Page:The Great Harry Thaw Case.djvu/112

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but the woman in the case was a very bad one and he did not think the case was much good.

"Then he said Thaw was a very bad man, and, above all things, I must be protected from him. Mr. White then said that the other man was to get Harry Thaw out of New York and keep him out.

"They asked me if I went to Europe of my own accord, and I said I certainly had. I said I remained in Europe after my mother left because I had quarreled with her and could not dance for a year, and I liked Mr. Thaw very much and could not do anything else.

"'Nevertheless,' Hummel said, 'you are a minor and he should not have taken you away from your mother.' I said he did not take me away.

"Mr. White said that strong methods must be resorted to to keep Thaw out of New York, and to protect myself I must help in every way I could.

"Mr. White said I must leave everything in Mr. Hummel's hands. Then they sent for a stenographer, and the lawyer said I must not interrupt him in what he was about to say. I was very nervous and excited, and I think I began to cry. Then they began to dictate and put in a lot of stuff that I had been carried away by Harry Thaw against my will. I started to interrupt, but the lawyer put up his hands and stopped me.

"They put in that I had been taken away from my mother and a lot of stuff that was not true—that