Ten
A DECISION IN JAMESTOWN
Dr. Graham was in Jamestown, in the Administrator’s office, sitting at a
table opposite his friend Daventry, a grave young man of thirty-five.
“You sounded rather mysterious on the phone, Graham,” said Daventry.
“Anything special the matter?”
“I don’t know,” said Dr. Graham, “but I’m worried.”
Daventry looked at the other’s face, then he nodded as drinks were
brought in. He spoke lightly of a fishing expedition he had made lately.
Then when the servant had gone away, he sat back in his chair and looked
at the other man.
“Now then,” he said, “let’s have it.”
Dr. Graham recounted the facts that had worried him. Daventry gave a
slow long whistle.
“I see. You think maybe there’s something funny about old Palgrave’s
death? You’re no longer sure that it was just natural causes? Who certified
the death? Robertson, I suppose. He didn’t have any doubts, did he?”
“No, but I think he may have been influenced in giving the certificate by
the fact of the Serenite tablets in the bathroom. He asked me if Palgrave
had mentioned that he suffered from hypertension, and I said No, I’d
never had any medical conversation with him myself, but apparently he
had talked about it to other people in the hotel. The whole thing—the
bottle of tablets, and what Palgrave had said to people—it all fitted in—no
earthly reason to suspect anything else. It was a perfectly natural infer-
ence to make—but I think now it may not have been correct. If it had been
my business to give the certificate, I’d have given it without a second
thought. The appearances are quite consistent with his having died from
that cause. I’d never have thought about it since if it hadn’t been for the
odd disappearance of that snapshot….”
“But look here, Graham,” said Daventry, “if you will allow me to say so,
aren’t you relying a little too much on a rather fanciful story told you by
an elderly lady? You know what these elderly ladies are like. They mag-
nify some small detail and work the whole thing up.”
“Yes, I know,” said Dr. Graham, unhappily. “I know that. I’ve said to my-
self that it may be so, that it probably is so. But I can’t quite convince my-
self. She was so very clear and detailed in her statement.”
“The whole thing seems wildly improbable to me,” said Daventry. “Some
old lady tells a story about a snapshot that ought not to be there—no, I’m
getting mixed myself—I mean the other way about, don’t I?—but the only
thing you’ve really got to go on is that a chambermaid says that a bottle of
pills which the authorities had relied on for evidence, wasn’t in the Ma-
jor’s room the day before his death. But there are a hundred explanations
for that. He might always have carried those pills about in his pocket.”
“It’s possible, I suppose, yes.”
“Or the chambermaid may have made a mistake and she simply hadn’t
noticed them before—”
“That’s possible, too.”
“Well, then.”
Graham said slowly:
“The girl was very positive.”
“Well, the St. Honoré people are very excitable. You know. Emotional.
Work themselves up easily. Are you thinking that she knows — a little
more than she has said?”
“I think it might be so,” said Dr. Graham slowly.
“You’d better try and get it out of her, if so. We don’t want to make an
unnecessary fuss—unless we’ve something definite to go on. If he didn’t
die of blood pressure, what do you think it was?”
“There are too many things it might be nowadays,” said Dr. Graham.
“You mean things that don’t leave recognizable traces?”
“Not everyone,” said Dr. Graham dryly, “is so considerate as to use ar-
senic.”
“Now let’s get things quite clear—what’s the suggestion? That a bottle of
pills was substituted for the real ones? And that Major Palgrave was
poisoned in that way?”
“No—it’s not like that. That’s what the girl—Victoria Something thinks—
But she’s got it all wrong — If it was decided to get rid of the Major —
quickly—he would have been given something—most likely in a drink of
some kind. Then to make it appear a natural death, a bottle of the tablets
prescribed to relieve blood pressure was put in his room. And the rumour
was put about that he suffered from high blood pressure.”
“Who put the rumour about?”
“I’ve tried to find out—with no success—It’s been too cleverly done. A
says ‘I think B told me’—B, asked, says ‘No, I didn’t say so but I do remem-
ber C mentioning it one day.’ C says ‘Several people talked about it—one of
them, I think, was A.’ And there we are, back again.”
“Someone was clever?”
“Yes. As soon as the death was discovered, everybody seemed to be talk-
ing about the Major’s high blood pressure and repeating round what other
people had said.”
“Wouldn’t it have been simpler just to poison him and let it go at that?”
“No. That might have meant an inquiry — possibly an autopsy — This
way, a doctor would accept the death and give a certificate—as he did.”
“What do you want me to do? Go to the CID? Suggest they dig the chap
up? It’d make a lot of stink—”
“It could be kept quite quiet.”
“Could it? In St. Honoré? Think again! The grapevine would be on to it
before it had happened. All the same,” Daventry sighed—“I suppose we’ll
have to do something. But if you ask me, it’s all a mare’s nest!”
“I devoutly hope it is,” said Dr. Graham.
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