Midnight Betrayal

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Authors: Melinda Leigh
Tags: Fiction, General, Suspense, Romance, Thrillers
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involvement, she was curious about the policemen’s visit to the bar. She hadn’t heard from the detectives. Had Conor learned anything about Zoe’s case? But she couldn’t fool herself. Her concern for Zoe wasn’t the only reason she ended the call, walked to the garage, and retrieved her car.
    The sound of his voice eased her loneliness.
    Sullivan’s bustled at happy hour. Louisa threaded her way through the tables and clusters of patrons. Laughter and conversation buzzed around her. Pat and Conor worked the bar. Pat smiled at her and gave his brother’s arm an elbow nudge. Conor’s eyes brightened when he saw her walking toward him. He set a tumbler of clear liquid on a cocktail napkin, tossed in a lime wedge, and slid it across the bar to a customer. He motioned her toward a stool at the rear of the bar. A bearded man of about thirty on the next seat looked her up and down. Conor narrowed his eyes at the man until he shrugged and turned back to his buddy.
    Conor leaned over the bar. “Hi there, what can I get you?”
    “Club soda.” She claimed the stool, the snugness of her skirt making the effort more of an undignified hop than the smooth slide she’d intended.
    “Are you sure? We have a decent wine list and a few really good craft beers.”
    “Club soda is fine.”
    He reached for a glass. “Everything all right? I mean, except for your missing friend.”
    She nodded, unwilling and unable to articulate her distress over her father’s call.
    Setting her soda on a napkin in front of her, he scanned her face. “Dinner?”
    “No, thank you.”
    He frowned. His attention flickered to another customer. “I’ll be back. The crowd’ll thin in an hour or so. Then we’ll have some time to talk. Are you sure I can’t get you something to eat while you wait?”
    “I’m OK.” She watched him and sipped her soda. She envied his ease with people, the comfortable way he conversed as he worked. People responded to him. Women flirted. Men joked.
    A petite but voluptuous young waitress set a plate in front of Louisa.
    “I’m sorry. I didn’t order anything,” she protested.
    The waitress shrugged. “Conor said to bring you a club sandwich.”
    She turned to catch his gaze, but he ignored her, seemingly on purpose.
    She hadn’t wanted food, but the scents of french fries and bacon tantalized her nostrils. She ate a fry, then another, then bit into the sandwich. Her mouth was full when Conor drifted over and refilled her glass. He’d timed that well. He glanced at the plate, gave her a know-it-all smirk, and sauntered away.
    By seven thirty, the work crowd had thinned. The bar was still busy, but the waitress’s trips back and forth to the kitchen slowed. Sports fans clustered around the hockey game that played on hanging TVs.
    Conor propped an elbow on the bar and rested his chin in one palm. “So how was your day?”
    The indelicate snort that burst from her lips shocked her. She covered her mouth with a knuckle. “Long. Yours?”
    He gave her a small, wry smile. “Same here.”
    She was tempted to tell him about her father’s call. What would it be like to have someone to confide in at the end of the day? But she couldn’t get the words out. Face it. Sharing her emotions was a new endeavor. She’d have to start slowly. “How did it go with the police?”
    He lifted a shoulder. “OK, I guess. They weren’t here long. Asked for a copy of the surveillance tapes and left.”
    “Is that good?”
    “Beats me.” But suspicion lingered in his eyes. “You didn’t hear from them?”
    “No. I haven’t heard anything about Zoe.” She chewed her lip. “God, I hope she’s all right.”
    Conor reached across the bar and rested his hand over hers. “I know.”
    A shadow fell across Louisa. Conor straightened. She twisted on the stool. Detectives Jackson and Ianelli were behind her.
    Jackson presented Conor with a stack of folded papers. “Conor Sullivan, we have a search warrant for the bar, your

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