Definitely Dead
was a roll of duct tape sitting ready beside it.
I’d been pretty calm until I saw the duct tape.
I didn’t know if tigers could count, but I held up three fingers in case Quinn was watching. Moving slowly and carefully, I squatted down and moved south until I was below the second window. I was feeling pretty proud of my sneaking ability, which should have alerted me to potential disaster. Pride goeth before a fall.
Though the window was dark, when I eased up into position, I was looking through the glass right into the eyes of a small swarthy man with a mustache and goatee. He was sitting at a table right by the window, and he’d been holding a cup of coffee in his hand. In his shock, he let it drop to the table and the hot backsplash hit his hands and chest and chin.
He shrieked, though I wasn’t sure he was using actual words. I heard a commotion at the front door and in the front room.
Well . . . eff.
I was around the corner of the house and up the steps to the little deck faster than you could say Jack Robinson. I yanked open the screen door and pushed in the wooden door, and I leaped into the kitchen with the stun gun on. The small guy was still patting at his face with a towel while I zapped him, and he went down like a sack of bricks. Wow!
But the stun gun had to recharge, I discovered, when Sandra Pelt, who’d had the advantage of already being on her feet, charged into the kitchen, teeth bared. The stun gun didn’t do a damn thing to her, and she was on me like an—well, like an enraged wolf.
However, she was still in the form of a girl, and I was desperate and desperately angry.
I’ve seen at least two dozen bar fights, ranging from half-hearted punches to rolling-on-the-ground biting, and I know how to fight. Right now I was willing to do whatever it took. Sandra was mean, but she was lighter and less experienced, and after some wrestling and punching and hair pulling that went by in a flash, I was on top of her and had her pinned to the floor. She snarled and snapped but she couldn’t reach my neck, and I was prepared to head-butt her if I had to.
A voice in the background bellowed, “Let me in!” and I assumed it was Quinn behind some door. “Come on now!” I yelled in answer. “I need help!”
She was squirming underneath me, and I dared not let go to shift my grip. “Listen, Sandra,” I panted, “hold still, dammit!”
“Fuck you,” she said bitterly, and her efforts redoubled.
“This is actually kind of exciting,” a familiar voice said, and I glanced up to see Eric looking down at us with wide blue eyes. He looked immaculate: neat as a pin in blue jeans that had a crease and a starched blue-and-white striped dress shirt. His blond hair was shining clean and (here was the most enviable part) dry. I hated his guts. I felt nasty to the nth degree.
“I could use some help here,” I snapped, and he said, “Of course, Sookie, though I’m enjoying the wiggling around. Let go of the girl and stand up.”
“Only if you’re ready for action,” I said, my breathing ragged with the effort of holding Sandra down.
“I’m always ready for action,” Eric said, with a glowing smile. “Sandra, look at me.”
She was too smart for that. Sandra squeezed her eyes shut and fought even harder. In a second, she freed one of her arms and swung it back to get momentum for her punch. But Eric dropped to his knees and caught the hand before it could fly at my head.
“That’s enough,” he said in an entirely different tone, and her eyes flew open in surprise. Though he still couldn’t catch her with his eyes, I figured he had charge of her now. I rolled off the Were to lie on my back in what remained of the floor in the tiny kitchen. Mr. Small and Dark (and Burned and Stunned), who I figured owned this house, was crumpled by the table.
Eric, who was having almost as much trouble with Sandra as I’d had, took up a lot more of the available space. Exasperated with the Were, he adopted a simple solution. He squeezed the fist he’d caught, and she screamed. And shut up—and quit struggling.
“That’s just not fair,” I said, fighting a wave of weariness and pain.
“All’s fair,” he said quietly.
I didn’t like the sound of that. “What are you talking about?” I asked. He shook his head. I tried again. “Where’s Quinn?”
“The tiger has taken care of your two abductors,” Eric said, with an unpleasant smile. “Would you like to go see?”
“Not
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