him. âDigitalis is a proven remedy for fluid retention, but of course she wonât take anything by mouth. One might resort to a dry dietââ
âLimit her liquids even further?â Libâs voice shot upwards. âShe has only a few spoonfuls of water a day as it is.â
Dr. McBrearty plucked at his side-whiskers. âI could reduce her legs mechanically, I suppose.â
Bleeding, did he mean? Leeching? Lib wished she hadnât said a word to this antediluvian.
âBut that has its own risks. No, no, on the whole, safer to watch and wait.â
Lib was still uneasy. Then again, if Anna was imperiling her own health, whose fault was it but her own? Or the fault of whoever was putting her up to this, Lib supposed.
âShe doesnât look like a child who hasnât eaten in four months, does she?â the doctor asked.
âFar from it.â
âMy sense of it exactly! A wonderful anomaly.â
The old man had misunderstood her. He was wilfully blind to the obvious conclusion: the child was getting fed somehow. âDoctor, if Anna were really taking no nourishment at all, donât you think sheâd be prostrated by now? Of course you must have seen many famished patients during the potato blight, far more than I,â Lib added, as a sop to his expertise.
McBrearty shook his head. âAs it happens I was still in Gloucestershire then. I inherited this estate only five years ago and couldnât rent it out, so I thought Iâd return and practice here.â He rose to his feet as if to say their interview was over.
âAlso,â she went on in a rush, âI canât say I have the utmost confidence in my fellow nurse. It will be no easy task to maintain complete alertness during night shifts in particular.â
âBut Sister Michael should be an old hand at that,â said McBrearty. âShe nursed at the Charitable Infirmary in Dublin for twelve years.â
Oh. Why had nobody thought to tell Lib this?
âAnd at the House of Mercy, they rise for Night Office at midnight, I believe, and again for Lauds at dawn.â
âI see,â said Lib, mortified. âWell. The real problem is that the conditions at the cabin are most unscientific. I have no way to weigh the child, and there are no lamps to provide adequate light. Annaâs room can easily be accessed from the kitchen, so anyone might go in when I take her out walking. Without your authority, Mrs. OâDonnell wonât even let me shut the door to oglers, which makes it impossible to watch the child rigourously enough. Could I have it in your hand that there are to be no visitors admitted?â
âQuite, yes.â McBrearty wiped his pen on a cloth and took up a fresh page. He fumbled in his breast pocket.
âThe mother may resist turning away the mob, of course, on account of the loss of money.â
The old man blinked his rheumy eyes and kept digging in his pocket. âOh, but the donations all go into the poor box that Mr. Thaddeus gave the OâDonnells. You donât understand these people if you think theyâd keep a farthing.â
Libâs mouth set. âAre you by any chance looking for your spectacles?â She pointed to where they lay among his papers.
âAh, very good.â He jammed the side arms over his ears and began to write. âHow do you find Anna otherwise, may I ask?â
Otherwise? âIn spirits, you mean?â
âIn, well, in character, I suppose.â
Lib was at a loss.
A nice girl. But a cheat of the deepest dye.
Anna had to be. Didnât she? âGenerally calm,â she said instead. âWhat Miss Nightingale used to describe as an accumulative temperament, the kind that gathers in impressions gradually.â
McBrearty brightened up at the name, so much so that Lib wished she hadnât used it. He signed the note, folded it, and held it out.
âCould you have it sent over to the
Lisa Black
Sylvia McDaniel
Saorise Roghan
Georg Purvis
Pfeiffer Jayst
Christine Feehan
Ally Thomas
Neil McCormick
Juliet Barker
Jeny Stone