I'm puzzled by this matter of Christie's visit to Dr. Odess on the day of Beryl's murder, for two separate reasons. I haven't had the chance to read Rupert Furneaux's book yet; I have a copy on order, but it will take some time to arrive. But why would Christie's doctor visit militate against his having killed Beryl at lunchtime, since the visit in question seems to have been in the evening?
While Kennedy knew that Christie visited the doctor "at some point" on that day, curiously Kennedy didn't seem to know what time that visit took place. He remarked that it "may have happened" in the morning, but then went on to argue that "it is more likely" to have taken place in the evening, because the purpose of Christie's visit was to get a certificate to excuse him from work, and it's only after the murder that Christie would realize the urgency of staying home the next day "to ward off casual callers and make plans for the disposal of the body." Dr. Odess's surgery was presumably not open in the afternoon, but Kennedy states his evening hours were between 6pm and 7:30pm.
That's a perfectly reasonable argument, but Gordon Honeycombe tells us in his account (in The Murders of the Black Museum) that at Evans's trial, Christie actually testified that it was in the evening he went to the doctor, "about twenty past five." So one puzzle in my mind is how come Kennedy didn't know that, when he'd studied the case in so much detail? Especially when an evening visit supported his own argument.
I must agree that Kennedy underestimated the time it would take for Christie to visit the doctor, who lived in Colville Square. Kennedy thought Christie could walk there and back in fifteen minutes, and if he was "lucky enough" to see the doctor straight away, he could do it all in under twenty minutes! Colville Square is a good half mile away, so I can't see Christie walking there and back in under twenty minutes. As for seeing the doctor in under five minutes, with the kind of waiting lines they probably had at a doctor's surgery that seems supremely unlikely to me! Furthermore, Christie said his wife was at the library while he was at the doctor's, and he picked her up on his way back home. I imagine that added still more to the time.
It's notable that Christie left home as early as 5:20 if the doctor's office wasn't open until 6:00. I wonder if he left early because patients started queuing up before the office actually opened. Even if he was first in line, I imagine the whole trip must have taken at least an hour or so, not the twenty minutes Kennedy imagined. Kennedy of course was trying to make the time seem short to fit Evans's claim that after Christie told him of his wife's death ("about 5:30 in the evening"), Christie went away and then returned a short time later, "just as [Evans] was finishing feeding the baby."
In spite of all that, I don't see that the timing is critical. If Evans's claim was true, it's perfectly possible that Christie went to the doctor and just took longer to return than it would seem from Evans's account.
However, what I don't understand is why Christie's visit to the doctor in the evening would preclude his killing Beryl at lunch time. Christie did claim he was "in a great deal of pain," "feeling pretty bad," and implied that he went to bed after getting back from the doctor. But surely he could easily have been lying about that, and malingering in order to get the necessary certificate to stay home the next day. Any comments?
While Kennedy knew that Christie visited the doctor "at some point" on that day, curiously Kennedy didn't seem to know what time that visit took place. He remarked that it "may have happened" in the morning, but then went on to argue that "it is more likely" to have taken place in the evening, because the purpose of Christie's visit was to get a certificate to excuse him from work, and it's only after the murder that Christie would realize the urgency of staying home the next day "to ward off casual callers and make plans for the disposal of the body." Dr. Odess's surgery was presumably not open in the afternoon, but Kennedy states his evening hours were between 6pm and 7:30pm.
That's a perfectly reasonable argument, but Gordon Honeycombe tells us in his account (in The Murders of the Black Museum) that at Evans's trial, Christie actually testified that it was in the evening he went to the doctor, "about twenty past five." So one puzzle in my mind is how come Kennedy didn't know that, when he'd studied the case in so much detail? Especially when an evening visit supported his own argument.
I must agree that Kennedy underestimated the time it would take for Christie to visit the doctor, who lived in Colville Square. Kennedy thought Christie could walk there and back in fifteen minutes, and if he was "lucky enough" to see the doctor straight away, he could do it all in under twenty minutes! Colville Square is a good half mile away, so I can't see Christie walking there and back in under twenty minutes. As for seeing the doctor in under five minutes, with the kind of waiting lines they probably had at a doctor's surgery that seems supremely unlikely to me! Furthermore, Christie said his wife was at the library while he was at the doctor's, and he picked her up on his way back home. I imagine that added still more to the time.
It's notable that Christie left home as early as 5:20 if the doctor's office wasn't open until 6:00. I wonder if he left early because patients started queuing up before the office actually opened. Even if he was first in line, I imagine the whole trip must have taken at least an hour or so, not the twenty minutes Kennedy imagined. Kennedy of course was trying to make the time seem short to fit Evans's claim that after Christie told him of his wife's death ("about 5:30 in the evening"), Christie went away and then returned a short time later, "just as [Evans] was finishing feeding the baby."
In spite of all that, I don't see that the timing is critical. If Evans's claim was true, it's perfectly possible that Christie went to the doctor and just took longer to return than it would seem from Evans's account.
However, what I don't understand is why Christie's visit to the doctor in the evening would preclude his killing Beryl at lunch time. Christie did claim he was "in a great deal of pain," "feeling pretty bad," and implied that he went to bed after getting back from the doctor. But surely he could easily have been lying about that, and malingering in order to get the necessary certificate to stay home the next day. Any comments?
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