THE HS Scenario (Continued)
HS,
I think the staging of the robbery is more plausible after the murder. Let's handle it then. I have now added the crucial minute and most distinctive aspect of your proposed scenario - that the mackintosh ignited before the attack.
6:35PM. According to his trial testimony, David Jones delivers the Echo to No. 29. He sees no lights on (there is a deep fanlight window above the front door) or hears no one inside. He also sees no one else in Wolverton Street.
Inference 1: Julia and William Wallace are in the kitchen with the hall door closed.
Inference 2: Given testimony of teenagers (and broadly consistent with both Holmes and Johnston), Alan Close had not yet arrived to deliver milk.
6:36PM. Julia retrieves the Echo and takes it back to the kitchen to read.
Justification: The newspaper was found on the table by her seat - open at the centre pages, I believe.
6.37PM. Alan Close knocks on the door of No. 29. He leaves a can of milk on the doorstep and goes to No. 31. Julia retrieves can, leaves the front door open but closes the vestibule door, and returns to the kitchen to fill her milk jug. Close returns to No. 29. James Wildman is at No. 27 delivering a paper. He looks across and sees Close with the door of No. 29 wide open.
As Julia returns to the front door, Wallace enters the front room and lights the gas lamp.
Assumption: The vestibule door was closed, allowing Wallace to enter the front room unseen by Close.
6:38PM. Julia opens vestibule door and hands the empty can to Close, with whom she exchanges a few words. The front door closes. Pretending to check his appearance in the mirror, Wallace asks Julia to bring him his mackintosh.
6:39PM. Wallace asks Julia to light the fire in the front room [P1]. Wallace helps light the fire [P2]. As he does so, the mackintosh he is holding falls onto the fire clays and ignites [P3]. The flames on the mackintosh are extinguished.
6:40PM. Wallace picks up the iron bar on the hearth... TO BE CONTINUED.
I have highlighted three premises in 6:39, as I understand the proposal to be. I think we can ask questions of each.
P1. Why is the fire being lit? Wallace is going out and Julia is in the warm kitchen reading the newspaper. The front room is used sparingly for musical evenings and entertaining visitors (and the evidence we have supports this). More importantly, Wallace can strike without the fire being lit.
P2. Why does Wallace get involved? The fire is lit by turning on the gas and lighting a match. Perhaps Wallace lights it... but back to P1.
P3. The fire clays are recessed into the wall inside the chimney breast. He would have to stand right on the hearth and right by the fire as it is being lit. The only way I can see Wallace draping the mackintosh in the fire is if he did it deliberately. I concede it is an oddity in any scenario, but this one is quite hard to reconcile with general experience.
Of course, I may have misread your proposal. Or we can amend it.
In my opinion:
a) The burnt mackintosh implies the front room fire was lit
b) The front room fire was lit only if there was (i) a visitor or (ii) a musical evening.
The only way I can think of supporting P1 is if Wallace told Julia he was meeting Qualtrough and then was going to return with him. But - again - why strike when the fire was lit? As soon as Julia turns and bends down - bang! First blow before she even turns on the gas and the blood splatter would have been to the right of the fireplace (as I believe that's where the regulator was - I will need to check this point).
HS,
I think the staging of the robbery is more plausible after the murder. Let's handle it then. I have now added the crucial minute and most distinctive aspect of your proposed scenario - that the mackintosh ignited before the attack.
6:35PM. According to his trial testimony, David Jones delivers the Echo to No. 29. He sees no lights on (there is a deep fanlight window above the front door) or hears no one inside. He also sees no one else in Wolverton Street.
Inference 1: Julia and William Wallace are in the kitchen with the hall door closed.
Inference 2: Given testimony of teenagers (and broadly consistent with both Holmes and Johnston), Alan Close had not yet arrived to deliver milk.
6:36PM. Julia retrieves the Echo and takes it back to the kitchen to read.
Justification: The newspaper was found on the table by her seat - open at the centre pages, I believe.
6.37PM. Alan Close knocks on the door of No. 29. He leaves a can of milk on the doorstep and goes to No. 31. Julia retrieves can, leaves the front door open but closes the vestibule door, and returns to the kitchen to fill her milk jug. Close returns to No. 29. James Wildman is at No. 27 delivering a paper. He looks across and sees Close with the door of No. 29 wide open.
As Julia returns to the front door, Wallace enters the front room and lights the gas lamp.
Assumption: The vestibule door was closed, allowing Wallace to enter the front room unseen by Close.
6:38PM. Julia opens vestibule door and hands the empty can to Close, with whom she exchanges a few words. The front door closes. Pretending to check his appearance in the mirror, Wallace asks Julia to bring him his mackintosh.
6:39PM. Wallace asks Julia to light the fire in the front room [P1]. Wallace helps light the fire [P2]. As he does so, the mackintosh he is holding falls onto the fire clays and ignites [P3]. The flames on the mackintosh are extinguished.
6:40PM. Wallace picks up the iron bar on the hearth... TO BE CONTINUED.
I have highlighted three premises in 6:39, as I understand the proposal to be. I think we can ask questions of each.
P1. Why is the fire being lit? Wallace is going out and Julia is in the warm kitchen reading the newspaper. The front room is used sparingly for musical evenings and entertaining visitors (and the evidence we have supports this). More importantly, Wallace can strike without the fire being lit.
P2. Why does Wallace get involved? The fire is lit by turning on the gas and lighting a match. Perhaps Wallace lights it... but back to P1.
P3. The fire clays are recessed into the wall inside the chimney breast. He would have to stand right on the hearth and right by the fire as it is being lit. The only way I can see Wallace draping the mackintosh in the fire is if he did it deliberately. I concede it is an oddity in any scenario, but this one is quite hard to reconcile with general experience.
Of course, I may have misread your proposal. Or we can amend it.
In my opinion:
a) The burnt mackintosh implies the front room fire was lit
b) The front room fire was lit only if there was (i) a visitor or (ii) a musical evening.
The only way I can think of supporting P1 is if Wallace told Julia he was meeting Qualtrough and then was going to return with him. But - again - why strike when the fire was lit? As soon as Julia turns and bends down - bang! First blow before she even turns on the gas and the blood splatter would have been to the right of the fireplace (as I believe that's where the regulator was - I will need to check this point).
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