Below the Clock. David Brawn
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THE MEDICAL REPORT
WORD passed round the House of Commons on the following day that Edgar Reardon had died of heart failure. It was difficult to trace the origin of the information, but members linked it obscurely with the post mortem which had taken place early that morning. The news was received eagerly and immediately accepted. It was satisfactory to all to know that there was no foundation for the vague fears of Tranter.
Curtis first heard the news while waiting in the outer lobby to speak to Fred Otwood. At the time he couldn’t find an opportunity. Otwood was talking to a small man with a frightened air and an ill-fitting suit—Amos Petrie.
‘I didn’t know that Reardon had a heart,’ said Curtis. ‘In that case Tranter was wrong, almost foolishly wrong.’
‘That’s old news,’ asserted his informant. ‘I wouldn’t take his word for anything that really mattered.’
Curtis smiled vaguely and was walking away when from the corner of his eye he sighted Fred Otwood. At that instant the former Chancellor of the Exchequer leaped to one side as if he had been stung by a tarantula.
‘How dare you, sir?’ he cried.
The little man seemed more surprised than any man of his inches had a right to be.
‘I’ll report you to the House,’ shouted another Member. Otwood’s trouble seemed to be catching! Petrie blinked his eyes and tugged nervously at his coloured handkerchief. He stared round as though searching for an ally.
With unbelievable suddenness the octagonal space in which members woo constituents and placate troublesome petitioners, was converted into pandemonium. It seemed that before the mind recovered from one surprise the eye was shocked by another. Member after member left those to whom they had been speaking and retreated hastily to the Inner Lobby where the outside world may be defied.
Amos Petrie, his mild face creased in bewilderment, walked over to Curtis.
‘Did you see that?’ he inquired. ‘What’s the matter with the man?’
‘I was as much surprised as you were.’
A wan smile passed over Petrie’s face. He remarked artlessly:
‘I only asked him if he could tell me something about the death of the late Edgar Reardon.’
‘Well? And what then?’
‘He didn’t seem to hear me. So I touched his arm to attract his attention. How do you explain it all?’
Curtis laughed and also beat a retreat to the Inner Lobby. Petrie stood with a smile twisting his mouth. Now he realised some of Ripple’s difficulties. It may be generally conceded that those seeking news with regard to an occurrence at a particular time and place first ask those who were present. But whenever detectives attempt such a move in the precincts of the House of Commons they raise nice questions about freedom of ingress and egress and the immemorial Privileges of Parliament. It was so now.
The Inner Lobby was seething with discontent and ruffled vanity. The walls were echoing to discordant voices.
‘They’ve no right in here except as servants of the House …’
‘But if Reardon’s death was not heart failure after all …’
‘Nonsense. Of course it was heart failure.’
‘Why this shoulder clapping business anyway …’
‘A sheer impertinence …’
‘A gross breach of privilege, too.’
‘I’ve never been so insulted before during my years …’
‘We must tell the Speaker. We certainly must …’
‘And discover if he authorised it …’
Fred Otwood promised to raise the question and walked into the House. Curtis followed him and immediately walked over to Joe Manning. He told him of the trouble.
Manning was puzzled as well as annoyed.
‘You’re a lawyer and I’m not, Curtis. What’s the constitutional line?’
‘That depends,’ whispered Curtis. ‘I’d advise you to go slow.’
Manning nodded and took no part in the Parliamentary crisis produced by the arrival of Amos Petrie. He did not need to fan the trouble and he couldn’t assuage it. The Home Secretary made an attempt to temporise and the House became more and more impatient. Matters were not improved when the Speaker admitted that he knew nothing whatever about the affair. He had been kept in entire ignorance about the inquiries.
That fact disturbed even the Speaker. And if the pale ghost of Charles I had appeared at the Bar of the House the private members could not have been more shocked. The Home Secretary was harried, baited and badgered until anyone but an M.P. would have felt sorry for him. He began to wilt, looked hopefully at the Prime Minister. There was no help coming from that quarter.
Ingram sat on the Treasury Bench, his elbow on his knee, his head supported on his hand, listening to the disheartening exhibition made by his Home Secretary. The Premier decided to close the storm of questions and silenced everyone by stepping to the table.
‘I think,’ announced Ingram, ‘that this House will have to reconcile itself to accepting the aid of the Civil Power. I say that although I should have disapproved of its intrusion without the sanction of the House. To explain why I am of this opinion I must say that I hold in my hand the reports of two eminent medical men who this morning performed a postmortem in connection with the tragic death of the late Edgar Reardon.’
The members moved restlessly. Ingram seemed tiresomely verbose. The forensic mantle dropped from Ingram with cruel abruptness.
‘The late Chancellor of the Exchequer died of poison!’
The last word shot through his lips as though it had blistered his tongue. Five hundred breaths were intaken.
‘He was poisoned with strophanthin.’
A whisper rose round the startled House. What was strophanthin? To Eric Watson that seemed unimportant. He felt like a fly taken in the web of a spider. He flashed dimmed eyes round the vague sea of faces, half-unconsciously seeking for a friendly glance. Instead he heard five hundred repetitions of the word strophanthin.
Tranter knew what it was. He smacked his thigh to proclaim his knowledge. Those on each side began to question him. The whispers faded away as Ingram opened his mouth to speak again:
‘I understand that strophanthin is one of the most dangerous drugs in the pharmacopœia,’ he announced.
‘How did the deceased Member get it?’ The questioner was Manning.
‘That is one of the matters demanding inquiry. I am told, though, that in minute pathological doses it is used medicinally.’
‘Oh!’ Manning sat back and relaxed. ‘That explains it, of course.’