Doctor Bart Royle’s
mother would have liked to see him married to her nurse, Janice Loveday, but
two people stood in the way—Ned, who needed Janice, and Pippa, who wanted Bart.
GRADE: B+
BEST QUOTES:
“That was one good thing about Nurse Wilson, nobody would
ever have married her!”
REVIEW:
A more superlative nurse than Janice Loveday, who without
questions merits her surname, never silently walked the VNRN wards in her
spotless white oxfords; she is a “delightful girl who, apart from her beauty of
face and form, had that rare quality, a beauty of character which was displayed
in everything she did or said.” But she has taken on a hopeless loser of a man,
Ned Thaneton, who is the son of a wealthy man and a louche gambler. Time and
again Janice has tried to make him heel to the straight and narrow path, but
the lazy cad doesn’t feel he should have to work for a living and so inevitably
drifts back to the casino. As the book opens, Janice is finally starting to
tire of his insistence that she be available at his whim to go out with him, irritated
that he completely misses the point that if he does not work for a living, she
goes, and at a job that requires the mental sharpness that follows eight hours
in the sack. Her solution is not to tell not-friend Ned to take a long walk off
a short pier, but instead to get a new job: “If I found a post either miles
away, so that Ned couldn’t ask me to keep these hours and so on I had free, it
would be better. Or if I took a post private nursing locally,” she says. Though
it’s not clear why a new job will make Ned say no when she can’t herself. Well!
It just so happens that Dr. Bart Royle has just such a post, caring for his
most beloved mother, former nurse Norma Mattingly Royle, who has what is
described as a relentlessly advancing “sclerosing arthritis.”
In Janice moves, and before long she is the daughter Norma
never knew, her own having died of polio in childhood, and a pillar of strength
for the entire household. The fly in the linament, because we must have one, is
Pippa Chambers, a beautiful young wealthy lass who has her heart set not on
Bart but his name, as she is nouveau riche and wants an entrée into an upper
crust society that no amount of Daddy’s money can buy. Pippa is not pleased by
Bart’s well-known devotion to his mother and plots to pack the old bag off to a
nursing home as soon as Bart carries her over his threshold. And, when she
claps eyes on the lovely Janice, Pippa is not pleased with the new nurse,
either, as she fears Bart will be seduced by her beauty, strength and
character. She sets out through various lame schemes that all quickly come to
naught to turn Bart against Janice, but in the end her big chance comes when
Ned turns up and begs Janice for £250 lest the thug he owes smash him to
a jelly. Janice, finally seeing a chance
to be rid of Ned forever, tells him to get lost. No, wait, that’s not what
happens at all—Janice, the perennial doormat, promises to find the money
somehow! But if she gives him the money, he has to go to Canada and work on the
farm of this nurse she knows there, who surely would be delighted to take on a
lazy gambling addict like Ned!
Wandering the house in a daze after her meeting with Ned,
Janice bumps into Pippa and immediately tells her arch enemy the whole story.
Helpful Pippa whips out her checkbook and offers to gift Ned the money if
Janice will quit her post and go work for the World Health Organization in
Africa somewhere, far away from Bart. Janice’s next ricochet lands her in
Norma’s room, and that intelligent woman, seeing Janice’s shock—for the proposed
separation from Bart makes Janice suddenly realize “how blind she had been! She
knew now and for ever that she was in love with him!”—is easily able to get the
story, as well as Pippa’s heartless proposal, out of Janice. In three seconds
Norma has hatched a convoluted plot that involves converting her own large
estate into a nursing home where she will continue to live, establishing her
son as chief medical officer with the caveat that he be married, arranging a
meeting between Pippa and Janice in which Janice politely declines Pippa’s
offer and Pippa unpolitely expresses her displeasure with Janice and Norma just
as Bart is walking through the door, and arranging a gourmet dinner between
herself, Bart, and Janice for that evening (I pitied the cook) during which
Janice is wearing the Mattingly estate diamond and sapphire earrings that
almost make Janice’s blue, blue eyes pale in comparison. That Norma is one
wicked smart woman!
This book started out from Bart’s point of view, Janice
nowhere in sight, which made me fear it wouldn’t quite qualify as a nurse
novel, but we do work our way around to Janice in the end. Janice would be too
good to be true except for her absurd devotion to Ned, but apart from this bit of
overperfection in Janice, the characters in this book are vivid, completely
endearing—even Pippa, although she undergoes a character transformation at the
end that is as disappointing as it is implausible—and thoroughly enjoyable to
pal around with. Except, actually, Bart, who is fairly bland, even if he does
have “firm sensitive lips.” If the story line isn’t novel or especially
exciting, it is still a pleasant book and one worth reading.
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