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Authors: Mary Higgins Clark

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Thrillers, #Suspense

BOOK: The Cradle Will Fall
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CHAPTER SEVEN

 

AT FIVE o'clock Gertrude Fitzgerald turned the phone over to the

answering service and locked the reception desk. Nervously she

dialed Edna's number. Again there was no answer. There was no

doubt. Edna had been drinking more and more lately. She was

such a good person. They had both worked for Dr. Highley for

several years and often had lunch together. Sometimes Edna

would want to go to a pub for a manhattan. Gertrude understood

her need to drink, understood that hollow feeling when all you do

is go to work and then go home and stare at four walls.

 

Gertrude was a widow, but at least she had the children and

grandchildren to care about her. She had her own lonely times,

but it wasn't the same as it was for Edna. She'd lived. She had

something to look back on.

 

She could swear Dr. Highley had known she was lying when she

said Edna had called in sick. But suppose Edna hadn't been drinking?

Suppose she was sick or something? She'd have to find out.

She'd drive over to her house right now.

 

Her mind settled, Gertrude left the office briskly and drove the

six miles to Edna's apartment. She parked in the visitors' area and

walked around to the front. As she neared Edna's door, she heard

the faint sound of voices. The television set, of course.

 

Gertrude rang the bell and waited. There was no familiar voice

calling "Right with you." Gertrude firmly pushed the bell again.

Maybe Edna was sleeping it off.

 

By the time she'd rung the bell four times, Gertrude was thoroughly

alarmed. Something was wrong. The superintendent, Mr.

Krupshak, lived across the court. Hurrying over, Gertrude told

her story. The super was eating dinner and looked annoyed, but

his wife, Gana, reached for the keys. "I'll go with you," she said.

 

The two women hurried across the courtyard together. "Edna's

a real friend," Gana Krupshak volunteered. "Sometimes in the

evening I pop in on her. Just last night I stopped over at about

eight. I had a manhattan with her, and she told me that one of her

favorite patients had killed herself. Well, here we are."

 

 

They were on the small porch leading to Edna's apartment. The

superintendent's wife inserted the key into the lock, twisted it and

pushed open the door.

 

The two women saw Edna at the same moment: lying on the

floor, her legs crumpled under her, her graying hair plastered

around her face, her eyes staring, crusted blood making a crimson

crown on the top of her head.

 

"No. No." Gertrude's voice rose, high and shrill. She pressed

her knuckles to her mouth.

 

In a dazed voice Gana Krupshak said, "It's just last night I was

sitting here with her. And she was talking about a patient who

killed herself. And then she phoned the woman's husband." Gana

began to sob. "And now poor Edna is dead too!"

 

CHRIS Lewis stood next to Vangie's parents at the right of the

coffin, numbly acknowledging the sympathetic utterances of

friends. When he'd phoned her parents about her death, they had

agreed that they would view her body privately and have a memorial

service the next morning followed by a private interment.

 

Instead, when he'd arrived in Minneapolis, he found that they

had arranged for a public viewing that night.

"So many friends will want to say good-by to our little girl," her

mother sobbed.

Our little girl. If only you had let her grow up, Chris thought,

it might all have been so different.

 

Vangie's parents looked old and tired and shattered with grief.

They were plain, hardworking people who had brought up their

unexpectedly beautiful child to believe her wish was law.

 

Would it be easier for them when it was revealed that someone

had taken Vangie's life? Or did he owe it to them to say nothing,

to keep that final horror from them? He wanted badly to talk to

Joan. She'd been so upset when she heard about Vangie. "Did she

know about us?" He'd finally had to admit to her that Vangie

suspected he was interested in someone else.

 

Joan would be back from Florida on Friday, two days away.

He was going to return to New Jersey tomorrow right after the

funeral. He would say nothing to the police until he had warned

 

 

Joan that she might be dragged into this. The police would be

looking for a motive for him to kill Vangie. In their eyes, Joan

would be the motive.

 

Chris glanced over at the coffin, at Vangie's now peaceful face,

the quietly folded hands. He and Vangie had scarcely lived as

man and wife in the past few years. They'd lain side by side like

strangers, he emotionally drained from the endless quarreling, she

wanting to be cajoled, babied.

 

A suspicion that had been sitting somewhere in his subconscious

sprang to life. Was it possible that Vangie had become involved

with another man, a man who did not want to take responsibility

for her and a baby? Had she confronted that other man, hurled

hysterical threats at him?

 

He realized that he was shaking hands, murmuring thanks to

a man in his mid-sixties. He was slightly built but sturdily attractive,

with gray hair and bushy brows over keen, penetrating

eyes. "I'm Dr. Salem," he said. "Emmet Salem. I delivered Vangie

and was her first gynecologist. She was one of the prettiest things I

ever brought into this world, and she never changed. I only wish I

hadn't been away when she phoned my office Monday."

 

Chris stared at him. "Vangie phoned you Monday?"

 

"Yes. My nurse said she was quite upset. Wanted to see me

immediately. I was teaching a seminar in Detroit, but the nurse

made an appointment for her for today. She was planning to fly

out yesterday. Maybe I could have helped her."

 

Why had Vangie called this man? Chris tried to think. What

would make her go back to a doctor she hadn't seen in years? A

doctor thirteen hundred miles away?

 

"Had Vangie been ill?" Dr. Salem was looking at him curiously.

 

"No, not ill," Chris said. "As you probably know, she was expecting

a baby, and it was a difficult pregnancy."

 

"Vangie was pregnant?" The doctor stared in astonishment.

 

"I know. She had just about given up hope. But in New Jersey

 

she started the Westlake Maternity Concept. You may have heard

of it, or of Dr. Highley—Dr. Edgar Highley."

"Captain Lewis, may I speak with you privately?" The funeral

director had a hand under his arm.

 

 

“Excuse me,” Chris said to the doctor. He allowed the funeral

director to guide him into the office.

The director closed the door. “I’ve just received a call from the

prosecutor’s office in Valley County, New Jersey,” he said.

“Written confirmation is on the way. We are forbidden to inter

your wife’s body. It is to be flown back to the medical

examiner’s office in Valley County immediately after the

service tomorrow.”

 

They know it wasn’t suicide, Chris thought. Without

answering the funeral director, he turned and left. He wanted to

see Dr. Salem, find out what Vangie had said to the nurse on the

phone.

 

But Dr. Salem was already gone. Vangie’s mother rubbed

swollen eyes with a crumpled handkerchief. “What did you say

to Dr. Salem that made him leave like that?” she asked. “Why

did you upset him so terribly?”

 

WEDNESDAY evening Edgar Highley arrived home at six

o’clock. Hilda was just leaving. He knew she liked this job.

Why not? A house that stayed neat; no mistress to constantly

give orders; no children to clutter it.

 

No children. He went into the library, poured a Scotch and

watched from the window as Hilda disappeared down the street.

 

He had gone into medicine because his own mother had died

in childbirth. His birth. “Your mother wanted you so much,” his

father had told him again and again. “She knew she was risking

her life, but she didn’t care.”

 

Sitting in the chemist’s shop in Brighton, watching his father

prepare prescriptions, asking questions: “What is that? What

will that pill do? Why do you put caution labels on those

bottles?”

 

He’d gone to medical school, finished in the top ten percent of

his class. He’d interned at Christ Hospital in Devon, with its

magnificent research laboratory. He’d become a member of staff;

 

 

his reputation as an obstetrician had grown rapidly. But his project

had been held back by his inability to test it.

 

At twenty-seven he'd married Claire, a distant cousin of the

earl of Sussex. She was infinitely superior to him in social background,

but his growing reputation had been the leveler. And what

incredible ignominy. He who dealt in birth and fertility had

married a barren woman.

 

When had he started to hate Claire? It took a long time—seven

years. It was when he realized that her disappointment was faked;

that she'd known all along that she could not conceive.

 

Impatiently he turned from the window. It would be another

cold, wind-filled night. When all this was over, he'd take a vacation.

He was losing his grip on his nerves. He had nearly given

himself away this morning when Gertrude told him that Edna had

phoned in sick. He'd grasped the desk, watched his knuckles

whiten. Then he'd realized: Gertrude was covering for her friend.

 

The missing shoe. This morning he'd gone to the hospital soon

after dawn and once again searched the parking lot and the office.

Had Vangie been wearing it when she came into his office Monday

night? He couldn't be sure. The other shoe, the right one, was still

in his bag in the trunk of the car.

 

Even if the police started an investigation into Vangie's death,

there was no evidence against him. Her file in the office could

bear intensive scrutiny. All the true records of the special cases

were here in the wall safe, and he defied anyone to locate that safe.

It wasn't even in the original plans of the house.

 

Anyway, no one had any reason to suspect him—no one except

Katie DeMaio.

 

Fukhito had come in to see him just as he was locking up tonight.

He'd said, "Mrs. DeMaio was asking a lot of questions. Is

it possible that they don't believe Mrs. Lewis committed suicide?"

 

"I really don't know." He'd enjoyed Fukhito's nervousness.

 

"The interview you gave to that magazine comes out tomorrow?"

 

"Yes. But I gave them the impression I use a number of psychiatric

consultants. Your name will not appear in the article."

 

"Still, it's going to put the spotlight on us."

 

"On yourself. Isn't that what you're saving, Doctor?"

 

 

He'd almost laughed aloud at the troubled, guilty look on

Fukhito's face. Now, finishing his Scotch, he realized that he had

been overlooking another avenue of escape. If the police concluded

that Vangie had been murdered, if they did investigate

Wesdake, he could reluctantly suggest that they interrogate

Dr. Fukhito. Especially in view of his past. After all, Fukhito was

the last person known to have seen Vangie Lewis alive.

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