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{754}
"Can you remember the words in which he alluded to his wife and son?"
"Perfectly; I wrote them in the memorandum addressed to Mr. Atherton, and which Mr. Merrivale has communicated to you."
The Chief-Justice: "Read the extract, brother Donaldson."
Sergeant Donaldson read as follows: "'Five-and-twenty years ago I married one much younger than myself, an orphan living with an aunt, her only relative, and who died shortly after our marriage. My ruling pa.s.sion was speculation; and I married her, not for love, but for her fortune, which was large; I coveted it for the indulgence of my pa.s.sion. She was not happy with me, and I took no pains to make her happier. Few knew of our marriage. I kept her at the Grange till she died. Only _I_ and _one other person_ were with her at her death. She gave birth to one child, a boy. Ho grew up an idiot, and I hated him.
But I wish to make reparation to my dead wife in the person of her son--not out of love to her memory, but to _defeat the plans of others, and in expiation of me wrong done to her_. I have never loved any one in my life but my twin-sister, Hugh Atherton's mother: and him for her sake and his own.' And then, my lord, follow the instructions for the will given to Mr. Kavanagh." To the witness: "Did Mr.
Thorneley give you any clue to the '_other person_' who was with him at his wife's death?"
"None at all."
"When you met the prisoner in Vere street, did he say he was going to visit his uncle then?"
"No; on the contrary, he seemed anxious to come home with me. I should imagine it was an after-thought."
"Mr. Wilmot has stated that you _volunteered_ to give evidence against the prisoner: is it so?"
"No; it is most false. I was surprised by detective Jones into an admission; and when I found that it would be used against Mr.
Atherton, I did all in my power to get off attending the inquest."
Reexamined by the Solicitor-General: "It was against your consent that the prisoner was engaged to your ward Miss Leslie, was it not?"
"Against my consent! a.s.suredly not. She bad my consent from the beginning."
"You may go, Mr. Kavanagh."
The witness who succeeded me was the housekeeper. It was observed that she did not maintain the same calmness as at the inquest; but her evidence was perfectly consistent, given perhaps with more eagerness, but differing and varying in no essential point from her previous depositions.
Questioned as to whether she had been aware of Mr. Thorneley's marriage, replied she had not, having always been in charge of his house in town, first in the city and afterward in Wimpole street. He had often been from home for many weeks together, but she never knew where he went.
Cross-examined.--Could swear she had poured no ale out in the tumbler before taking it into the study--Barker had been with her all the time--nor yet in the room.
Sergeant Donaldson: "Now, Mrs. Haag, attend to me. How long have you been a widow?"
"Fifteen years."
"What was your husband?"
"A commercial traveller. He was not successful, and I went into service soon after I married."
"Had you any children?"
"One son. He died."
"When?"
"Years ago."
"How many years ago?"
"Twenty years ago."
"Is Haag your married name?"
"Yes."
"Did you bear the name of Bradley?"
"I never bore such a name. I am a Belgian; so was my husband."
{755}
A paper was here pa.s.sed in to Sergeant Donaldson, and handed by him to the judges.
The Chief-Justice: "This is a certificate of marriage celebrated at Plymouth between Maria Haag, spinster, and Robert Bradley, bachelor, dated June, 1829, and witnessed in proper legal form."
Witness: "I know nothing of it. My name is Haag by marriage. I am very faint; let me go away."
A chair and gla.s.s of water were brought to the witness. In a few moments she had recovered and the cross-examination was renewed.
"How came it that you were met in the middle of Vere street, when, by your own showing, you must then have turned out of the street before Mr. Kavanagh could have overtaken you?"
"Mr. Kavanagh did not meet me. I have so said before. I went straight home after pa.s.sing him and Mr. Atherton at the chemist's shop. He is mistaken."
"What took you to Peterborough on the 30th of last month?"
"I went to visit a friend at Spalding."
"How was it, then, that you returned to London by the twelve o'clock train the following day--I mean arrived in London at that hour?"
Witness hesitated for some time, and at last looked up defiantly.
"What right have you to ask me such a question?"
Baron Watson: "You are bound to answer, Mrs. Haag."
Witness confusedly: "I did not find my friend at home."
Sergeant Donaldson: "Do you mean to say you took that journey with the chance of finding your friend away?"
"I did."
To the Chief-Justice: "My lord, I am informed by Inspector Keene, of the detective service, that Mrs. Haag never visited Spalding at all; that she took a ticket for Stixwould, at which station she got out, and from which station she returned the following day."
Baron Watson: "I don't see what you are trying to prove, brother Donaldson."
"I am trying to prove, my lord, that Mrs. Haag is not a witness upon whose veracity we can rely."