“Is Dr. Horace Wilkinson at home?”
“I am he. Pray step in.”
The visitor looked somewhat astonished
at having the door opened to him by the master of
the house.
“I wanted to have a few words.”
The doctor, a pale, nervous young
man, dressed in an ultra-professional, long black
frock-coat, with a high, white collar cutting off
his dapper side-whiskers in the centre, rubbed his
hands together and smiled. In the thick, burly
man in front of him he scented a patient, and it would
be his first. His scanty resources had begun
to run somewhat low, and, although he had his first
quarter’s rent safely locked away in the right-hand
drawer of his desk, it was becoming a question with
him how he should meet the current expenses of his
very simple housekeeping. He bowed, therefore,
waved his visitor in, closed the hall door in a careless
fashion, as though his own presence thereat had been
a purely accidental circumstance, and finally led
the burly stranger into his scantily furnished front
room, where he motioned him to a seat. Dr. Wilkinson
planted himself behind his desk, and, placing his
finger-tips together, he gazed with some apprehension
at his companion. What was the matter with the
man? He seemed very red in the face. Some
of his old professors would have diagnosed his case
by now, and would have electrified the patient by describing
his own symptoms before he had said a word about them.
Dr. Horace Wilkinson racked his brains for some clue,
but Nature had fashioned him as a plodder a
very reliable plodder and nothing more. He could
think of nothing save that the visitor’s watch-chain
had a very brassy appearance, with a corollary to
the effect that he would be lucky if he got half-a-crown
out of him. Still, even half-a-crown was something
in those early days of struggle.
Whilst the doctor had been running
his eyes over the stranger, the latter had been plunging
his hands into pocket after pocket of his heavy coat.
The heat of the weather, his dress, and this exercise
of pocket-rummaging had all combined to still further
redden his face, which had changed from brick to beet,
with a gloss of moisture on his brow. This extreme
ruddiness brought a clue at last to the observant
doctor. Surely it was not to be attained without
alcohol. In alcohol lay the secret of this man’s
trouble. Some little delicacy was needed, however,
in showing him that he had read his case aright that
at a glance he had penetrated to the inmost sources
of his ailments.
“It’s very hot,”
observed the stranger, mopping his forehead.
“Yes, it is weather which tempts
one to drink rather more beer than is good for one,”
answered Dr. Horace Wilkinson, looking very knowingly
at his companion from over his finger-tips.
“Dear, dear, you shouldn’t do that.”
“I! I never touch beer.”
“Neither do I. I’ve been an abstainer
for twenty years.”
This was depressing. Dr. Wilkinson
blushed until he was nearly as red as the other.
“May I ask what I can do for you?” he
asked, picking up his stethoscope and tapping it gently
against his thumb-nail.
“Yes, I was just going to tell
you. I heard of your coming, but I couldn’t
get round before ” He broke
into a nervous little cough.
“Yes?” said the doctor encouragingly.
“I should have been here three
weeks ago, but you know how these things get put off.”
He coughed again behind his large red hand.
“I do not think that you need
say anything more,” said the doctor, taking
over the case with an easy air of command. “Your
cough is quite sufficient. It is entirely bronchial
by the sound. No doubt the mischief is circumscribed
at present, but there is always the danger that it
may spread, so you have done wisely to come to me.
A little judicious treatment will soon set you right.
Your waistcoat, please, but not your shirt.
Puff out your chest and say ninety-nine in a deep
voice.”
The red-faced man began to laugh.
“It’s all right, doctor,” said he.
“That cough comes from chewing tobacco, and I
know it’s a very bad habit. Nine-and-ninepence
is what I have to say to you, for I’m the officer
of the gas company, and they have a claim against you
for that on the metre.”
Dr. Horace Wilkinson collapsed into
his chair. “Then you’re not a patient?”
he gasped.
“Never needed a doctor in my life, sir.”
“Oh, that’s all right.”
The doctor concealed his disappointment under an
affectation of facetiousness. “You don’t
look as if you troubled them much. I don’t
know what we should do if every one were as robust.
I shall call at the company’s offices and pay
this small amount.”
“If you could make it convenient,
sir, now that I am here, it would save trouble ”
“Oh, certainly!” These
eternal little sordid money troubles were more trying
to the doctor than plain living or scanty food.
He took out his purse and slid the contents on to
the table. There were two half-crowns and some
pennies. In his drawer he had ten golden sovereigns.
But those were his rent. If he once broke in
upon them he was lost. He would starve first.
“Dear me!” said he, with
a smile, as at some strange, unheard-of incident.
“I have run short of small change. I am
afraid I shall have to call upon the company, after
all.”
“Very well, sir.”
The inspector rose, and with a practised glance around,
which valued every article in the room, from the two-guinea
carpet to the eight-shilling muslin curtains, he took
his departure.
When he had gone Dr. Wilkinson rearranged
his room, as was his habit a dozen times in the day.
He laid out his large Quain’s Dictionary of
Medicine in the forefront of the table so as to impress
the casual patient that he had ever the best authorities
at his elbow. Then he cleared all the little
instruments out of his pocket-case the
scissors, the forceps, the bistouries, the lancets and
he laid them all out beside the stethoscope, to make
as good a show as possible. His ledger, day-book,
and visiting-book were spread in front of him.
There was no entry in any of them yet, but it would
not look well to have the covers too glossy and new,
so he rubbed them together and daubed ink over them.
Neither would it be well that any patient should
observe that his name was the first in the book, so
he filled up the first page of each with notes of
imaginary visits paid to nameless patients during
the last three weeks. Having done all this, he
rested his head upon his hands and relapsed into the
terrible occupation of waiting.
Terrible enough at any time to the
young professional man, but most of all to one who
knows that the weeks, and even the days during which
he can hold out are numbered. Economise as he
would, the money would still slip away in the countless
little claims which a man never understands until
he lives under a rooftree of his own. Dr. Wilkinson
could not deny, as he sat at his desk and looked at
the little heap of silver and coppers, that his chances
of being a successful practitioner in Sutton were
rapidly vanishing away.
And yet it was a bustling, prosperous
town, with so much money in it that it seemed strange
that a man with a trained brain and dexterous fingers
should be starved out of it for want of employment.
At his desk, Dr. Horace Wilkinson could see the never-ending
double current of people which ebbed and flowed in
front of his window. It was a busy street, and
the air was forever filled with the dull roar of life,
the grinding of the wheels, and the patter of countless
feet. Men, women, and children, thousands and
thousands of them passed in the day, and yet each
was hurrying on upon his own business, scarce glancing
at the small brass plate, or wasting a thought upon
the man who waited in the front room. And yet
how many of them would obviously, glaringly have been
the better for his professional assistance. Dyspeptic
men, anemic women, blotched faces, bilious complexions they
flowed past him, they needing him, he needing them,
and yet the remorseless bar of professional etiquette
kept them forever apart. What could he do?
Could he stand at his own front door, pluck the casual
stranger by the sleeve, and whisper in his ear, “Sir,
you will forgive me for remarking that you are suffering
from a severe attack of acne rosacea, which makes
you a peculiarly unpleasant object. Allow me
to suggest that a small prescription containing arsenic,
which will not cost you more than you often spend
upon a single meal, will be very much to your advantage.”
Such an address would be a degradation to the high
and lofty profession of Medicine, and there are no
such sticklers for the ethics of that profession as
some to whom she has been but a bitter and a grudging
mother.
Dr. Horace Wilkinson was still looking
moodily out of the window, when there came a sharp
clang at the bell. Often it had rung, and with
every ring his hopes had sprung up, only to dwindle
away again, and change to leaden disappointment, as
he faced some beggar or touting tradesman. But
the doctor’s spirit was young and elastic, and
again, in spite of all experience, it responded to
that exhilarating summons. He sprang to his feet,
cast his eyes over the table, thrust out his medical
books a little more prominently, and hurried to the
door. A groan escaped him as he entered the
hall. He could see through the half-glazed upper
panels that a gypsy van, hung round with wicker tables
and chairs, had halted before his door, and that a
couple of the vagrants, with a baby, were waiting
outside. He had learned by experience that it
was better not even to parley with such people.
“I have nothing for you,”
said he, loosing the latch by an inch. “Go
away!”
He closed the door, but the bell clanged
once more. “Get away! Get away!”
he cried impatiently, and walked back into his consulting-room.
He had hardly seated himself when the bell went for
the third time. In a towering passion he rushed
back, flung open the door.
“What the ?”
“If you please, sir, we need a doctor.”
In an instant he was rubbing his hands
again with his blandest professional smile.
These were patients, then, whom he had tried to hunt
from his doorstep the very first patients,
whom he had waited for so impatiently. They
did not look very promising. The man, a tall,
lank-haired gypsy, had gone back to the horse’s
head. There remained a small, hard-faced woman
with a great bruise all round her eye. She wore
a yellow silk handkerchief round her head, and a baby,
tucked in a red shawl, was pressed to her bosom.
“Pray step in, madam,”
said Dr. Horace Wilkinson, with his very best sympathetic
manner. In this case, at least, there could be
no mistake as to diagnosis. “If you will
sit on this sofa, I shall very soon make you feel
much more comfortable.”
He poured a little water from his
carafe into a saucer, made a compress of lint, fastened
it over the injured eye, and secured the whole with
a spica bandage, secundum artem.
“Thank ye kindly, sir,”
said the woman, when his work was finished; “that’s
nice and warm, and may God bless your honour.
But it wasn’t about my eye at all that I came
to see a doctor.”
“Not your eye?” Dr. Horace
Wilkinson was beginning to be a little doubtful as
to the advantages of quick diagnosis. It is an
excellent thing to be able to surprise a patient,
but hitherto it was always the patient who had surprised
him.
“The baby’s got the measles.”
The mother parted the red shawl, and
exhibited a little dark, black-eyed gypsy baby, whose
swarthy face was all flushed and mottled with a dark-red
rash. The child breathed with a rattling sound,
and it looked up at the doctor with eyes which were
heavy with want of sleep and crusted together at the
lids.
“Hum! Yes. Measles, sure enough and
a smart attack.”
“I just wanted you to see her, sir, so that
you could signify.”
“Could what?”
“Signify, if anything happened.”
“Oh, I see certify.”
“And now that you’ve seen
it, sir, I’ll go on, for Reuben that’s
my man is in a hurry.”
“But don’t you want any medicine?”
“Oh, now you’ve seen it,
it’s all right. I’ll let you know
if anything happens.”
“But you must have some medicine.
The child is very ill.” He descended
into the little room which he had fitted as a surgery,
and he made up a two-ounce bottle of cooling medicine.
In such cities as Sutton there are few patients who
can afford to pay a fee to both doctor and chemist,
so that unless the physician is prepared to play the
part of both he will have little chance of making a
living at either.
“There is your medicine, madam.
You will find the directions upon the bottle.
Keep the child warm and give it a light diet.”
“Thank you kindly, sir.”
She shouldered her baby and marched for the door.
“Excuse me, madam,” said
the doctor nervously. “Don’t you
think it too small a matter to make a bill of?
Perhaps it would be better if we had a settlement
at once.”
The gypsy woman looked at him reproachfully
out of her one uncovered eye.
“Are you going to charge me
for that?” she asked. “How much,
then?”
“Well, say half-a-crown.”
He mentioned the sum in a half-jesting way, as though
it were too small to take serious notice of, but the
gypsy woman raised quite a scream at the mention of
it.
“’Arf-a-crown! for that?”
“Well, my good woman, why not
go to the poor doctor if you cannot afford a fee?”
She fumbled in her pocket, craning
awkwardly to keep her grip upon the baby.
“Here’s sevenpence,”
she said at last, holding out a little pile of copper
coins. “I’ll give you that and a
wicker footstool.”
“But my fee is half-a-crown.”
The doctor’s views of the glory of his profession
cried out against this wretched haggling, and yet what
was he to do? “Where am I to get ’arf-a-crown?
It is well for gentlefolk like you who sit in your
grand houses, and can eat and drink what you like,
an’ charge ’arf-a-crown for just saying
as much as, ’’Ow d’ye do?’
We can’t pick up’ arf-crowns like that.
What we gets we earns ’ard. This sevenpence
is just all I’ve got. You told me to feed
the child light. She must feed light, for what
she’s to have is more than I know.”
Whilst the woman had been speaking,
Dr. Horace Wilkinson’s eyes had wandered to
the tiny heap of money upon the table, which represented
all that separated him from absolute starvation, and
he chuckled to himself at the grim joke that he should
appear to this poor woman to be a being living in
the lap of luxury. Then he picked up the odd
coppers, leaving only the two half-crowns upon the
table.
“Here you are,” he said
brusquely. “Never mind the fee, and take
these coppers. They may be of some use to you.
Good-bye!” He bowed her out, and closed the
door behind her. After all she was the thin edge
of the wedge. These wandering people have great
powers of recommendation. All large practices
have been built up from such foundations. The
hangers-on to the kitchen recommend to the kitchen,
they to the drawing-room, and so it spreads.
At least he could say now that he had had a patient.
He went into the back room and lit
the spirit-kettle to boil the water for his tea, laughing
the while at the recollection of his recent interview.
If all patients were like this one it could easily
be reckoned how many it would take to ruin him completely.
Putting aside the dirt upon his carpet and the loss
of time, there were twopence gone upon the bandage,
fourpence or more upon the medicine, to say nothing
of phial, cork, label, and paper. Then he had
given her fivepence, so that his first patient had
absorbed altogether not less than one sixth of his
available capital. If five more were to come
he would be a broken man. He sat down upon the
portmanteau and shook with laughter at the thought,
while he measured out his one spoonful and a half of
tea at one shilling eightpence into the brown earthenware
teapot. Suddenly, however, the laugh faded from
his face, and he cocked his ear towards the door,
standing listening with a slanting head and a sidelong
eye. There had been a rasping of wheels against
the curb, the sound of steps outside, and then a loud
peal at the bell. With his teaspoon in his hand
he peeped round the corner and saw with amazement
that a carriage and pair were waiting outside, and
that a powdered footman was standing at the door.
The spoon tinkled down upon the floor, and he stood
gazing in bewilderment. Then, pulling himself
together, he threw open the door.
“Young man,” said the
flunky, “tell your master, Dr. Wilkinson, that
he is wanted just as quick as ever he can come to
Lady Millbank, at the Towers. He is to come
this very instant. We’d take him with us,
but we have to go back to see if Dr. Mason is home
yet. Just you stir your stumps and give him
the message.”
The footman nodded and was off in
an instant, while the coachman lashed his horses and
the carriage flew down the street.
Here was a new development.
Dr. Horace Wilkinson stood at his door and tried to
think it all out. Lady Millbank, of the Towers!
People of wealth and position, no doubt. And
a serious case, or why this haste and summoning of
two doctors? But, then, why in the name of all
that is wonderful should he be sent for?
He was obscure, unknown, without influence.
There must be some mistake. Yes, that must
be the true explanation; or was it possible that some
one was attempting a cruel hoax upon him? At
any rate, it was too positive a message to be disregarded.
He must set off at once and settle the matter one
way or the other.
But he had one source of information.
At the corner of the street was a small shop where
one of the oldest inhabitants dispensed newspapers
and gossip. He could get information there if
anywhere. He put on his well-brushed top hat,
secreted instruments and bandages in all his pockets,
and without waiting for his tea closed up his establishment
and started off upon his adventure.
The stationer at the corner was a
human directory to every one and everything in Sutton,
so that he soon had all the information which he wanted.
Sir John Millbank was very well known in the town,
it seemed. He was a merchant prince, an exporter
of pens, three times mayor, and reported to be fully
worth two millions sterling.
The Towers was his palatial seat,
just outside the city. His wife had been an
invalid for some years, and was growing worse.
So far the whole thing seemed to be genuine enough.
By some amazing chance these people really had sent
for him.
And then another doubt assailed him,
and he turned back into the shop.
“I am your neighbour, Dr. Horace
Wilkinson,” said he. “Is there any
other medical man of that name in the town?”
No, the stationer was quite positive that there was
not.
That was final, then. A great
good fortune had come in his way, and he must take
prompt advantage of it. He called a cab and drove
furiously to the Towers, with his brain in a whirl,
giddy with hope and delight at one moment, and sickened
with fears and doubts at the next lest the case should
in some way be beyond his powers, or lest he should
find at some critical moment that he was without the
instrument or appliance that was needed. Every
strange and outre case of which he had ever
heard or read came back into his mind, and long before
he reached the Towers he had worked himself into a
positive conviction that he would be instantly required
to do a trephining at the least.
The Towers was a very large house,
standing back amid trees, at the head of a winding
drive. As he drove up the doctor sprang out,
paid away half his worldly assets as a fare, and followed
a stately footman who, having taken his name, led
him through the oak-panelled, stained-glass hall,
gorgeous with deers’ heads and ancient armour,
and ushered him into a large sitting-room beyond.
A very irritable-looking, acid-faced man was seated
in an armchair by the fireplace, while two young ladies
in white were standing together in the bow window
at the further end.
“Hullo! hullo! hullo!
What’s this heh?” cried the
irritable man. “Are you Dr. Wilkinson?
Eh?”
“Yes, sir, I am Dr. Wilkinson.”
“Really, now. You seem
very young much younger than I expected.
Well, well, well, Mason’s old, and yet he don’t
seem to know much about it. I suppose we must
try the other end now. You’re the Wilkinson
who wrote something about the lungs? Heh?”
Here was a light! The only two
letters which the doctor had ever written to The Lancet modest
little letters thrust away in a back column among
the wrangles about medical ethics and the inquiries
as to how much it took to keep a horse in the country had
been upon pulmonary disease. They had not been
wasted, then. Some eye had picked them out and
marked the name of the writer. Who could say
that work was ever wasted, or that merit did not promptly
meet with its reward?
“Yes, I have written on the subject.”
“Ha! Well, then, where’s Mason?”
“I have not the pleasure of his acquaintance.”
“No? that’s
queer too. He knows you and thinks a lot of your
opinion. You’re a stranger in the town,
are you not?”
“Yes, I have only been here a very short time.”
“That was what Mason said.
He didn’t give me the address. Said he
would call on you and bring you, but when the wife
got worse of course I inquired for you and sent for
you direct. I sent for Mason, too, but he was
out. However, we can’t wait for him, so
just run away upstairs and do what you can.”
“Well, I am placed in a rather
delicate position,” said Dr. Horace Wilkinson,
with some hesitation. “I am here, as I
understand, to meet my colleague, Dr. Mason, in consultation.
It would, perhaps, hardly be correct for me to see
the patient in his absence. I think that I would
rather wait.”
“Would you, by Jove! Do
you think I’ll let my wife get worse while the
doctor is coolly kicking his heels in the room below?
No, sir, I am a plain man, and I tell you that you
will either go up or go out.”
The style of speech jarred upon the
doctor’s sense of the fitness of things, but
still when a man’s wife is ill much may be overlooked.
He contented himself by bowing somewhat stiffly.
“I shall go up, if you insist upon it,”
said he.
“I do insist upon it.
And another thing, I won’t have her thumped
about all over the chest, or any hocus-pocus of the
sort. She has bronchitis and asthma, and that’s
all. If you can cure it well and good.
But it only weakens her to have you tapping and listening,
and it does no good either.”
Personal disrespect was a thing that
the doctor could stand; but the profession was to
him a holy thing, and a flippant word about it cut
him to the quick.
“Thank you,” said he,
picking up his hat. “I have the honour
to wish you a very good day. I do not care to
undertake the responsibility of this case.”
“Hullo! what’s the matter now?”
“It is not my habit to give
opinions without examining my patient. I wonder
that you should suggest such a course to a medical
man. I wish you good day.”
But Sir John Millbank was a commercial
man, and believed in the commercial principle that
the more difficult a thing is to attain the more valuable
it is. A doctor’s opinion had been to him
a mere matter of guineas. But here was a young
man who seemed to care nothing either for his wealth
or title. His respect for his judgment increased
amazingly.
“Tut! tut!” said he; “Mason
is not so thin-skinned. There! there! Have
your way! Do what you like and I won’t
say another word. I’ll just run upstairs
and tell Lady Millbank that you are coming.”
The door had hardly closed behind
him when the two demure young ladies darted out of
their corner, and fluttered with joy in front of the
astonished doctor.
“Oh, well done! well done!”
cried the taller, clapping her hands.
“Don’t let him bully you,
doctor,” said the other. “Oh, it
was so nice to hear you stand up to him. That’s
the way he does with poor Dr. Mason. Dr. Mason
has never examined mamma yet. He always takes
papa’s word for everything. Hush, Maude;
here he comes again.” They subsided in
an instant into their corner as silent and demure as
ever.
Dr. Horace Wilkinson followed Sir
John up the broad, thick-carpeted staircase, and into
the darkened sick room. In a quarter of an hour
he had sounded and sifted the case to the uttermost,
and descended with the husband once more to the drawing-room.
In front of the fireplace were standing two gentlemen,
the one a very typical, clean-shaven, general practitioner,
the other a striking-looking man of middle age, with
pale blue eyes and a long red beard.
“Hullo, Mason, you’ve come at last!”
“Yes, Sir John, and I have brought,
as I promised, Dr. Wilkinson with me.”
“Dr. Wilkinson! Why, this is he.”
Dr. Mason stared in astonishment.
“I have never seen the gentleman before!”
he cried.
“Nevertheless I am Dr. Wilkinson Dr.
Horace Wilkinson, of 114 Canal View.”
“Good gracious, Sir John!” cried Dr. Mason.
“Did you think that in a case
of such importance I should call in a junior local
practitioner! This is Dr. Adam Wilkinson, lecturer
on pulmonary diseases at Regent’s College, London,
physician upon the staff of the St. Swithin’s
Hospital, and author of a dozen works upon the subject.
He happened to be in Sutton upon a visit, and I thought
I would utilise his presence to have a first-rate
opinion upon Lady Millbank.”
“Thank you,” said Sir
John, dryly. “But I fear my wife is rather
tired now, for she has just been very thoroughly examined
by this young gentleman. I think we will let
it stop at that for the present; though, of course,
as you have had the trouble of coming here, I should
be glad to have a note of your fees.”
When Dr. Mason had departed, looking
very disgusted, and his friend, the specialist, very
amused, Sir John listened to all the young physician
had to say about the case.
“Now, I’ll tell you what,”
said he, when he had finished. “I’m
a man of my word, d’ye see? When I like
a man I freeze to him. I’m a good friend
and a bad enemy. I believe in you, and I don’t
believe in Mason. From now on you are my doctor,
and that of my family. Come and see my wife
every day. How does that suit your book?”
“I am extremely grateful to
you for your kind intentions toward me, but I am afraid
there is no possible way in which I can avail myself
of them.”
“Heh! what d’ye mean?”
“I could not possibly take Dr.
Mason’s place in the middle of a case like this.
It would be a most unprofessional act.”
“Oh, well, go your own way!”
cried Sir John, in despair. “Never was
such a man for making difficulties. You’ve
had a fair offer and you’ve refused it, and
now you can just go your own way.”
The millionaire stumped out of the
room in a huff, and Dr. Horace Wilkinson made his
way homeward to his spirit-lamp and his one-and-eightpenny
tea, with his first guinea in his pocket, and with
a feeling that he had upheld the best traditions of
his profession.
And yet this false start of his was
a true start also, for it soon came to Dr. Mason’s
ears that his junior had had it in his power to carry
off his best patient and had forborne to do so.
To the honour of the profession be it said that such
forbearance is the rule rather than the exception,
and yet in this case, with so very junior a practitioner
and so very wealthy a patient, the temptation was
greater than is usual. There was a grateful note,
a visit, a friendship, and now the well-known firm
of Mason and Wilkinson is doing the largest family
practice in Sutton.