Thanks a lot Mark.
div>
As you say, ‘rather suspect’: Goodman uses the same possibility, ‘By standing at the top of the entry between No 19 and No 21 (the end farthest from the street, where it meets the entry running behind the houses), Qualtrough would have had both exits covered: the back-yard door of No 29 would have been fully visible to him; and, if Wallace had decided to leave by the front, Qualtrough would have seen him as he walked along the street and passed the bottom of the entry’. In this, I assume Goodman had to have been working under the assumption that Qualtrough would have seen him journeying to St Margaret’s to get his tram – surely Goodman wouldn’t have thought that Wallace would have taken a convoluted route to the Rochester Road stop to get a bus up Breck Road (this would assume that Wallace would have used the entry between 12 and 14 Wolverton) when there was a stop at the end of Richmond Park. If he would have used the front door to reach the Richmond Park Stop through the entry by the dance hall, how would Qualtrough have know that shadowy figure at the end of the darkened entry was Wallace?
Bookmarks