‘Amy Teasdale had a marrow puncture she didn’t need?’
‘I remember one of the housemen pointing out that it wasn’t necessary, but Dr Ross insisted she had one anyway.’
‘Tell me about it,’ said Dunbar. ‘I want to know everything that happened to Amy.’
‘You know most of it. She was a difficult case. She’d been ill almost from the time she was born, and appealing to Medic Ecosse was a last resort for her doctors.’
‘So no one was too surprised when she died,’ said Dunbar thoughtfully.
‘Put that way, I suppose not,’ agreed Lisa. ‘People were more surprised that the hospital took her on in the first place when things hadn’t been going too well for them financially and Amy seemed a bit of a lost cause anyway.’
‘A bit like Amanda.’
Lisa looked questioningly at Dunbar but he chose not to elaborate. Instead, he said, ‘Then you rocked the boat when you started saying that Amy died because she’d been given the wrong organ?’
‘I suppose so. You see, she was only a lost cause when they couldn’t find a suitable kidney for her, but within weeks of coming in to Medic Ecosse they did. By rights she should have been perfectly okay after her transplant.’
‘There was an Omega patient in the hospital at the time, wasn’t there?’ said Dunbar, still half preoccupied with his own thoughts.
‘Yes. How did you know?’
‘I checked the dates of free transplant patients before Amanda Chapman against those of Omega patients.’
‘Why?’
‘I thought at first that the hospital might be using income from Omega patients to cover the costs of expensive free referrals.’
‘And now?’
‘There’s more to it. I wonder if Kenneth Lineham was a free transplant patient too?’
‘Couldn’t you check?’
‘The list of free referral patients didn’t include names. I suppose I could-’ He broke off in mid-sentence.
‘What is it?’
‘I’ve just remembered something,’ said Dunbar excitedly. ‘Sheila Barnes, in her journal, got quite upset at one point because an Omega patient seemed to be getting more attention than her patient. That means there was an Omega patient in the hospital at the same time as Kenneth Lineham. He must have been the first free transplant patient, Amy was the second and now Amanda Chapman is number three. All apparently hopeless cases taken on out of the goodness of Medic Ecosse’s heart and always at the same time as an Omega patient.’
‘But surely that means-’
‘That Amanda Chapman is in great danger,’ interrupted Dunbar. ‘Just like the others.’
‘What are you going to do?’
‘We need more than just suspicion,’ said Dunbar, exasperation showing on his face. ‘We need hard evidence and we haven’t got any. We don’t even have a clue what they’re really up to.’
Lisa looked alarmed. ‘We can’t just do nothing,’ she said.
‘I’m going to talk to Clive Turner. He might have an idea.’ She nodded.
Dunbar called Turner at the Children’s Hospital. ‘I’m sorry I didn’t get back to you sooner,’ he began. ‘The truth is, I haven’t been able to find out discreetly why Amanda Chapman was given an unnecessary marrow puncture.’
‘As it happens, I don’t think anyone is going to be too upset, even if it was a mistake,’ said Turner.
‘What’s changed?’
‘A kidney’s become available for Amanda. Hadn’t you heard?’
‘No, I hadn’t,’ said Dunbar slowly. ‘That is good news.’ He said the words but his head suddenly seemed full of broken glass. It was happening all over again. It was happening to Amanda just as it had to the others. She was going to die. She was going to reject her transplant.
‘Amazing luck really,’ continued Turner. ‘She’s a very fortunate young lady.’
‘Clive, could I come over there? I need to talk to you.’
‘Why… yes, I suppose so. Is something the matter?’
‘I’m not sure. How about now?’
‘If you like.’
‘I’ll be there in fifteen minutes.’
He found Turner in the duty room, talking to a colleague.
‘Clive? I’m Steven Dunbar.’
Turner broke off his conversation and turned to shake hands. ‘We can talk next door,’ he said. He ushered Dunbar into a small, sparsely furnished room and offered him coffee from a half-full flask that sat on an electric heating plate. This and a computer terminal were the only furnishings in the room, apart from two hard chairs and an old Formica-topped table. It said something about modern-day priorities.
‘Thanks. Black, no sugar.’
Turner handed Dunbar his coffee and sat down opposite him. ‘You sounded a bit concerned on the phone?’
Dunbar nodded. ‘The truth is I don’t quite know where to begin. I know you’re going to find this hard to believe, but something very wrong is going on at Medic Ecosse and I think Amanda Chapman is about to be caught up in it.’
‘Go on,’ said Turner, now looking serious.
Dunbar told Turner who he really was and why he had been sent to Medic Ecosse.
‘So you think Amanda is at risk like the previous two,’ said Turner.
‘I do. I don’t know how or why exactly, but I do feel she’s in great danger.’
Turner moved his hands in a gesture of confusion and tried but failed to find words.
‘I’m sorry to have sprung this on you like this, but I need your input. You’re a transplant expert,’ said Dunbar.
‘There’s rather a lot to take in,’ said Turner. ‘James Ross has an international reputation. It’s difficult to believe he’s mixed up in anything shady. On the other hand, if what you say is true… What is it you want from me?’
‘I’d like to be able to call on you if it proves necessary at any point. I’d also be interested in any suggestions you might care to make as to why the kids died.’
‘You say both previous patients were given ostensibly compatible transplants yet they rejected them strongly? That would be unusual in itself.’
‘The computer agrees with you,’ said Dunbar. ‘I checked. They were the only two in the country to die with compatibility ratings as high as they had.’
Turner nodded. ‘You know that Ross has been experimenting with animal organs but you say you don’t think he risked trying them on the patients?’
‘I’ve seen his research data. There was no hope of success with pig organs the way they are at the moment. There would have been no point in attempting it.’
‘What about a mistake in the compatibility ratings given to the donor organs?’ suggested Turner.
‘Checked at both ends in Amy Teasdale’s case,’ said Dunbar.
Turner made a face. ‘They agreed?’
‘To within five per cent.’
‘Maybe we should check up on the kidney they’ve found for Amanda?’
‘Good idea,’ agreed Dunbar.
Turner logged on to the computer terminal in the corner of the room and asked for access to the donor database. While the machine was considering his request, he suddenly swore as if he’d just remembered something and got up to go next door. He came back clutching Amanda Chapman’s old notes. ‘We’re in luck,’ he said. ‘I thought they might have been taken down for filing. I need to know her tissue type.’
He thought for a moment, then went on, ‘It won’t be any good asking for a kidney match if the kidneys have already been booked for Amanda, but it might still be possible to ask about the availability of the liver.’ He entered the request for a liver, along with Amanda Chapman’s tissue type.
There was a delay of about thirty seconds before the screen filled with information. ‘There we are,’ said Turner quietly. ‘There’s our donor. Eighty-four per cent homology. A first-class match. Amanda should have no problem at all. All straight and above-board.’
Dunbar stared at the screen without emotion. ‘You’d better decline the liver,’ he said. ‘They’re holding it for you.’
Turner was about to enter the cancellation when Dunbar put a hand on his arm. ‘Before you cancel, can you find out where the organ is coming from?’
‘Sure.’
Turner requested the information, still under the pretext of searching for a liver for someone with Amanda’s tissue type. ‘Here it comes,’ he said as the screen blinked and changed. ‘The organ is available through the Kohl Clinic.’