"Now, Mr. de Mountford, on the night in question, you say you went to see the deceased at the Veterans" Club. You were, I understand, shown into the smoking room?"
"Yes," was the simple answer.
"Your cousin was in the room?"
"Yes."
"Alone?"
"Alone."
"And how long did your interview with him last?"
"About an hour or less, perhaps."
"Was it of an amicable character?"
This question was identical to the one already put to Luke on the actual night of the crime, by the detective charged to elucidate its mysteries. And Luke"s reply was identical to his former one:
"Of an indifferent character," he replied.
"There was no quarrel between you and the deceased gentleman?"
"Our interview was of a private nature," rejoined Luke with unalterable calm.
"But other witnesses," retorted the coroner sharply, "heard angry voices issuing from the smoking room."
"That no doubt is for those other witnesses to say."
"You deny then that you quarrelled with the deceased on the night when he was murdered?"
"I deny nothing. I am not on my trial, I presume."
Again a pause. The coroner closed his eyes and stroked his heavy chin.
He had not yet succeeded in chipping the smooth surface of the ice.
"At what precise hour then did you last see the deceased alive?" he asked, allowing his voice once more to appear harsh and his manner more peremptory.
"At nine o"clock or thereabouts, the night before last."
"Where was that?"
"He was in the lobby of the Veterans" Club and I just outside."
"He made certain remarks to the hall porter at that moment, which offended you very deeply, I understand."
"Mr. Philip de Mountford was not always guarded in his speech when he spoke to servants."
"And his remarks offended you?"
"My opinion on this point is of no consequence, I imagine."
"You then left the door step of the Veterans" Club, and a moment later the deceased joined you in the street."
"I finally left the club soon after nine, but I did not again see Mr.
Philip de Mountford alive."
"The deceased suggested that you should come with him then and there to see Lord Radclyffe at Grosvenor Square; he hailed a taxicab and you entered it with him," insisted the coroner with sudden, slow emphasis.
"I last saw Mr. Philip de Mountford alive in the lobby of the Veterans" Club," reiterated Luke calmly, "soon after nine o"clock."
"He overtook you in the street outside the club?"
"It is not true."
"And hailed a cab?"
"He may have done so, but not in my company."
"You entered the cab with him, and he told the driver to follow along Piccadilly."
"He may have done so," once more reiterated Luke in the same calm and even voice, "but not in my company."
"You parted from him in the lobby of the club?"
"I have told you so."
"And you never saw him again after that?"
"Never."
"You were not with him when he came out of the club?"
"No."
"When he hailed a taxicab?"
"No."
"You were not with him when he entered the cab and put his head out of the window, telling the driver to go along Piccadilly until he was stopped?"
"No."
The answers had come clear, sharp, and distinct, quick ripostes of the foils against the violent attack. Now the adversary drew breath. The pause was dramatic in its effect, far-reaching in its significance.
The coroner with eyes steadily fixed on the witness made a quick movement with his hand. He drew away the long narrow strip of green baize in front of him, revealing a snake-wood stick, with ferrule stained and tarnished.
"Is this your stick?" he asked curtly.