The patient in Room 18
M. G. Eberhart
Copyright, 1929 by Doubleday, Doran & Company, Inc.
Garden City, New York
William and Margaret Good
NOTE
All of the characters in this book, as well as St. Ann’s Hospital, are entirely fictitious.
St. Ann’s is an old hospital, sprawling in a great heap of weather-stained red brick and green ivy on the side of Thatcher Hill, a little east and south of the city of B——. The building, though remodelled and added on to here and there, still retains the great, solid walls, the gumwood and walnut woodwork, the large, old-fashioned rooms, and the general air of magnificence and dignity that characterized what was known, in the grandiloquent nineties, as the Thatcher mansion.
Time has made changes; quantities of windows, low and wide, modern plumbing, electricity, a telephone to every floor, and added wings whose brick walls have been carefully weather-stained to match the original walls are some of them. On the west is the main entrance, an imposing affair of massive doors and great travertine pillars and curving driveway. But on the south, at the extreme end of the south wing, is another and less imposing entrance, a small, semi-circular, colonial porch and a glass-paned door that leads from the hushed hospital corridor directly upon a narrow strip of grass and then shrubbery and apple orchard and willows and thickets of firs. From this door, too, is a path leading up and around the hill, and, considerably below and beyond the thickets of trees and brush, winds a road, dusty and seldom used.
The south wing is the most recently rebuilt wing of St. Ann’s, and time was when Room 18 was the brightest and sunniest room of the whole wing. I say, time was. Room 18 is now cleaned and dusted regularly twice a week by two student nurses. Occasionally Miss Jones, the office superintendent, tries to enter a patient in Room 18, but patients from the city remember too well the newspaper headlines—such as Room 18 Claims Its Third Victim—and refuse at the first hint of that significant numeral. Patients from out of town present a no less serious problem in that, even though they take the room assigned to them without demur, they invariably demand removal to another room after only a few hours’ residence in Room 18. Once we tried giving the whole wing a new set of numbers but it made no difference. Room 18 was Room 18 and the patients placed there, with one exception, have never remained past midnight.
M. G. Eberhart
The Patient in Room 18
Contents
1. An Unpleasant Dinner Party
2. In Room 18
3. Dr. Letheny Does Not Return
4. A Yellow Slicker and Other Problems
5. A Lapis Cuff Link
6. I Make a Discovery—and Regret It
7. The Disappearing Key and Part of an Inquest
8. A Gold Sequin
9. Under the Barberry Bush
10. A Midnight Visitor
11. By the Light of a Match
12. Room 18 Again
13. The Radium Appears
14. A Matter of Evidence
15. Corole Is Moved to Candour
16. The Red Light Above the Door
17. O’Leary Tells a Story
18. O’Leary Revises His Story
Transcriber’s Notes