Cold Pursuit - Carla Neggers [36]
That transtibial—below-the-knee—field amputation had probably saved Grit’s life.
A short woman with ultrablack dyed hair emerged from a knot of reporters and walked up to Grit. She had bloodred nails and wore a denim jacket over a black dress and flat gold shoes that he figured cost more than he earned in a week. Maybe a month.
She took a lipstick out of a gigantic black handbag and looked sideways at him as she opened it up. She had big, lavender eyes. Grit put her at somewhere between fifty and a hundred. Whatever her age, she was still a knockout.
She dabbed her mouth with the lipstick. As far as he could see, it was the same color as her lips. What was the point?
“You’re not a reporter,” she said with a trace of a Southern accent, not unlike his own. “What are you doing hanging around out here?”
He figured he didn’t have to answer her question. “Who are you?”
“I’m a reporter. Myrtle Smith.”
Grit had never heard of her. “Nice to meet you, Ms. Smith.”
“Myrtle’s fine, but if you make fun of my name or tell me you have an aunt Myrtle—” she smiled “—I’ll cut off your balls.”
She weighed maybe a hundred pounds. But she could have a sharp little knife in that big handbag. Grit realized his foot wasn’t hurting anymore. “I do have an aunt Myrtle. She’s my great-aunt. My grandmother’s older sister.”
“What’s your grandmother’s name?”
“Vasselona.”
“I like that. Your name?”
He debated telling her. “Ryan Taylor.”
“Mind if I call you Ryan?”
“Most people call me Grit.”
She gave him a frank once-over. He was dark and wiry, his hair almost as black as hers, and he had on jeans and a plain gray sweatshirt. “I can see why.” She shoved her lipstick back in her handbag. “Well, Grit, what are you up to?”
He didn’t answer.
“Not a talker, are you? Okay. I’ll talk. The police are looking for eyewitnesses to the hit-and-run this morning. No one’s come forward yet.”
A beefy doorman opened up the back door of a black limo that had pulled up to the hotel. Myrtle watched who got out but didn’t react. Just a businessman, no bodyguards, no Secret Service. Not anyone high up in law enforcement.
Grit figured something about him had sparked Myrtle’s interest.
“It’s those dreamy black eyes of yours,” Moose said.
“Shut up,” Grit said calmly. Moose had always had a sense of humor.
Myrtle frowned. “What did you say?”
Grit ignored her question. Moose wasn’t easy to explain to people. “What else do you have on Ambassador Bruni’s death?”
“Police want to know if he was meeting someone here at the hotel or just was on his way to breakfast by himself. There’s nothing on his calendar. His office is across the street and up a few doors.”
“Lots of talk about where he’d end up next.”
“Yes. Did you know Ambassador Bruni, Grit?”
“No, ma’am.”
She didn’t look offended that he’d called her ma’am. “I hear he could be difficult.” She opened her handbag again, fished out a business card and handed it to him. “That’s how to reach me if you want to talk.”
“About what, Myrtle?”
“Life, death, the virtues of Southern peach cobbler. Whatever you want.”
She eased off down the street. The doormen all watched her. The beefy one came and stood next to Grit. “That accident this morning’s killing business today. Maybe the reporters will come in for a drink when they’re done. Bottom-feeders.”
“Don’t like reporters?”
“Nope.”
He didn’t look as if he liked many people. Grit didn’t mind.
“It’s not as if that bastard died in the service of anyone but himself,” the doorman said.
“Not a popular guy?”
“I hate to speak ill of the dead, but, no, he wasn’t popular, at least not with me. He was in here a few times a week. Most days he was a Class A prick.”
“A mean bastard, huh?”
“Entitled. I’ll take a mean scrapper any day over some trust-fund jackass who thinks he can push people around. They’re not all like that—we get some damn fine trust-fund types in here. Bruni wasn’t one of them.”
“Think someone ran him over on purpose?”
“I suppose someone else could have. But no, that’s not what I think. I think