That Mainwaring Affair eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 378 pages of information about That Mainwaring Affair.

That Mainwaring Affair eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 378 pages of information about That Mainwaring Affair.

Again the silence deepened as the white-haired gentleman, with great dignity, took his place upon the stand.  His heavy, sonorous tones rang out over the court-room, while from time to time the piercing eyes beneath the beetling, snow-white brows sought the face of Ralph Mainwaring with their silent but unmistakable challenge.  At the first sound of his voice, Mrs. LaGrange’s agitation increased perceptibly; her expression changed to abject terror, yet she seemed unable to move or to withdraw her gaze from his face.

To the question, “Where were you born?” the witness replied, “I was born in London, but for the past forty-five years have been a resident of Melbourne, Australia.”

“Are you not connected with the Mainwaring family?”

“Distantly.  The Scott and Mainwaring families have intermarried for many years, but I have waived all claims of relationship for nearly half a century.”

“Were you acquainted with the Harold Scott Mainwaring mentioned in this will?”

“Intimately acquainted with him, as we were associated together in business during his entire stay in Australia.”

“In what business were you engaged?”

“In the sheep business, principally; we were also interested in the mines.”

“For how long a time were you associated together?”

“Six years, or thereabouts.”

“Mr. Scott, you are the foster-father of Harold Scott Mainwaring who has just preceded you upon the witness stand, are you not?”

“I am, and have been from the day of his birth.”

“Will you state the circumstances under which you became his foster-parent?”

“Harold Scott Mainwaring, the elder son of Ralph Maxwell Mainwaring, came to Australia within a year after the marriage for which he was disinherited.  His reason for leaving England was not, as many have supposed, on account of his father’s severity, but because of the discovery of his wife’s infidelity after all that he had sacrificed for her.  He brought her to Australia in the vain hope that, removed from other influences — the influence of his own brother, in particular, — she would yet prove true to him.  Within the following year, his son was born; but before that event he had fully learned the character of the woman he had married, and he determined that no child of his should be disgraced by any knowledge of its mother, or contaminated by association with her.  To my wife and myself he confided his plans, and, as we had no children of our own, he pledged us to the adoption of his child while yet unborn.  An old and trusted nurse in our family was also taken into the secret, but not the physician employed on that occasion, as he was a man of no principle and already in league with the false wife against her husband.  When the child was born, Mrs. Mainwaring was very ill and the babe received comparatively little notice from the attendant physician.  A dead child, born but a few hours earlier, was therefore easily substituted for the living child of Harold Mainwaring, while the latter was secretly conveyed to my own home.

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That Mainwaring Affair from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.