"'No, sir.'
"'What was he like?'
"'A young gentleman, sir, as far as I can remember, in an Inverness cape and Glengarry cap, but I could not see his face very well as he stood with his back to the light, and the cap shaded his eyes, and he only spoke to me for a minute.'
"'Look all round you,' said the coroner quietly. 'Is there any one in this court at all like the gentleman you speak of?'
"An awed hush fell over the many spectators there present as Peter Tyrrell, the night porter of the Castle Hotel, turned his head towards the body of the court and slowly scanned the many faces there present; for a moment he seemed to hesitate—only for a moment though, then, as if vaguely conscious of the terrible importance his next words might have, he shook his head gravely and said:
"'I wouldn't like to swear.'
"The coroner tried to press him, but with true British stolidity he repeated: 'I wouldn't like to say.'
"'Well, then, what happened?' asked the coroner, who had perforce to abandon his point.
"'The gentleman went upstairs, sir, and about a quarter of an hour later he come down again, and I let him out. He was in a great hurry then, he threw me a half-crown and said: "Good night."'
"'And though you saw him again then, you cannot tell us if you would know him again?'