Authors: Catherine Aird
âShe would. Painful things, abscesses.'
âSomeone might have put two and two together, then.'
âThey might.' The pathologist wasn't making any promises in that quarter.
âI see.' Sloan nodded. âI should have thought of that, shouldn't I?' Time was when he'd never even seen that sort of thing â an abscess at an injection site. That was before the abuse of drugs became a feature of police life. Though there seemed a world of difference between youngsters dying in filthy holes and corners and a middle-aged schoolmistress meticulously treating her diabetes, presumably an unsterile injection had the same effect on all members of the human race. If you prick us, do we not bleed ⦠No, that was something different.
âSomeone took care,' remarked the pathologist.
âThe other bottles â¦'
âRight as rain,' said Dabbe with singular inappropriateness.
âBut there had been insulin in the one she was using though, hadn't there? Once, I mean.'
âOh yes. It started off as the real stuff because there's still a very faint trace of it in the water left in the bottle.'
âThe bottle labelled insulin,' said Sloan heavily, thinking of someone ill and failing, increasing her dose and not getting any better. âNasty.'
âMurder always is,' said Dabbe. âAnd I should know.'
âDoctor â¦'
âYes?'
âLet me get this straight. Miss Wansdyke had been using this duff bottle up until the time she died. Agreed?'
âAgreed.'
âAnd all the other bottles are perfectly all right?'
âAgreed.'
âSo,' said Sloan, âif she had happened to pick on one of the other bottles in the batch she was using then she wouldn't have died when she did?'
âNo.'
Sloan paused. Then:
âAre you saying, Doctor,' he asked, thinking aloud, âthat someone must have tampered with the current one after she started using it, then? Not before?'
âOh yes,' returned Dabbe promptly. âYou see, Sloan, the only â er â non-destructive way into and out of that sort of bottle is by using a hypodermic syringe and pushing the needle through the rubber composition cap.'
âAh, I see â¦'
âThe patient might very well have noticed a puncture hole in a new bottle that she hadn't used before.'
âAnd would have suspected something then,' concurred Sloan.
âThe dirty deed,' pronounced Dr Dabbe in the manner of a pantomime king, âwill turn out to have been done after she started using that particular bottle. You'll see.'
âSo,' said Sloan, who had always been quick at school, âif we could work out how many doses she had out of it we could expect to find an extra hole in the rubber cap?'
âWe could,' said the pathologist. âIt would be clever stuff all right, but â¦'
âBut?'
âToo clever for open court.'
âAh.' They â policeman and pathologist both â knew the dangers that lay in that direction. The Defence could be as clever as it liked. That pleased everyone except the police. The Prosecution had to be more careful about the weight of evidence. Pitching the full resources of the establishment against the lonely figure in the dock had a counter-productive effect on some juries. Especially nowadays.
âJuries don't like it,' said Dabbe.
âJuries,' said Sloan shortly, âaren't what they used to be.'
âTwelve good men and true.'
âThat's as may be,' said Sloan. Since the property qualification had gone, juries were a random selection. Very. And it showed in the verdicts they brought in. âYou don't know where you are with juries these days. Take obscenity, for instance.'
âAnything to oblige,' murmured Dabbe negligently.
âOften as not your new-style jury doesn't even know what the prosecution is going on about.'
âNeed French lessons, do they?'
âAnd when it is explained to them,' said Sloan stiffly, âthey won't convict. Can't see what all the fuss is about.'
âI can tell you anyway,' complained Dabbe, âthat too clever by half prosecutions don't go down well either, and as for â¦'
âThe trouble is â' Sloan rarely let himself be carried away in this fashion ââ that they can't be flattered into thinking they understand any more. They know there are a lot of things they can't grasp. People have been telling them so all their lives.'
âThey all know, though,' agreed Dabbe sagely, âwhen they're being buttered up.'
âAnd they take against expert witnesses,' said Sloan not entirely inconsequentially.
âThere's nothing new about that,' said the pathologist sturdily. âA watertight case isn't watertight if the jury doesn't like it.'
Sloan agreed. As he did so his eye was caught by the little heap of message sheets on his desk. He came back to the matter in hand.
âI think we can agree, then,' he said, âthat it wasn't chance that Miss Wansdyke was using this doctored bottle now.'
âIf you're asking my opinion,' said Dabbe, âI should say on the contrary. By the way, Sloan â¦'
âYes?'
âCould you be a bit more careful with your adjectives? Gives the profession a bad name. Doctored, indeed! Whatever next â¦'
The very ill patient on Fleming Ward did die.
In spite of all that the doctors and modern medical science could do, the last enemy â death â supervened. Nature, as is her wont, won in the end. As it happened, the patient wasn't the husband of the stout countrywoman to whom Detective-Constable Crosby had been speaking earlier but he had been somebody's husband and Sister Fleming's first duty was to tell his wife that he had died. Where handkerchief work was involved, so to speak, she always felt the task to be hers. When she delegated it to the young house officers she usually had to see the relative herself all over again.
Once more with feeling, in fact.
On Fleming Ward itself a certain briskness set in as the man died. Death represented a new procession of tasks and another course of action. It was a clear-cut and speedy course. Porters were summoned, screens appeared. The House Surgeon and a Registrar, suddenly idle, were treated to a little oblique and educative propaganda from the ward sister
en passant
.
âI'll fight for a patient for all I'm worth,' said Sister Fleming quite fiercely, âbut once they've gone I forget them completely.'
The two young doctors got the message and melted away, consoled, to other duties.
The ward sister always had been one to improve the shining hour. She turned her attention to the nurses.
âAnd when you've made up a fresh bed, Nurse Petforth,' she said sharply, âbe sure to check the drip on the hemi-colectomy over there.'
âYes, Sister,' said Briony obediently. In prison, in the Army, in the police force, you might be a name and number: in hospital it was quite different. If you were a patient on a medical ward you were known by the disease you had. If you were on a surgical ward it was by the name of the operation you had been admitted to have.
âThat drip should have been attended to before,' she said.
âYes, Sister.'
âAnd Nurse â¦' She turned her baleful gaze towards the probationer who was helping Briony Petforth with her bed-making and whose very first encounter with death this had been.
âYes, Sister,' said the young nurse tremulously. âYou should have noticed before now that the appendix has come round from his anaesthetic.'
âYes, Sister.'
âSee to him,' she commanded, âas soon as you've finished the bed.'
Rightly calculating that righteous indignation at this cavalier approach to the Pale Horseman of the Apocalypse would banish any backward thoughts about the patient they had just lost, Sister swept off to see the ward clerk about the admissions waiting list.
Acknowledged tartar Sister Fleming might be, but there were times when she came into her own.
âThe patient is dead, long live the patient,' muttered Briony rebelliously, attacking the bed-making with a certain savagery. While the dirty linen was being swept into a bag by the other nurse she set off for the linen room to collect fresh sheets and pillow cases.
Something â she didn't know what â was stopping her opening the door properly. She gave it an extra push and stepped inside feeling for the light switch. It was then that she saw the crumpled figure of a man lying supine on the floor.
Where another girl might have screamed Briony Petforth reminded herself that she was a nurse. She bent down cautiously, noticing as she did so the blood coming from a wound on the back of the man's head.
She thought she recognized the man's face but it wasn't his name that she used.
âOh, Nick,' she moaned. âOh, Nick.'
CHAPTER XIII
We seek and seek, and were it once discovered
We should be safe enough â expenses covered.
âWhat!' exploded Leeyes. âThey've found who? Attacked? And injured, did you say?'
âDetective-Constable Crosby.'
âWhere?' spluttered Leeyes. âWait until I â¦'
âIn the hospital, sir. On Fleming Ward.'
âWe should have searched it,' declared Leeyes inevitably.
Sloan ploughed on with the meagre information at hand. The Superintendent was a great one for being wise after the event. âCrosby was found lying on the floor in the linen room, sir.'
âAssaulted in the execution of his duty,' intoned Leeyes in tones suitable for a memorial service.
âHe's unconscious,' Sloan informed him hastily. âNot dead.'
âOne of my men,' said Leeyes sonorously.
âThey've taken him down to Casualty.'
âA good man, Crosby.'
âEr ⦠quite,' said Sloan, savouring the occasion. Superintendent Leeyes's geese were only swans now and then.
âWe'll get whoever did this, Sloan,' he said militantly, âif we don't do anything else. And soon.'
âYes, of course,' said Sloan calmly. It was a fact of police life that people who killed or tried to kill policemen were usually caught sooner or later. Sooner, more often than not. For some reason too arcane for an ordinary person to explore, those who attacked policemen in Great Britain ran out of support from friends and relatives earlier than other wrongdoers did. And more commonly than with most transgressors, someone turned them in. Perhaps as a penalty for breaking the rules by which the game of cops and robbers was played? Sloan didn't know.
âIf they so much as touch a hair of his head,' growled Leeyes, âI'll â¦'
âThey've hit it,' announced Sloan baldly. âQuite hard. Already.' The Superintendent's press conference would come later. He could say whatever he liked at that. Clichés and all. Now was a time for facts.
âGrievous bodily harm, then,' responded Leeyes automatically.
âCould be,' admitted Sloan. âHe hasn't come round yet. I'm on my way over there now.'
âThat's right,' said Leeyes obscurely. âClose the ranks.'
âWe've put out a general alert.'
âGood, good. No one else missing, is there?' At times like this all of the Superintendent's flock were dear to him.
âNo,' said Sloan, startled. âCrosby and I are the only two on this job anyway.'
âBetter write your own report out, then, before you leave,' said Leeyes lugubriously, âin case anything happens to you too.'
âHe's only a boy really,' said Sloan, heroically suppressing a number of other tempting retorts to this last. âIf in fact it was actually Nicholas Petforth who hit Crosby.'
âBoys,' pronounced Leeyes with feeling, âcan cause more trouble than men.'
âIt may not have been him, of course,' said Sloan fairly. âThere's another possibility. All Briony Petforth will say is that she opened the door of the linen room and found Crosby there.'
âAh.'
âShe also insists, sir, that she hasn't seen her brother since before their aunt died.'
âHe would always know where to find her, though, Sloan.'
âI gather,' said Sloan drily, âthat he is in the habit of coming up on the ward when he wants something.'
âMoney?'
âProbably. She didn't say.'
âI shouldn't be surprised,' said the Superintendent, who was, after all, in a better position to judge than most men.
Sloan, momentarily diverted, voiced something that had been puzzling him all along. âI've been thinking, sir, that Beatrice Wansdyke's money must have come from somewhere pretty out of the ordinary.'
Superintendent Leeyes snorted gently but did not speak.
âShe didn't inherit it,' pursued Sloan, âor win it on the pools, nothing's been stolen that we don't know about, the bank isn't unhappy about where it came from â¦'
âIf it wasn't for the fact that someone had it in for her over the insulin and the dog,' said Leeyes judiciously, âI'd have said the answer was easy.'
âSir?'
âComputer error, Sloan. I had a gas bill once â¦'
âThis other possibility on the ward,' said Sloan, who had heard about the gas bill before, âis something we've got to think about.'
âWhat's that?'
âI am told that a frequent visitor on the men's surgical ward,' said Sloan, âis Inspector Harpe's favourite medical motorist.'
âDr McCavity?'
âHe was a house officer at the hospital before he went into general practice with Dr Paston,' Sloan informed him. âGot quite friendly with Nurse Petforth while he was about it.'
âAh,' said Leeyes alertly. The Superintendent had never been able to make up his mind if sex was a more powerful ingredient of crime than money. He was, however, willing to consider the proposition at any time.
âBut she wasn't having any.'