go on. You met Mr. Aylmore
close to Waterloo Bridge? How close?"
"Well, sir, to be exact, Mr. Aylmore came down the steps from the
bridge on to the Embankment."
"Alone?"
"No."
"Who was with him?"
"A man, sir."
"Did you know the man?"
"No. But seeing who he was with. I took a good look at him. I haven't
forgotten his face."
"You haven't forgotten his face. Mr. Lyell--has anything recalled that
face to you within this last day or two?"
"Yes, sir, indeed!"
"What?"
"The picture of the man they say was murdered--John Marbury."
"You're sure of that?"
"I'm as certain, sir, as that my name's what it is."
"It is your belief that Mr. Aylmore, when you met him, was accompanied
by the man who, according to the photographs, was John Marbury?"
"It is, sir!"
"Very well. Now, having seen Mr. Aylmore and his companion, what did
you do?"
"Oh, I just turned and walked after them."
"You walked after them? They were going eastward, then?"
"They were walking by the way I'd come."
"You followed them eastward?"
"I did--I was going back to the hotel, you see."
"What were they doing?"
"Talking uncommonly earnestly, sir."
"How far did you follow them?"
"I followed them until they came to the Embankment lodge of Middle
Temple Lane, sir."
"And then?"
"Why, sir, they turned in there, and I went straight on to De Keyser's,
and to my bed."
There was a deeper silence in court at that moment than at any other
period of the long day, and it grew still deeper when the quiet, keen
voice put the next question.
"You swear on your oath that you saw Mr. Aylmore take his companion
into the Temple by the Embankment entrance of Middle Temple Lane on the
occasion in question?"
"I do! I could swear no other, sir."
"Can you tell us, as near as possible, what time that would be?"
"Yes. It was, to a minute or so, about five minutes past twelve."
The Treasury Counsel nodded to the Coroner, and the Coroner, after a
whispered conference with the foreman of the jury, looked at the
witness.
"You have only just given this information to the police, I
understand?" he said.
"Yes, sir. I have been in Paris, and in Amiens, and I only returned by
this morning's boat. As soon as I had read all the news in the
papers--the English papers--and seen the dead man's photographs I
determined to tell the police what I knew, and I went to New Scotland
Yard as soon as I got to London this morning."
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