‘You know, it’s a funny thing,’ said Byars. ‘Despite all the bleeding, haemorrhagic fever cases rarely die from blood loss.’
‘You’ve had experience of it before?’
‘No,’ Byars confessed. ‘I read it in a book.’
Steven accepted an invitation to attend a meeting later in the hospital with representatives from the Public Health Service and other bodies concerned with the outbreak, then headed for the police station where Lennon and Clark had worked.
He was seen by a chief superintendent who seized the opportunity to subject him to a short lecture about the dangers his officers on the street were constantly exposed to. It was short because Steven interrupted him with a request to see the shift rota the two sick officers were on at the time of the call to Ann Danby’s place. He followed this up with a request to speak with Sergeant John Fearman.
‘I’ve known Tom Lennon for fifteen years,’ said Fearman. ‘Salt of the earth, he is. That’s why I put young Clark with him — I thought he’d teach the lad a lot about what police work’s all about.’
‘Tell me about that night,’ said Steven.
‘It’s all in the report,’ said Fearman. ‘We got a call from one of the neighbours about loud music. Tom and Clark attended and had to force an entry to the Danby woman’s flat. The rest is history.’
‘No, tell me the details.’
‘What’s to say? Tom thought she was dead when they arrived — he couldn’t find a pulse — but then she moved and he yelled for an ambulance. Clark actually tried mouth-to-mouth on her, poor little sod — I suppose that’s how he got it. But by the time the ambulance got there she really was dead.’
‘You say she moved?’
‘Clark was watching her when it happened. She was the first body he’d ever come across, see, and when she moved it gave him the fright of his life.’
‘Then what?’
‘Tom called immediately for an ambulance and tried clearing her throat. There was vomit on the pillow so he thought her airway might be blocked, but he told me it was all clear when he put… his fingers in her mouth.’
Steven and Fearman exchanged glances as they both saw the significance of this action.
‘Tom kept trying to wake her up because he thought she’d taken an overdose of pills, as indeed she had, and he thought he was succeeding, too, when she appeared to come round and say something. But it was no use. She died.’
‘She said something?’ asked Steven.
Fearman shrugged ruefully. ‘Tom told me that her last words were, “All men are bastards.”’
SIX
Steven said he wanted to take a look at Ann Danby’s flat. He had no specific reason in mind but it was vital that he understand as much as possible about her because she was — in the absence of any known contact — the sole cause of the Manchester outbreak. He was told that the police and Public Health people had finished their business there, and was given a key, which had been marked for collection by her parents on the following day; it had been necessary to change the lock after the police’s forced entry. He was driven over to the flats in a police Panda car, and he told the driver not to wait, as he might be some time.
‘Just like Captain Oates, eh?’ said the driver.
‘But I’m planning on coming back,’ countered Steven.
Palmer Court had little architectural merit, being a rather nondescript block of concrete flats four storeys high with roughcast walls and a flat roof, but it had a well-cared-for appearance. The grounds inside the gates were obviously professionally tended, with manicured lawns and knife-edged borders. The residents’ parking bays were white-lined and numbered and the rubbish bins, also numbered, were discreetly stored in a little stable of their own at the side of the building, disguised with climbing plants. The hallmark of the middle class, thought Steven, a place for everything and everything in its place.
A round-shouldered man wearing a blue serge suit and a grubby-collared shirt, supposedly made respectable by a thin black tie secured with an incredibly tight knot, admitted him to the building. He carried a large bunch of keys on a metal ring as if it were a symbol of his authority and walked with a shuffling gait that suggested his shoes were too large. His complexion spoke of a long association with alcohol but his breath smelled of peppermint. He seemed pleasant enough when he asked Steven his business. Steven showed his ID and said why he’d come.
‘Another one, eh,’ said the man. ‘Poor woman has had more visitors since she died than she ever did when she was alive.’
‘That’s often the way,’ said Steven, keen to engage the man in conversation in case he had useful information. ‘People tend to turn up at your funeral when they wouldn’t have crossed the street to say hello to you while you were alive.’
‘Ain’t that the truth,’ agreed the man. ‘You know, I still can’t get over it.’ He sighed. ‘Poor Miss Danby. She seemed happy enough when I talked to her the weekend before last. She was asking me about a good garage to service her car. I sent her to Dixon’s in Minto Street. My brother works there.’
‘Then you didn’t think she was the sort to take her own life?’ probed Steven.
‘Who’s to say?’ replied the doorman, philosophically. He put his head to one side and both hands behind his back to impart his wisdom. ‘People often put a brave face on things. Hide the truth from the world, if you know what I mean.’
‘Sure,’ replied Steven, hoping he wasn’t about to be subjected to a series of examples. ‘You implied that she didn’t have many friends?’
‘If she did, very few of them ever came here,’ replied the man. ‘Having said that, she quite often went away for the weekend but maybe that was work.’
‘She didn’t say?’
‘She was a very private person, was Miss Danby, not the sort to volunteer that kind of information, and I’m not the sort to ask,’ replied the doorman.
‘Of course not,’ said Steven. He asked for directions to the flat.
‘Third floor, second door. You can still smell the disinfectant. God knows why they’d want to go and do that.’
Steven had overlooked the fact that the Public Health people would have disinfected the flat thoroughly in the wake of the PM findings. He got the full lingering force of it when he opened the door and entered the hall. They had obviously used a formaldehyde ‘bomb’ to make sure that the disinfectant got everywhere and that no virus particles were left alive. This was effective, but unfortunate from Steven’s point of view, because he hated the smell of formaldehyde and had done ever since his early days at medical school, where the cadavers the students worked on were stored in solutions of the stuff. He put a handkerchief over his nose and mouth until he opened a window in the living room and waited by it until the air had cleared enough for him to take a look around.
The flat was very well furnished but in a pleasantly understated way — good-quality stuff but kept to a minimum so that there was a feeling of light and space about the place. He noted that Ann Danby had an eclectic CD collection, all stacked neatly in purpose-built racks beside the Bang and Olufsen music centre. A closer inspection revealed that they were filed neatly in alphabetical order. Steven moved on to her tape collection and found that the same system applied. It spoke of a tidy, organised mind. Her books, however, were arranged by subject and occupied three tiers of black metal shelving fitted to the wall opposite the window.
Many of the titles were computer- and probably work-related. They took up almost the entire top shelf, while a liking for poetry was demonstrated by the titles to the left on the middle shelf. Keats seemed to have been a particular favourite but Auden, Rupert Brooke and Wordsworth were also well represented. At the end of the poetry section, just before the shelf divider, there were a number of volumes of love poetry. Steven saw a certain poignancy in that in view of the picture the man on the door had painted of a rather solitary, lonely woman.