'Thank you, I'll tell my wife.'
The conversation returned once again to Ward's murder, Carriscant suggesting it could be any criminal from the Tondo slums, Bobby reluctant to concede it might be as random as that. They walked to the door and Bobby followed him on to the wide marble landing above the main staircase.
'But why dump him miles away?' Bobby was saying. 'Why not leave him where he fell?'
A uniformed man walked by, stopped and turned. 'Hello, Bobby,' he said. 'Any news?'
Bobby introduced him to Carriscant – a Colonel Sieverance. He had a pleasant, boyish face and a thin moustache, a little patchy. If that was the best quality bristle your face could produce, Carriscant thought, then it would be better to go clean-shaven. Colonel Sieverance seemed remarkably young to hold such an elevated rank, and there was something familiar about him too, Carriscant thought… Perhaps they had met before, somewhere.
'Ward used to be in the colonel's regiment,' Bobby explained. 'Dr Carriscant examined the body-he has been most helpful.'
Sieverance smiled, he had an engaging, enthusiastic manner, not in the least warlike or military, Carriscant thought. 'A doctor?' he said, gladly. 'Are you a physician, sir?'
'- I'm a surgeon, I'm afraid.'
'Damn. Why can't the US army hire a decent physician?' He grinned ruefully. 'Thought you'd made my day. Nice to see you. So long, Bobby.'
'He's on the Governor's staff, now,' Bobby said, watching Sieverance stride off down a corridor. 'Agreeable fellow.'
A DIET OF BEEF TEA
'The fish are jumping,' Pantaleon said, 'time to dig for worms.'
Carriscant cut into the flesh of the loin. It was pulpy and oedematous, which made him worried. The man on the operating table, a money-changer from Binondo, had been one of Cruz's patients who had returned to the hospital after being discharged, complaining of pains in his abdomen and of a cloudiness in his urine. Carriscant cut through the integument and separated the muscles. He paused while the nurses swabbed and sponged.
'What did Cruz do with this fellow, Panta?' he asked.
Pantaleon checked his notes. 'He thought it might be malaria, or else – you'll like this – "obstinate constipation".'
'Good God.'
'He applied a hot fomentation over iodide of potash. Look, you can see the remains of the blistering.'
Carriscant felt disgusted. 'You know, sometimes I feel we might as well be living in caves fighting dinosaurs. This man's dying of perinephritis and Cruz is smearing ointments on him to blister his skin.'
'Don't forget the morphia given as a suppository.'
'You're joking!'
'And a diet of beef tea.'
Carriscant laughed loudly, joined by his theatre nurses. You had to laugh, he supposed. If people knew what misplaced trust in their physicians subjected them to…
The incision was held apart by retractors and Carriscant looked at the exposed organ. What he could see of it was an unhealthy grey, there was a lot of fat and fibrous tissue obscuring much of the surface. He inserted his finger into the cavity, feeling between the kidney and the diaphragm. There was a spurt of pus that spattered on to his sleeve. He smelt its farinaceous sweetness, noting that it was a brackish green in colour. He had found the abscess, about the size of a tangerine, he guessed.
'How's the new project going?' he asked Pantaleon as he stitched the wall of the abscess cavity to the lip of the wound.
'Very well. I must say the standard of local carpentry is astonishing. They'll make anything.'
'I know.' Carriscant pulled away with his fingers loose sloughs of cellular tissue and shook them off into a bowl. 'I remember having some marquetry replaced by a fellow who lived in Tondo. Just a little shack really. This stuff had been done in Japan. When he'd finished you couldn't tell the difference.'
'You should see the propeller blades, exquisite. How much longer? Pulse is a bit thready.'
'Five minutes… Dressing forceps, Nurse.'
Carriscant pulled away more of the adipose tissue. 'Depends if there's a fistula, I suppose.' He felt with his finger. 'Don't think so.'
'I hope to have all the panels done by next week.'
'Really? Fast work… Lot of suppuration here.'
He washed out the abscess cavity with a solution of carbolic acid and inserted a drainage tube. He had found out where the Gerlinger school was, where the American woman worked. Bad idea to wait there while the children were studying. Later in the day perhaps. He closed up the wound with some sutures. One of the nurses laid a large wadding of soaked cotton wool over the wound.
'That should do it,' he said. 'And I think a large and abundant enema might be called for.'
Pantaleon chuckled. 'Cruz would certainly approve.'
'And some ergot of rye. Two doses for the next three days. Wheel him out.'
He walked over to the sink to wash his hands. Stink of pus clung to you. How Annaliese hated that. Carried the smell of your work home. Like being married to a fishmonger.
'What's up next?' he called to his nurse.
'Volvulus of the small intestine.'
Busy day, he thought, busy day.
ON THE LUNETA
The Gerlinger school was down a side street off Escolta, a hundred yards or so from that prosperous stripe of elegant stores and the tinselly allure of the Chinese fancy goods emporia. It was a former barracks of the guardia civil and still had a somewhat institutional and cheerless aspect although some attempt had been made to pretty it up recently by planting a border of zinnias along the foot of the facade. The children were gone by the time Carriscant arrived at the end of the afternoon.
An old woman swabbing down the stone flags in the entrance hall directed him to the teachers' common room where a trio of youthful nuns confirmed that Miss Caspar had gone for the day.
'Is it urgent business?' one of them asked, politely.
'Ah, no, Sister, it's…' He paused: how to express this? 'A personal matter.'
Something of his anguish must have irradiated the familiar phrase because the three nuns all glanced sympathetically at each other and then one of them volunteered the information that it was Miss Caspar's habit to take a walk on the Luneta before she went home. Especially if the Constabulary band was playing.
The Luneta was a small park between the battlements of Intramuros and the sea wall where traditionally the citizens of Manila gathered for the paseo at dusk. The custom had survived the arrival of the Americans and it was one of the few occasions during which foreigners, mestizos and native Filipinos encountered each other in some sort of relaxed and egalitarian social mix.
When Carriscant arrived at the modest esplanade around which most of the ostentatious parading and covert scrutiny took place a few people were beginning to saunter away and the last Angelus could be heard tolling faintly from the old city. All the same there were over a hundred carriages still making their steady clockwise circuit around and around, beneath the now glimmering streetlights. He ordered his driver to stop and he proceeded on foot down the central paved area, with some difficulty through the dawdling crowds, towards the bandstand, from where the sound of a competently played Strauss waltz was carried to him on the sea breeze. He glanced about him rapidly as he went, scanning every white, female face, completely confident that his eye would pick her out – rather in the way one's own name leaps out from any printed page-from the mass of people wandering to and fro, chatting, flirting, ogling, commenting on the burnished landaus and victorias and the lacy finery of the women they contained. There were many American soldiers present in their dress whites with their soft pinched hats, rich Chinese in vibrant silks, Englishmen in boating coats and solar topees, and here and there an old friar would shuffle past nervously, dreaming of the old days before the Revolution and the Americans came. On his right was the wide placid bay, its waters dark now the sun was dipping behind the Bataan headland, the darker shapes of the moored ships riding at anchor pricked out by coloured lights.