Midnight Louie 14 - Cat in a Midnight Choir

Read Online Midnight Louie 14 - Cat in a Midnight Choir by Carole Nelson Douglas - Free Book Online

Book: Midnight Louie 14 - Cat in a Midnight Choir by Carole Nelson Douglas Read Free Book Online
Authors: Carole Nelson Douglas
Tags: Fiction, General, Mystery & Detective, Women Sleuths
Miss Louise swipes me again on the rear.
    “Ow! What was that for!”
    “Conduct becoming a male chauvinist porcine. I do not need protection from Mr. Lucky. Do you not recognize Butch from the Rancho Exotica? He is the one who shared his dinner with poor Osiris, thanks to me.”
    “Oh. Sorry, Mr. Butch. I mean, Mr. Lucky.”
    The paw lowers and tickles my ears, and my back and my everything.
    “Is this your poor old dad?” the black panther’s voice growls like thunder above me. “He was most valiant in your defense, although sadly ineffective.”
    “That is my dad. He wants to see you for some reason. I am sure he will update me shortly.”
    Well, what is a practical private eye to do? I am where I want to be, about to interview who I want to see. The only fly in the ointment is the odious Miss Louise, and telling her so would be highly self-destructive in present company.
    So I do the right thing, ignore the chit, and get down to the chitchat with the Big Boys.

 

Saturday Night Stayin’ Alive
     
    Women in strip clubs that catered to men either had business in being there, or no business at all in being there. Women with no business at all being there attracted attention, all of it either bigoted (“dyke!”) or unflattering (“frigid freak”).
    Molina couldn’t afford attention and she couldn’t admit to her real business in being here at Saturday Night Fever — police business — so tonight she was a location scout for C.S.I.: Crime Scene Investigation.
    It gave her a professional payback to name-drop the hit forensic science TV show that uses Las Vegas as a backdrop for its high-tech and personal look at maggots, body parts, and implausible police procedure.
    Tonight, Molina was here on official business, and she was not alone.
    Visibly alone, yes. Actually, no.
    She glanced in the mirror behind the bar at Sergeant Barry Reichert, who usually did undercover drug detail. His dirt-biker ensemble and party-animal attitude fit right in at Saturday Night Fever.
    At the moment he was stuffing ten-dollar bills in about six G-strings at a prodigious rate, all the time getting paid back in information that was worth hundreds.
    Molina sipped her watered-down no-name whiskey and kicked back, despite the relentless overamped beat of music to strip by: loud, all bass, and brutally rhythmic.
    She could relax and (almost) be herself because tonight she knew where Rafi Nadir was: being tailed by a plainclothes officer who had reported him across town at another strip club. Purely a customer now, not a bouncer.
    She glimpsed her curdled expression in the mirror, as if she was drinking a whiskey sour.
    Didn’t want to think about why a man she had used to know hung out at strip clubs. Know? “A fellow officer” was the now-inoperative phrase. Another phrase followed, one even more painful to roll around in her head like ice in an empty lowball glass: an ex-significant other.
    Barry unglued himself and his wad from the bevy of off-duty strippers and lurched to Molina’s station at the bar.
    “Hey, casting director lady!” he greeted her with feigned quasi-drunken camaraderie.
    “Location scout,” she corrected him for whatever public they played to during even the most private conversation.
    “Whatever, babe.” He grinned. Barry Reichert enjoyed getting into a persona where he could play fast and loose with a ranking female homicide officer. That was almost living as dangerously as risking his sanity and life among the crystal meth set.
    Barry was an unstriking brown/brown: hazel-eyed, dishwater brown-haired, middle-American guy with scraggly coif, a five o’clock shadow aiming for midnight blue and missing by several shades, and scruffy casual clothes.
    Like all undercover officers, he absorbed his role. He was “in character” night and day, even when a slice of reality stabbed through on the knife of a cutting remark.
    Despite his apparent shaggy geniality, Barry reminded her of that walking immaculate

Similar Books

Brooke

V.C. Andrews

By Any Other Name

Tia Fielding

Catching Tatum

Lucy H. Delaney

Dare to be Mine

Kim Allison

Lesser of Two Evils

K. S. Martin

Gift of Fire

Jayne Ann Krentz