Authors: Catherine Aird
âBesides?' said Sloan. If Crosby fell off that pouffe he'd have his guts for garters.
âBesides a woman always knows, Inspector. Always.'
âI'm sure, madam.' His own wife, Margaret, knew because he told her so. Always.
Detective Constable Crosby had seemed at first unsure of what to do with his knees. Turning them first one way and then another, he had settled for enveloping his long arms round them and then locking his fingers together. He unclasped a hand now to point at a photograph in a silver frame.
âThat him, is it?' he asked conversationally.
Hannah Glawari expelled her breath in a long, tearful sigh. âYes, that's my Paul.'
Only, decided Sloan, he wasn't her Paul any longer. He'd died as Bunty Meggie's father and presumably that was all. He braced himself to put a painful question to the distressed woman. âForgive me, madam, but wasâerâmarriageâerâcontemplated?'
âWe were to be married on Midsummer's Day, Inspector. Paul said it would be a good time because we were both in the mid-summer of our lives.' Here she broke down completely, quite beyond speech now.
Shaking off a powerful charm, Sloan made a swift return to his duties. As they left Hannah Glawari's house he said to the detective constable, âCrosby, find out who Dr Meggie's solicitors are.'
âSir?'
âAnd enquire whether the good doctor had by any chance made a will in expectation of marriage before he died or a new one, for that matter.'
âBeg pardon, sir, but why would that be?'
âBecause you can't sue a dead man for breach of promise,' said Sloan irritably. âThat's why.'
âDriving a man to suicide, Sloan,' pronounced Superintendent Leeyes weightily, âisn't an offence yet.'
âNo, sir,' Detective Inspector Sloan had, duty bound, reported back at Berebury Police Station before going over to the
post mortem
on Dr Meggie.
âAlthough,'âLeeyes stroked his chin consideringlyââI'm not at all sure that it shouldn't be.'
âYes, sir. One day, perhaps.' There were a number of actions that were both legal and bad. His own mother, who was a great churchwoman, was strong on sin and weak on parking offences. âActually, sir, we're not one hundred per cent certain yet about the suicide in Dr Meggie's case.'
âHa!'
âHis daughter says,' here Sloan chose his words with extreme care, âthat her father had a telephone call about five o'clock this morning asking him to go to see a patient at Willow End Farm at Larking.'
âDid he?' said Leeyes, adding significantly, âAnd did she?'
âThere's an old farmer there by the name of Granger who was very ill and, in fact, did die there later on today from heart failure.'
âThat's three deaths,' said Leeyes.
âYes, sir,' agreed Sloan. From all accounts it was the merest chance that there hadn't been four. Dr Dilys Chomel had told Crosby that the glass that had injured Darren Clements's hand and arm had been perilously near an artery.
âI'm glad you haven't forgotten the woman in Berebury Hospital,' said Leeyes tartly.
âNo, sir. I haven't forgotten her. Or her son. I'm seeing Mr Gordon Galloway later on this afternoon. After we've heard what Dr Dabbe has to say about his mother.'
âWillow End Farm, Larking,' mused the superintendent, changing tack again. âThat's where the doctor was found, isn't it?'
âYes, sir.' Sloan coughed. âOnly he wasn't sent for.'
âWhat's that?' The superintendent's head came up with a jerk. âWhat do you mean?'
âAccording to their statements neither the farmer's familyâthe Grangersânor the patient's own doctorâthat's Angus Browneâtelephoned Dr Meggie at five o'clock this morning to ask him to visit Abel Granger.' He turned a page in his notebook. âDr Browne did ring for him but not until later on in the morning.'
âPuts things in a different light, that,' conceded Leeyes upon the instant.
âIt means,' ventured Sloan, âthat whoever did send that messageâ'
âOr says that the message had been sent.'
âThat's something we'll be looking into, sir.' Sloan accepted his superior officer's qualification without demur. âWhat it does mean is that whoever did cause that message to be written on the pad beside the deceased's bed'âhe didn't think he could put it more precisely than thatââknew that old Abel Granger was ill enough to warrant the consultant being called out at that time.'
âAnd that Dr Meggie knew that too,' put in Leeyes, âand would come if sent for. Doctors don't always.'
âHe'd go all right, sir.' Sloan told the superintendent that Dr Browne had said that old Abel Grangerâlike Mrs Muriel Gallowayâhad been one of those entered for the trial of the drug code-named Cardigan.
Leeyes drummed his fingers on his desk. âI don't like it, Sloan.'
âNo, sir.' Sloan hadn't thought for one moment that he would. He added something else the superintendent wouldn't like either. âSomeone telephoned Kinnisport Hospital first thing this morning to say Dr Meggie wouldn't be taking his clinic there today andâ'
âAnd?'
âAnd Bunty Meggieâthat's the deceased's daughterâswears it wasn't her.'
Shirley Partridge, who had taken the incoming call on her switchboard, had been sure it had been a woman on the line and she had told Detective Constable Crosby so. âThe voice was a bit husky,' she said, âas if she might have had a cold.' That was all she remembered.
âBut was it the doctor's daughter?' Crosby had insisted. He had reached Shirley's little glass-walled cubicle at Kinnisport Hospital only after a bruising encounter in the entrance hall with the artist, Adrian Gomm.
Of this she had been less sure.
âThink back,' he urged.
âI don't know Miss Meggie's voice very well,' said Shirley Partridge, professionally challenged. âShe doesn't often ring the hospital. Not since Dr Meggie got his own mobile telephone.'
âBut someone rang,' persisted the young constable.
âOh, yes.' Shirley Partridge had been quite confident about this. âAnd I took the message and passed it on straightaway to Dr Friar. He was the one who needed to know about taking the clinic instead of Dr Meggie, you see.'
Crosby's expression suddenly became very cunning. âDid the caller ask for Dr Friar by name or did you just ring through to him yourself? Off your own bat, I mean.'
âShe said would I pass a message on to Dr Friar.'
âBut she didn't ask to be put through to him himself?' asked Crosby, who had never really mastered the matter of leading questions.
âNo.'
âAnd when exactly did the call come?'
Shirley Partridge sank her head into her hands. âI'd have to think.'
âDo that,' commanded Crosby. âIt's quite important.'
âYou could always ask Dr Friar.'
âI have,' said Crosby. Dr Martin Friar, having been woken by the call, had immediately gone back to sleep. He had no idea when the telephone had rung.
âIt was early,' she volunteered.
âHow early?'
âQuite early.'
âWas there anyone about? That funny chap doing the painting, say?'
âOnly Dr Teal. She kept on coming along here after she came off-duty at seven thirty.'
âDid this woman ring before or after you saw Dr Teal?'
âOh, before,' said Shirley Partridge, her face clearing. âShe rang even before the calls for Niobe started to come in and they're always early.'
âWho's Niobe?' asked Crosby.
âIt's not a person. It's the name of one of the wards here. At least,'âShirley Partridge remembered somethingââI think Niobe was a person in history. All the wards here, you see, are named after doctors in historyâ'
âAnd Niobe was a doctor?'
âNo.' She shook her head. âBut when they wanted a name for a new sort of ward in the hospital someone suggested they called it Niobe.'
âWhy?'
âNiobe is the ward here where they treat infertilityâ'
âSo?'
âNiobe is someone in Greek mythology who wept for her babies that were not ⦠Dr Teal explained it to me.'
Crosby turned slightly pink.
âAnd the ladies,' said Shirley, âwho are to be admitted there have to take their temperatures early in the morning so they know whether to come in that day.'
Crosby turned even more pink.
âBecause, you see, it all depends onâ' but she was talking to thin air.
Detective Constable Crosby had fled.
CHAPTER NINE
Make it compulsory for a doctor using a brass plate to have inscribed in it ⦠the words âRemember, I too am mortal.'
One of the many things which Dr Dilys Chomel found difficult about being a house physician at Berebury Hospital Trust was the sudden switches of role required of her.
One moment there she was happily dispensing authoritative advice to patients and having people twice her age hanging on her every word. The next minute she was trotting along behind Dr Byville, being cut down to size by having her every suggestion about diagnosis and treatment subjected to comment and criticism. Teaching by humiliation it was known in the profession.
And all the time she was trying to keep on the good side of Sister Pocock who had been ruling the Women's Medical Ward longer than anyone could remember and whose goodwill made all the difference to a quiet life.
Life at the moment was not quiet.
âIs there anyone else on this ward who's on the Cardigan Protocol?' Dr Byville had heard the news about Dr Meggie and hurried straight back to the Women's Medical Ward at Berebury Hospital.
âThe ventricular fibrillation in bed seven.' The patient in bed seven had a name but Dilys Chomel had forgotten it and she doubted if Dr Byville had ever known it.
âGod knows what all this is about,' said Byville irritably, âbut I don't like it.'
âNo, sir.' Dilys Chomel had never liked the Cardigan Protocol but no one had ever asked her opinion.
âAnd what Meggie wanted to go and do a thing like that forâ' It was the nearest Dilys Chomel had ever been to seeing Roger Byville animated. A normally colourless man, he was quite stirred now.
âNo, sir.' Where Dilys Chomel came from suicide was not a problem. Keeping alive took up too much time and energy.
âStart taking the ventricular fibrillation off the protocol,' ordered the senior physician, âand step up her other drugs to compensate if necessary.'
âVery good, sir.'
âBut be very careful. There could just be some problems with Cardigan that we don't know about.'
âI understand.'
The consultant relaxed for a moment. âI reckon,' he said unguardedly, âthat all hell's going to be let loose over this.'
âYes, sir,' said Dilys. âDo we ⦠I mean, is there something thatâ'
He cut her short abruptly. âAnyone else on it here?'
âNo, sir,' stammered Dilys. âNot since Mrs Galloway died.'
He jerked his head. âAnything back from the pathologist about her yet?'
Dilys Chomel shook her head. âNot so far, sir.'
âSee that I get it as soon as it comes.' Dr Roger Byville looked up and down the ward. âYou'd better give me a run-down on all of Dr Meggie's cases here. I'll have to take them over until they find someone else to fill his post and that isn't going to be easy.'
Dilys obediently supplied him with the details and then came back to the condition of one of Dr Byville's own patients on the ward. âI'm a bit worried about Mrs Aileen Hathersageâshe's the spleen in the end bedâ'
He gave a quick frown. âSpleens are always worrying. Has she got any Howell-Jolly bodies?'
âI don't know, sir,' she said haltingly, trying hard to remember what Howell-Jolly bodies were. Something seen in blood, she knew, but she couldn't for the life of her think what. She wished she dare get out her little
vade mecum
from her pocket and look itâor was it them?âup.
âFind out,' commanded Byville. âWhat's the trouble with her now, anyway?'
âI'm not sure, sir. Only that she's rather ill today.' Naïve as she was, Dilys Chomel had already learned all about the meiosis of medical-speak: doctor to doctor, that is. It was understatement raised to an art form. In that context ârather ill' meant what the lay person would consider very ill indeed. By the same token, ânot too good' really meant dying. âShe's quite a lot worse,' continued Dilys uncomfortably, âthan she was yesterday.'
Byville gave an almost imperceptible shrug of his thin shoulders. âShe had a splenectomy for some reason or other last year.'
âIt was ruptured in a road traffic accident,' said Dilys, who had clerked the patient on her admission. âThey couldn't stop it bleeding.'
âSo,' the consultant opened his hands in a gesture of hopelessness, âshe's lost her spleen. And now she needs it. Pretty badly, actually.'
âYes, sir, I know butâ'
âAnd, Dr Chomel, neither you nor I can put it back for her.'
âNo, sir, of course not.'
âI expect the barber boys'll find a way of doing it one day but not yet awhile.'
âNo, sir.' Sister Pocock had had to explain to her why Dr Byville always called the surgeons the barber boys. Ever since then Dilys had been scanning the streets of Berebury looking for a red-and-white striped barber's pole. Sister Pocock had also attemptedâwithout successâto make her understand why it was that the physicians invariably considered themselves a cut above the surgeons.
âAnd Mrs Hathersage will have been very prone to infection ever since.'
âI understand that, sir, butâ'
âAnd will remain so for the rest of her life. Some authorities,' he said, belatedly conscious of a duty to teach, âmaintain that the immunity improves with time but I have yet to see the evidence of that myself.'