Dick sat exhausted in the chair nearest the door.
During three nights he had remained with the scabbed anonymous woman-artist he had come to love, formally to portion out the adrenaline, but really to throw as much wan light as he could into the darkness ahead.
Half appreciating his feeling, Franz travelled quickly over an opinion:
“It was neuro-syphilis.
All the Wassermans we took won’t tell me differently.
The spinal fluid—”
“Never mind,” said Dick.
“Oh, God, never mind!
If she cared enough about her secret to take it away with her, let it go at that.”
“You better lay off for a day.”
“Don’t worry, I’m going to.”
Franz had his wedge; looking up from the telegram that he was writing to the woman’s brother he inquired:
“Or do you want to take a little trip?”
“Not now.”
“I don’t mean a vacation.
There’s a case in Lausanne.
I’ve been on the phone with a Chilian all morning—”
“She was so damn brave,” said Dick.
“And it took her so long.”
Franz shook his head sympathetically and Dick got himself together.
“Excuse me for interrupting you.”
“This is just a change—the situation is a father’s problem with his son—the father can’t get the son up here.
He wants somebody to come down there.”
“What is it?
Alcoholism?
Homosexuality?
When you say Lausanne—”
“A little of everything.”
“I’ll go down.
Is there any money in it?”
“Quite a lot, I’d say.
Count on staying two or three days, and get the boy up here if he needs to be watched.
In any case take your time, take your ease; combine business with pleasure.”
After two hours’ train sleep Dick felt renewed, and he approached the interview with Senor Pardo y Cuidad Real in good spirits.
These interviews were much of a type.
Often the sheer hysteria of the family representative was as interesting psychologically as the condition of the patient.
This one was no exception: Senor Pardo y Cuidad Real, a handsome iron-gray Spaniard, noble of carriage, with all the appurtenances of wealth and power, raged up and down his suite in the Hotel de Trois Mondes and told the story of his son with no more self-control than a drunken woman.
“I am at the end of my invention.
My son is corrupt.
He was corrupt at Harrow, he was corrupt at King’s College, Cambridge.
He’s incorrigibly corrupt.
Now that there is this drinking it is more and more obvious how he is, and there is continual scandal.
I have tried everything—I worked out a plan with a doctor friend of mine, sent them together for a tour of Spain.
Every evening Francisco had an injection of cantharides and then the two went together to a reputable bordello—for a week or so it seemed to work but the result was nothing.
Finally last week in this very room, rather in that bathroom—” he pointed at it, “—I made Francisco strip to the waist and lashed him with a whip—”
Exhausted with his emotion he sat down and Dick spoke:
“That was foolish—the trip to Spain was futile also—” He struggled against an upsurging hilarity—that any reputable medical man should have lent himself to such an amateurish experiment! “—Senor, I must tell you that in these cases we can promise nothing.
In the case of the drinking we can often accomplish something—with proper co-operation.
The first thing is to see the boy and get enough of his confidence to find whether he has any insight into the matter.”
—The boy, with whom he sat on the terrace, was about twenty, handsome and alert.