Part 21 (1/2)

As Rudd.i.c.k, sauntering again, reached the door, Grigsby said, ”One thing, Wilbur.”

Rudd.i.c.k turned.

Grigsby said, ”I'm gonna be watchin' you. All of you. Like a hawk.” But Grigsby's heart wasn't really in the threat, and it didn't sound, even to him, particularly threatening.

Apparently, it didn't sound too threatening to Rudd.i.c.k, either. He only shrugged, and then he turned and flounced from the room.

Grigsby stood looking down through the window at the street below him, a shallow brown river dimpled with raindrops, s.h.i.+vering beneath gusts of wind. The storm was easing up, the clouds were feathering away. A few people, most of them in flapping yellow slickers, dashed along the sleek black sidewalks.

Poor Dell.

Poor Dell was right.

Grigsby had known Dell Jameson for nearly fifteen years. He was a good man, hardworking, dependable, and a good father to his kids. And brave as a bull-three years ago he had gone barreling through a burning house to grab old Mrs. Cartwright and carry her out to the street. He had come staggering onto the sidewalk and set her down soft as silk on the ground, then taken a step or two back toward the house and keeled right over.

Jesus Christ. Dell Jameson.

How the h.e.l.l was Grigsby supposed to handle this?

Hey, Dell, how's Barbara, oh, and by the way, about what time last night you finish cornholing the lulu-belle from San Francisco?

Grigsby frowned.

G.o.ddamm it, Dell. How could you do this to me?

He sighed.

Well, s.h.i.+t. Maybe it was time to pack it in. Let Sheldon and Greaves take over like they wanted to. Looked like they were about to do that anyway.

He frowned again.

Greaves. Who had gone whining to Greaves?

Wilde.

It had to be Wilde. Couldn't have been von Hesse or Rudd.i.c.k, because Greaves had known too soon. If it'd been O'Conner, he would've told Greaves about the shooting, and Greaves hadn't mentioned that. Henry had no reason to talk to Greaves, not that Grigsby could see. It had to be Wilde or Vail, and Vail and Grigsby had struck a deal.

So. It had been Wilde.

Grigsby tried to work up some anger at the Englishman, and discovered that he couldn't do it.

He really didn't care anymore. About much of anything.

It was beginning to look like he'd never get to the bottom of this Molly Woods thing. The whole business was a mess. Greaves and Sheldon b.u.t.ting in. Nances coming out of the woodwork, everywhere you looked. (Including, Jesus, poor Dell Jameson.) Drunken reporters and crazy German officers. French countesses.

French countesses. Grigsby remembered the round b.r.e.a.s.t.s, the pouty mouth, and felt a familiar tingling tightness in his crotch.

Leave it be, Bob, that one's too cla.s.sy for the likes of you.

Right about now, Grigsby would've given his left arm for an uncomplicated shoot-out. Two drunken cowboys drawing down on each other for the simple satisfaction of blowing each other off the face of the earth.

Someone knocked on the office door.

Grigsby turned. ”Yeah?”

The door opened and Carver poked in his head. ”Doc Boynton is out here, Marshal.”

Sitting opposite Grigsby, Boynton raised his gla.s.s of bourbon in a hand that was small and stubby and yet somehow delicate. ”Health and wealth and pretty women, Bob, and the time to enjoy them all.”

Grigsby raised his own gla.s.s and smiled. ”Too late for all of it, Doc.”

The doctor was short, round, and bald. His eyebrows were bushy and gray and so was his mustache. His cheeks were red; his eyes, behind s.h.i.+ny round spectacles, were light brown. He wore-as he had always worn, for as long as Grigsby had known him-a gray three-piece suit. Only the lower portion of the trousers were wet, so he must've worn a slicker and hung it up on the coat rack out in the anteroom.

Boynton sipped at his gla.s.s, sighed happily, lowered the gla.s.s to his shelf of stomach, and held it there between his fingers, daintily, like a spinster careful not to spill a drop of sherry. He lifted his head slightly and sniffed at the air, then turned with a grin to Grigsby. ”Are you wearing toilet water these days, Bob?”

Grigsby smiled. ”Tryin' to improve myself.”

Boynton grinned at him. ”Or maybe you've got a fancy woman hiding in the closet?”

”Wish I did. Okay, Doc. What can you tell me about Molly Woods?”

Boynton frowned. ”Well, for one thing,” he said, ”she couldn't get any deader than she is.”

Grigsby smiled bleakly. ”Yeah. I reckoned she wasn't gonna be makin' no recovery.”

Boynton shook his head. ”Jesus Christ, Bob. I've been a doctor for more years than I care to think about, and I've never seen anything like that. Have you? Ever?”

”Nope. When do you figure she got killed?”

”Sometime early this morning.” Boynton adjusted his spectacles. ”Probably not much earlier than two or three, I'd say.”

Which meant that any of the men in Wilde's tour could've killed her. Including Rudd.i.c.k, after Dell Jameson had left his hotel. Which meant that maybe Grigsby wouldn't have to talk to Dell Jameson after all.

”What's the latest time it coulda been?” he asked Boynton.

Boynton shrugged. ”Four or five, maybe. Not much beyond that.”

Grigsby nodded-any later than that and there would've been people up and about, even in Shantytown. ”There were some parts missin' from the body?”

Boynton looked at him. ”How'd you know about that, Bob?”

”Molly Woods wasn't the first hooker this sonovab.i.t.c.h has cut up.”

Boynton frowned, thought for a moment, took a sip of whiskey. ”That doesn't really surprise me. It seemed to me that he knew what he was doing. He knew what he was looking for. Who else has he killed?”

”Three others. Not here in Denver. What do you mean, he knew what he was doin'?”

”He knows his anatomy, Bob. He cut out her uterus, cut it out and took it with him when he left. And did a fairly neat job of it, too.”

”You sayin' he's a doctor?”