An Ice Cold Grave

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Book: Read An Ice Cold Grave for Free Online
Authors: Charlaine Harris
Tags: Fiction, Mystery
didn’t say anything. It was time for me to find out, but I didn’t want anyone else to watch while I did it. “Okay,” I said, to steady myself. “Tolliver?” I wanted him to be ready.
    â€œI’m here,” he said. “I’ve got a hold.” I could feel his grip on my arms.
    I stepped directly onto the ground above the corpse, and I looked down through the soil and rocks, caught a glimpse of hell. That was the last thing I remember.

Four
    â€œ SHE ever gonna wake up?” The speaker was Sandra Rockwell. I remembered her voice, but she sounded strange and strained.
    â€œHarper?” my brother said. “Harper?”
    I didn’t want to do this, but I had to.
    â€œOkay,” I said, and it came out as wobbly as I felt. “You found them yet?”
    â€œTell me what to do,” Sheriff Rockwell said. She sounded as if she didn’t want to be there.
    I had to open my eyes, and I had to look at the anxious brown eyes under the hat. Sheriff Rockwell was in a padded coat that made her look twice as large.
    â€œThey’re all there,” I said. “If you can wait a minute, I can tell you who’s where. And there are eight of them, not six.”
    â€œHow do you know that?”
    I was sitting in the back seat of Twyla’s car, my head leaning against the cushion.
    â€œHere, eat some sugar,” Tolliver said anxiously, working a piece of candy out of his jeans pocket. He unwrapped it for me, and popped it in my mouth. I knew from experience that I would feel better in a few minutes, especially if I had a Coke.
    â€œYou were willing to believe me before I did anything,” I said. “Have a little more faith. Dig for them.”
    â€œIf you’re lying, your ass will end up in jail,” she said.
    â€œAnd I would deserve it.”
    With a lot of effort, I turned my head to look out the car window. There were a couple of deputies standing on the site. Twyla was with them. The expression on her face would have made the most jaded con man weep—or maybe not. In our travels, in my line of work, we’ve met a few con men, and they almost all have no empathy. It’s just not in their emotional repertoire.
    â€œCome show me,” Sheriff Rockwell said, and Tolliver helped me out of the car. Slowly we made our way to the place where I’d fainted, and though I was shaking all over because I would have to feel the death again, I stood on the spot where I’d sensed the most recent body.
    â€œHere,” I said, pointing straight down. I knew who it was, too. This was the body of Jeff, Twyla’s grandson. Tolliver got out a spiral-bound notebook he had zipped in his jacket. He’d sketched a very rough outline of the site. “This is Jeff, Jeff McGraw,” I told Tolliver. “He was strangled.” Tolliver stuck a length of wire in the ground. The red flag flapped a little in the stiff breeze. He put his left arm around me and took my right hand in his. I nodded in the direction we should go, a little uphill and to the north, and I centered myself above another corpse. Tears began rolling down my cheeks…I’d never encountered such suffering. “Here,” I said. “Chester.” Two yards farther, we had a boy Sheriff Rockwell hadn’t mentioned. “This is someone named something like—Chad, Chad something that begins with a T.” The sheriff was scribbling in her own notebook. The deputies were listening, too, but they were completely skeptical and not a little angry. I couldn’t do anything about that. They’d learn soon enough.
    I followed the next signal to the rear of the lot, right where the ground began to rise sharply. It was centered behind a clump of bushes. I wiped my face with a handkerchief, said, “Dylan,” and staggered a bit south. Now I was behind the house. The sheriff and Twyla followed me, and the deputies, too. “Aaron,” I said.

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