A Touch of Dead
vibrating with purpose.
When Preston emerged from the bathroom, his bottom half was wrapped in a large blue bath towel of Amelia’s. Believe me, it had never looked so good. Preston had draped a towel around his neck to catch the drips from his hair, and it covered his shoulder wound. He winced a little as he walked, and I knew his feet must be sore. I’d gotten some men’s socks by mistake on my last trip to Wal-Mart, so I got them from my drawer and handed them to Preston, who’d resumed his seat at the table. He looked at them very carefully, to my puzzlement.
“You need to put on some socks,” I said, wondering
if he paused because he thought he was wearing some other man’s garments. “They’re mine,” I said reassuringly. “Your feet must be tender.”
“Yes,” said Preston, and rather slowly, he bent to put them on.
“You need help?” I was pouring the soup in a bowl.
“No, thank you,” he said, his face hidden by his thick dark hair as he bent to the task. “What smells so good?”
“I heated some soup for you,” I said. “You want coffee or tea or . . .”
“Tea, please,” he said.
I never drank tea myself, but Amelia had some. I looked through her selection, hoping none of these blends would turn him into a frog or anything. Amelia’s magic had had unexpected results in the past.
Surely anything marked LIPTON was okay? I dunked the tea bag into the scalding water and hoped for the best.
Preston ate the soup carefully. Maybe I’d gotten it too hot. He spooned it into his mouth like he’d never had soup before. Maybe his mama had always served homemade. I felt a little embarrassed. I was staring at him, because I sure didn’t have anything better to look at. He looked up and met my eyes.
Whoa. Things were moving too fast here. “So, how’d
you get hurt?” I asked. “Was there a skirmish? How come your pack left you?”
“There was a fight,” he said. “Negotiations didn’t work.” He looked a little doubtful and distressed. “Somehow, in the dark, they left me.”
“Do you think they’re coming back to get you?”
He finished his soup, and I put his tea down by his hand. “Either my own pack or the Monroe one,” he said grimly.
That didn’t sound good. “Okay, you better let me see your wounds now,” I said. The sooner I knew his fitness level, the sooner I could decide what to do. Preston removed the towel from around his neck, and I bent to look at the wound. It was almost healed.
“When were you hurt?” I asked.
“Toward dawn.” His huge tawny eyes met mine. “I lay there for hours.”
“But . . .” Suddenly I wondered if I’d been entirely intelligent, bringing a stranger into my home. I knew it wasn’t wise to let Preston know I had doubts about his story. The wound had looked jagged and ugly when I’d found him in the woods. Yet now that he came into the house, it healed in a matter of minutes? What was up? Weres healed fast, but not instantly.
“What’s wrong, Sookie?” he asked. It was pretty hard to think about anything else when his long wet hair was trailing across his chest and the blue towel was riding pretty low.
“Are you really a Were?” I blurted, and backed up a couple of steps. His brain waves dipped into the classic Were rhythm, the jagged, dark cadence I found familiar.
Preston Pardloe looked absolutely horrified. “What else would I be?” he said, extending an arm. Obligingly, fur rippled down from his shoulder and his fingers clawed. It was the most effortless change I’d ever seen, and there was very little of the noise I associated with the transformation, which I’d witnessed several times.
“You must be some kind of super werewolf,” I said.
“My family is gifted,” he said proudly.
He stood, and his towel slipped off.
“No kidding,” I said in a strangled voice. I could feel my cheeks turning red.
There was a howl outside. There’s no eerier sound, especially on a dark, cold night; and when that eerie sound comes from the line where your yard meets the woods, well, that’ll make the hairs on your arm stand
up. I glanced at Preston’s wolfy arm to see if the howl had had the same effect on him, and saw that his arm had reverted to human shape.
“They’ve returned to find me,” he said.
“Your pack?” I said, hoping that his kin had returned to retrieve him.
“No.” His face was bleak. “The Sharp Claws.”
“Call your people. Get them here.”
“They left me for a
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