Cover
illustration by Tom Miller
For lovely Cheryl Lanier, nursing wealthy, elderly
Trevor Rutledge at his magnificent estate seemed a routine assignment. But that
was before Rutledge’s nephew, Victor Lawson, arrived. Perhaps Cheryl should
have known better than to fall in love with the handsome playboy.
Certainly there were those—especially the young lawyer, Carl Drew—who warned
her about Victor. But Victor’s promises drowned out all warnings—until, amid
sudden tragedy and scandal, she heard a different voice: that of agonizing
doubt. Had she made the greatest mistake of her young life? Had she given her
trust to the wrong mad? And how could she know for sure before it was too late?
GRADE: C-
REVIEW:
It is incredibly frustrating to read a book that is thoroughly
annoying, yet has glimmers of what could have been a good story. Even more
frustrating than that is the knowledge that the author—in this unhappy case,
Adelaide Humphries, who brought us the delightful The
Nurse Knows Best, Nurse
Landon’s Challenge, and Office
Nurse (as well as, it must be confessed, a few duds)—is capable of
pulling off that better book. And so here we contend with the disappointment of
The Nurse Made Headlines.
Cheryl Lanier is a beautiful, smart, steady, dedicated nurse who
has been hired to care for Trevor Rutledge, a wealthy man in his 70s recovering
from a heart attack. He is childless, so his huge estate will pass presumably to
his nephew Victor Lawson. Vic has been lovin’ ’em and leavin’ ’em for many
years, but hearing about Dear Uncle Trevor’s brush with death, he hurries home
to suck up to the old man in the event that the recovery does not go well.
He immediately targets Cheryl as a potential plaything—and also the
red-haired barmaid Jackie Barnes—but Cheryl has the advantage of having a lot
of influence on Trevor, and a lot of information about Trevor’s health and
plans. So he cultivates her by taking her out for high-speed drives that muss
her hair and her nerves, and visits to the gazebo that muss her lipstick. And he
pumps her for details. Initially Cheryl manages to resist Victor’s interrogation
tactics, reminding herself on several occasions of the importance of not
discussing what would today be called confidential patient health information.
But Victor is so beautiful! “Quite the handsomest she had ever seen”! And when she
is under the spell of his hypnotic dark eyes laughing down into hers, her
cheeks flush, her heart pounds against her ribs. And gathered in his arms, she whispers
passionately, “I believe your uncle wants to make some changes in his will.”
And so Victor learns that Trevor is going to turn his estate into
a rest home for poor elderly folks. Lawyer Carl Drew is going to come over to
have Trevor sign the new will, the day after he takes Cheryl out to show her how
to use the tiny automatic Colt that once belonged to Trevor’s deceased wife, not
to mention take her to dinner, fall in love with her, and give her a much more
reasonable love interest. Except that “Cheryl did not find him exactly
exciting. The touch of his hand, a look from his eyes, did not start her pulses
to pounding,” unlike Victor—“Darn it, why did her pulses race whenever her eyes
met his?” Oh, but there’s also David Earling from back home, who makes an unexpected
and essentially parenthetical appearance on page 75 as yet another man who
wants to marry Cheryl, but “he had failed to strike the necessary spark.”
Unlike the forest fire that is Victor Lawson. Run, Bambi, run!
On return to the mansion
after her dinner with Carl, Cheryl discovers—you will never believe this—Trevor’s
lifeless body in his study. Turns out he’s been shot through the heart, but before
she can start screaming, Cheryl is knocked unconscious, and when she comes to,
she has that infernal tiny automatic Colt in her hand and the housekeeper
standing over her. Victor promptly throws her under the police van, and she is hauled
to the station as Suspect Number One. But Carl Drew, bless his wholesome but not
nearly so handsome heart, steps in to get her out on bail, and a few days later
everyone gathers for the reading of the will—when we learn that Trevor actually
had managed to sign his new will a day ahead of schedule, disinheriting Victor.
This shocking turn of events causes Victor to completely and inexplicably lose
his head, whip out the actual murder weapon and reveal himself as the killer,
but since the room has at least three cops in it, he goes down without a fight.
As he’s hauled away, Carl decides that he will give Cheryl time to get over her
trauma—she’s coming back in a few months to run Trevor’s nursing home anyway—and
Cheryl decides she’s going to call her mother and let her know what’s new with
her, and to ask mom to pass on her regards to the barely mentioned David
Earling.
At the end of this book we are left with no clear love interest
for Cheryl—a rarity in VNRNs—and indeed a big huh? over one of her potential options. Exonerated with the police,
with the reader Cheryl is easily convicted of being an annoying patsy who
abandons everything she stands for to tumble for an obviously manipulative con
man, whom even Cheryl can see through. Of
course good women have been known to fall for bad men, but we are not given any
sort of reasonable explanation why Cheryl would be such a dope, just
descriptions of her weak-kneed compliance with Victor’s every selfish request. If
Ms. Humphries had put in the effort to write a character study that explained
Cheryl’s wildly self-contradictory behavior, this could have been an
interesting book—and at a crawling 180 pages she certainly had room to pull off
something—anything!—more complex and interesting than the plate of indigestion
we are actually served. As it is, The
Nurse Made Headlines is an exasperating, overly drawn-out story that wraps
up in three rapid-fire pages and isn’t worth the time it takes to read, well, a
headline.
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