Death of a Dentist

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Death of a Dentist Page 3

by Beaton, M. C.


  With a little sigh, he pushed it open. The waiting room was empty, the receptionist’s desk was empty. The silence was absolute. A tank of fish ornamented one corner, but the fish were dead and floating belly up. A table with very old copies of Scottish Field was in the centre of the room. Hard upright chairs lined the walls.

  His tooth gave another sharp wrench of pain, and stifling a moan, he pushed open the surgery door.

  A man was sitting in the dentist’s chair, his back to Hamish. ‘Hello,’ said Hamish tentatively. ‘Where’s the dentist?’

  Silence.

  He strode around the front of the chair.

  From the white hair and white coat, he realized he was looking at Mr Gilchrist.

  But his face was not white. It was horribly discoloured and distorted.

  Hamish felt for a pulse at the wrist and then at the neck.

  Mr Gilchrist was dead.

  Chapter Two

  My name is Death: the last best friend am I.

  – Robert Southey

  Hamish stood for a moment, shocked. And then the heavy stillness was broken, almost as if the whole of the small town had been waiting for him to find the body.

  A dog barked in the street below, its master called it in an angry voice, an old car coughed and spluttered on its way, and high heels sounded on the stone staircase outside.

  He heard the outside door opening as the high heels clacked their way in. He opened the door of the surgery. A beautiful girl was hanging her coat on a hatstand in the corner. She had glossy jet black hair, a white clear complexion and large blue eyes. She was of medium height with a curvaceous figure and excellent legs. ‘What do you want?’ she snapped, and, oh, the voice did not match the face or figure. But the voice was undoubtedly that of the receptionist, Maggie Bane.

  ‘Who are you?’ she went on. Hamish was not in uniform.

  ‘Hamish Macbeth.’

  ‘Well, Mr Macbeth, Mr Gilchrist has his coffee at this time in the morning and does not like to be disturbed.’

  ‘He’s dead.’

  She did not seem to hear him. She detached a white coat from the coat rack and put it on. ‘In any case,’ she went on, ‘your appointment is for three o’clock this afternoon. Not eleven o’clock this morning.’

  ‘He’s dead!’ howled Hamish. ‘Mr Gilchrist is dead and it looks like poison to me.’

  Those wide blue eyes dilated. She suddenly ran past him into the surgery. She stared down at the dead body of the dentist. She stood there in silence. She looked as if she might never move again.

  ‘Miss Bane!’ said Hamish sharply. ‘I am a police officer. Do not touch anything. I’ll need to phone police headquarters.’

  He walked forward and took her by the shoulders and guided her back to her desk. ‘Sit down and don’t move,’ he ordered.

  She sat down numbly and stared straight ahead.

  He dialled the Strathbane number and got through to Detective Chief Inspector Blair, who listened while Hamish quickly outlined the finding of the body. ‘I’ll be over right away,’ said Blair in his heavy Glaswegian accent. ‘Trust you to find another body. If ah hadnae enough on ma hands as it is.’

  Hamish put down the receiver and turned to Maggie Bane. ‘Do you feel up to answering a few questions, Miss Bane?’

  She sat motionless.

  ‘Miss Bane?’

  Those beautiful eyes finally focused on him. ‘I can’t believe it,’ she whispered. ‘I took him in his morning coffee and went out to the shops. Oh, here’s his next patient coming.’

  Hamish went quickly to the door. A woman stood there, holding a small child by the hand. ‘I’m afraid there’s been an accident,’ he said. ‘I am a police officer. Give me your name and address and we will be in touch with you.’

  He coped with her startled questions as best he could, noted down her name, address and telephone number, and then went quickly into the surgery, where the dead body lay in the chair, to look for the coffee cup. He found it over by a stainless steel sink. Cup and saucer had been washed.

  He went back to Maggie. ‘Did he usually wash his own cup and saucer after drinking his coffee?’

  ‘No,’ she said in a shaky voice. ‘He just usually left it and I washed it for him and put it away in the cupboard.’

  ‘How long have you worked for him?’

  ‘Five years.’

  ‘I’ll need your home address and telephone number, Miss Bane. I do not want to distress you now with too many questions. When did Mr Gilchrist start work?’

  ‘At nine o’clock.’

  ‘And you?’

  ‘The same.’

  ‘And was he in a good mood? No signs of depression or distress?’

  ‘What? Oh, do you mean would he have committed suicide? No. He was the same as ever.’

  Hamish crossed to the outside door, opened it and hung a CLOSED sign which had been hanging on the doorknob on the inside of the door on the outside doorknob. ‘What I need at the moment before the contingent from Strathbane arrives is your appointment book. Who had the first appointment?’

  ‘Someone from Lochdubh.’ She pulled forward the book. She seemed unnaturally calm now. ‘Mr Archibald Macleod.’

  Archie, the fisherman, thought Hamish.

  ‘And how long was he with the dentist?’

  ‘He wasn’t. He didn’t turn up.’

  ‘Who did Mr Gilchrist see before his coffee break?’

  ‘A Mrs Harrison.’

  ‘Mrs Harrison from outside Lochdubh on the Braikie road?’

  ‘Yes, her.’

  ‘But she was spreading scandal that Mr Gilchrist had sexually interfered with her.’

  ‘She’s a nut case. She was always hanging around him.’

  Hamish scratched his head in perplexity.

  ‘Mr Gilchrist must have known what she had been saying about him. Why on earth was he treating her?’

  ‘She was a good-paying customer.’

  ‘Now, let’s go over your own movements. When you came in at nine o’clock, Mr Gilchrist was the same as ever. Mr Macleod did not turn up. The next was Mrs Harrison. What did she have done?’

  ‘She had a tooth drawn.’

  ‘How long was she with him?’

  ‘Half an hour.’

  ‘And so it was coffee break time. You took him in a cup of coffee?’

  ‘Yes. At ten o’clock. I told him I was stepping out to buy a few things from the shops.’

  ‘Show me where the coffee things are kept.’

  She rose and went over to a low cupboard next to the tank of dead fish. ‘Why are these fish dead?’ asked Hamish.

  ‘I don’t know. I followed all the instructions properly but they died a week ago.’

  Hamish looked into the depths of the murky tank. ‘You should have a filter and the tank should have been cleaned.’

  ‘I didn’t want the things,’ said Maggie, crouching down by the cupboard. ‘It was Mr Gilchrist’s idea. When they died he ordered me to clear out the tank and throw the dead fish away but I told him to do it himself.’

  ‘And he agreed?’

  ‘What does it matter now?’ demanded Maggie in that sharp, ugly voice of hers. ‘He’s lying dead next door.’

  ‘We’ll get back to it later.’ Hamish bent down in front of the cupboard. ‘So this is where you keep the coffee things.’ There was a jar of instant coffee and three cups and saucers and two spoons, a bowl of sugar lumps, and a carton of milk. ‘I’d better not touch anything here until the forensic team arrives,’ he said.

  He was itching to go out and ask if anyone had been seen entering the surgery after ten o’clock. But he did not want to leave her alone. ‘How many lumps of sugar did Mr Gilchrist take in his coffee?’

  ‘Six lumps.’

  ‘Six! There’s a packet of biscuits at the back,’ he said, peering into the depths of the cupboard. ‘Gypsy Creams. Did he have any of them?’

  ‘He usually had two with his coffee but he said he didn’t want a
ny biscuits this morning.’

  ‘Did he say why?’

  Maggie Bane stood up and suddenly began to cry. Hamish got slowly to his feet. ‘You’d best go and sit down,’ he said, although he could not help wondering whether the tears were genuine or not. Maggie’s ugly voice robbed her of femininity and any softness.

  He went back into the surgery and stared down at the dead man. If he had been poisoned, and Hamish suspected he might have been, then the killer had waited in the surgery for him to die and then had taken the cup and saucer and washed both. Hamish shook his head. Had he been arranged in the chair after death? Surely a poisoned man would writhe and vomit, stagger to the door for help.

  Wait a bit, he thought. He, Hamish, had arrived just after eleven. When he had felt the pulse, the body was still warm.

  He went back to the reception room. Maggie had stopped crying and had lit up a cigarette.

  ‘You went out to buy some things,’ said Hamish, ‘and yet you didnae get back here until after eleven. A long coffee break. Did you always go out?’

  ‘No, hardly ever.’

  ‘And was the coffee break always an hour?’

  ‘No, half an hour.’

  ‘So what kept you?’

  ‘There wasn’t another patient expected until that woman and her child turned up, Mrs Albert and wee Jamie.’

  ‘But you gave me the impression when I phoned for an appointment that he was busy all day.’

  ‘It’s business,’ she said wearily. ‘Mr Gilchrist didn’t like his clients to know that he wasn’t fully booked.’

  Police sirens sounded, coming down the street. ‘This is the lot from headquarters,’ said Hamish.

  When Blair lumbered in, a heavyset man whose fat face always seemed to be sneering, accompanied by his sidekicks, detectives Anderson and MacNab, and then the forensic team, pathologist and photographer, Hamish hurriedly outlined what he had found, and then suggested he should go out and try to find out if anyone had seen anything.

  ‘Aye, all right,’ growled Blair ungraciously. ‘We don’t want you getting in the way o’ the professionals.’

  Hamish went out on to the landing. The staircase led to an upper floor. A man was leaning over the banister, looking down.

  ‘Whit’s going on?’ he asked.

  Hamish went up the stairs. ‘There’s been a bit of an accident. I am a police officer.’

  ‘Aye, I ken you fine. You’re thon Hamish Macbeth from Lochdubh.’

  He was an elderly man, small, gnarled, wearing the odd mixture of pyjamas, dressing gown and a tweed cloth cap on his head.

  ‘Come ben,’ he said as Hamish reached the upper landing. Hamish followed him into a small, neat flat.

  ‘What is your name?’

  ‘Fred Sutherland.’

  ‘Right, Mr Sutherland, the situation is this. Mr Gilchrist has been found dead.’

  ‘Murdered?’

  ‘We don’t know yet. Now, did you hear any odd sound from downstairs between ten this morning and eleven?’

  ‘Nothing oot o’ the way. Usual dentist’s noises.’

  ‘But he didnae hae a customer between those hours. What do you mean, dentist’s noises?’

  ‘Just that damn drill. I’ve got the dentures. Had them for years. But I tell you, laddie, every time that drill goes, my false teeth ache.’

  ‘I’ll be back,’ said Hamish and shot out of the flat and hurtled down the stairs.

  The surgery was crammed with police. Hamish shoved his way in and said to the pathologist, ‘Have you looked at his teeth?’

  The pathologist, a tall, lugubrious man, looked up from his examination in surprise. ‘He’s a dentist. He looks at other people’s teeth.’

  ‘Chust look at them,’ begged Hamish, ‘afore rigour sets in too bad.’

  ‘I was just about to examine the mouth.’ The pathologist prised the mouth open and shone a torch into it.

  Then he looked up at Hamish with a startled expression on his face. ‘How did you know about this?’

  ‘Know about what?’ howled Blair.

  ‘A hole has been drilled in each tooth.’

  ‘After death?’ asked Hamish.

  ‘I do not know,’ said the pathologist slowly. ‘The face is discoloured, yes, but I would expect signs of a struggle and bruising.’

  ‘How did you . . .?’ began Blair.

  But Hamish ignored him. ‘There’s something else. If he had been poisoned wi’ something, surely he would have writhed about. Could someone have lifted him off the floor after death, put him in that chair and drilled his teeth?’

  ‘Could be.’

  Blair managed to interrupt. ‘How did you know the teeth had been drilled?’

  ‘A wee man who lives above the surgery heard the drill going when Gilchrist was not supposed to have a patient.’

  ‘But someone could have dropped in.’

  ‘Aye, but I wass beginning to get the feeling the man might be hated.’

  ‘I’ll go and see your wee man myself.’ Blair set off.

  Hamish then went downstairs to the dress shop underneath. A bell clanged above the door when he opened it. A fussy little woman came forward to meet him.

  ‘I am a police officer,’ began Hamish.

  ‘What’s all the row upstairs?’

  ‘Mr Gilchrist is dead.’

  She was a neat middle-aged woman with neat closed features and white hair in a rigid perm. ‘Oh, dear. Is there anything I can do to help? Was it a heart attack?’

  ‘No. What is your name?’

  ‘Mrs Elsie Edwardson.’

  ‘And you own this dress shop?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Did you notice anyone going up the stairs to the dentist’s between, say, ten and eleven o’clock?’

  ‘Is it murder?’

  ‘We don’t know yet.’

  ‘Well, let me think. Dear me, this is quite a bit of excitement for us all.’ Her eyes gleamed. ‘Nothing usually happens in Braikie. Nobody even knows where Braikie is. I once went on a holiday to Scarborough and people had not only not heard of Braikie, they’d never heard of the county of Sutherland. That receptionist, that bad-tempered girl, Maggie Bane, I saw her go out but I couldn’t be sure of the exact time.’

  ‘Anyone going in?’

  She shook her head. ‘I was pricing goods in the back shop most of the time.’

  ‘And did you hear any funny noises from upstairs?’

  ‘Not that I remember.’

  A glare of white light lit up the shop windows. ‘Dear me, what is that?’ asked Mrs Edwardson.

  ‘I think Grampian Television has arrived.’

  ‘Oh, the television! My wee shop on the telly! I’d best go and put a little more lipstick on.’ Mrs Edwardson was now flushed and happy. ‘This is grand publicity for my shop.’

  Hamish looked at the depressing display in the window and privately thought that even if Princess Diana appeared in a gown bought from Mrs Edwardson, it would not sell one of them.

  ‘We’ll be talking to you again,’ he said, but Mrs Edwardson already had her compact out and was applying pink lipstick in the little mirror.

  He continued with his interviews in the shops on either side, occasionally pursued by the local press who all knew him. The death of a dentist and in such gruesome circumstances would soon bring up the national newspapers and then the foreign ones. Blair would feel under pressure and Blair under pressure was a nasty sight.

  At last he returned to the surgery. Blair was telling Maggie Bane she would need to accompany them to Strathbane for questioning. He obviously thought her the prime suspect. Hamish reported his lack of success and Blair grunted and then told him to go about the town and see what he could dig up on Gilchrist’s background.

  ‘Was he married?’ asked Hamish.

  ‘He was, but he got a divorce ten years ago.’

  ‘And where’s the wife?’

  ‘Down in Inverness.’

  ‘What’s her name?’


  ‘Nothing to do wi’ you,’ said Blair truculently. ‘Now run along and see if you can dae anything useful.’

  As Hamish went back down the stairs again, Jimmy Anderson was coming up.

  ‘The press are driving me fair mad,’ he grumbled.

  ‘Listen,’ said Hamish, catching his arm as he would have sprinted past up the stairs, ‘what’s the name of the ex-wife?’

  ‘Jeannie Gilchrist.’

  ‘And whereabouts in Inverness can she be found?’

  ‘She can be found by the Inverness police.’

  ‘No more whisky for you, Jimmy.’

  ‘Och, if you’re that interested, she’s at 851 Anstruther Road.’

  ‘Thanks.’

  ‘Hamish!’ Jimmy called after him. ‘Don’t you go near her or Blair’ll have you off the force.’

  Hamish waved by way of reply and went out to the police Land Rover. He was determined to go to Inverness because his tooth had started to ache again. He would go to his own dentist and then he may as well call on Mrs Gilchrist. Various camera flashes went off in his face as he drove off. He knew the press had an irritating way of photographing everyone and everything. The photos would not be used.

  As he took the long road to Inverness, putting on the police siren so that he could exceed the speed limit, he reflected that it would be nice to be one of those private eyes in fiction before whose wisdom the whole of Scotland Yard bowed and who seemed to be kept informed of every step of the game. But he was only a Highland policeman, a little cog in a murder inquiry. Blair would get the pathologist’s report and all the statements and he would need to winkle out what he could by plying Jimmy Anderson with whisky.

  Once in Inverness, he went straight to his own dentist, a Mr Murchison, and pleaded with the receptionist that the pain in his tooth was so bad he was about to die.

  ‘They all say that,’ she said heartlessly. ‘Take a seat and I’ll see if he can fit you in.’

  ‘Tell him I haven’t much time,’ said Hamish with low cunning, for there were six people in the waiting room. ‘Mr Gilchrist, the dentist over at Braikie, has just been murdered. And I am in the middle of a murder investigation.’

  ‘Oh, my! How dreadful. Wait there.’

  She went into the surgery. After a few moments, she emerged. ‘Mr Murchison will see you right now. He’s just finished.’

 

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