âNot seriously or long, I hope. Watkyn's probably got some tedious job mapped out for me, but I'm not due to meet him till half past ten.'
âWell, come up to the hospital. Humbleby and I are going there now, to see if daylight supplies any kind of a clue. Of course, I was on the spot soon after the thing happened, but there was very little I could do or discover.'
âYou've got the girl guarded, I suppose?'
âLord, yes.' Wolfe laughed, but without humour. âMy professional nerve is shaken, but not so seriously as to omit that. There's to be a tough policewoman in the room with her day and night, and I've instituted a system of triple checking on all drugs and injections that are administered to her, so as to be sure they haven't been tampered with. The hospital people don't like it much, but to hell with them.'
âTo hell with them indeed,' Fen mildly concurred. âI'll drive over straight away, then.' He rang off.
The Sanford Morvel hospital was a sturdy red-brick building set in small but pleasant grounds, in no way dissimilar from a multitude of other such cottage hospitals scattered throughout the country. Wolfe and Humbleby were discovered on a garden seat, conversing despondently. They moved up to make room for Fen.
âNothing useful so far.' Red-eyed and yawning, Wolfe anticipated the inevitable question. âWe haven't even been able to identify the stuff in the hypodermic. From all the doctors are able to tell us, it might be nothing more deadly than water. It
looks
like water, to me. And since luckily it was never administered, there are no physiological effects to go by.'
âBut presumably,' said Fen, âit can be tested.'
âWe shall try,' Humbleby answered. âBut the analyst people aren't going to be pleased at having no guide whatever. There are about five thousand different tests for toxins. They'll use up what we give them in doing the first thousand or so and, if they haven't got a positive reaction by then, there'll be nothing more we can do about it.'
âRabbits,' said Fen. âDogs, toads.'
Humbleby sighed. âOh yes. A licensed vivisection laboratory is the only hope. But even so, you know, it will probably take weeks.'
âAnd the syringe?'
âFive c.c.,' said Wolfe. âAn unusually large one, I understand. It
may
ultimately be traced, but there's nothing to stop anyone buying a hypodermic anywhere at any time, so frankly I'm not hopeful. Still, we've ascertained that it doesn't belong to the hospital, which I suppose is progress of a kind.'
âI take it you've also ascertained that no drugs are missing from the hospital stores?'
âI only wish we could. But bless their hearts, they can't tell me. There's apparently no check on quantities. They just go on using things until they run out, and then get some more. No locks have been tampered with â and that's absolutely all one can say on the subject.'
âAnd it would be inane, no doubt, to ask if there were any finger-prints.'
âIt would, I'm afraid. Gloves are indicated. Nor are there any footmarks; the ground's far too hard. Nor are there any fragments of clothing. Clothing very seldom catches on things, if you come to think of it.'
âWhat about the nurse? Can't she help?'
âA nice girl,' said Humbleby thoughtfully. âAnd courageous. But no, she can't help. Assailant unidentifiable, a mere silhouette. Sex of assailant probably male, but there's no swearing to that. Size of assailant â too confused and alarmed to be certain. We're operating â or rather,
not
operating â in a factual vacuum. . . . Well, well, it's common enough. There have to be clues in detective novels, but in actuality there are fewer than is generally supposed, and on occasion â as now â none at all.' Humbleby peered about him. âOr after all,
is
there to be a clue? Your sergeant, Wolfe, looks as if he might have found one.'
They followed the direction of his gaze. An eager-looking young man in uniform hurried up to them with something lying on a handkerchief in the palm of his hand.
âFound it under a bush near the girl's window, sir,' he reported.
âGood for you, Jimmy,' said Wolfe.
They all examined the object â a small glass container empty, and bearing the label of a well-known chemist. When they had looked their fill, Wolfe said: âTry it for prints, Jimmy.'
The sergeant saluted and made off. âInsulin,' Humbleby commented without evident comprehension. âI can't say I know much about that. They give it for diabetes, don't they?'
âSo I believe.' Wolfe nodded. âOf course, we can't be sure that container has anything to do with the attack on the girl. In a hospital it's natural that â â '
âOh, come,' Fen interrupted. âIt's clear enough, I think. The effect of an overdose of insulin is to produce a hypoglycaemic coma â just such a coma, to all outward appearance, as would probably precede death in a case of serious head injury.' He sat upright with something like animation. âMy God, what a damnably clever scheme! The girl will have been having injections, so the prick in her arm wouldn't arouse comment. And death would look like a perfectly natural consequence of the accident. There probably wouldn't even be an inquest. And if there
were
a post-mortem it certainly wouldn't occur to them to test the blood-sugar content. The thing is fool-proof. There isn't a doctor in the land who would have hesitated to write out the death certificate.'
âGood God.' Humbleby was shocked. âAnd am I to understand that this insulin can be obtained by anyone?'
âCertainly you are. There's no need to sign a poisons book, or even to have a doctor's prescription.'
âAnd the quantity required?'
Fen frowned slightly. âLet's see; that was a 5 c.c. container, at forty units to the c.c. Two hundred units. It would probably be enough to kill, but I dare say he had more of the stuff on him, and was proposing to give a second injection and make sure of it. . . . Hell!' Fen suddenly exclaimed. âHe may have actually given one injection before the nurse got back. Wait for me.' He got up and fled into the hospital.
Ten minutes later he reappeared in a more tranquil state of mind. âAll's well,' he said. âNo sign of trouble. In fact, it seems that the girl's rallying fast. They're expecting her to be conscious at any time now. . . . And there's a point there, by the way. As I understand it, they didn't at first imagine she'd live.'
âThat's so,' said Wolfe. âShe took a turn for the better early yesterday morning â thereby, one presumes, provoking the attack last night.'
âBut how many people would
know
she was recovering?'
âHalf the neighbourhood, I should think. These nurses gossip â who doesn't â â and it's got about that there's some kind of a mystery regarding this girl, so people are interested in her. No, I've considered that as a possible lead, and of course I'll do what I can about it, but I'm not sanguine.'
Humbleby's eye was on Wolfe's ruddy complexion, and he seemed for a moment to contemplate some species of joke in connexion with this last remark. But evidently he thought better of it, for he produced a packet of cheroots from his pocket, lit one, and after a pause for reflection merely said:
âWell, what now? To
me
it seems that our only course is to wait till the girl's fit to talk, and then see if we can't get some indication from her of a reason for the attack. It's not impossible that she knows something about Bussy's murder.'
âWell, there's very little else we can do, except wait,' said Wolfe with candour.
âYou've made no progress, then,' Fen inquired, âin the matter of Bussy?'
âNone whatever. Material clues are lacking, inferences lead in and out of the same blind alley: how did
X
know that Bussy was going to turn up at the hut?' Wolfe stared at Fen with distrust. âAre you
sure
your conversation with Bussy couldn't have been overheard?'
âI'm positive of it. And I didn't tell anyone about it, and it's inconceivable to me that Bussy did.'
Wolfe shrugged. âThen we're left with an impossibility.' He hesitated, and then, apparently, came to a decision. âLook here, has it occurred to either of you that these cases may not, after all, be rationally related to one another?'
âIt has certainly occurred to
me
,' said Humbleby through a cloud of blue smoke. âYou mean, I take it, that there's a homicidal maniac at work; that the connexion between two of his victims â Bussy and Mrs Lambert â is fortuitous; and that we're wasting our time trying to establish a logical nexus for the three affairs, when the only thing they have in common is that one madman is responsible for all of them.'
âThat is what I mean,' Wolfe agreed. âI wouldn't, of course, now identify this madman with Elphinstone.'
âNor even, necessarily, with the person who was blackmailing Mrs Lambert.'
âQuite so.'
Humbleby turned to Fen. âAnd you, Professor â What do you think?'
âI think you're talking nonsense. Homicidal maniacs don't contrive murder methods which simulate natural death. No, I stick to our original notion: that
X
blackmailed Mrs Lambert, killed her to prevent discovery, killed Bussy because Bussy was on his track, and attempted to kill this girl for a reason which we've yet to discover.'
Humbleby sighed. âIt's the better hypothesis, I admit. But for the one besetting problem, it fits the facts very much more snugly. Well, well, we shall see.'
âAnd until the girl's fit to talk,' said Wolfe, âthere's one job we can get on with â I mean breaking open that box I took from her room at the inn just after the accident. I feel I'm justified in doing that now.'
âAh,' said Fen. âLet me know if it's anything interesting, won't you?' He made his farewell and departed.
CHAPTER 15
I
T
is no part of my intention, in this brief though salutary narrative, to describe the progress of Fen's election campaign. And indeed details are needless, since the intelligent reader can easily infer them from what has already been said. Shepherded by Captain Watkyn, Fen toured the constituency, was orotund in village halls and at street corners, disrupted with canvassing the matutinal labours of housewives, chatted affably and encouragingly with the small but gallant band of his active supporters, and in general piled
cliché
on
cliché
with an ingenuity worthy (as Captain Watkyn, with the air of one who has coined a new and striking turn of phrase, on one occasion remarked) of a better cause.
But disenchantment lay heavy on him, and he performed these functions conscientiously but without zeal. A repugnance for the whole transaction grew on him hourly, and upon the editing of Langland he looked back with a nostalgia which students of that malignant poet will scarcely be able to credit. His meetings, though numerically small, were almost always enthusiastic, and he might have derived some consolation from that. By a smooth and earnest utterance, in which no single sentence lacked platitude of form or content, he could undoubtedly hold and stir his hearers. But the pleasure to be had from this rapidly palled. An expert conjuror may initially be gratified if his audience supposes the tricks to be worked by real magic; if this attitude persists, he will soon grow peevish and discontented. And thus it was with. Fen. He found himself in the position of an actor whose miming is so plausible that the emotions he presents come to be universally regarded as real and not artificial, and to whose skill, in consequence, no tribute is ever paid.
He was haunted, moreover, by a growing fear that he might actually be elected. This possibility had not, at the time of his arrival in Sanford Angelorum, seemed particularly daunting, but a few days of campaigning gave it a more ominous look. A whole-time preoccupation with democratic politics, he rapidly discovered, is not easily imposed on a humane and civilized mind. In no very long time the gorge rises and the stomach turns. And the prospect of five years spent trooping in and out of lobbies, crying âOh!' from back benches, arguing in committee rooms, corresponding with crazy constituents, and suffering without protest that which the House of Commons supposes to be wit â all this, conceivably stored up for him in what Captain Watkyn would have called the womb of time, Fen was beginning to find inexpressibly dispiriting. He had money of his own; he had been a Professor at Oxford for nearly ten years; he had felt that a change of occupation would be good for his soul. And he now saw with belated clarity that he had been mistaken. He might, of course, have withdrawn his candidature, and there were moments when he seriously considered doing this; but a certain native obstinacy, combined with a curiosity as to the ultimate issue, kept him in the field. And if the worst happened, the Chancellor could probably be induced to give him the Chiltern Hundreds. . . .
Polling was fixed for the Saturday. By the Thursday, the state of the parties defied analysis. Labour expected a gain on the figures at the General Election, but was far from being confident of victory. And the Conservatives would have been happy enough had it not been, for Fen, whose programme, in so far as it was ascertainable at all, leaned rather to the Right than to the Left, and who was expected in consequence to seduce a certain number of Conservative voters from their proper allegiance: an expectation which was strengthened by Strode's comparative lack of personality.
âThe fact is, old boy, it's anybody's guess,' said Captain Watkyn, who was as yet unaware of Fen's waning enthusiasm. âAnd your own chances aren't half bad. Now, if we could only get that ruddy loudspeaker van working again. . . .'