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Jeremiah seemed somehow to suspect as much. ‘You’re making this up, Jude.’

‘I am not.’ Time to pull out her trump card. ‘There wasn’t only Bill Shefford.’

‘Oh?’

‘There was also Jodie Flint.’

‘We need to meet,’ said Jeremiah brusquely.

‘I agree. Come to Woodside Cottage. Seven o’clock this evening.’

TWENTY-SIX

Jude knew the risk she was taking but her anger outweighed the fear.

It had already been dark a couple of hours by seven o’clock when, prompt to the minute, the doorbell rang. She was unsurprised to see that Jeremiah was accompanied by Dr Rawley.

‘Do come in. Sit down. Can I offer you anything?’

Both shook their heads as they sank into her rug-shrouded sofa.

The doctor spoke first. He seemed to be the senior partner in their business. ‘I did not expect to see you again so soon, Mrs Nicholls.’

‘Don’t call me “Mrs Nicholls”. Call me “Jude”.’

‘Very well. Jude … I gather from Jeremiah that you have been making accusations against us.’

‘Yes.’

‘I would say, from the legal point of view, that’s a very risky thing to do.’

‘“From the legal point of view”? That’s rich, coming from you.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘I think there’s a law against diagnosing people with cancer when they haven’t got it.’

‘Are you talking about yourself? And your rather shabby bit of play-acting this morning? I’ll have you know that the treatment recommended by me, with Jeremiah’s healing assistance, has had remarkable successes.’

‘Oh yes?’

‘Some of our patients have had a completely clean bill of health at the end of it.’

‘No cancer in their bodies?’

‘No cancer in their bodies,’ he confirmed.

‘Hardly surprising when they didn’t have any when they started the treatment, is it?’

‘Jude—’

‘And when did you decide their treatment was complete – that they were cured? When they got suspicious about what you were up to? Or just when their money ran out? There’s no way round it. You two are a pair of quacks, playing one of the oldest con tricks in history.’

‘I don’t think you’re really in much of a position to say that, Jude.’

‘Why not?’

‘Touch of the pot and kettle. Making an appointment with a doctor on the pretence of having breast cancer when you haven’t got it is … well, certainly immoral. I think a good lawyer might be able to prove it was criminal.’

‘I think a good lawyer,’ Jude snapped back, ‘would have a much easier job proving that diagnosing someone with breast cancer when they haven’t got it is criminal.’

‘I haven’t diagnosed you, Jude. I am awaiting the results of a blood test.’

‘Which I bet will be negative now. Anyway, since when has a simple blood test been an adequate proof that someone has cancer?’

‘I am afraid, Jude, that you do not have nearly as much medical knowledge as I have. New techniques are being developed every day. I know a lot more about them than you do. And I know that I have done nothing illegal in your case.’

‘Possibly not. Yet. But let’s put my case to one side. I only came to see you this morning as a means to an end. And, so far as I’m concerned, the exercise worked very well. I got the information I wanted. And that information does not concern me. It concerns Bill Shefford. And particularly the circumstances of his death.’

Jeremiah looked rather nervously at his colleague, but the doctor was unfazed. ‘I can guarantee that neither of us had anything to do with Bill Shefford’s death. He died in an accident at his place of work. Neither Jeremiah nor I have ever even been to that garage. As I say, we could not possibly have had anything to do with his death.’

‘But suppose he committed suicide?’

‘That’s pure speculation on your part.’

‘Would you feel any guilt if he had committed suicide?’

‘Why should I feel guilt?’

‘It was you who diagnosed him with cancer. If he received the same approach from you as I did this morning, then I would think it very unlikely that he even had cancer in the first place.’

‘That again is speculation. And probably slander. I don’t deny that I diagnosed cancer in Bill Shefford. I stand by that diagnosis. And since he has now been cremated, there is no way of proving whether or not he did have the disease.’

‘But you signed the death certificate that allowed him to be cremated.’

‘That is normal medical practice. In a case of unexpected death, if the deceased has not seen a doctor in the previous fortnight, there has to be a post mortem. I had seen Bill Shefford in the fortnight before his death, because I was treating him for cancer. His family had no wish to involve the police or set up any form of enquiry. It was therefore entirely legitimate for me to sign the death certificate.’

Jude should have anticipated that Dr Rawley would have all of his arguments so neatly in a row. She was beginning to feel as though she was on the back foot. She tried again. ‘After you’d diagnosed the cancer, do you deny that you put Bill Shefford on a course of treatment with Jeremiah?’

‘No, of course I don’t deny it. And are you criticizing me for that? Ooh, be very careful, Jude. You’re on dangerous ground here, aren’t you? Are you saying that Jeremiah’s a charlatan? It’s a very small step from that to saying that all healers are charlatans, nothing more than snake-oil salesmen. And then you wouldn’t be exactly backing up your own so-called profession, would you?’

For a moment, Jude ran out of steam. Jeremiah took the opportunity to join the conversation. ‘You said you had in your possession a diary written by Bill Shefford …’

‘Yes, I do.’

‘In which he writes down all of his thoughts about his cancer and its treatment …?’

‘Yes,’ she lied.

Jeremiah looked back at his senior partner and the doctor took over the reins again. ‘I think you’d better give us that diary, Jude. If you do that, then we’ll be prepared to forget all about this whole business … your making false accusations against us, the risk of slander. I think we’re offering you a good deal, Jude.’

‘You are in no position to be offering me a deal of any kind!’ Driven by sheer anger, Jude’s energy was returning. ‘I’m innocent in all of this. You’re the ones who caused the death of an innocent man and destroyed a happy marriage!’

Infuriatingly, Dr Rawley wagged a finger at her. ‘Now be careful. That definitely is slander!’

‘I don’t care! What I’d like to talk about now is the dietary supplements you foisted off on to Bill Shefford.’

‘Dietary supplements?’ The two men exchanged anxious looks, then the doctor asked, ‘What are you talking about?’

‘Do you deny that you recommended him to buy supplements? You were talking about me going on them only this morning.’

‘There are lots of medicinal supplements on the market,’ said Rawley calmly. ‘Just go online and you’ll find any number of them.’

‘And what about supplements that are guaranteed to cure cancer?’

‘All kinds of ridiculous claims are made online. Miracle cancer cures have always been out there for the gullible.’

‘And what about your own miracle cancer cure? Those supplements marketed through “VADJ Trading”?’ To whom, of course, Bill Shefford had been paying thousands of pounds. And whose web address she and Carole had logged on to this afternoon.

‘How do you know about that?’ demanded Jeremiah.