An Innocent Bride. Betty Neels

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An Innocent Bride - Betty Neels


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got out. He said briefly, ‘Stay there—have you a key to the door?’

      ‘On the left-hand side there’s a narrow ledge above the door…’

      The key was large and heavy; Dr Glenville reflected that it was certainly too cumbersome to carry around in a woman’s handbag as he opened the door. It gave directly onto the living room, which was small and rather overcrowded with furniture. A half-open door ahead of him gave him a glimpse of the kitchen beyond. There were two other doors too, so he opened the one nearest to him—another small room, the dining room presumably—and when he lifted the latch of the other door he found a narrow curved stair.

      He went back to the car, opened Katrina’s door and lifted her out.

      ‘I can walk.’

      ‘Better not until your doctor has had a look at you.’ As he thrust back the stairs door with a foot Katrina said urgently, ‘You can’t carry me up.’

      She could have saved her breath. He didn’t reply, and on the tiny landing above, still breathing easily, he asked, ‘Which door?’

      ‘On the right.’ She added sharply, ‘Do put me down…’ He didn’t reply to that either, but laid her tidily on the narrow bed in the little room, took off her sandals and covered her with the patchwork quilt folded across its foot.

      ‘Lie still and close your eyes,’ he said, and at the thump on the door knocker he said, ‘That will be the police or your doctor. I’ll be back.’

      ‘This is ridiculous,’ said Katrina peevishly, but she closed her eyes and was asleep before he had reached the bottom of the stairs.

      It was the police—at least, a constable, who was rather stout, with a cheerful round face, his bike leaning against the hedge by the gate. ‘Had a message,’ he observed, eyeing the doctor. ‘I live in the village. I’m to have a look and see what’s amiss. Miss Katrina’s not hurt?’

      The doctor held out a hand. ‘Dr Glenville. I found Miss—er—Katrina in the road. A motorbike knocked her over, smashed her bicycle to bits, I’m afraid. I’ve phoned her doctor—she’s resting on her bed. I expect you need a statement, but could it wait until she’s been examined? She’s rather shocked, and has been bruised and cut.’

      ‘You saw the accident, sir?’

      ‘No, but the motorbike missed me by inches coming round the bend, and I found the young lady sitting in the road. A mile back.’

      ‘I’d best go and take a look. You didn’t get the number, I suppose?’

      ‘No. He was going at speed. I had to move the bike to the side of the road in case it caused a further accident.’

      ‘You’ll be here, sir?’

      ‘Yes, I’ll stay until her doctor gets here. You’ll want a statement from me, won’t you?’

      ‘I’ll go and take a look right away and send in a report.’

      The doctor went to his car, unlocked the boot, took his case into the cottage and went into the kitchen. He supposed that he had better stay until whoever it was who would be back at one o’clock returned. He was in no great hurry to get home, and the girl shouldn’t be left alone.

      He prowled around the kitchen, which was almost as large as the living room, with a tiled floor and cheerful wallpaper. There was a door leading to a long garden with a small window beside it. It was open and sitting beside it, composed and dignified, was a small black and white cat.

      The doctor tickled it under its chin and, rightly interpreting its fixed stare, he found a saucer, the milk in the slip of a pantry, and offered it.

      The cat scoffed it daintily, got down from the window and walked out of the kitchen and through the open door to the stairs, and the doctor, raised by a loving mother and an old-fashioned nanny, put the milk back where he had found it, washed the saucer and folded the teacloth tidily over its rail. Childhood teachings don’t die easily.

      Footsteps coming up the garden path sent him to the door. The man about to enter was middle-aged, grey-haired, with a long thin face and a stoop. He said at once, ‘Dr Glenville?’ He held out a hand. ‘Peters—thank heaven you were able to help Katrina. Is she upstairs?’

      ‘Yes. The village constable came; he’s gone to take a look round. I’ll wait here for a bit, shall I?’

      ‘I’d be obliged if you could. Did you form any opinion? Nothing serious?’

      ‘It seems not, but I haven’t examined her—just bandaged a cut on her leg and made sure that she hadn’t been knocked out.’

      Dr Peters nodded. ‘I’ll go on up.’

      Presently he came downstairs again and joined Dr Glenville sitting on the wooden bench outside the door. ‘I can’t find much wrong—she tells me that she didn’t lose consciousness at all. She’s a healthy young woman; I don’t think there’s much harm done. All the same, I don’t like to leave her on her own. She needs to rest for an hour or so, don’t you agree? Knowing Katrina, she is quite capable, once our backs are turned, of coming downstairs to dig the garden or Hoover the house. She lives with her aunt, Miss Thirza Gibbs, who has gone into Warminster to see her dentist. Won’t be back until the bus gets in round one o’clock.’ He frowned. ‘I wonder if the vicar’s wife would pop over?’

      ‘If it is of any help, I will stay,’ said Dr Glenville, and wondered as he said it why on earth he had suggested it. ‘I’m on my way back to town, but the rest of the day is my own.’ He added, ‘I have beds at St Aldrick’s, so I have rooms in town, but I live at Wherwell.’

      Dr Peters said, ‘St Aldrick’s’s—you’re the chap who wrote that article in the Lancet—the haematologist. I’m delighted to have met you, though I would wish for a more sociable occasion. But can you spare the time?’

      ‘Certainly I can. Do you wish me to say anything to the young lady’s aunt?’

      ‘Miss Thirza? Would you? And tell her that I’ll call in later today or tomorrow morning.’ He smiled a little. ‘She is a very forthright person—so, for that matter, is Katrina.’

      Left on his own, the doctor trod upstairs, paused at the open door to ask if he might go in and crossed to the bed.

      ‘Dr Peters has gone, but I’ll stay until your aunt gets back. Would you like a cup of tea?’

      Katrina sat up in bed and regretted it; she had the beginnings of a headache. Not surprising, really, with all the fuss… ‘I can’t think why you’re still here,’ she said rudely. ‘There’s no need. I’m not a baby and there’s nothing wrong with me at all. Do please go away. You’ve been most helpful, thank you.’

      The doctor studied her face. ‘Would you like a cup of tea?’ he asked again, in the mildest of voices.

      She nodded, her eyes closed. She was behaving badly; she opened her eyes, anxious to apologise, but he had gone.

      The doctor pottered round the kitchen looking for things while the kettle boiled. It was a pleasant little room, with cheerful curtains at the window, a small table against one wall and two chairs. The cooking stove was old but immaculate, and the cupboards were models of tidiness. But there wasn’t a great deal in them—the basic necessities, no tins or packets—and no fridge, although there was an old-fashioned pantry with stone shelves, which was very cool.

      He made tea, and since the cat was staring at him in an anxious manner he looked around for its food. There were no tins, but there was a covered saucepan on the stove with what looked like some kind of stew in it. He filled a saucer and offered it, found a mug and went back upstairs. A pity that Mrs Peach couldn’t see him now, he reflected—a housekeeper of the old-fashioned school, she considered that no one who employed her should lift a finger while she or Peach, her husband and his house-man, were within reach.

      Katrina sat up as he went in. He put the mug down, tucked a cushion


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