The Burying Ground. Janet Kellough

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The Burying Ground - Janet Kellough A Thaddeus Lewis Mystery

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taking the measure of Dr. Christie. Besides, he could scarcely ask that the offending object be removed. The older man would think him strange indeed, and Luke couldn’t afford to do anything that would jeopardize this welcome partnership with an established physician.

      Having completed his medical studies, Luke could have gone anywhere that was without a doctor and simply hung out his shingle. In fact, his original intention was to return to the Huron Tract, where his brothers both had farms and where doctors were scarce. Later on he had imagined that he would stay in Montreal. Then everything had changed, and he realized that upon graduation he would have no money for necessary instruments, nor a stake that would see him through the first lean months of a fledgling practice.

      And then, an aging doctor who lived at the northern edges of Toronto wrote to the medical department at McGill asking for help in finding an assistant. He had himself, Stewart Christie said, trained at the University of Edinburgh, but “failing to entice anyone from that august institution to the wilds of colonial Canada,” he was willing to settle for a recent graduate from McGill who had been thoroughly schooled in the Scottish method, provided he was able to engage one who was “fit and able to shoulder the more onerous duties attendant on the practice.” The doctor was offering a small salary, a fully-equipped office, and free living quarters on the second floor of his house.

      One of the surgeons, Professor Brown, had duly brought the letter to the attention of the graduating class, to a less than enthusiastic response. Luke’s fellow students had never heard of Yorkville and scorned the prospect of a village practice.

      “Middle of nowhere,” one of them scoffed as they trailed down the ward in the surgeon’s wake.

      “Farmers and ploughboys,” said another. “Not very interesting.”

      But what they really meant, Luke knew, was “not lucrative.” Many of Luke’s classmates had family money that would help them get started or family connections that would guarantee them a place with a prosperous city practice. Their futures had been assured almost as soon as they had been accepted at medical school.

      After rounds finished, Luke approached Professor Brown and indicated that he might be interested in applying for the position. And then he promptly wrote to his father seeking his opinion on the matter.

      “Able to shoulder the more onerous duties?” Thaddeus had written back. “In other words, you’d be a drudge. On the other hand, I can think of no more expeditious way for you to enter the profession you have chosen. You might be wise to consider this.”

      His father was also familiar with the village called Yorkville, as Luke had known he would be.

      “Although it’s true that it’s a small place right now, it can’t be any more than two or three miles to Toronto,” Thaddeus wrote. “In a few years, it’s entirely likely that the city’s limits will have stretched to encompass the entire area. By the time your elderly doctor is ready to hand over the reins, you could well find yourself with a city practice after all.”

      Armed with this knowledge, Luke wrote to offer his services.

      When he arrived in Yorkville, he found a sleepy little village on Yonge Street, which — according to Christie, who seemed to have an extensive knowledge of the history and events of the area — had sprung up around a tollgate and a tavern, The Red Lion Inn. This public house was famous as a rallying point for the rebels of 1837.

      “Brigands, all of them,” the doctor said. “Should have been sent straight off to the hangman.”

      A small stream to the northeast had attracted the attention of Joseph Bloor, who built a brewery beside it in the early ’30s, and then of John Severn, who did the same. The two breweries, along with the brickworks that produced a distinctive yellow product from local clay, were, Christie said, the major industries of the village.

      “You won’t see many grand estates here. It’s mostly small houses and cottages for the local workers, more’s the pity. I could do with a few clients who don’t have to be hounded for payment.”

      To Luke, it seemed like a very self-sufficient little community, but he could see signs that his father might well be correct about Yorkville’s future. Just south of the village, the area between the Tollgate Road and Queen Street was designated by Toronto as part of its liberties — not really city, not really county — but a legislative distinction that cleared the legalities for future annexation. City factories, once too far away for the workers of Yorkville to reach every day on foot, were now serviced by omnibuses. And the Strangers’ Burying Ground, a cemetery on the corner of Yonge Street and the concession line, once considered on the verge of wilderness, now formed a barrier to the ever-expanding sprawl of houses in the village. Yorkville would probably always be a small town, Luke figured, but by the time Dr. Christie finally packed it in, its fresher air and slower pace might well have attracted a more well-heeled population.

      In the meantime, as junior partner, Luke was relegated to the tasks that entailed the most work. This arrangement meant that he handled the cases that required walking any great distance. Dr. Christie’s definition of “any great distance” was narrow in the extreme, as the older man was disinclined to indulge in any sort of effort and much preferred that his patients come to him. Few patients ever did this. As a rule they attended to their gumboils and bunions themselves, and when a more serious ailment presented itself, they expected a physician to treat them in their own homes. This meant that Luke would be handling virtually all of the calls. That was fine, as far as he was concerned — every time he was called out it meant that he could leave the office and the sneering skeleton behind.

      When a small boy pounded on the door the day after his arrival, Luke eagerly grabbed the scuffed leather satchel that contained his potions and instruments and followed the child down Yonge Street and into a side alley that led through a cluster of modest cottages.

      “Hurry,” the boy said, “Pa’s bleeding something fierce.”

      Luke’s patient was still in his back dooryard where he had been splitting firewood. The axe had sliced through the man’s boot and embedded itself in the big toe of his left foot. The man had not attempted to remove either the axe or the boot, instead slumping to the ground to await the doctor’s arrival. He was not suffering in silence, however, and his yells and moans had drawn a crowd of his neighbours, who hung over the garden fence to watch the drama.

      “You’ll be all right now, Holden,” one of them said when he saw Luke. “The doctor’s here.”

      “He’ll probably have to remove the leg, you know,” another offered, resulting in a further, and louder, round of moaning from the injured man.

      “Shush!” a woman said to the man who had spoken. “You’re scaring him!”

      “That was what I was hoping to do.”

      “Well, stop!”

      Luke ignored them all and lowered himself to one knee in order to assess the injury. Sometimes these wounds could be nasty, the laceration rarely clean, the edges of the wound ragged and shredded, depending on the sharpness of the axe.

      After a moment, he turned to the boy. “Can you find me some clean rags?” he asked. “Freshly washed ones, that haven’t been used for anything else?”

      The boy nodded and disappeared into the house.

      Luke untied the boot, removing the laces entirely in preparation for taking it off. There was a great deal of blood spilling out from the slash in the toe. He would have to move

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