Dead as a doornail - By Charlaine Harris Page 0,31

back into the leather seat. “So what’s the deal?”

“Is there anything you want to tell me?”

I froze. “Tell you? About what?”

“About that night. The night of the Witch War.”

Years of controlling my face came to my rescue. “Not a thing,” I said calmly enough, though I may have been clenching my hands as I said it.

Alcide said nothing more. He parked the car and came around to help me out, which was unnecessary but nice. I’d decided I wouldn’t need to take my purse inside, so I stuck it under the seat and Alcide locked the car. We started toward the front of the church. Alcide took my hand, somewhat to my surprise. I might be a friend of the pack, but I was apparently supposed to be friendlier with one member of the pack than the others.

“There’s Dad,” Alcide said as we approached a knot of mourners. Alcide’s father was a little shorter than Alcide, but he was a husky man like his son. Jackson Herveaux had iron-gray hair instead of black, and a bolder nose. He had the same olive skin as Alcide. Jackson looked all the darker because he was standing by a pale, delicate woman with gleaming white hair.

“Father,” Alcide said formally, “this is Sookie Stackhouse.”

“A pleasure to meet you, Sookie,” Jackson Herveaux said. “This is Christine Larrabee.” Christine, who might have been anything from fifty-seven to sixty-seven, looked like a painting done in pastels. Her eyes were a washed-out blue, her smooth skin was magnolia pale with the faintest tinge of pink, her white hair was immaculately groomed. She was wearing a light blue suit, which I personally wouldn’t have worn until the winter was completely over, but she looked great in it, for sure.

“Nice to meet you,” I said, wondering if I should curtsy. I’d shaken hands with Alcide’s father, but Christine didn’t extend hers. She gave me a nod and a sweet smile. Probably didn’t want to bruise me with her diamond rings, I decided after a squint at her fingers. Of course, they matched her earrings. I was outclassed, no doubt about it. Eff it, I thought. It seemed to be my day for shrugging off unpleasant things.

“Such a sad occasion,” Christine said.

If she wanted to do polite chitchat, I was up to it. “Yes, Colonel Flood was a wonderful man,” I said.

“Oh, you knew him, dear?”

“Yes,” I said. As a matter of fact, I’d seen him naked, but in decidedly unerotic circumstances.

My brief answer didn’t leave her much of anywhere to go. I saw genuine amusement lurking in her pale eyes. Alcide and his dad were exchanging low-voiced comments, which we were obviously supposed to be ignoring. “You and I are strictly decorations today,” Christine said.

“Then you know more than I do.”

“I expect so. You’re not one of the two-natured?”

“No.” Christine was, of course. She was a full-blooded Were, like Jackson and Alcide. I couldn’t picture this elegant woman changing into a wolf, especially with the down-and-dirty reputation the Weres had in the shifter community, butthe impressions I got from her mind were unmistakable.

“The funeral of the packmaster marks the opening of the campaign to replace him,” Christine said. Since that was more solid information than I’d gotten in two hours from Alcide, immediately I felt kindly disposed toward the older woman.

“You must be something extraordinary, for Alcide to choose you as his companion today,” Christine continued.

“I don’t know about extraordinary. In the literal sense, I guess I am. I have extras that aren’t ordinary.”

“Witch?” Christine guessed. “Fairy? Part goblin?”

Gosh. I shook my head. “None of the above. So what’s going to happen in there?”

“There are more roped-off pews than usual. The whole pack will sit at the front of the church, the mated ones with their mates, of course, and their children. The candidates for packmaster will come in last.”

“How are they chosen?”

“They announce themselves,” she said. “But they’ll be put to the test, and then the membership votes.”

“Why is Alcide’s dad bringing you, or is that a real personal question?”

“I’m the widow of the packmaster prior to Colonel Flood,” Christine Larrabee said quietly. “That gives me a certain influence.”

I nodded. “Is the packmaster always a man?”

“No. But since strength is part of the test, males usually win.”

“How many candidates are there?”

“Two. Jackson, of course, and Patrick Furnan.” She inclined her patrician head slightly to her right, and I gave a closer look at the couple that had been on the periphery of my attention.

Patrick Furnan was in his mid-forties,

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