited other instincts.
I will make your hands bleed,
he warned me, with a great effort. He was partially animal now, and the animal thought processes didn’t necessarily travel the same paths as the human.
I bit my own bottom lip to keep from gasping as Quinn’s teeth bit into the duct tape. He had to exert a lot of pressure to get the three-inch canines to pierce the duct tape, and that meant that those shorter, sharp incisors bit into my skin, too, no matter how much care he took. Tears began rolling down my face in an unending stream, and I felt him falter. I shook my bound hands to urge him on, and reluctantly he bent back to his task.
“Hey, George, he’s biting her,” Clete said from the passenger’s seat. “I can see his jaw moving.”
But we were so close together and the light was so poor that he couldn’t see that Quinn was biting the binding on my hands. That was good. I was trying hard to find good things to cling to, because this was looking like a bleak, bleak world just at this moment, lying in the van traveling through the rain on an unknown road somewhere in southern Louisiana.
I was angry and bleeding and sore and lying on my already injured left arm. What I wanted, what would be ideal, would be to find myself clean and bandaged in a nice bed with white sheets. Okay, clean and bandaged and in a clean nightgown. And then Quinn would be in the bed, completely in his human form, and he would be clean and bandaged, too. And he’d have had some rest, and he’d be wearing nothing at all. But the pain of my cut and bleeding arms was becoming too demanding to ignore any longer, and I couldn’t concentrate enough to cling to my lovely daydream. Just when I was on the verge of whimpering—or maybe just out-and-out screaming—I felt my wrists separate.
For a few seconds I just lay there and panted, trying to control my reaction to the pain. Unfortunately Quinn couldn’t gnaw on the binding on his own hands, since they’d been bound behind him. He finally succeeded in turning over so I could see his wrists.
George said, “What are they doing?”
Clete glanced back at us, but I had my hands together. Since the day was dark, he couldn’t see very clearly. “They’re not doing anything. He quit biting her,” Clete said, sounding disappointed.
Quinn succeeded in getting a claw hooked into the silvery duct tape. His claws were not sharp-edged along their curve like a scimitar; their power lay in the piercing point backed by a tiger’s huge strength. But Quinn couldn’t get the purchase to exercise that strength. So this was going to take time, and I suspected the tape was going to make a ripping noise when he succeeded in slicing it open.
We didn’t have much time left. Any minute even an idiot like Clete would notice that all was not well.
I began the difficult maneuvering to get my hands down to Quinn’s feet without giving away the fact that they weren’t bound any longer. Clete glanced back when he glimpsed my movement, and I slumped against the empty shelves, my hands clasped together in my lap. I tried to look hopeless, which was awfully easy. Clete got more interested in lighting a cigarette after a second or two, giving me a chance to look at the plastic strap binding Quinn’s ankles together. Though it had reminded me of the bag tie we used last Thanksgiving, this plastic was black and thick and extra tough, and I didn’t have a knife to cut it or a key to unlock it. I did think Clete had made a mistake putting the restraint on, however, and I hurried to try to take advantage of it. Quinn’s shoes were still on, of course, and I unlaced them and pulled them off. Then I held one foot pointed down. That foot began to slide up inside the circle of the tie. As I’d suspected, the shoes had held his feet apart and allowed for some slack.
Though my wrists and hands were bleeding onto Quinn’s socks (which I left on so the plastic wouldn’t scrape him) I was managing pretty well. He was being stoic about my drastic adjustments to his foot. Finally I heard his bones protest at being twisted into a strange position, but his foot slid up out of the restraint. Oh, thank God.
It had taken me longer to think about than to do. It had felt like hours.
I pulled the restraint down and shoved it into the debris, looked up at Quinn, and nodded. His claw, hooked in the duct tape, ripped at it. A hole appeared. The sound hadn’t been loud at all, and I eased myself back full length beside Quinn to camouflage the activity.
I stuck my thumbs in the hole in the duct tape and yanked, achieving very little. There’s a reason duct tape is so popular. It’s a reliable substance.
We had to get out of that van before it reached its destination, and we had to get away before the other van could pull up behind ours. I scrabbled around through the chalupa wrappers and the cardboard french fry cartons on the floor of the van and finally, in a little gap between the floor and the side, I found an overlooked Phillips screwdriver. It was long and thin.
I looked at it and took a deep breath. I knew what I had to do. Quinn’s hands were bound and he couldn’t do it. Tears rolled down my face. I was being a crybaby, but I just couldn’t help it. I looked at Quinn for a moment, and his features were steely. He knew as well as I did what needed to be done.
Just then the van slowed and took a turn from a parish road, reasonably well paved, onto what felt like a graveled track running into the woods. A driveway, I was sure. We were close to our destination. This was the best chance, maybe the last chance, we would have.
“Stretch your wrists,” I murmured, and I plunged the Phillips head into the hole in the duct tape. It became larger. I plunged again. The two men, sensing my frantic movement, were turning as I stabbed at the duct tape a final time. While Quinn strained to part the perforated bindings, I pulled myself to my knees, gripping the latticed partition with my left hand, and I said, “Clete!”
He turned and leaned between the seats, closer to the partition, to see better. I took a deep breath and with my right hand I drove the screwdriver between the crosshatched metal. It went right into his cheek. He screamed and bled and George could hardly pull over fast enough. With a roar, Quinn separated his wrists. Then Quinn moved like lightning, and the minute the van slammed into Park, he and I were out the back doors and running through the woods. Thank God they were right by the road.
Beaded thong sandals are not good for running in the woods, I just want to say here, and Quinn was only in his socks. But we covered some ground, and by the time the startled driver of the second van could pull over and the passengers could leap out in pursuit, we were out of sight of the road. We kept running, because they were Weres, and they would track us. I’d pulled the screwdriver out of Clete’s cheek and had it in my hand, and I remember thinking that it was dangerous to run with a pointed object in my hand. I thought about Clete’s thick finger probing between my legs, and I didn’t feel so bad about what I’d done. In the next few seconds, while I was jumping over a downed tree snagged in some thorny vines, the screwdriver slipped from my hand and I had no time to search for it.
After running for some time, we came to the swamp. Swamps and bayous abound in Louisiana, of course. The bayous and swamps are rich in wildlife, and they can be beautiful to look at and maybe tour in a canoe or something. But to plunge into on foot, in pouring rain, they suck.
Maybe from a tracking point of view this swamp was a good thing, because once we were in the water we wouldn’t be leaving any scent. But from my personal point of view, the swamp was awful, because it was dirty and had snakes and alligators and God knows what else.
I had to brace myself to wade in after Quinn, and the water was dark and cool since it was still spring. In the summer, it would feel like wading through warm soup. On a day so overcast, once we were under the overhanging trees, we would be almost invisible to our pursuers, which was good; but the same conditions also meant that any lurking wildlife would be seen approximately when we stepped on it, or when it bit us. Not so good.
Quinn was smiling broadly, and I remembered that some tigers have lots of swamps in their natural habitat. At least one of us was happy.
The water got deeper and deeper, and soon we were swimming. There again, Quinn swam with a large grace that was kind of daunting to me. I was trying with all my might just to be quiet and stealthy. For a second, I was so cold and so frightened I began to think that . . . no, it wouldn’t be better to still be in the van . . . but it was a near thing, just for a second.
I was so tired. My muscles were shaking with the aftermath of the adrenalin surge of our escape, and then I’d dashed through the woods, and before that there’d been the fight in the apartment, and before that . . . oh my God, I’d had sex with Quinn. Sort of. Yes, definitely sex. More or less.
We hadn’t spoken since we’d gotten out of the van, and suddenly I remembered I’d seen his arm bleeding when we’d burst out of the van. I’d stabbed him with the Phillips head, at least once, while I was freeing him.
And here I was, whining. “Quinn,” I said. “Let me help you.”
“Help me?” he asked. I couldn’t read his tone, and since he was forging through the dark water ahead of me, I couldn’t read his face. But his mind, ah, that was full of snarled confusion and anger that he couldn’t find a place to stuff. “Did I help you? Did I free you? Did I protect you from the fucking Weres? No, I let that son of a bitch stick his finger up you, and I watched, I couldn’t do anything.”
Oh. Male pride. “You got my hands free,” I pointed out. “And you can help me now.”
“How?” he turned to me, and he was deeply upset. I realized that he was a guy who took his protecting very seriously. It was one of God’s mysterious imbalances, that men are stronger than women. My grandmother told me it was his way of balancing the scales, since women are tougher and more resilient. I’m not sure that’s true, but I knew that Quinn, perhaps because he was a big, formidable guy and, perhaps because he was a weretiger who could turn into this fabulously beautiful and lethal beast, was in a funk because he hadn’t killed all our attackers and saved me from being sullied by their touch.
I myself would have preferred that scenario a lot, especially considering our present predicament. But events hadn’t fallen out that way. “Quinn,” I said, and my voice was just as weary as the rest of me, “they have to have been heading somewhere around here. Somewhere in this swamp.”
“That’s why we turned off,” he said in agreement. I saw a snake twined around a tree branch overhanging the water right behind him, and my face must have looked as shocked as I felt, because Quinn whipped around faster than I could think and had that snake in his hand and snapped it once, twice, and then the snake was dead and floating away in the sluggish water. He seemed to feel a lot better after that. “We don’t know where we’re going, but we’re sure it’s away from them. Right?” he asked.
“There aren’t any other brains up and running in my range,” I said, after a moment’s checking. “But I’ve never defined how big my range is. That’s all I can tell you. Let’s try to get out of the water for a minute while we think, okay?” I was shivering all over.
Quinn slogged through the water and gathered me up. “Link your arms around my neck,” he said.
Sure, if he wanted to do the man thing, that was fine. I put my arms around his neck and he began moving through the water.
“Would this be better if you turned into a tiger?” I asked.
“I might need that later, and I’ve already partially changed twice today. I better save my strength.”
“What kind are you?”
“Bengal,” he said, and just then the pattering of the rain on the water stopped.
We heard voices calling then, and we came to a stop in the water, both of our faces turned to the source of the sound. As we were standing there stock-still, I heard something large slide into the water to our right. I swung my eyes in that direction, terrified of what I’d see—but the water was almost still, as if something had just passed. I knew there were tours of the bayous south of New Orleans, and I knew locals made a good living out of taking people out on the dark water and letting them see the alligators. The good thing was, these natives made money, and out-of-staters got to see something they’d never have seen otherwise. The bad thing was, sometimes the locals threw treats to attract the gators. I figured the gators associated humans with food.
I laid my head on Quinn’s shoulder and I closed my eyes. But the voices didn’t get any closer, and we didn’t hear the baying of wolves, and nothing bit my leg to drag me down. “That’s what gators do, you know,” I told Quinn. “They pull you under and drown you, and stick you somewhere so they can snack on you.”
“Babe, the wolves aren’t going to eat us today, and neither will the gators.” He laughed, a low rumble deep in his chest. I was so glad to hear that sound. After a moment, we began moving through the water again. The trees and the bits of land became close together, the channels narrow, and finally we came up on a piece of land large enough to hold a cabin.

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