Midnight: Midnight Betrayal - Midnight: Midnight Betrayal Part 30
Library

Midnight: Midnight Betrayal Part 30

"What?"

"Don't you watch the news?" Jackson asked, shaking his head. "We arrested Professor English for the museum murder."

"You did?" Conor would have jumped to his feet if his legs had been steadier.

"Can't give you the deets, but we were on our way back to the station when this call came in. We thought you should know." Jackson stepped toward the door. "Excuse us, we have to go nail his ass."

"Good luck with that," Conor said.

Jackson turned back. "Oh, and we're bringing Blaine Delancey in. We think he might have been the one who pushed Dr. Hancock into the street."

"You'll let me know if the kid makes it, right?" Conor asked.

"Sure," Jackson said.

The cops walked out the door, leaving Conor in a state of disbelief. Even though he'd found evidence the professor was a pervert, and he'd considered the possibility of Xavier being the killer, the cop's confirmation of the professor's guilt was still a shock.

Was it really over?

His phone vibrated. He glanced at the screen, hoping it was Louisa. The vet's number popped onto the display.

He answered the call. "Hello?"

The vet didn't waste any time. "You need to come down here immediately."

Louisa checked her cell phone. Nothing from Conor. He'd promised to call her when he heard from the vet. Maybe the vet hadn't finished the tests or he'd gotten tied up at work. The bar could get insanely busy at dinnertime. He'd call when he could. She needed to be patient.

Did he even know about Xavier's arrest? She still couldn't believe the professor was a sexual deviant and a killer.

She collected her purse, shimmied into her jacket, and locked her office. April slumped at her desk, not looking any more productive or less miserable than Louisa had been all afternoon.

She stopped in front of her desk. "I'm heading out."

April sniffed. "Good idea."

"Are you going to be all right?" Louisa hesitated, unsure of how to proceed with the closer relationship that had sprung up with her assistant.

"Yeah." April gave her a watery smile. "We have to face one day at a time. That's all we can do."

Louisa took a deep breath. Her lungs ached with sadness, fighting tight ribs to expand. "I suppose you're right."

It was over, but it was going to take a long time for it to feel that way.

April wiped her nose and pulled her purse from her drawer. "I'll walk out with you."

Seeing April cry started Louisa all over again. She plucked a tissue from the box on her assistant's desk and dried the tender skin around her eyes.

April changed into athletic shoes. They walked toward the exit in silence and swiped their badges at the security desk. Outside on the concrete apron in front of the museum, April turned toward the bus stop with a sad wave. Louisa scanned the curb for the Rittenhouse town car.

The museum murderer had been caught. She could just walk home, but she'd arranged for the pickup that morning, and her limbs felt as if they had tripled in weight since then. Every step was a supreme effort. She was going to take a hot bath, put on yoga pants, and climb into bed. But without Kirra, the apartment would be empty. How could she have gotten so attached to the dog in less than a week?

An even better idea occurred to her. She would change her clothes, then go see Conor at work tonight and have dinner at the bar. Perhaps the crowd and noise would be better than her silent apartment. So what if he hadn't said he was falling for her too? Probably, she should have waited before springing that on him this soon. A week did not make a relationship.

Decision made, she suddenly craved his strong arms around her body. Just being with him would make her feel better. How could she have gotten so attached to him in such a short period of time? It suddenly seemed as if her life had started when she'd walked into his bar the week before. Prior to him, she'd been alive, but she hadn't really been living.

Everything had changed since that day. Riki and Zoe were dead, probably Isa too.

The wind blurred her watery vision. She spotted the sleek black vehicle fifty yards ahead. As she approached, the uniformed driver got out and opened the door for her. Blinking away her tears, she rooted through her purse for another tissue. She was blotting her eyes and running nose as she stepped into the vehicle. A jolt of pain struck her in the shoulder and blazed through her body. She stiffened and fell forward onto the back seat. Her twitching legs were shoved roughly into the vehicle.

What was happening?

A shadow loomed over her. A knee pressed into her back, shoving her face into the seat. The weight holding her down sparked a surge of brain-numbing panic. Before she could move, something bound her ankles. Her hands were pulled behind her back and fastened together. In seconds, she was effectively kidnapped.

The weight moved off her back. Unable to control her body enough to even turn her head, she caught the driver's back in her peripheral vision. She couldn't see his head, but the figure was too tall, too thin. It wasn't the short, stocky driver from the Rittenhouse. Then who was it?

The door closed. Her captor got into the driver's seat. The quiet snick of the door locks made everything fall into place.

Oh my God. Fear slammed through her with the same jolt of electricity as she realized the truth. The police had arrested the wrong person as the murderer.

31.

The back room at the veterinary clinic smelled like dogs and disinfectant. Conor stared at the plastic pouches of coffee-colored liquid spread on the stainless-steel tray. "What is that?"

Standing next to him in pale blue scrubs, the vet scratched her head. "We aren't positive, but we suspect drugs."

"Drugs." Events and information clicked into place like the tumblers in a lock. "And you took them out of Kirra's stomach?"

"Yes." The vet gestured to the packs. "There have been several other recent cases of liquid heroin and cocaine being transported inside animals."

"Liquid heroin." It made perfect sense. Hector had been way too determined to get Kirra back.

"Yes. Kirra is a lucky dog. If one of those pouches had burst, she would have died."

"But you said she's going to be OK."

"She is." The vet nodded. "The police are on the way. Since she's your dog, you'll need to stay and talk to them. Do you want to see her while you wait?"

"Yes." Relief coursed through Conor as his gaze swept over the pitiful dog. Her belly was shaved. A long row of stitches closed an eight-inch incision. An IV line was taped to her foreleg. The line snaked out of the metal cage and attached to the bag of fluids hanging on the bars above the door.

The vet opened the cage door. "You can pet her."

Conor reached in and stroked the dog's head. Her eyes opened. Her tail stub jerked in a weak wag the second she caught sight of him.

"I spayed her since she was under anesthesia anyway. She'll need to stay here overnight," the vet said.

"Thank you." Conor checked his messages but saw none from Louisa. A sliver of apprehension slid through his gut. She'd been waiting for word on Kirra.

The next hour was spent answering questions for the police report. The cops verified the pouches were likely full of liquid heroin. They'd had several other cases of drugs being transported in animals recently. It was seven o'clock before Conor finished. He left the vet's office. Pulling out his phone, he hurried toward the bar. He left a message on Louisa's cell phone and sent her another text. Something was wrong.

He went into Sullivan's.

Behind the bar, Pat set a freshly drawn draft in front of a customer. "Is everything all right?"

"The dog was full of heroin packets."

Pat's eyes widened. "Holy shit. No wonder that kid wanted her back so much."

"Yeah." Conor's gaze swept the bar. "Louisa hasn't been in?"

"No." Pat took an order and tilted a tall glass under the tap. "Was she supposed to come here?"

"No, but I haven't heard from her. She was worried about the dog. She should have called me right after work." Conor paced the length of the bar. "I'm going to drive over there."

"Go." Pat straightened the glass. A perfect head of foam topped the amber liquid. "Text me when you find her, all right?"

"Yeah." Conor headed out the back door. Was it just this morning that he'd found Hector bleeding in the alley? Seemed like much longer. His Porsche was parked on the street at the end of the alley. He started the engine. His phone chirped as he pulled away from the curb. He didn't recognize the number.

"Hello."

"Mr. Sullivan?" a familiar voice asked.

"Yes."

"This is Gerome from the Rittenhouse."

Conor's heart double tapped.

"The police have already been notified, but I wanted you to know too," Gerome said. "You know Dr. Hancock arranged for the car to pick her up after work."

"Yeah. I was there."

"Right. When she didn't come home right after work, I thought maybe she wanted to stop somewhere. But we just found our driver in the men's room utility closet. He was tied up. Someone zapped him with a homemade stun gun. His uniform and the car are missing. Dr. Hancock isn't in her apartment."

Conor's heart dropped into his stomach. "Someone stole the town car?"

"Yes."

"Did you try Dr. Hancock at the museum?"

"She left two hours ago."

"I'll be right there." Conor floored the Porsche. Weaving in and out of traffic on Front Street, he dug Detective Jackson's card out of his wallet. He left his name and number on the cop's voice mail with a simple message. "Louisa is missing."

Two patrolmen were questioning the driver when Conor ran into the Rittenhouse.

Gerome paced the lobby.

"Does he remember anything?"

"No." Gerome stopped and shook his head. "Someone zapped him as he came out of the stall. Whoever it was dragged him into the utility closet, stole his clothes and keys, and tied him up."

One of the cops walked over. "Are you the boyfriend?"

"Yes." Conor gave him his personal information. "Do you have any clues? What about tracking the GPS in her cell phone?"

"The town car is fitted with a GPS. We're trying to get a position on it now." The cop looked grim. "Her purse was found in the street in front of the museum. Her phone was inside."

Pacing, Conor dialed the museum, but the after-hours message played. He tapped Gerome on the shoulder. "I'm going to the museum. Call me if anything happens here?"

"Will do," Gerome said.

A police cruiser was parked at the curb in front of the museum. An officer was in the foyer, talking to the guards and a tall man Conor recognized from the fund-raiser as Louisa's boss. Conor banged on the door. Cusack opened it.

Conor pushed his way inside and introduced himself. "Where's Louisa?"

Cusack crossed his arms over his chest. "The police are reviewing the security camera footage. The guard saw Dr. Hancock walking toward a black sedan about fifty yards down the street. That's all he saw. It was rush hour. Most of the office staff was heading out. We're not open on Monday nights."

A second cop hustled down the hall.

"Are you familiar with the museum murder case?" Conor asked.

"Every cop in the city knows about the case," the cop said and then turned to Cusack. "Did anything unusual happen here today?"

"The whole office was out of sorts. Between the news that Isa Dumont had disappeared and Professor English had been arrested, everyone was in shock." He paused. "I doubt that it's connected, but just before she left, Dr. Hancock brought a box to my office. She claimed to have found it in one of the third-floor storage rooms. We've had a petty thief in the museum over the past few weeks. The box contained some of the items the staff had reported missing. I called the detectives in charge of the case. They weren't available, so I left a message."

"Would you show us the box?" the cop asked.

"Of course." Cusack led them to his office. "We changed cleaning contractors this week in hopes that would solve the problem. The things seemed to go missing at night."

Conor and the cop looked into the box of random personal items.

The cop pulled gloves out of his pocket and lifted the museum brochure onto the desk. He opened it, and a pile of papers fell out, including what appeared to be a map printed off the Internet. "It's a map."

Conor pointed to a fat line on the map. "The expressway." He moved his finger to tap two wavy squiggles. "The Delaware and Schuylkill Rivers."

They identified other landmarks.

"I wonder what these stars mean?"

"They're numbered. One and two are in North Kensington. Number three is in West Philly. Number four is in Camden." Conor squinted at the tiny marks.