Stillburyâs face cleared instantly. âOh, Iâm glad itâs nothing more than that,â he said with an air of relief. âI was afraid, it was some confounded woman. Thereâs always that danger, you know, when a locum is young and happensâ âif I may say so, Jervisâ âto be a good-looking fellow. Let us hear about this case.â
I gave him a condensed narrative of my connection with the mysterious patient, omitting any reference to Thorndyke, and passing lightly over my efforts to fix the position of the house, and wound up with the remark that the facts ought certainly to be communicated to the police.
âYes,â he admitted reluctantly, âI suppose youâre right. Deuced unpleasant though. Police cases donât do a practice any good. They waste a lot of time, too; keep you hanging about to give evidence. Still, you are quite right. We canât stand by and see the poor devil poisoned without making some effort. But I donât believe the police will do anything in the matter.â
âDonât you really?â