thinking that he knew me in America, for I have certainly never set foot in America, neither North nor South, in my life! I am very much surprised indeed to be forced into publicity as I have been this morning⁠—I came here as a merely curious spectator and had no idea whatever that I should be called into this box. But if any evidence of mine can establish, or help to establish, the prisoner’s innocence, I will give it only too gladly.”

“Much obliged to you, sir,” said Mr. Millington-Bywater, who, in Viner’s opinion, was evidently impressed by the witness’s straightforward tone and candid demeanour.

“Well, if you will tell us⁠—in your own way⁠—about these papers, now⁠—always remembering that we have absolute proof that until recently they were in the possession of John Ashton? Let me preface whatever you choose to tell us with a question: Do you know that they were in possession of John Ashton?”

“I have no more idea or knowledge of whose hands they were in, and had been in, for many years, until they were restored to me, than the man in the moon has!” affirmed the witness. “I’ll tell you the whole story⁠—willingly: I could have told it yesterday to certain gentlemen, whom I see present, if they had not treated me as an impostor as soon as they saw me. Well,”⁠—here he folded his hands on the ledge of the witness-box, and quietly fixing his eyes on the examining counsel, proceeded to speak in a calm, conversational tone⁠—“the story is this: I left England about five-and-thirty years ago after certain domestic unpleasantnesses which I felt so much that I determined to give up all connection with my family and to start an absolutely new life of my own. I went away to Australia and landed there under the name of Wickham. I had a certain amount of money which had come to me from my mother. I speculated with it on my arrival, somewhat foolishly, no doubt, and I lost it⁠—every penny.

“So then I was obliged to work for my living. I went up country, and for some time worked as a miner in the Bendigo district. I had been working in this way perhaps fourteen months when an accident occurred in the mine at which I was engaged. There was a serious fall of earth and masonry; two or three of my fellow-workers were killed on the spot, and I was taken up for dead. I was removed to a local hospital⁠—there had been some serious injury to my head and spine, but I still had life in me, and I was brought round. But I remained in hospital, in a sort of semiconscious state, for a long time⁠—months. When I went back, after my discharge, to my quarters⁠—nothing but a rough shanty which I had shared with many other men⁠—all my possessions had vanished. Among them, of course, were the papers I had kept, and a packet of letters written to me by my mother when I was a schoolboy at Eton.

“Of course, I knew at once what had happened⁠—some one of my mates, believing me to be dead, had appropriated all my belongings and gone off with them. There was nothing at all to be wondered at in that⁠—it was the usual thing in such a society. And I knew there was nothing to do but to accept my loss philosophically.”

“Did you make no effort to recover your possessions?” asked Mr. Millington-Bywater.

“No,” answered the witness with a quiet smile. “I didn’t! I knew too much of the habits of men in mining centers to waste time in that way. A great many men had left that particular camp during my illness⁠—it would have been impossible to trace each one. No⁠—after all, I had left England in order to lose my identity, and now, of course, it was gone. I went away into quite another part of the country⁠—into Queensland. I began trading in Brisbane, and I did very well there, and remained there many years. Then I went farther south, to Sydney⁠—and I did very well there too. It was in Sydney, years after that, that I saw the advertisements in the newspapers, English and Colonial, setting forth that my father was dead, and asking for news of myself. I took no notice of them⁠—I had not the least desire to return to England, no wish for the title, and I was quite content that my youngest brother should get that and the estates. So I did nothing; nobody knew who I really was⁠—”

“One moment!” said Mr. Millington-Bywater. “While you were at the mining-camp, in the Bendigo district, did you ever reveal your secret to any of your fellow-miners?”

“Never!” answered the witness. “I never revealed it to a living soul until I told my solicitor there, Mr. Methley, after my recent arrival in London.”

“But of course, whoever stole your letters and so on, would discover, or guess at, the truth?” suggested Mr. Millington-Bywater.

“Oh, of course, of course!” said the witness. “Well as I was saying, I did nothing⁠—except to keep an eye on the papers. I saw in due course that leave to presume my death had been given, and that my younger brother had assumed the title, and administered the estate, and I was quite content. The fact was, I was at that time doing exceedingly well, and I was too much interested in my doings to care about what was going on in England. All my life,” continued the witness, with a slight smile, “I have had a⁠—I had better call it a weakness⁠—for speculating; and when I had got a goodly sum of money together by my trading venture in Brisbane and Sydney, I began speculating again, in Melbourne chiefly. And⁠—to cut my story short⁠—last year I had one of my periodic bad turns of fortune: I lost a lot of money. Now, I am, as you see, getting on in life, over sixty⁠—and it occurred to me that if

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