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Club Dead

Club Dead

Titel: Club Dead Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Charlaine Harris
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coldly, in a nasty undertone.
    It was like he’d thrown a bucket of cold water in my face. It was a shock, and it hurt terribly. Tears welled up in my eyes. It was also completely obvious to everyone at the table that he had said something to upset me.
    Talbot, Russell, and Franklin all gave Alcide level looks practically laden with threat. Talbot’s look was a weak echo of his lover’s, so it could be disregarded, but Russell was the king, after all, and Franklin was apparently an influential vampire. Alcide recalled where he was, and with whom.
    “Excuse me, Sookie, I was just feeling jealous,” he said, loud enough for all at the table to hear. “That was really interesting.”
    “Interesting?” I said, as lightly as I could. I was pretty damn mad, myself. I ran my fingers through his hair as I leaned over to his chair. “Just interesting?” We smiled at each other quite falsely, but the others bought it. I felt like taking a handful of that black hair and giving it a good hard yank. He might not be a mind reader like me, but he could read that impulse loud and clear. Alcide had to force himself not to flinch.
    Tara stepped in once again to ask Alcide what his occupation was—God bless her—and yet another awkward moment passed harmlessly by. I pushed my chair a little farther back from the circle around the table and let my mind roam. Alcide had been right about the fact that I needed to be at work, rather than amusing myself; but I didn’t see how I could have refused Tara something she enjoyed so much.
    A parting of the bodies crowding the little dance floor gave me a glimpse of Eric, leaning against the wall behind the small stage. His eyes were on me, and they were full of heat. There was someone who wasn’t pissed off at me, someone who had taken our little routine in the spirit in which it was offered.
    Eric looked quite nice in the suit and glasses. The glasses made him seem somehow less threatening, I decided, and turned my mind to business. Fewer Weres and humans made it easier to listen in to each one, easier to track the thread of thought back to its owner. I closed my eyes to help me concentrate, and almost immediately I caught a snatch of inner monologue that shook me up.
    “Martyrdom,” the man was thinking. I knew the thinker was a man, and that his thoughts were coming from the area behind me, the area right around the bar. My head began to turn, and I stopped myself. Looking wouldn’t help, but it was an almost irresistible impulse. I looked down instead, so the movements of the other patrons wouldn’t distract me.
    People don’t really think in complete sentences, of course. What I’m doing, when I spell out their thoughts, is translating.
    “When I die, my name will be famous,” he thought. “It’s almost here. God, please let it not hurt. At least he’s here with me . . . I hope the stake’s sharp enough.”
    Oh, dammit . The next thing I knew I was on my feet, walking away from the table.
     
     
    I WAS INCHING along, blocking the noise of the music and the voices so I could listen sharply to what was being said silently. It was like walking underwater. At the bar, slugging back a glass of synthetic blood, was a woman with a poof of teased hair. She was dressed in a tight-bodiced dress with a full skirt fluffing out around it. Her muscular arms and broad shoulders looked pretty strange with the outfit; but I’d never tell her so, nor would any sane person. This had to be Betty Joe Pickard, Russell Edgington’s second in command. She had on white gloves and pumps, too. All she needed was a little hat with a half-veil, I decided. I was willing to bet Betty Joe had been a big fan of Mamie Eisenhower’s.
    And standing behind this formidable vampire, also facing the bar, were two male humans. One was tall, and oddly familiar. His gray-threaded brown hair was long, but neatly combed. It looked like a regular men’s hair-cut, allowed to grow however it wanted to grow. The hairstyle looked odd with his suit. His shorter companion had rough black hair, tousled and flecked with gray. This second man wore a sports coat that maybe came off the rack from JCPenney on a sale day.
    And inside that cheap coat, in a specially sewn pocket, he carried a stake.
    Horribly enough, I hesitated. If I stopped him, I would be revealing my hidden talent, and to reveal that would be to unmask my identity. The consequences of this revelation would depend on what Edgington knew about me; he

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