special during the holidays.â
Lia held open the nondescript white door marked PRIVATE, and with a âsee ya!â wave to Missy, I followed Lia down a long corridor. Liaâs office was, I knew, at the rear. The austere stark white walls and muted gray industrial carpeting contrasted sharply with the opulence of the client areas. Her office was equally plain, a place to work, not relax. I couldnât help but notice that the paint was chipped and scratched and the carpet near the threshold was threadbare.
âI hope Iâm not disturbing you,â I said. âIâll only keep you a minute.â
âNot at all,â she said. âHave a seat. Tell me what I can do to help.â
âItâs Ian. I havenât heard from him, so I thought Iâd stop by and ask if you have.â
Lia raised her chin. âNo.â
âIâm so worried,â I said. âI try not to be, but I am.â
âIâd be worried, too, Josie. Itâs worrying. I barely know him and Iâm upset. Do you have thoughts about what might be going on?â
âNo,â I said, stopping myself just in time from sharing Tyâs opinion that Ian might be off with another woman.
As Lia walked me out, we agreed to let one another know the minute we heard anything. I waved good-bye, got in my car, and for the second time in two days drove straight to the Rocky Point police station.
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CHAPTER SEVEN
As I walked through the densely falling snow toward the weathered, cottage-looking building that housed the Rocky Point Police Department, a bitter wind tore off the water. I flipped my hood up, glad Iâd parked close to the door. Inside, I approached the chest-high counter that divided the lobby from the working area and waited for someone to look up. Two uniformed police officers were huddled together in the back talking. Ellis was leaning over someoneâs desk reading from the monitor. Cathy, the civilian admin who served as office manager, was pouring a cup of coffee from a Mr. Coffee machine that lived on a two-drawer file cabinet near her desk.
Cathy saw me out of the corner of her eye and smiled. She was plus-sized, with blond hair teased high and ice blue eyes, and she knew more about the inner workings of the police station than anyone else.
âHi, Josie,â she said.
Ellis looked up.
âHi, Cathy.â I met Ellisâs gaze, pumping mine full of gravitas. âWe need to talk.â
âSure,â he said.
He unlatched the swinging partition, stepped through into the lobby, and headed to his private office. I trailed along. He swung the door closed, and it latched with a sharp snap.
âIs this about Ian Bennington?â he asked once I was inside. âNothingâs changed, Josie.â
âSure it has. Itâs now forty-eight hours, give or take, since anyone has seen him. Heâs a foreigner, Ellis, a stranger to Rocky Point. Do you need me to raise hell with the British Embassy, or will you act as if Iâm a rational person making a reasonable request?â
His lips pressed together. âWhat exactly are you asking me to do?â
âSee if heâs in his hotel room. He may be sick. Maybe he slipped in the bathtub and hurt his head. Trace his car. What if he lost control on black ice and plummeted into a ravine? He told me he was struggling with driving on the opposite side of the road from what he was used to, and I doubt heâs ever driven in the kind of winter conditions we have around here. Find him.â
Ellis sat behind his desk and pointed at one of the two guest chairs. I perched on the edge, impatient and annoyed. I didnât understand his hesitation.
âI have a photo,â I said. I handed over one copy of the photograph Iâd printed earlier.
Ellis stared at it. âIâd need a court order to enter his room, and at this point, I donât have enough evidence to ask for one. While I know you
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