Silly fool wants his head examined."
"All of which makes it plain," said Dalgleish, "that this projected match would have been calamitous for the Maxies. And that gives several people an interest in seeing that it didn't happen."
The doctor leaned across the desk at him challengingly.
"At the cost of killing the girl? By making that child motherless as well as fatherless? What sort of people do you think we are?"
Dalgleish did not reply. The facts were incontrovertible. Someone had killed Sally Jupp. Someone who had not even been deterred by the presence of her sleeping child. But he noted how the doctor's cry allied him with the Maxies. "What sort of people do you think we are?"
There was no doubt where Dr. Epps's* allegiance lay.
It was growing dark in the little room.
Grunting with the slight effort, the doctor heaved himself across his desk and turned on a lamp. It was jointed and angled and he adjusted it carefully so that a pool of light fell on his hands but left his face in shadow. Dalgleish was beginning to feel weary but there was much to be done before his working day was over. He introduced the main object of his visit.
"Mr. Simon Maxie is your patient, I believe?"
"Of course. Always has been. Not much to be done for him now, of course.
Just a matter of time and good nursing.
Martha sees to that mostly. But, yes, he's my patient. Quite helpless. Advanced arteriosclerosis with other complications of one kind and another. If you're thinking that he crawled upstairs to do in the maid, well, you're wrong. I doubt if he knew she existed."
"I believe you've been prescribing some special sleeping tablets for him for the last year or so?"
"Wish you wouldn't keep on saying you believe this, that and the other. You know damn well I have. There's no secret about them. Can't see what they've got to do with this business though." He stiffened suddenly. "You don't mean she was doped first?"
"We haven't the post-mortem report yet, but it looks very like it."
The doctor did not pretend that he did not understand.
"That's bad."
"It does rather narrow down the field.
And there are other disquieting features."
Dalgleish then told the doctor about the missing Sommeil, where Sally was alleged to have found it, what Stephen did with the ten tablets and the finding of the bottle in the treasure-hunt plot. When he had finished there was a silence for a moment. The doctor was sagging back into the chair which had at first seemed too small to withstand his cheerful and comfortable rotundity. When he spoke the deep rumbling voice was suddenly an old and tired voice.
"Stephen never told me. Not much chance with the fete, of course. Might have changed his mind though. Probably thought I wouldn't be much help. I ought to have known, you see. He wouldn't overlook carelessness like that. His father… my patient. I've known Simon Maxie for thirty years. Brought his children into the world. You ought to know your patients, know when they want help. I just left the prescription week after week.
Didn't even go up to him very often recently. Didn't seem much point in it.
Can't think what Martha was doing though. She nursed him, did everything.
She must have known about those tablets.
That is, if Sally was telling the truth."
"It's difficult to imagine her making the whole thing up. Besides, she had the tablets. I presume they can only be obtained by a doctor's prescription?"
"Yes. Can't just walk into a chemist's and buy them. Oh, it's true all right.
Never doubted it really. I blame myself.
Should have seen what was happening at Martingale. Not only to Simon Maxie. To all of them."
"So he thinks one of them did it," thought Dalgleish. "He can see clearly enough which way things are moving and he doesn't like it. Small blame to him. He knows this is a Martingale crime all right.
The thing is, does he know for certain?
And if so, which one?"
He asked about Saturday evening at Martingale. Dr. Epps's account of Sally's appearance before dinner and the disclosure of Stephen's proposal was considerably less dramatic than that of Catherine Bowers or Miss Liddell, but the versions fundamentally agreed. He confirmed that neither he nor Miss Liddell had left the business room during the counting of the money and that he had seen Sally Jupp mounting the main staircase as he and his hostess were passing through the hall to the front door.
He thought Sally was wearing a dressinggown and carrying something, but he couldn't recall what. It might have been a cup and saucer or perhaps a beaker. He had not spoken to her. That was the last time he had seen her alive.
Dalgleish asked who else in the village had been prescribed Sommeil.
"I'll have to look up my records if you want accuracy. May take half an hour or so. It wasn't a common prescription. I can remember one or two patients who had it. May be others, of course. Sir Reynold Price and Miss Pollack at St. Mary's had it, I know. Mr. Maxie, of course. By the way, what's happening about his medicine now?"
"We're holding the Sommeil. I understand that Dr. Maxie has prescribed its equivalent. And now, Doctor, perhaps I might have a word with your housekeeper before I go."
It was a full minute before the doctor seemed to hear. Then he shuffled out of his chair with a muttered apology and led the way from the surgery into the house.
There Dalgleish was able tactfully to confirm that the doctor had arrived home at 10.45 the evening before and had been called out to a confinement at 11.10. He hardly expected to hear otherwise. He would have to check with the patient's family, but no doubt they would provide an alibi for the doctor up to 3.30 in the morning when he had finally left Mrs. Baines of Nessingford in proud possession of her first-born son. Dr. Epps had been busy helping life into the world for most of Saturday night, not choking it out of Sally Jupp.
The doctor muttered something about a late visit and walked with Dalgleish to the gate, first protecting himself from the evening air by an opulent and voluminous coat at least a size too large for him.
When they were at the gate the doctor, who had plunged his hands into his pockets, gave a little start of surprise and opened his right hand to reveal a small bottle. It was nearly full of small brown tablets. The two men looked at it in silence for a moment. Then Dr. Epps said, "Sommeil."
Dalgleish took a handkerchief, wrapped up the bottle and slipped it into his own pocket. He noted with interest the doctor's first instinctive gesture of resistance.
"That would be Sir Reynold's stuff, Inspector. Nothing to do with the family.
This was Price's coat." His tone was defensive.
"When did the coat come into your possession. Doctor?" asked Dalgleish.
Again there was a long pause. Then the doctor seemed to remember that there were facts which it was pointless to try to hide.
"I bought it on Saturday. At the church fete. I bought it rather as a joke between myself and… and the stallholder."
"And that was… who?" asked
Dalgleish inexorably.
Dr. Epps did not meet his eyes as he answered dully, "Mrs. Riscoe."
Sunday had been secularized and timeless, its legacy a week so out-of-joint that Monday dawned without any color or individuality, a mere limbo of a day.
The post was heavier than usual, a tribute to the efficiency both of the ubiquitous telephone and to those subtler and less scientific methods of country communications. Presumably tomorrow's post would be heavier still when the news of the Martingale murder reached those who depended on print for their information. Deborah had ordered half a dozen papers. Her mother wondered whether this extravagance was a gesture of defiance to a sop or genuine curiosity.