equals, not the execution he had expected.
“I know it ‘cause they said so when they asked us to come,” Walters replied stolidly.
“Thank you. Who is the ‘us’ you refer to? I mean, who from the River Police did go?”
“Mr. Durban an’ me, sir.”
“Mr. Durban being your commanding officer, the head of the River Police at Wapping?”
“Yes, sir.”
Rathbone considered asking why Durban was not testifying, although of course he knew, but most of the jury would not.
Lord Justice Sullivan beat him to it. He leaned forward, his expressionmild and curious. “Mr. Tremayne, are we to hear from this Commander Durban?”
“No, my lord,” Tremayne said grimly. “I regret to say that Mr. Durban died at the very end of last year, giving his life to save others. That is the reason we have called Mr. Walters.”
“I see. Please proceed,” Sullivan directed.
“Thank you, my lord. Mr. Walters, will you please tell the court where you went in answer to the summons, and what you found there?”
“Yes, sir.” Walters squared his shoulders. “We went down the Limehouse Reach, about level with Cuckold's Point, an’ there was a lighterman, a ferryman, and a couple o’ barges all anchored an’ waiting. One o’ the barges'd caught up the body of a boy, maybe twelve or thirteen years old. The lighterman'd seen it and raised the cry. O’ course you can't stop a barge, still less a string of ‘em, all of a sudden, like. So they'd gone a good ‘undred yards or so before they threw out an anchor an’ got to look at what they ‘ad.” His voice sank even lower, and he was unable to keep the emotion out of it. “Poor kid was in an ‘ell of a mess. Throat cut right across, from one ear to the other, an’ been dragged an’ bashed around so it were a wonder ‘is ‘ead ‘adn't come off altogether. ‘E were caught in some ropes, otherwise, of course, he'd ‘ave gone out with the tide, an’ we'd never ‘ave found him before the sea an’ the fish ‘ad ‘im down to bone.”
On his high seat Sullivan winced and closed his eyes. Rathbone wondered if any of the jurors had seen that small gesture of revulsion or noticed that Sullivan was more than usually pale.
“Yes, I see.” Tremayne gave the tragedy of it full importance by waiting to make sure the court had time to dwell on it also. “What did you do as a result of this discovery?”
“We asked ‘em to tell us exactly what ‘appened, where they were when they reckoned the barge'd run onto the body, ‘ow far they'd dragged it without realizing …”
Sullivan frowned, looking sharply at Tremayne.
Tremayne saw it. “Mr. Walters, if they did not know the body was there, how could they have estimated how far they had dragged it?”
Rathbone hid a smile not because he was unamused by the ironyof the arguments, and Tremayne's exactness, but because if he were seen to display any lack of horror or pity now it would work against him later.
“Because o’ the last time someone would ‘ave ‘ad to ‘ave seen it if it were there, sir,” Walters said grimly “If someone passed astern o’ you, they'd ‘ave seen.”
Tremayne nodded. “Precisely so. And how far had that been?”
“Around Horseferry Stairs. Passed a ferry going in, pretty close. Must ‘ave run afoul o’ the poor little begger some time after that.”
“Did you know who he was, this dead child?”
Walters winced, his face suddenly transformed by anger and pity. “No, sir, not then. There's thousands o’ children on the river, one way or the other.”
“Did you work on the case after that, Mr. Walters?”
“No, sir. It was mostly Mr. Durban hisself, and Mr. Orme.”
“Thank you. Please remain there, in case my learned friend, Sir Oliver, wishes to ask you anything.” Tremayne walked back across the open space of the floor and gestured an invitation to Rathbone.
Rathbone rose to his feet, thanked him, and walked calmly into the center of the court. Then he looked up at