“I took it to be my duty to do so. And Yuri Messenko. The Hyde Park bomber,” he added.
“Ah, yes.” Savidge grinned bleakly. “You were there when the bomb exploded, I understand.”
“I was. Some hundred paces behind. It happened at Hyde Park Corner, not far from Buckingham Palace,” the inspector added helpfully.
“I see,” Savidge said. “Messenko was carrying a satchel, was he not?”
“Yes.”
Savidge leaned forward. “Well, then, Inspector, tell the jury why, if you knew this satchel-carrying Anarchist to pose a dangerous threat, you allowed him to approach Buckingham Palace. The King and Queen were arriving back from the Cathedral just at this time, were they not?”
The inspector frowned uncomfortably. “Messenko wasn’t
that
close to the Palace. Quite a distance, actually.”
“But you were not close enough to
him
to prevent him from exploding his bomb.”
“Well, no, I—”
Savidge smiled tightly. “Just out of curiosity, Inspector, how close to the Palace would you have allowed this dangerous bomber to approach?”
A titter went around the courtroom. Inspector Ashcraft flushed. Sims jumped up. “Object, my lord! Calls for the witness to speculate.”
Savidge raised his eyebrows. “I wasn’t asking the inspector to speculate, my lord. I quite naturally assumed that he had some sort of plan to keep this dangerous man from approaching too near the King and Queen. However, I do not wish to embarrass him.”
Kate smiled. The man next to her guffawed, and another titter made the rounds.
“If Mr. Savidge is through with this witness,” the judge said, “the inspector may step down.”
“Just one thing more, my lord,” Savidge said. He was shuffling the papers in front of him as if he were looking for something. “It is true, Inspector, that you did not accompany the officers who made the searches?”
“Yes,” the inspector said, obviously relieved at the change of subject. “I was otherwise engaged. On important police business.”
“I see,” Savidge said. Still looking down at the table and riffling papers, he said, “Then you have not handled any of the evidence that the officers discovered?”
Inspector Ashcraft shook his head.
Savidge looked up. “I didn’t quite hear you, Inspector. Could you repeat your answer?”
“No,” the inspector snapped, out of patience. “I did not handle any of the evidence.”
“Thank you,” Savidge said absently, moving his papers around again. “That will be all for the moment.” As the inspector stepped out of the box, Savidge added, “I reserve the right, however, to recall this witness.” He glanced at Sims. “If my esteemed friend has no objection.”
The prosecutor looked amused. “No objection at all,” he said in a supercilious tone, and called Detective Finney, who was sworn in. In a series of questions, Sims took the detective through the surveillance, the raid on the
Clarion,
and the subsequent searches of the living quarters of the men arrested at the newspaper, during which the bombs had been discovered, in each case hidden under the bed.
“And are these the bombs themselves?” the prosecutor inquired, gesturing at the three ginger-beer bottles he had placed in evidence as Exhibit B. The bottles, Kate saw, were quite ordinary stoneware bottles with what appeared to be screw-on caps. Kate saw that Charles was leaning forward, looking at them intently.
“Objection,” Savidge said. “My honorable friend has not yet demonstrated that these so-called bombs are anything other than what they appear to be—that is, ginger-beer bottles.”
“I will rephrase,” Sims said with an upward roll of his eyes. “You collected these three pieces of evidence in the rooms of the defendants, did you not?”
“I did,” Finney said.
“And did you assume, when you saw them, that they might . . . blow up?”
“Oh, yes, sir,” said Finney earnestly. “They could’ve contained shock-sensitive explosives, y’see. Nitroglycerine, maybe.”
“What did you do? I mean, how exactly did you handle these objects, which you assumed to be dangerous?”
“I labeled each bottle with the date and location. The bottle found in Mr. Mouffetard’s room is labeled
one.
That found in Mr. Kopinski’s room,
two.
In Mr. Gould’s flat,
three.
Mouffetard and Kopinski live in the same rooming house, in Halsey Street,” he added.
Sims indicated the bottles. “These are your labels?”
“Right, sir. Then I placed each bottle in a straw-lined crate and put the crate into a bomb box.”
“A
bomb
box?” the prosecutor asked, widening his eyes dramatically. “Please tell the jury what you mean by that term.”
“It’s a box made of special, heavy-duty metal, designed to contain a possible explosion. The boxes were transported to the Yard, where an expert chemist examined the bottles and their contents, which turned out to be—”
“Thank you,” Sims said, holding up his hand. “We’ll let the chemist tell us what he found.” He pointed to a stack of papers and several books. “This Anarchist literature, which I have entered as Exhibit C—you found it in Mr. Kopinski’s room?”
“Yes. The papers advertise an Anarchist meeting. The books are by Anarchists named Kropotkin and Bakunin.”
“Books advocating violence against the state?”
Finney nodded violently. “Oh, yes, indeed, sir. Very much so, sir.”
“And one more found object.” Sims pointed to another bottle. “Exhibit D. Please tell his lordship and the members of the jury what it is and where you found it.”
“Bottle of glycerine, sir. Doctor Gabriel’s Pure Medicinal Glycerine. I found it when I searched the newspaper office.”
“Thank you,” said Sims. “You may step down—unless, of course, my estimable friend Mr. Savidge has questions.”
“I suppose I may have one or two,” Savidge said, rising slowly. “Prior to the raid on the
Clarion,
the newspaper’s employees were followed. How long did you say you followed the suspects, Detective Finney?”
Finney thought. “For about a fortnight, I’d say.”
“A fortnight before the explosion in Hyde Park?”
“Yes. Maybe more.”
“So you were following these persons for a fortnight or more for no other reason than that they wished to exercise
the right of the free press
?” As he spoke, his voice rose. The last few words were spoken with a flinty emphasis.
Finney looked uncomfortable. “I wouldn’t put it that way.”
“I would,” Savidge said. “I certainly would. But never mind. Let’s talk about these three ginger-beer bottles that have been entered into evidence. Did either of the officers with you handle the bottles?”
“No, sir.” Finney squared his shoulders, assuming a brave look. “I was the only one. If something blew up, I didn’t want them to get hurt.”
“A commendable caution, I’m sure,” Savidge remarked in a dry tone. “You testified that you applied the labels to the bottles. Where did you do this?”
Detective Finney smiled. “Right on the side, sir.” The spectators tittered.
Savidge smiled. “Very good, Detective, very good, indeed. Where were you when you applied the labels?”
“In the defendants’ rooms, sir. I labeled ’em as I found ’em.”
“Thank you. You testified that you handled the bottles with care. How exactly did you handle them?”
Finney frowned. “Sir?”
“Did you pick them up by the base?” Savidge asked patiently. “By the neck? Did you cradle them in your hands? Did you wear gloves?”
“No gloves.” Finney’s grin was crooked. “But I was careful. Didn’t want to get blown to pieces, y’see.”
“I do see,” Savidge said. He turned away as if to sit down, and the detective, obviously relieved, took a step backward preparatory to leaving the box. The prosecutor opened his mouth to call the next witness, but Savidge turned quickly, catching them both off their guard.
“And how about fingerprints, Detective Finney? Since fingerprint evidence prevailed in this very courtroom only two days ago, we must not neglect it. I don’t suppose you made an effort to wipe the bottles clean of any fingerprints that may have been left by persons who handled them prior to your discovery?”
“Wipe them clean?” Finney darted a surprised look at the prosecutor. “No, I didn’t see any reason to—”
“Very good, Detective. Now, then, did you make any effort to refrain from leaving your fingerprints on the bottles?”
Kate noticed that the judge seemed to be listening with a greater interest.
Finney frowned. “Well, no. I had to put on the labels, y’see, which means that—”
“So we are likely to find your fingerprints on all three of these bottles?”
“I suppose,” Finney said, now quite clearly nettled. “But I don’t know what you’re—”
Sims had gotten to his feet. “I would like to ask my estimable friend what he—”
“Thank you, Detective,” Savidge said. “That will be all.”
The judge was leaning forward, a slight frown on his face. “Does counsel for the defense wish to explain to the jury what fingerprints are? I rather think that most of them are puzzled.”
“I do indeed, but not at the present time, may it please your lordship,” Savidge replied. “I expect to have occasion to do so later.”
“Very well.” The judge took out his gold watch and consulted. “Twenty minutes to the luncheon adjournment.” He peered down at the prosecution. “Mr. Sims? Will that be sufficient time to present your next witness?”
“I believe so, Your Honor,” Sims replied. With a sidelong glance at Savidge, he added, “Unless my honored colleague plans a lengthy cross-examination.”
Savidge smiled.
“We’ll risk it,” the judge said, and tapped his gavel. “Proceed, Mr. Sims.”
“Call Mr. George Baker,” the prosecution said.
Mr. George Baker, sworn, identified himself as a chemist employed by Scotland Yard to conduct routine chemical analyses. He had, he testified, analyzed the contents of three ginger-beer bottles brought to him by Detective Finney.
“And what did your analysis reveal, Mr. Baker?” asked Sims.
Mr. Baker spoke with the precision that Kate might have expected from a chemist. “In the bottle labeled
one,
I found two hundred and ten milliliters of nitric acid. In the bottle labeled
two,
I found two hundred and fifty of the same substance. In the bottle labeled
three,
I found a hundred and seventy-five milliliters.”
“A little over a pint, all told.” Sims’s face was somber. He seemed to suppress a small shudder. “And how might an Anarchist use nitric acid? As a weapon, I mean.”
“In concentrated form, it can cause severe burns—thrown into a person’s face, for instance. And it is an active ingredient of nitroglycerine, a well-known explosive.”
“I see.” Sims paused. “And to make nitroglycerine, you also need—”
“Glycerine, of course.” At this elementary answer, Mr. Baker smiled in a self-deprecating way.
The courtroom buzzed. The judge rapped his gavel sharply. Sims raised his voice over the hubbub. “You’ve had an opportunity to analyze the contents of the bottle labeled Exhibit C, Mr. Baker?”
“Yes. It contains glycerine.”
“So the Anarchists had, ready at hand, the ingredients of a powerful explosive. Is that not correct?”
“That’s correct, sir. And nitroglycerine is the explosive compound in dynamite.”
There was an audible gasp in the court, and several small squeals from the more fashionably-dressed of the ladies. One fanned herself, while another appeared to be searching in her reticule for her salts. The journalists and artists along the wall were scribbling and sketching madly. Kate looked at Charles and saw that he wore a faint smile.
The prosecutor cast a sympathetic glance at the spectators. “But there is nothing to fear from these bottles, I understand, since the substances are not in combination. The ladies in this court are safe, are they not?”
“Yes,” Baker said dryly, “they are safe.”
“However, since each of these four bottles contains an ingredient of an explosive, each therefore falls under the sanctions of the Explosives Act.” He put on a pair of reading glasses, took a sheet of paper from his assistant, and read aloud, “ ‘Explosives are to be defined as any apparatus or substance used or adapted for causing, or aiding in causing, any explosion.’ Is that correct?”
“That is correct.”
Sims cast a triumphant glance in the direction of the defense. “Then, sir, we are justified in calling these containers of explosives ‘bombs,’ are we not?”
“I believe so, sir,” Baker said.
“That will be all, Mr. Baker,” Sims said conclusively, and swept to his seat.
Savidge rose. “I have several questions of the witness.”
The judge pursed his lips. “You
will
be brief, won’t you, Counsel?”
Savidge bowed. “I fear I cannot promise, my lord. However, I shall certainly try to—”
The judge gave an audible sigh. “Proceed.”
“Very well. Mr. Baker, the nitric acid that you found in the bottles labeled
one, two,
and
three.
Does it have any purpose other than the manufacture of explosive?”
The chemist spoke somewhat reluctantly. “Nitric acid has many industrial uses related to metallurgy. It is also used to make certain fertilizers.”
“It could be used to etch metal printing plates, could it not?”
Mr. Baker was wary. “So I understand.”
“So it might not be surprising if nitric acid were found in the possession of a printer? And what about glycerine?”
“Glycerine,” Mr. Baker acknowledged slowly, “has a number of applications related to medicine.”
“It is used in soap, is it not? And in other cleaners? Could not Dr. Gabriel’s Pure Medicinal Glycerine also be used to remove printers’ ink from hands and equipment?”
“If you’re suggesting that—”