“Will you tell him so? He won’t listen to me. There are very few people he will listen to. But he seems to have some respect for you, Mr. Archer.”
“It’s mutual. I doubt that he’d want my opinion on the subject of his responsibility, though. He’s a very powerful and temperamental man, easy to cross.”
“You’re telling me,” she said. “I suppose I had no right to ask you to speak to him. But the way he pours his life away into those patients of his–” Her hand moved from her breast in an outward gesture.
“He seems to thrive on it.”
“I don’t.” She made a wry face. “Physician’s wife, heal thyself, eh?”
“You’re thriving by all appearances,” I said. “That’s a nice coat, by the way.”
“Thank you. Jim bought it for me in Paris last summer.”
I left her smiling less professionally, and went to the nursing home. Alex’s red Porsche was standing at the curb in front of the big plain stucco building. I felt my heartbeat pounding in my ears. Something good could still happen.
A Spanish American nurse’s aide in a blue and white uniform unlocked the door and let me into the front room to wait for Dr. Godwin. Nell and several other bathrobed patients were watching a television drama about a pair of lawyers, father and son. They paid no attention to me. I was only a real-life detective, unemployed at the moment. But not, I hoped, for long.
I sat in an empty chair to one side. The drama was well directed and well played but I couldn’t keep my mind on it. I began to watch the four people who were watching it. Nell the somnambulist, her black hair hanging like tangled sorrows down her back, held cupped in her hands the blue ceramic ashtray she had made. A young man with an untrimmed beard and rebellious eyes looked like a conscientious objector to everything. A thin-haired man, who was trembling with excitement, went on trembling right through the commercial. An old woman had a translucent face through which her life burned like a guttering candle. Step back a little and you could almost imagine that they were three generations of one family, grandmother, parents, and son, at home on a Saturday night.
Dr. Godwin appeared in the inner doorway and crooked his finger at me. I followed him down the hallway through a thickening hospital odor, into a small cramped office. He switched on a lamp over the desk and sat behind it. I took the only other chair.
“Is Alex Kincaid with his wife?”
“Yes. He called me at home and seemed very eager to see her, though he hasn’t been around all day. He also wanted to talk to me.”
“Did he say anything about running out on her?”
“No.”
“I hope he’s changed his mind.” I told Godwin about my meeting with Kincaid senior, and Alex’s departure with his father.
“You can’t entirely blame him for falling by the wayside momentarily. He’s young, and under great strain.” Godwin’s changeable eyes lit up. “The important thing, for him as well as Dolly, is that he decided to come back.”
“How is she?”
“Calmer, I think. She didn’t want to talk tonight, at least not to me.”
“Will you let me have a try at her?”
“No.”
“I almost regret bringing you into this case, doctor.”
“I’ve been told that before, and less politely,” he said with a stubborn smile. “But once I’m in I’m in, and I’ll continue to do as I think best.”
“I’m sure you will. Did you see the evening paper?”
“I saw it.”
“Does Dolly know what’s going on outside? About the gun, for instance?”
“No.”
“Don’t you think she should be told?”
He spread out his hands on the scarred desk-top. “I’m trying to simplify her problems, not add to them. She had so many pressures on her last night, from both the past and the present, that she was on the verge of a psychotic breakthrough. We don’t want that to happen.”
“Will you be able to protect her from police questioning?”
“Not indefinitely. The best possible protection would be a solution to this case absolving her.”
“I’m working on it. I talked to her Aunt Alice this morning, and looked over the scene of the McGee killing. I became pretty well convinced that even if McGee did kill his wife, which I doubt, Dolly couldn’t have identified him as he left the house. In other words her testimony at his trial was cooked.”
“Alice Jenks convinced you of this?”
“The physical layout did. Miss Jenks did her best to convince me of the opposite, that McGee was guilty. I wouldn’t be surprised if she was the main motive power behind the case against him.”
“He was guilty.”
“So you’ve said. I wish you’d go into your reasons for believing that.”
“I’m afraid I can’t. It has to do with the confidences of a patient.”
“Constance McGee?”
“Mrs. McGee wasn’t formally a patient. But you can’t treat a child without treating the parents.”
“And she confided in you?”
“Naturally, to some extent. For the most part we talked about her family problems.” Godwin was feeling his way carefully. His face was bland. Under the lamp his bald head gleamed like a metal dome in moonlight.
“Her sister Alice made an interesting slip. She said there was no other man in Constance’s life. I didn’t ask her. Alice volunteered the information.”
“Interesting.”
“I thought so. Was Constance in love with another man at the time she was shot?”
Godwin nodded almost imperceptibly.
“Who was he?”
“I have no intention of telling you. He’s suffered enough.” A shadow of the suffering passed across his own face. “I’ve told you this much because I want you to understand that McGee had a motive, and was certainly guilty.”
“I think he was framed, just as Dolly is being framed.”
“We agree on the latter point. Why can’t we settle for that?”
“Because there have been three killings, and they’re connected. They’re connected subjectively, as you would say, in Dolly’s mind. I believe they’re objectively connected, too. They may all have been done by the same person.”
Godwin didn’t ask me who. It was just as well. I was talking over my head, and I had no suspect.
“What third killing are you referring to?”
“The death of Luke Deloney, a man I never heard of until tonight. I met Helen Haggerty’s mother at the L.A. airport and had a talk with her on the way down here. According to her, Deloney shot himself by accident while cleaning a gun. But Helen claimed he was murdered and said she knew a witness. The witness may have been herself. At any rate she quarreled with her father on the issue – he seems to have been the detective in charge of the case – and ran away from home. All this was over twenty years ago.”
“You seriously think it’s connected with the present case?”
“Helen thought so. Her death makes her an authority on the subject.”
“What do you propose to do about it?”
“I’d like to fly to Illinois tonight and talk to Helen’s father. But I can’t afford to do it on my own hook.”
“You could phone him.”
“I could. My sense of the situation is that it would do more harm than good. He may be a tough nut to crack.”
Godwin said after a minute’s thought: “I might consider backing you.”
“You’re a generous man.”
“A curious one,” he said. “Remember I’ve been living with this case for over ten years. I’d give a good deal to see it ended.”
“Let me talk to Alex first, and ask him how he feels about laying out more money.”
Godwin inclined his head and remained bowing as he stood up. He wasn’t bowing to me. It was more of a general and habitual bow, as if he could feel the weight of the stars and was asking their permission to take part of the weight on human shoulders.