Heated(76)

“Do you want me to call him?” Tyler asked.

“Not yet. Caroline said he was a lunch customer. So if he’s not at the club today, maybe I’ll have you call. But I’d like to chat with him first.”

“Fair enough.”

“In the meantime,” I added, “I’m going to see if I can’t find her in Vegas the old-fashioned way, detective way.”

As he maneuvered the streets and highways of Chicago, I pulled out my phone and hit the only speed dial number I had programmed. Two rings later, my dad answered.

“Hey, daughter o’ mine,” he said, in the kind of gravelly baritone that could be either soothing or scary depending on whether he was helping a victim or interrogating a suspect. “How’s the hip?”

“Hey, yourself. It’s fine. They’re idiots for keeping me off the job.”

“No argument there. To what do I owe this call?” I could hear the clatter of the station behind him, and imagined him in front of a battered desk covered two feet thick in paperwork. “You just wanted to hear your wonderful father’s voice, or do you need something?”

I laughed. “If I said both, would you see right through my ruse?”

“Pretty much.”

“Okay, then I need something.”

“And I’m happy to help. If you can answer one question.”

“Shoot.”

“What the hell are you doing working when you’re supposed to be recuperating on medical leave?”

I leaned back and rolled my eyes. Beside me, Tyler’s mouth quirked up. I knew he couldn’t hear my dad’s side of the conversation, but I supposed the one-sided version was amusing on its own.

“Saving my sanity,” I said dryly. “And helping out a friend.” I gave him the quick rundown on Candy and Amy.

“What do you need?”

“I’ve already prowled the phone records and I’m getting nowhere. Do you know anyone in the Vegas PD?”

“I’m insulted you have to ask. I know everyone. That’s what makes me invincible.”

“You’re not as funny as you think you are, Daddy. Seriously, I was hoping you could ask someone for a favor. Maybe she’s been cited for speeding or something. Can you get someone to run a search? See if her driver’s license has come up? Maybe get a current address?”

He promised he would, of course. “But you have to promise not to run yourself ragged. Like it or not, you’re still recovering. And more than that you need to take a step back. You go at this like a bat out of hell, but you’re going to burn out.”

“Daddy …”

“I’m serious. Go find a guy. See a movie. Take two hours off being a detective to be a girl.”

My eyes were on Tyler. “Thanks for the advice, Dad. Believe it or not, I’m working on it.”

Chapter Nineteen

“Wow,” I said as we stood in front of the vibrant purple facade. I tilted my head up to look at Tyler. “There are dresses in there?”

“Many,” he said.

“If you say so.”

We’d walked down Michigan Avenue from The Drake to Tonic, this Gold Coast boutique that, to my mind anyway, more resembled a child’s Lego construct than an actual retail establishment. The building appeared to be made of plastic blocks, though Tyler assured me it was more solid than that. It consisted of multiple levels, like a wedding cake that had gone horribly wrong or, again, like a child’s toy, if that child was trying to use up every Lego he owned.

The doorway was in the shape of a triangle, and various geometric shapes made up the row of windows that lined the second story. It was tucked in tight between two classically ornate buildings, and the contrast only made it look more, well, purple.