A Touch of Dead

A Touch of Dead by Charlaine Harris

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Authors: Charlaine Harris
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girlfriend, Selah, would answer.
    “Bill, this is Sookie. Eric and Pam are out of touch, and I have a problem.”
    “What?”
    Bill has always been a man of few words.
    “There’s a young man in town we think is a vampire. Have you met him?”
    “Here in Bon Temps?” Bill was clearly surprised and displeased.
    That answered my question. “Yes, and Clancy told me they hadn’t farmed out any new vamps to Bon Temps. So I thought maybe you’d encountered this individual?”
    “No, which means he’s probably taking care not to cross my path. Where are you?”
    “We’re parked outside the Auberts’ house. He’s interested in the daughter, a teenager. We’ve pulled into the driveway of a house for sale across the street, middle of the block on Hargrove.”
    “I’ll be there very soon. Don’t approach him.”
    As if I would. “He thinks I’m stupid enough—” I began, and Amelia already had her “Indignant for You”
face on when the driver’s door was yanked open and a white hand latched onto my shoulder. I squawked until the other hand clamped over my mouth.
    “Shut up, breather,” said a voice that was even colder than Bill’s. “Are you the one that’s been following me around all night?”
    Then I realized that he didn’t know Amelia was in the passenger’s seat. That was good.
    Since I couldn’t speak, I nodded slightly.
    “Why?” he growled. “What do you want with me?” He shook me like I was a dustcloth, and I thought all my bones would come disjointed.
    Then Amelia leaped from the other side of the car and darted over to us, tossing the contents of a Ziploc on his head. Of course, I had no idea what she was saying, but the effect was dramatic. After a jolt of astonishment, the vampire froze. The problem was, he froze with me clasped with my back to his chest in an unbreakable hold. I was mashed against him, and his left hand was still hard over my mouth, his right hand around my waist. So far, the investigative team of Sookie Stackhouse, telepath, and Amelia Broadway, witch, was not doing a top-flight job.
    “Pretty good, huh?” Amelia said.

    I managed to move my head a fraction. “Yes, if I could breathe,” I said. I wished I hadn’t wasted breath speaking.
    Then Bill was there, surveying the situation.
    “You stupid woman, Sookie’s trapped,” Bill said. “Undo the spell.”
    Under the streetlight, Amelia looked sullen. Undoing was not her best thing, I realized with some anxiety. I couldn’t do anything else, so I waited while she worked on the counterspell.
    “If this doesn’t work, it’ll only take me a second to break his arm,” Bill told me. I nodded . . . well, I moved my head a fraction of an inch . . . because that was all I could do. I was getting pretty breathless.
    Suddenly there was a little pop! in the air, and the younger vampire let go of me to launch himself at Bill—who wasn’t there. Bill was behind him, and he grabbed one of the boy’s arms and twisted it up and back. The boy screamed, and down they went to the ground. I wondered if anyone was going to call the police. This was a lot of noise and activity for a residential neighborhood after one o’clock. But no lights came on.
    “Now, talk.” Bill was absolutely determined, and I guess the boy knew it.

    “What’s your problem?” the boy demanded. He had spiked brown hair and a lean build and a couple of diamond studs in his nose. “This woman’s been following me around. I need to know who she is.”
    Bill looked up at me questioningly. I jerked my head toward Amelia.
    “You didn’t even grab the right woman,” Bill said. He sounded kind of disappointed in the youngster. “Why are you here in Bon Temps?”
    “Getting away from Katrina,” the boy said. “My sire was staked by a human when we ran out of bottled blood substitute after the flood. I stole a car outside of New Orleans, changed the license plates, and got out of town. I reached here at daylight. I found an empty house with

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