(pseud. Adeline McElfresh), ©1960
When Dr. Dee Bailey joined the surgical staff of big, modern Still River General Hospital to serve as anesthesiologist under Surgeon Arn Thurston she made an implacable enemy of Nurse Cele Maynard. For the young nurse was madly in love with the handsome surgeon and believed Dr. Dee wanted him, too. Then fate played into the hands of Nurse Maynard. A powerful underworld czar was brought for an emergency operation and Nurse Maynard listened on an extension phone as a sinister voice offered Dr. Dee “real money, a hundred grand—if he don’t come through that operation.” When Phil Roscoe died on the table, the young nurse, almost insane with triumphant malice, made her accusation—Dr. Dee Bailey had taken a man’s life for a hundred thousand dollars!
GRADE: B
BEST
QUOTES:
“Let
a doctor be personable and good-looking, and they don’t trust him.”
REVIEW:
I didn’t realize until I started in on this book that it is actually the
prequel to Dr. Dorothy’s Choice,
which is not a book I cared for very much, since the Dr. Dorothy “Dee” Bailey
was a spineless wimp buffeted about by the men in her life. Here, though, she
shows a bit more starch, and with good writing to bolster the storyline, we’ve
got a better yarn with Dee’s introduction, and one worth reading.
Dee
has returned to Still River, Indiana, her home town, after medical school and
residency and a job in New York, to work for Dr. Paul Courtney. She’s walked
into a bit of a mess, however, taking control of the anesthesiology department
from Celia Maynard, nurse anesthetist, who is not happy about her demotion.
Cele is also ridiculously jealous because about a week after Dee’s arrival,
Cele’s boyfriend, surgeon Arn Thurston, makes a major pass at Dee at a dinner
party that he has attended with Cele on his arm. Dee does not show enough sense
to tell Dr. Thurston to get lost, unfortunately, and the gossip about Arn and
Dee’s moonlit peccadillo doesn’t make things any better between the two ladies.
Then,
when a golf buddy of Arn’s collapses with a gallbladder attack, it is revealed
that he has a bad heart due to an unspecified stab wound to the pericardium
that makes surgery risky. Scrubbing up for surgery, Dee gets a phone call
during which she is advised of a unique financial opportunity: Should former
Sing Sing resident and wise guy Phil Roscoe not survive the surgery, her bank
account could be $100,000 heavier. Then, when Phil does arrest on the table,
Cele, present in the room as a curious onlooker, starts shrieking that she was
eavesdropping on the extension and overheard the whole exchange, and that Dee
is a murderer.
The
rest of the book is a somewhat strange muddle in which a pack of fairly stupid
gangsters threaten Arn to speak out against Dee or they will reveal an incident
from his past in which he ordered a barbiturate for a young patient who subsequently
died; he had denied having written the order and was never proven to be guilty
of wrongdoing, though everyone suspected him of it. A bundle of cash is hurled
onto Dee’s doorstep, and when she turns it over to the police, she is
kidnapped. Instead of whimpering in a corner, though, she plots her escape, and
thank goodness she decided to forego the heels for Keds this morning!
In
the end, delivered back to Still River by a passing truck driver, Dee lands in
the arms of a man she has dated but professed little interest in, so though we
should see it coming, it still feels a bit odd. The fate of Dr. Thurston, the
gangsters, Cele, and even Dee’s career is left unanswered, and unless there’s
another book between this and Dr. Dorothy’s Choice, we can only guess
how all that turns out. But there’s some nice writing and some fun characters
in this book, and the plot is livelier than many. Even if you decide not to
follow Dee’s career path going forward—and I can’t strongly recommend that you
do—you could do a lot worse than to watch her debut.
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