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The Doctor and the Dead Man's Chest

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by Robin Hathaway




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  PART ONE

  The Doctor and the Lawyer

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  The Doctor Takes a House Tour

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  The Doctor Consults a Detective

  CHAPTER 12

  The Doctor and the Bookseller’s Daughter Go to the Strawberry Festival

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  CHAPTER 19

  CHAPTER 20

  CHAPTER 21

  The Nurse Goes Incognito

  CHAPTER 22

  CHAPTER 23

  CHAPTER 24

  CHAPTER 25

  CHAPTER 26

  CHAPTER 27

  CHAPTER 28

  CHAPTER 29

  For the Birds

  CHAPTER 30

  CHAPTER 31

  CHAPTER 32

  CHAPTER 33

  CHAPTER 34

  CHAPTER 35

  CHAPTER 36

  CHAPTER 37

  CHAPTER 38

  CHAPTER 39

  CHAPTER 40

  CHAPTER 41

  CHAPTER 42

  CHAPTER 43

  CHAPTER 44

  CHAPTER 45

  CHAPTER 46

  CHAPTER 47

  CHAPTER 48

  CHAPTER 49

  CHAPTER 50

  CHAPTER 51

  CHAPTER 52

  CHAPTER 53

  CHAPTER 54

  PART TWO

  The Doctor on His Own

  CHAPTER 55

  CHAPTER 56

  CHAPTER 57

  The Doctor Goes a-Dueling

  CHAPTER 58

  CHAPTER 59

  CHAPTER 60

  Come Up and See My Etchings

  CHAPTER 61

  CHAPTER 62

  CHAPTER 63

  CHAPTER 64

  CHAPTER 65

  CHAPTER 66

  CHAPTER 67

  EPILOGUE - The Doctor, the Nurse, the Teenager, & the Bookseller’s Daughter Go a-Wassailing

  ALSO BY ROBIN HATHAWAY

  Notes

  Copyright Page

  To my mother, who first read me Treasure Island

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  My deepest thanks to:

  Steve Nawojczyk, for his help and knowledge of street gangs.

  Sara Watson, for sharing her knowledge of the history of south Jersey.

  Carol Raviola, M.D., for her knowledge of surgical and hospital procedures.

  Jonathan Wood, for his help with research of south Jersey.

  Tony Malesic, Dr. Anthony D’Italia, and Chris Biggs, for their pirate toasts.

  Robert Anderson, for his knowledge of cattle.

  Ruth Cavin, for her wisdom and inspiration.

  Laura Langlie, for her constant enthusiasm and support.

  Robert Alan Keisman, M.D., for his knowledge of cardiology (and recipe for veal cutlets).

  Julie and Anne Keisman, for their reading and critiquing.

  Jason Miller, for his unflagging interest and moral support.

  PART ONE

  The Doctor and the Lawyer

  CHAPTER 1

  Dr. Fenimore had set this day aside to clean out his office files, and he was making good progress. Mrs. Doyle, his nurse-secretary-office manager, had been after him for years to clean out his father’s file drawers, but he had always come up with some excuse. Immediately after his father’s death, he had pleaded that it was too depressing. But as the years rolled on, he had to admit it was sheer laziness. Today, however, he was proud of himself. It was barely 10:00 A.M. and he had already reached the letter F.

  While perusing a folder labeled “Favorite Quotations” (He would have filed it under Q, as “Quotations, Favorite”), he had come across a quote, carefully preserved by his father, that especially appealed to him. It appealed to him so much that he planned to ask Mrs. Doyle to type it up so he could frame it and hang it over his desk. The author was Thomas Jefferson, no less. And the part Fenimore liked best was:

  The physician is happy in the attachement of the families in which he practices. All think he has saved some one of them, and he finds himself everywhere a welcome guest, a home in every house.

  (A bit out of date in the age of “managed care,” he mourned.) But the next phrase still applied.

  If, to the consciousness of having saved some lives, he can add that of having at no time, from want of caution, destroyed the boon he was called on to save, he will enjoy, in age, the happy reflection of not having lived in vain.

  A bit awkward from the creator of the Declaration of Independence. Nevertheless, it summed up nicely Fenimore’s modest ambitions—to have done some good, little harm, and not have lived in vain. Fenimore slipped the quote out of the folder and laid it on his desk for Mrs. Doyle to type later.

  “Doctor …”

  Speak of the devil.

  “Yes?”

  “There’s a man to see you. A Mr. Detweiler.”

  “A patient?”

  “No. He said he was a lawyer.”

  Fenimore felt a small shock of alarm. In these days of excess litigation, even doctors with a clear conscience feared any unexpected visit from a lawyer. He hoped no one was suing him. If they were, it would be a first. “Well, send him in,” Fenimore said.

  Mrs. Doyle ushered in a tall, lean man in a rumpled suit. With his shock of black hair, scrawny neck, and prominent Adam’s apple (which was working overtime), he reminded Fenimore strongly of Abraham Lincoln. He wondered if the lawyer deliberately cultivated the likeness or just fell into it naturally. After the initial handshake and settling into chairs, Fenimore asked, “What can I do for you, Mr. Detweiler?”

  “This visit is more about what we can do for you,” the lawyer said, pleasantly. “I represent a former patient of yours. A Miss Smith.”

  Fenimore raised an eyebrow. Surely the man saw the humor in this. “I’ve had a number of patients named ‘Smith.’”

  “A Miss Reebesther Smith?”

  Fenimore relaxed. “I’ve had only one Reebesther Smith.” He remembered Reebesther Smith fondly. Her unfortunate name was the result of two well-meaning parents trying to please both sides of the family by naming their only child after both grandmothers—Rebecca and Esther. “Reebesther” was the sad result. But Reebesther had borne her name well, and had made no effort to change it, not even adopting a nickname.

  “Miss Smith …” The lawyer rummaged, at length, through a shabby portfolio and drew out a legal document. “Miss Smith,” he repeated, “has bequeathed to you a gift of real estate. But you may only claim it if you agree to certain conditions.”

  Fenimore was beginning to feel as if he had stepped into a Victorian novel, or, at least, a very early detective story. “I must say, I’m surprised,” he said. “Miss Smith was a fine patient and a good friend, but I never expected …”

  Abraham Lincoln raised a raw, bony hand. “Nevertheless, Miss Smith thought very highly of you and decided that you were the only person capable of carrying out her wishes.”

  Fenimore waited expectantly.

  The lawyer cleared his throat, causing the Adam’s apple to bob anew, and began:

  “‘I, Reebesther Banks Smith, hereby bequeath to Andrew B. Fenimore, M.D., fifty acres of the finest New Jersey …�
��”

  Fenimore leaned forward.

  “‘ … marshlands.’”

  Fenimore slumped back.

  “‘ … with the proviso that he will preserve said acres in their natural state for as long as he shall live, and when he dies, bequeath said acres to a person or persons whom he trusts to preserve them in the same manner into perpetuity …’”

  Mr. Detweiler glanced up to see how the doctor was taking the news.

  Fenimore returned his gaze as calmly as possible.

  “‘In return for his conscientious stewardship,’” the lawyer continued, “‘Dr. Fenimore will be provided with monies for yearly maintenance and taxes for said land …’”

  “But …”

  Fenimore was stayed by the bony hand.

  “‘And, in addition, he will receive a treasure map …’”

  Fenimore blinked.

  “‘bequeathed to me by my husband, Adam Fairfax Smith, on which is marked the location of a considerable treasure. Being well provided for, myself, I had no occasion to pursue this venture. But, if Dr. Fenimore decides to, I believe his efforts will not go unrewarded. He has my blessing. Signed, Reebesther Banks Smith, May twentieth, 1999.’”

  Again, Fenimore started to speak.

  “There’s a postscript,” the lawyer stopped him, and read, “‘I am only sorry I cannot join the hunt.’”

  Fenimore smiled.

  Mr. Detweiler handed over the document for Fenimore to examine. It looked authentic enough. And it seemed in character with the patient Fenimore remembered. Reebesther Smith was a woman of great dignity who also had a fondness for the absurd. He thought she was probably having a grand time observing his discomfiture from above, right now.

  “Well?” said the lawyer.

  “Well what?” asked the doctor.

  “Will you agree to her conditions?”

  Fenimore scanned his little office, crowded with files, papers, journals, and medical books. “I’ve been wishing for more space,” he said, “but I never imagined it would take the form of marshland.”

  Apparently Mr. Detweiler did not share Lincoln’s sense of humor. With no change of expression, he rose and put out his hand. “I will send you another document tomorrow in which my client lists her instructions for the care and preservation of the property.”

  “And the map?” Fenimore prompted.

  “Of course—and the map.”

  Fenimore rose and accompanied Mr. Detweiler to the door. On his way out the lawyer nodded to the nurse.

  The nurse nodded back.

  The door had barely closed behind him before Mrs. Doyle was out of her chair. “What was that all about?”

  Fenimore surveyed her coolly. “You are now looking at the proud owner of fifty acres …”

  Mrs. Doyle gasped.

  “ … of New Jersey marshland.”

  Her face fell.

  “Now, now, I haven’t finished. On which there is buried a pirate’s treasure.”

  “What?”

  “Worth many millions …” he fabricated a little more.

  Her eyes narrowed. “But you have to find it.”

  “Don’t be a spoilsport, Mrs. Doyle. The hunt is half the fun. And I have a map. Or I will have in a day or two.”

  “Ha!”

  “And exactly what is the meaning of that unpleasant noise?”

  She shook her head. “Sounds like a fairy tale to me.”

  “Well, as we all know, fairy tales have happy endings.” He smiled complacently.

  “Not always.”

  “Hmm?”

  “Some of those German ones were pretty Grimm!” she cackled.

  “You’re a great wit, Mrs. Doyle.” He retreated to the sanctuary of his inner office where he could contemplate his newfound fortunes in peace.

  CHAPTER 2

  A week passed before Fenimore was able to leave his office and take off for south Jersey to look at his new bequest. He invited Horatio, his teenage office assistant, along for company. He had forgotten that riding with Horatio meant music, if that’s what you call it. Fenimore’s tastes did not run to the Beastie Boys. He made a deal with him. Beastie Boys on the way down; Mozart on the way back. Grudgingly, Horatio agreed.

  They had left the highway over an hour ago. Nothing but empty fields stretched from the car to the horizon. Not a house or barn in sight.

  “Man, where is everybody?” Horatio shouted over the “boom, boom” of his box.

  Fenimore, suddenly realizing that the boy had probably never been to the country before, launched into one of his lectures. “Working in the fields. This is farm country. New Jersey is the ‘Garden State’ …”

  Horatio glanced around, taking in the vast spread of empty fields. “What gardens?”

  “That’s just an expression,” Fenimore said peevishly. “There’s a house.” He lifted his hand from the wheel to point out a brick farmhouse amid a clump of trees. “That was probably built before the revolution. Mad Anthony Wayne came down here to round up cattle to take back to Valley Forge to feed Washington’s troops during that terrible winter of 1777.”

  Not a history buff, Horatio grunted.

  Fenimore paused at a crossroad to study his map. A road map. (The treasure map was tucked carefully in his breast pocket.) According to his calculations, a right on Gum Tree Road and a left on Possum Hollow would bring him to the entrance of his tract of land. He pressed the accelerator, startling a bunch of blackbirds who were making a meal from some poor farmer’s freshly sowed seeds. They watched the birds soar and dip—a rippling black flag—before settling into another furrow to continue their freeloading.

  “Cool!” Horatio said.

  Wildlife was more interesting to the boy than history, Fenimore noted. As if to affirm this, a deer dove across their path, causing Fenimore to slam on the brakes and careen off the road. If it hadn’t been for the safety belt he had insisted Horatio wear, the boy would have gone through the windshield.

  They both looked after the deer’s bobbing white tail until it disappeared into the woods.

  “That was a close one,” Fenimore said.

  Horatio shut off his boom box, a sure sign he was rattled. “Are there many of them around here?” he asked.

  “More than there should be. They eat the crops and they carry ticks that spread Lyme disease.”

  “What’s that?”

  And Fenimore remembered that Horatio’s real passion was not history, not wildlife, but disease—and how to cure it. The doctor restarted the car and simultaneously launched into a detailed account of Lyme disease, confident this time that he would not be interrupted.

  South Jersey was not big on road signs. After crossing a number of roads without signs, Fenimore had to admit to himself he was lost.

  “You sure you know where you’re going?” Horatio asked.

  “Of course. Just let me take another look at that map.”

  “You’re lost.” Horatio shoved the map at him.

  “Hang on.” Fenimore pulled over and pointlessly studied the map. What he really needed was a compass. He had been lost once before in this desolate neighborhood at night, and wandered aimlessly around until sunrise. As soon as the sun rose in the east, he knew if he headed in the opposite direction he would eventually end up in West Philadelphia. He kept this information to himself. At least now it was daylight. “I’ve got it,” he said heartily, dropping the map. “I’ll continue on this stretch until we come to Gum Tree Road.”

  “How will you know it’s Gum Tree, if there’s no sign,” grumbled the boy.

  “Simple. There’ll be a gum tree on the corner.”

  “Do you know a gum tree when you see one?” Horatio eyed him narrowly.

  “Of course,” he said airily. “It will have packages of Spearmint hanging from its branches.”

  “Ha. Ha.”

  After a few more wrong turns, they came to a general store facetiously called Possum Hollow Mall. Figuring that Possum Hollow Road could not be fa
r away, Fenimore parked and went in to ask. Horatio was right behind him. A few boxes of cereal, some cans of soup, and a glass case packed with beer and soft drinks were the “mall”’s meager offerings. Used to The Gallery on Philadelphia’s Market Street, Horatio was unimpressed.

  While sipping a Sprite, Fenimore asked directions of the woman behind the counter. She answered in the soft, measured tones of the southerner. “This is Possum Hollow Road. If you drive about two miles to the right you’ll come to a bridge. Before the bridge there’s a sign—NO CRABBIN’. On the other side of the bridge—Be careful not to hit the crabbers!—there’s a skimpy trail to the right. That’s the Smith tract. Turn in there. But you better leave your car on the road, if you don’t wanta get stuck.”

  “Stuck?”

  “In the mud. Or I’ll have to send Harry over to tow ya out.”

  “Thanks.” Fenimore grabbed Horatio’s arm. The boy left reluctantly. He had discovered the gun and ammunition display next to the soft drinks.

  Back in the car, he said, “Did you see all that stuff?”

  “Yes. This is big hunting country.”

  “You mean they shoot those pretty deer?”

  “You bet. Then they eat them.”

  “Cannibals!” This from a kid who lived in a neighborhood that had shoot-outs every other night in which the targets were human.

  Now that Fenimore was only a few miles away from his property, his excitement mounted. Edging his car cautiously through the crowd of crabbers on the bridge, he had the first glimpse of his tract. What a disappointment! As far as the eye could see, nothing but wild, flat land separated by muddy streams and covered with reeds and cattails. Ruefully, he thought of those Florida properties that people had bought sight unseen, only to find they were under water. But he couldn’t claim to have been deceived. This land was a gift and he had been told exactly what to expect. There’s always the treasure, he reminded himself.

  When they stepped out of the car, they actually sank into mud up to their ankles. A peculiar thick, fishy-smelling mud that clung to their shoes like tar.

 

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