‘I’ve managed to get you a few minutes with the accused,’ Tilling had told him. ‘Just try to convince the man to say something in his defence.’
They entered the dock and followed the rickety staircase down into an underground passageway that led from the courtroom through a number of guarded and fortified doors to the condemned block at Newgate prison and the press room where Arthur Sobers was being pinioned by an army of turnkeys. Somehow the restraints they were placing around his arms and shoulders seemed wholly inadequate for the task, and briefly Pyke imagined the big man sneezing and the leather straps flying loose from their fixings.
Because he was hunched on a chair while the turnkeys finished their job, it was hard for Pyke to get a proper sense of the man’s size, but even through the leather restraints Pyke could see that his shoulders were like an ox’s and his neck was thicker than Felix’s waist. Sobers’ general demeanour was that of a beaten man, however, and when, a few minutes later, Pyke sat down on a chair next to him and tried to elicit his attention, it was as if he were looking at someone who wasn’t there.
‘I want to help you, Arthur,’ Pyke said, staring into the man’s eyes. ‘I don’t believe you killed Mary Edgar.’
Sobers barely twitched and his stare remained as blank as a fresh sheet of paper.
‘A pornographer called Jemmy Crane sent some of his men to threaten you and Mary at your lodging house on the Ratcliff Highway. Can you tell me what that was about?’
This time a flash of recognition passed across Sobers’ eyes.
‘In less than an hour, you’ll stand trial for killing Mary Edgar. If you don’t say anything, if you don’t let me help, they’ll find you guilty and men like Crane and Silas Malvern will escape punishment. Is that what you want?’
Sobers’ body stiffened at the mention of Malvern’s name, but when Pyke tried to press him, the big man’s attention was lost once more.
‘Will you at least tell me why you accompanied Mary Edgar from Jamaica?’ When Sobers didn’t answer, Pyke let his frustration show for the first time. ‘Mary’s dead, for Christ’s sake. She’s not coming back. Who are you being loyal to?’
Sobers continued to ignore him.
‘If you don’t try to defend yourself, they will kill you as surely as night follows day. Is that what you want?’ Pyke could feel the beads of sweat prickling his forehead. ‘Why were you loitering near Elizabeth Malvern’s house when the police arrested you? Do you know her?’
Pyke wanted to grab the big man’s shoulders and shake him but the turnkeys had made it clear he wasn’t to touch the prisoner.
Finally Pyke played his last card. ‘John Harper and Isaac Webb told me to pass on their regards.’
That seemed to garner a reaction; Sobers looked at him, puzzled and intrigued.
‘Did they send you here?’ Pyke asked immediately. ‘Was it their idea that you chaperone Mary?’
But Sobers let his stare fall back to the floor. Pyke sensed he was angry at himself for revealing that he knew Harper and Webb.
‘I’ve just returned from Jamaica. Charles Malvern is dead, so is Michael Pemberton.’
No visible reaction.
‘Don’t you understand? This is your last chance.’ Pyke hesitated. ‘What did Harper and Webb want you to do here in London? Make contact with Phillip Malvern? Was he the blind man you were seen talking to on the Ratcliff Highway?’
Very slowly Sobers raised his gaze to meet Pyke’s. His face was lean and taut, despite his size, and his eyes glowed with a peculiar intensity.
‘Does the term “kill-devil” mean anything to you?’
That registered too, but still Sobers refused to speak.
‘I think Phillip — the man they call Filthy — is in real danger. I need to talk to him.’
Sobers wetted his lips with his fat, pink tongue but said nothing. ‘He hasn’t been seen for a couple of months. Do you know where I can find him?’
Sobers leaned forward in his chair and bowed his head. For a moment Pyke thought he was about to speak.
‘He’s a rat-catcher among other things. Roams the sewers and culverts underneath the city.’
But the next time Sobers looked up at Pyke, his face was once again devoid of expression.
In the hour they’d been gone, the courtroom had filled up almost to its capacity. The jury had taken their seats to the left of the bench, as had the journalists, who sat across from them under the public gallery. The prosecuting barrister was adjusting his horsehair wig and the clerks of court were making last-minute preparations. Pyke took his place next to Saggers in the press gallery and watched Pierce stride into the room accompanied by three constables. They took their positions alongside other witnesses for the prosecution. In front of them, the two judges entered the courtroom and everyone stood up. Finally, they all watched as Arthur Sobers was led into the dock.
Pyke found the whole thing hard to swallow. The wigs, the pomp, the solemnity of the occasion led one to believe that due process was being adhered to. But the verdict was never in question. Sobers’ natural or innate savagery would be given as an explanation for his murderous tendencies and so-called ‘expert’ witnesses would corroborate this view. There would be a flimsy chain of circumstantial evidence linking Sobers to Mary’s murder. The prosecuting barrister would lead the jury through his case unchallenged — and being unchallenged, the man wouldn’t have to temper his assertions. Finally, the jury would retire for a respectable amount of time — long enough to give the impression they’d considered the evidence — and the foreman would stand up and deliver a guilty verdict. The recorder would then congratulate the jury for its verdict and would pass a death sentence on Sobers. All of this would happen and the man would sit there in silence and watch it; afterwards he would have to face those like Pierce who would be slapping each other on the back and congratulating themselves on a job well done.
The assistant judge, the deputy recorder of London, dressed in his ceremonial robes and wig, waited for silence. Having read out the first part of the indictment to the whole court, he turned to Sobers.
‘It is hereby presented that Arthur Sobers, late of the Ratcliff Highway in the county of Middlesex, being of evil disposition and having strayed from God’s righteous path, did on the first day of May in the third year of the reign of our Sovereign Queen Victoria, and with malice aforethought, wilfully murder Mary Edgar, late of the Ratcliff Highway, by strangulation.’ He looked up from the bench and waited for a few moments. ‘How do you plead? Guilty or not guilty?’
All eyes in the courtroom turned to Sobers, whose giant hands were gripping the rail in front of him.
‘Accused, how do you plead?’
Sobers stared back at the deputy recorder and opened his mouth. ‘Guilty.’
For a moment there was consternation in the room and the recorder had to bang his gavel on the bench to restore some semblance of order.
‘Could you repeat your plea for the court, accused.’
‘Guilty,’ Sobers said, his plea carrying right across the courtroom.
‘Do you understand what you are pleading guilty to?’
Sobers nodded. ‘I do.’
The deputy recorder exchanged a glance, and a few words, with the recorder. ‘Do you have anything else you wish to say to the court?’
Sobers stood there, still gripping the rail, but this time said nothing.
‘A few words of contrition? A confession before God?’
Saggers leaned over and whispered, ‘I didn’t see that one coming, did you?’
Pyke was too stunned to speak. Even though he’d heard Sobers as clearly as everyone else he couldn’t reconcile himself to what the big man had just admitted.
There was a general sense of bewilderment and even deflation in the room. People had queued for hours expecting to hear lurid descriptions of bodily mutilations and accounts of the evils of black magic and witchcraft. Now they had to be content with a guilty plea and silence. Even the recorder himself seemed affected by the mood.