When he had to question Hester it would be worse.
"Yes, sir," Orme agreed.
Rathbone nodded.
"But it has not blunted your sensibilities, or made you any less dedicated to finding justice for the victims of unspeakable torture and death."
"No, sir." Orme's face was pale, his hands hidden by his sides, but his shoulders were high and tight.
"Did Mr. Durban feel as deeply?"
"Yes, sir. This case was... was one of the worst. If you'd seen that boy's body, sir, wasted and burned like it was, then 'is throat cut near through, and dumped in the river as if he were an animal, you'd have felt the same."
"I imagine I would," Rathbone said quietly, his head bent a trifle as if he were in the presence of the dead now.
Lord Justice Sullivan leaned forward, his face pinched, his mouth drawn tight. "Is there some purpose to this, Sir Oliver? I trust it has not slipped your mind which party you represent in this case?" There was a note of warning in his voice, and his eyes were suddenly flat and hard.
"No, my lord," Rathbone said respectfully. "I wish to find the truth. It is far too grave and too terrible a matter to settle for anything less, in the interests of humanity."
Sullivan grunted, and for a moment Rathbone was afraid he had taken his play too far. He glanced sideways at the jury and knew he was right. Relief washed over him with physical warmth. Then he remembered Phillips shivering in Newgate and his horror of dripping water, and his satisfaction vanished. He turned again to Orme. "You and Mr. Durban worked all your duty hours, and many beyond?"
"Yes, sir." Orme knew not to answer more than he was asked.
"Was this same passionate dedication also true of Mr. Monk?" He had to ask; it was the plan.
"Yes, sir." There was no hesitation in Orme; if anything, he was more positive.
"I see. It is not surprising, and much to be respected."
Tremayne was fidgeting in his seat, growing restive at what seemed to be a purposeless reaffirmation of what he himself had just established. He suspected Rathbone of something, but he could not deduce what, and it troubled him.
The jury was merely puzzled.
Rathbone knew he must make his point now. One by one he touched on the evidence that first Durban and then Monk had pursued, asking Orme for the facts that specifically connected the abuse of the boys to Phillips's boat. Never once did he suggest that it had not happened, only that the horror of the facts had obscured the lack of defining links to Phillips.
The boat existed. Boys from the age of five or six up to about thirteen unquestionably lived on it. There were floating brothels for the use of men with any kind of taste in sexual pleasures, either to participate, or merely to watch. There were pornographic photographs for sale in the dark alleys and byways of the river. What unquestionable proof had Durban, Monk, or Orme himself found that the boys so abused were the ones to whom Phillips gave a home?
There was none. The horror of the cruelty, the greed, and the obscenity of it, had moved all three men so deeply that they had been too desperate to stop it and punish the perpetrators of it than to make certain of their facts. It was only too easy to understand. Any decent man might fall into the same error. But surely any decent man would also be appalled at the idea of convicting the wrong person of such a heinous crime, deserving of the gallows?
The court adjourned for lunch with quite suddenly a complete and awful confusion, a knowledge that all the certainties had been swept away. Only the horror remained, and a sense of helplessness.
Rathbone had accomplished exactly what he had intended. It was brilliant. Even the subtle and clever Tremayne had not seen the trap before he was in it. He had left pale-faced, angry with himself.
Hester was waiting to testify to her part in the investigation when Tremayne came to her during the lunch adjournment. She was sitting in one of the public houses that provided food, but she was too tense to do more than take an occasional bite of her sandwich, and then found it difficult to swallow.
He sat down opposite her, his face grim, his manner apologetic. He too declined to eat more than a sandwich and drink a glass of white wine.
"I'm sorry, Mrs. Monk," he said immediately once they