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<h1>The Stillwater Tragedy</h1>
<p>By Thomas Bailey Aldrich</p>
<h2>I</h2>
<p>It is close upon daybreak. The great wall of pines and
hemlocks that keep off the west wind from Stillwater stretches
black and indeterminate against the sky. At intervals a dull,
metallic sound, like the guttural twang of a violin string, rises
form the frog-invested swamp skirting the highway. Suddenly the
birds stir in their nests over there in the woodland, and break
into that wild jargoning chorus with which they herald the advent
of a new day. In the apple-orchards and among the plum-trees of
the few gardens in Stillwater, the wrens and the robins and the
blue-jays catch up the crystal crescendo, and what a melodious
racket they make of it with their fifes and flutes and
flageolets!</p>
<p>The village lies in a trance like death. Possibly not a soul
hears this music, unless it is the watchers at the bedside of Mr.
Leonard Tappleton, the richest man in town, who has lain dying
these three days, and cannot last until sunrise. Or perhaps some
mother, drowsily hushing her wakeful baby, pauses a moment and
listens vacantly to the birds singing. But who else?</p>
<p>The hubbub suddenly ceases,--ceases as suddenly as it
began,--and all is still again in the woodland. But it is not so
dark as before. A faint glow of white light is discernible behind
the ragged line of the tree-tops. The deluge of the darkness is
receding from the face of the earth, as the mighty waters receded
of old.</p>
<p>The roofs and tall factory chimneys of Stillwater are slowly
taking shape in the gloom. Is that a cemetery coming into view
yonder, with its ghostly architecture of obelisks and broken
columns and huddled head-stones? No, that is only Slocum's Marble
Yard, with the finished and unfinished work heaped up like
snowdrifts,--a cemetery in embryo. Here and there in an outlying
farm a lantern glimmers in the barn-yard: the cattle are having
their fodder betimes. Scarlet-capped chanticleer gets himself on
the nearest rail-fence and lifts up his rancorous voice like some
irate old cardinal launching the curse of Rome. Something crawls
swiftly along the gray of the serpentine turnpike,--a cart, with
the driver lashing a jaded horse. A quick wind goes shivering by,
and is lost in the forest.</p>
<p>Now a narrow strip of two-colored gold stretches along the
horizon.</p>
<p>Stillwater is gradually coming to its senses. The sun has
begun to twinkle on the gilt cross of the Catholic chapel and
make itself known to the doves in the stone belfry of the South
Church. The patches of cobweb that here and there cling
tremulously to the coarse grass of the inundated meadows have
turned into silver nets, and the mill-pond--it will be steel-blue
later--is as smooth and white as if it had been paved with one
vast unbroken slab out of Slocum's Marble Yard. Through a row of
button-woods on the northern skirt of the village is seen a
square, lap-streaked building, painted a disagreeable brown, and
surrounded on three sides by a platform,--one of seven or eight
similar stations strung like Indian heads on a branch thread of
the Great Sagamore Railway.</p>
<p>Listen! That is the jingle of the bells on the baker's cart as
it begins its rounds. From innumerable chimneys the curdled smoke
gives evidence that the thrifty housewife--or, what is rarer in
Stillwater, the hired girl--has lighted the kitchen fire.</p>
<p>The chimney-stack of one house at the end of a small
court--the last house on the easterly edge of the village, and
standing quite alone--sends up no smoke. Yet the carefully
trained ivy over the porch, and the lemon verbena in a tub at the
foot of the steps, intimate that the place is not unoccupied.
Moreover, the little schooner which acts as weather-cock on one
of the gables, and is now heading due west, has a new top-sail.
It is a story-and-a-half cottage, with a large expanse of roof,
which, covered with porous, unpainted shingles, seems to repel
the sunshine that now strikes full upon it. The upper and lower
blinds on the main building, as well as those on the extensions,
are tightly closed. The sun appears to beat in vain at the
casements of this silent house, which has a curiously sullen and
defiant air, as if it had desperately and successfully barricaded
itself against the approach of morning; yet if one were standing
in the room that leads from the bed-chamber on the
ground-floor--the room with the latticed window--one would see a
ray of light thrust through a chink of the shutters, and pointing
like a human finger at an object which lies by the hearth.</p>
<p>This finger, gleaming, motionless, and awful in its precision,
points to the body of old Mr. Lemuel Shackford, who lies there
dead in his night-dress, with a gash across his forehead.</p>
<p>In the darkness of that summer night a deed darker than the
night itself had been done in Stillwater.</p>
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