The Plague Doctor. E. Joan Sims

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The Plague Doctor - E. Joan Sims

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cake and a big bowl of icing over to the table and sat down.

      “I talked to him about an hour ago. That’s why I’m baking.”

      Cassie and I exclaimed in unison, “Uh-oh.”

      “Yes, I’m afraid the news is not so good. Bruce is representing the family of the victim, or victims, I should say. He cannot even recommend anyone else because it might be considered a conflict of interest. He said he was sorry because he’d met Ethan when he first came to town and liked him a lot.”

      Cassie’s face got even longer and more morose looking. She was absently stroking Aggie’s soft furry ears. I was a nervous wreck waiting for the first nip of those nasty little teeth. She never let any of us, including Cassie, pet her.

      “Cassie, tell us exactly what the situation is—not what Ethan says, but what Joiner told you.”

      “That’s just it,” she cried. “I couldn’t talk to Chief Joiner. They made me go in through the back of the jail. I never got to the front office, so I didn’t get to see anyone else. The deputy said it was for my own safety. Something about the town being ‘riled up’—whatever that means.”

      “So, we still don’t know exactly what happened.”

      Mother cleared her throat and licked the icing-covered spatula. I was astounded. That was a first. She must really be upset.

      “I spoke to Mavis,” she said quietly.

      “Ah, ha! Now we’re getting somewhere.”

      Mavis was an erstwhile friend of Mother’s. She had a police scanner and the biggest personal address book in town. Mavis knew everybody’s business before they did. I should have suggested that Mother call her in the first place.

      “Mavis heard the call over the police scanner when the young woman telephoned for help. I think her name is Hayes, Brittany or Brandy, one of those 1980s names. Anyway, she called 911 and said her father had been shot. Mavis heard the dispatcher order a police car to the Hayes’ farm and then call Doc Baxter. When the police got there, the girl’s father was lying out on the side of the road by his mailbox with a bullet through his head. The girl was found lying unconscious on the front porch.”

      I glanced at Cassie and watched her face grow paler as her back stiffed.

      “When the doctor got there he revived young whats-her-name and put her in the ambulance. On the way to the hospital she accused Ethan of raping her. When they told her that her father was dead, she said Ethan must have done that, too.”

      “Impossible!” cried Cassie.

      “Go on, Mother,” I encouraged grimly.

      “Chief Joiner himself went over to the Parsons’ house and quietly arrested Ethan. He was in his apartment working on some papers. He claimed that he knew nothing about Mr. Hayes being killed, or the daughter’s rape, but he couldn’t explain some really bad scratches on his hand and arms.”

      “No, no,” moaned Cassie.

      “Mavis said they photographed his wounds and booked him. The judge has refused to set bond since it’s a murder case.”

      Cassie jumped up, dumping the sleeping puppy in a furious snarling heap on the kitchen floor.

      “Ethan is innocent! He could never do anything like that!”

      “Listen to me, Cassandra! Your friend is in big trouble, but you can help him if you don’t wallow in your own feelings. His little genius medical brain seems to have shut down for the moment, and we’re going to have to do the thinking for him. So cool it and calm down.”

      She stared down at me for a moment, then sat down hard on the kitchen chair. Aggie jumped back up on her lap immediately.

      “You’re right. You’re absolutely right.” She tucked in her chin and grew three inches taller. I was proud of her. “Where do we start?”

      Mother knew.

      “Cake, anyone?”

      Chapter Seven

      After bracing ourselves with several cups of Queen Anne tea and a slice or two of Lady Baltimore cake, we took our full tummies back to the library—the gracious room that had provided the comfortable headquarters for our previous sleuthing. I loved the big brick fireplace, the soft jewel tones of the oriental rug, and the twin comfort of overstuffed sofas. The many photographs of family and friends lining the walls never failed to remind me of where I belonged in the grand scheme of things.

      Fortified by the aforementioned ladies Baltimore and Queen Anne, we sat around Dad’s desk with yellow legal pads in hand and waited for some monumental inspiration.

      “This is ridiculous,” protested Mother. “I don’t even know what I’m supposed to be considering. Paisley, give us a starting point, dear. And don’t ask for any more cake.”

      “Whatever do you mean?” I asked with feigned innocence.

      “You have that look in your eye.”

      “Please, you two. Let’s get serious,” begged Cassie.

      “Okay, okay. But Gran’s right. We don’t know diddley. For instance, when and where did Brandy, or Brittany meet Ethan? Was he really at the Hayes’s place that night? And if not, how did he get those scratches? And, I think, most important of all, what is Ethan doing in Rowan Springs in the first place?”

      “He told us the other night, Mom. He’s trying to find out why so many

      unborn babies are dying.”

      “Yeah, but is he really investigating the environment or the medical establishment?”

      “Oh, I hadn’t thought of that.”

      “Well, I think that’s where we need to focus.”

      “I could call Ed Baxter.”

      “I don’t think so, Mother, not just yet, anyway. I think we have a good starting place right here in this room.”

      “You mean Ethan’s laptop?”

      “Yes, Cassie, that’s exactly what I do mean. If he won’t talk to us, maybe his computer will.”

      “But that’s so indiscreet, Paisley. It’s like snooping in someone’s closet. Dreadful manners.”

      Mother looked so prim and proper I almost laughed. “But isn’t that just what we are? Snoops?”

      “Gran, you can’t argue with that. You’re the one who loves this detective stuff.”

      Cassie tapped her fingernail on the top of the closed computer case. “You are forgetting one thing though, Mom. We couldn’t read that disc. How are we going to let the computer do the talking if we can’t gain access?”

      “I’ve been thinking about that. Remember the other night when Horatio was here? He was telling us about Ethan’s work in Africa and his search for the host of the Ebola virus.”

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