middle name was tolerance, mostly because she was too easygoing to take a moral stance.
“Well, I’m surprised,” I said, sharply aware of how harshly I’d just evaluated someone I’d always looked on as a friend.
“Well, I been going to church with Rafe Prudhomme.”
I liked Rafe Prudhomme, a very quiet man in his forties who worked for Pelican State Title Company. But I’d never had the chance to get to know him well, never listened in to his thoughts. Maybe that had been a mistake. “What kind of church does he go to?” I said.
“He’s been attending that Fellowship of the Sun, that new church.”
My heart sank, almost literally. I didn’t bother to point out that the Fellowship was a collection of bigots who were bound together by hatred and fear. “It’s not really a church, you know. There’s a branch of the Fellowship close to here?”
“Minden.” Arlene looked away, the very picture of guilt. “I knew you wouldn’t like that. But I saw the Catholic priest, Father Riordan, there. So even the ordained people think it’s okay. We’ve been the past two Sunday evenings.”
“And you believe that stuff?”
But one of Arlene’s customers yelled for her, and she was definitely glad to walk away.
My eyes met Sam’s, and we looked equally troubled. The Fellowship of the Sun was an antivampire, antitolerance organization, and its influence was spreading. Some of the Fellowship enclaves were not militant, but many of them preached hatred and fear in its most extreme form. If the Fellowship had a secret underground hit list, I was surely on it. The Fellowship founders, Steve and Sarah Newlin, had been driven out of their most lucrative church in Dallas because I’d interfered with their plans. I’d survived a couple of assassination attempts since then, but there was always the chance the Fellowship would track me down and ambush me. They’d seen me in Dallas, they’d seen me in Jackson, and sooner or later they’d figure out who I was and where I lived.
I had plenty to worry about.
11
THE NEXT MORNING, TANYA SHOWED UP AT MY house. It was Sunday, and I was off work, and I felt pretty cheerful. After all, Crystal was healing, Quinn seemed to like me, and I hadn’t heard any more from Eric, so maybe he would leave me alone. I try to be optimistic. My gran’s favorite saying from the Bible was, “Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.” She had explained that that meant that you don’t worry about tomorrow, or about things you can’t change. I tried to practice that philosophy, though most days it was hard. Today it was easy.
The birds were tweeting and chirping, the bugs were buzzing, and the pollen-heavy air was full of peace as if it were yet another plant emission. I was sitting on the front porch in my pink robe, sipping my coffee, listening to Car Talk on Red River Radio, and feeling really good, when a little Dodge Dart chugged up my driveway. I didn’t recognize the car, but I did recognize the driver. All my peacefulness vanished in a puff of suspicion. Now that I knew about the proximity of a new Fellowship conclave, Tanya’s inquisitive presence seemed even more suspicious. I was not happy to see her at my home. Common courtesy forbade me from warning her off, with no more provocation than I’d had, but I wasn’t giving her any welcoming smile when I lowered my feet to the porch and stood.
“Good morning, Sookie!” she called as she got out of her car.
“Tanya,” I said, just to acknowledge the greeting.
She paused halfway to the steps. “Um, everything okay?”
I didn’t speak.
“I should have called first, huh?” She tried to look winsome and rueful.
“That would have been better. I don’t like unannounced visitors.”
“Sorry, I promise I’ll call next time.” She resumed her progress over the stepping stones to the steps. “Got an extra cup of coffee?”
I violated one of the most basic rules of hospitality. “No, not this morning,” I said. I went to stand at the top of the steps to block her way onto the porch.
“Well . . . Sookie,” she said, her voice uncertain. “You really are a grump in the morning.”
I looked down at her steadily.
“No wonder Bill Compton’s dating someone else,” Tanya said with a little laugh. She knew immediately she’d made an error. “Sorry,” she added hastily, “maybe I haven’t had enough coffee myself. I shouldn’t have said that. That Selah Pumphrey’s a bitch, huh?”