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Gathering his wits, Wield said, 'No, sir, it's fine. Will you excuse me?'

He went out. A ward sister had appeared at the desk, a stout woman with a smile of great sweetness which switched on as he approached and identified himself.

'I met Mrs Waterson a moment ago,' he said. 'Is she not on this ward?'

'No. Women's surgery. Did you want her?'

'No. At least not now. I'd like a telephone, if I could.'

'In my office, just down there.'

'Thanks. Any idea when Mr Waterson will be discharged?'

'You'll need to ask Dr Marwood. Shall I get him? He's just down the ward.'

'Yes, please.'

He went into the tiny office and dialled. He identified himself to the switchboard operator and asked to be put through to Dalziel. A moment later Pascoe answered the phone.

'That you, Wieldy? Look, the Super's in with the Chief. Anything I can do to help?'

Quickly Wield filled him in.

'Oh dear,' said Pascoe. 'No wonder you sounded relieved to get me.'

'It's not quite the same story as Swain's,' said Wield, in search of a silver lining.

'No. But it's a bloody sight closer to it than Fat Andy's version,' said Pascoe.

'You don't think he could have got it wrong?'

'Are you going to tell him that?'

'I'm only a sergeant. Chief Inspectors get the danger money,' said Wield. 'Went all right, did it, your big moment? Corks popping and such?'

'I got a cup of instant coffee. Is Waterson fit enough to come down here for a bit of close questioning?'

'He looks in rude health to me but I'm just going to check with the doctor.'

As Wield replaced the receiver, the door opened and a black man in a white coat came in. He was in his late twenties, with a hairline further back and a waistline further forward than they ought to be.

'Marwood,' he said. 'You the one wanting to know if Waterson's fit to go? The answer's yes. Sooner the better.'

This sounded like something more than a medical opinion.

'Thank you, Doctor,' said Wield. 'Were you on when he was admitted?'

'No, but I've seen the notes. Shock; sedation. Well, the sedation's worn off. Never lasts long with his type. Same with shock, I'd say.'

'His type?'

'Volatile,' said the doctor. 'At least that's one way of putting it.'

Wield said, 'Do you know Mr Waterson, sir? I mean, not just as a patient?'

'We've met. His wife works here.'

'And it was through her . . . ?'

'Staff parties, that sort of thing. He turned up a couple of times.'

'And how did he strike you?' asked Wield.

'Did I take to him, you mean? No way! He struck me as an opinionated little shit, and crypto-racist with it. I wasn't surprised when she left him.'

'Left him?'

'You didn't know?' Marwood laughed. 'If I try to operate without knowing my patient's a haemophiliac, I get struck off. But you guys just muddle through and no one gives a damn! What's he done anyway?'

'Just helping us, sir,' said Wield, wondering how Marwood would have reacted to the scene he had interrupted minutes earlier. 'How long have they been separated?'

'Not long. She moved into a room in our nurses' annexe. Excuse me.'

A bleeper had started up in his pocket. He switched it off and picked up the phone.

'Right,' he said after a moment. Replacing the receiver, he said, 'I've got to go. Listen, medically, Waterson's fit to go. But personally and off the record, I'd say the guy should be put out to pasture at the funny farm.'

He left. Wield pondered what he had heard for a while. Clearly Marwood felt about Waterson as Dalziel felt about Swain. Such strong antipathies bred bias and clouded the judgement. Wield knew all about bias, hoped he would speak out against it if necessary. But for the moment all that he was required to do was deliver Waterson safe into Dalziel's eager hands.

He went back to the small side ward.

It was empty.

Suddenly his heart felt in need of intensive care. He went out to the nurse's station. The plump sister gave him her smile.

'Where's Mr Waterson, sister?' he asked.

'Is he not in his bed?'

'No. ‘He might be in the lavvy. Or perhaps he's gone to have a shower.'

'You didn't see him? Have you been here all the time, since we talked, I mean?'

He must have sounded accusatory.

'Of course I haven't. I went off to fetch Dr Marwood to see you, didn't I?' she retorted.

'Where's the lavatory? And the shower?'

The lavatory was the nearer. It was empty. But in the shower Wield found a pair of pyjamas draped over a cubicle.

Either Waterson was wandering around naked, or . . .

He returned to the sister.

'What would happen to his clothes when he was admitted?'

'They'd be folded and put in his bedside locker,' she said.

The locker was empty.

'Shit,' said Wield. Only a few months earlier during the case on which Pascoe had hurt his leg, a suspect had made his escape from a hospital bed and Dalziel had rated the officer responsible a couple of points lower than PC Hector. But no reasonable person could have anticipated that a mere witness who'd volunteered a statement would do a bunk!

Then Dalziel's features flashed upon Wield's inward eye and reason slept.

'Oh shit,' he said again. Something made him glance down at his lapel. The tiny snowdrop had already wilted and died. He took it out and crushed it in his hand. Then with wandering steps and slow he made his way back to the telephone.

CHAPTER THREE

The Reverend Eustace Horncastle was a precise man. It was through exactitude rather than excellence that he had risen to the minor eminence of minor canon, so when he said to his wife, 'The woman is pagan,' she knew the word was not lightly chosen.

Nevertheless she dared a show of opposition.

'Surely she is merely exuberant, dramatic, full of life,' she said with the wistful envy of one who knew that whatever she herself had once been full of had seeped away years since.

'Pagan,' repeated the Canon with an emphasis which in a lesser man might almost have been relish.

Looking at the object of their discussion who was striding vigorously across the Market Square ahead of them, Dorothy Horncastle could not muster a second wave of disagreement. Eileen Chung's silver lurex snood was a nod in the direction of religiosity, and there was perhaps something cope-like in the purple striped poncho draped round her shoulders. But devil-detection begins at the feet, and those zodiac-printed moccasins with leather thongs biting into golden calves each separately sufficient to seduce a Chosen People, were a dead giveaway. Here was essence of pagan. If you could have bottled it, the Canon's wife might have bought some.

The clerical couple were almost at a canter to keep up with those endless legs, so when Chung stopped suddenly there was a small collision.

'Whoa, Canon,' said Chung amiably.

'A canon indeed, but little woe,' said Horncastle to his wife's amazement. He rarely aimed at wit and when he did was more likely to try a Ciceronian trope than plunge into a Shakespearean pun. A suspicion formed in Dorothy's mind, to be brushed away like a naughty thought at Communion, that her husband might have invited her presence this morning not simply to represent the views of the laity (his phrase), but because he felt the need of a chaperone!

There had been one full meeting of the Mysteries committee which had been as long as an uncut Hamlet and not nearly as jolly. The combined verbosity of a city councillor, a union leader, a member of the Chamber of Commerce, a mediaeval historian, a journalist and Canon Horncastle, had defeated even Chung's directorial expertise and she had resolved thereafter to pick them off singly as she had picked them on singly in the first place. The diocese contained many worldlier, merrier clerics who would have given half their tithes to be religious advisers on such a project, but Chung's homework had told her Horncastle was the man. Heir apparent to the senescent Dean, he was the key figure in the Cathedral Chapter on matters relating to sacred sites and buildings, and the Bishop was said to respect his views highly, which her interpreter assured her was Anglican for being shit-scared of him.