‘No problem.’
‘And one other thing. I’ve managed to trace a doctor who worked with Neil Tolkien at the time of the Northern Health Scheme. She was one of the voluntary team who worked with heroin addicts at the time. Her name is Mary Cunningham; she’s still a GP in the area with a practice in Lamont Avenue.’
‘Excellent. I’ll look her up.’
It was just after six p.m. when Steven watched the second of two courier vans leave College Hospital for London, laden with the medical records of patients treated between 1990 and 1992 when John Carlisle was health secretary and the sun was shining brightly on his career. Drysdale, the clerk of works, was on hand to lock up the cellars and return the trolleys the couriers had been using, and Paul Drinkwater was there to represent hospital management, his brief being ‘to see that things went smoothly’.
‘Will you be bringing them back?’ he asked Steven.
‘Do you want them back?’
‘Not really. They’re officially off-system. It’s just a question of data protection.’
‘We’ll take care of that.’
SEVENTEEN
Steven phoned the surgery in Lamont Avenue and was asked if he was registered with Dr Cunningham. He explained who he was and asked if it might be possible to have a word with Dr Cunningham that evening. A long pause was ended by a suggestion that he come round after evening surgery. She should be finished by seven thirty.
Mary Cunningham proved to be a tall, studious-looking woman, somewhere in her forties, her hair starting to grey and the first lines of age appearing at the corners of her eyes and mouth. She looked over her glasses at Steven as he was shown into her consulting room by a receptionist who already had her coat on, ready to leave.
‘Good of you to see me,’ he said.
‘I’m intrigued,’ said Mary Cunningham. ‘Unless you just want me to change the dressing on your hands,’ she added, noticing his bandages.
‘Accident with a steam pipe,’ said Steven with a smile. ‘Actually, no. I understand you knew Dr Neil Tolkien?’
‘Neil? My God, that was a long time ago. Yes, we worked together on a drug rehabilitation programme not long after I’d qualified. I was young and idealistic.’
‘And you’re not any more?’
‘Neither young nor idealistic,’ said Mary. ‘The passage of time I can do nothing about, but ideals tend to be modified through experience and the evidence of one’s own eyes.’
‘Sounds like there’s a pretty serious change of heart in there somewhere?’
‘Indeed. I now believe that the war against drugs — as they insist on calling it — is a complete waste of time and money, and has been for years.’
‘A point of view I’d have no trouble at all in agreeing with,’ said Steven. ‘But when you worked with Neil…’
‘We thought we could turn things round, rescue the fallen from the gutter, put addicts back on the straight and narrow, rebuild broken families…’
‘With the help of the Northern Health Scheme, I understand?’
‘It was very good,’ said Mary. ‘Gave us all the help we asked for in terms of medication, but we were fighting a losing battle.’
‘One in which Neil lost his life,’ said Steven.
‘Poor Neil. Yes, he and his girlfriend, a nurse, both died. The police told us they’d got on the wrong side of some criminals who didn’t like what the clinic was doing. They suggested we close it down.’
‘And you did?’
‘We did.’
‘Why do you think they targeted Neil and his girlfriend and not you or your other partner…’ Steven looked at his notes, ‘Dr Mitchell?’
‘Gavin Mitchell. He died a couple of years ago. It was pretty clear they targeted Neil because he’d teamed up with a journalist: the criminals feared exposure.’
‘Do you believe that?’
The directness of the question seemed to take Mary by surprise. ‘I’m not sure I understand…’
‘It’s a simple enough question,’ said Steven with a smile designed to soften the impact of the observation.
‘Yes, it is,’ conceded Mary. ‘Actually… I’ve always harboured doubts about Neil’s death.’
Steven waited for more.
‘Neil thought there was something wrong with the new health scheme. He thought some of our patients were dying when perhaps they shouldn’t have.’
‘Were any of those deaths ever investigated?’
‘Yes, routinely, but there were never any suspicious circumstances. The deaths were always due to the various medical conditions the deceased were suffering from.’
‘Despite the medication?’
‘Despite that.’
‘Thank you, Dr Cunningham, you’ve been most helpful.’
‘Have I?’
Steven smiled. ‘Enjoy your evening.’
‘What time d’you think you’ll get here?’ asked a surprised Tally when Steven said he was planning on driving down to Leicester.
‘Late.’
‘Well, don’t wake me.’
‘Yes, dear.’
‘My God, has it come to that?’ said Tally, utterly failing to conceal the amusement in her voice.
True to her word, Tally was fast asleep when Steven got there. He found a note saying that there was food in the microwave: give it two minutes. He closed the kitchen door so that the ping wouldn’t wake Tally, and helped himself to a beer from the fridge. He turned on the small TV and kept the volume low while he caught up on the news. The Tories and Liberal Democrats had agreed to form a formal coalition.
‘After placing their respective principles on a small bonfire,’ Steven muttered, as he removed his risotto from the microwave. ‘There’s nothing quite like the smell of power, is there, chaps?’
Half an hour later, he manoeuvred himself carefully and quietly into bed beside Tally. ‘About time too,’ she said.
Steven uttered a despairing, ‘Oh, God, I was trying so hard not to wake you.’
‘I know.’
‘But now that I have…’
Over breakfast next morning Steven told Tally about meeting Mary Cunningham, and of her suspicions concerning Neil Tolkien’s death.
‘Pretty much what you suspected already,’ said Tally.
‘But there was one thing. She said that some of the deaths Tolkien was concerned about were investigated — presumably by routine PM — and nothing suspicious was ever found.’
‘So either the bad guys devised the perfect crime or the good doctor’s imagination was working overtime.’
‘And James Kincaid’s was too and their imaginations got them killed? I don’t think so.’
‘So where do you go from here?’
‘Let’s wait and see what emerges from the medical records. Are you going to be able to take a day off sometime soon — like tomorrow?’
Tally shook her head. ‘I did try, but there’s no chance until the weekend. My boss is away till Friday so I’ll have to be there.’
Steven looked disappointed. ‘Pity. But let’s do something at the weekend?’
‘That would be nice. Do you want to visit Jenny?’
‘No, not this weekend. Let’s have some us time.’
Tally left for the hospital and Steven drove back to London through pouring rain. The Porsche was not much fun to drive in wet conditions on the motorway, being low on the ground and ultra susceptible to the spray clouds thrown up by lorries. Steven decided to take an unscheduled break at a service station to get some coffee and a bit of a rest from the high level of concentration demanded by the drive. He had just come to a halt in the car park when his Sci-Med mobile rang.
‘Steven? Where are you?’ asked Jean Roberts.
‘On my day off.’
‘Not any longer. The Prime Minister has called a meeting of COBRA. He wants a Sci-Med presence.’
‘Where? When?’
‘Conference room A in the main Cabinet Office building in Whitehall. Three p.m.’
‘I’ll be there.’
‘Good. I wasn’t looking forward to telling the new government that neither you nor Sir John could make it.’
‘What’s all the fuss?’
‘I don’t know. There was no warning.’