<h2>XVIII</h2>
<p>The general effect on Stillwater of Mr. Shackford's death and
the peculiar circumstances attending the tragedy have been set
forth in the earlier chapters of this narrative. The influence
which that event exerted upon several persons then but
imperfectly known to the reader is now to occupy us.</p>
<p>On the conclusion of the strike, Richard had returned, in the
highest spirits, to his own rooms in Lime Street; but the quiet
week that followed found him singularly depressed. His nerves had
been strung to their utmost tension during those thirteen days of
suspense; he had assumed no light responsibility in the matter of
closing the yard, and there had been moments when the task of
sustaining Mr. Slocum had appeared almost hopeless. Now that the
strain was removed a reaction set in, and Richard felt himself
unnerved by the fleeing shadow of the trouble which had not
caused him to flinch so long as it faced him.</p>
<p>On the morning and at the moment when Mary Hennessey was
pushing open the scullery door of the house in Welch's Court, and
was about to come upon the body of the forlorn old man lying
there in his night-dress, Richard sat eating his breakfast in a
silent and preoccupied mood. He had retired very late the
previous night, and his lack-lustre eyes showed the effect of
insufficient sleep. His single fellow-boarder, Mr. Pinkham, had
not returned from his customary early walk, and only Richard and
Mrs. Spooner, the landlady, were at table. The former was in the
act of lifting the coffee-cup to his lips, when the school-master
burst excitedly into the room.</p>
<p>"Old Mr. Shackford is dead!" he exclaimed, dropping into a
chair near the door. "There's a report down in the village that
he has been murdered. I don't know if it is true.... God
forgive my abruptness! I didn't think!" and Mr. Pinkham turned an
apologetic face towards Richard, who sat there deathly pale,
holding the cup rigidly within an inch or two of his lip, and
staring blankly into space like a statue.</p>
<p>"I--I ought to have reflected," murmured the school-master,
covered with confusion at his maladroitness. "It was very
reprehensible in Craggie to make such an announcement to me so
suddenly, on a street corner. I--I was quite upset by it."</p>
<p>Richard pushed back his chair without replying, and passed
into the hall, where he encountered a messenger from Mr. Slocum,
confirming Mr. Pinkham's intelligence, but supplementing it with
the rumor that Lemuel Shackford had committed suicide.</p>
<p>Richard caught up his hat from a table, and hurried to Welch's
Court. Before reaching the house he had somewhat recovered his
outward composure; but he was still pale and internally much
agitated, for he had received a great shock, as Lawyer Perkins
afterwards observed to Mr. Ward in the reading-room of the
tavern. Both these gentlemen were present when Richard arrived,
as were also several of the immediate neighbors and two
constables. The latter were guarding the door against the crowd,
which had already begun to collect in the front yard.</p>
<p>A knot of carpenters, with their tool-boxes on their
shoulders, had halted at the garden gate on their way to Bishop's
new stables, and were glancing curiously at the unpainted
façade of the house, which seemed to have taken on a
remote, bewildered expression, as if it had an inarticulate sense
of the horror within. The men ceased their whispered conversation
as Richard approached, and respectfully moved aside to let him
pass.</p>
<p>Nothing had been changed in the cheerless room on the ground
floor, with its veneered mahogany furniture and its yellowish
leprous wall-paper, peeling off at the seams here and there. A
cane-seated chair, overturned near the table, had been left
untouched, and the body was still lying in the position in which
the Hennessey girl had discovered it. A strange chill--something
unlike any atmospherical sharpness, a chill that seemed to exhale
from the thin, pinched nostrils--permeated the apartment. The
orioles were singing madly outside, their vermilion bosoms
glowing like live coals against the tender green of the foliage,
and appearing to break into flame as they took sudden flights
hither and thither; but within all was still. On entering the
chamber Richard was smitten by the silence,--that silence which
shrouds the dead, and is like no other. Lemuel Shackford had not
been kind or cousinly; he had blighted Richard's childhood with
harshness and neglect, and had lately heaped cruel insult upon
him; but as he stood there alone, and gazed for a moment at the
firmly shut lips, upon which the mysterious white dust of death
had already settled,--the lips that were never to utter any more
bitter things,--the tears gathered in Richard's eyes and ran
slowly down his cheeks. After all said and done, Lemuel Shackford
was his kinsman, and blood is thicker than water!</p>
<p>Coroner Whidden shortly appeared on the scene, accompanied by
a number of persons; a jury was impaneled, and then began that
inquest which resulted in shedding so very little light on the
catastrophe.</p>
<p>The investigation completed, there were endless details to
attend to,--papers to be hurriedly examined and sealed, and
arrangements made for the funeral on the succeeding day. These
matters occupied Richard until late in the afternoon, when he
retired to his lodgings, looking in on Margaret for a few minutes
on his way home.</p>
<p>"This is too dreadful!" said Margaret, clinging to his hand,
with fingers nearly as icy as his own.</p>
<p>"It is unspeakably sad," answered Richard,--"the saddest thing
I ever knew."</p>
<p>"Who--who could have been so cruel?"</p>
<p>Richard shook his head.</p>
<p>"No one knows."</p>
<p>The funeral took place on Thursday, and on Friday morning, as
has been stated, Mr. Taggett arrived in Stillwater, and installed
himself in Welch's Court, to the wonder of many in the village,
who would not have slept a night in that house, with only a
servant in the north gable, for half the universe. Mr. Taggett
was a person who did not allow himself to be swayed by his
imagination.</p>
<p>Here, then, he began his probing of a case which, on the
surface, promised to be a very simple one. The man who had been
seen driving rapidly along the turnpike sometime near daybreak,
on Wednesday, was presumably the man who could tell him all about
it. But it did not prove so. Neither Thomas Blufton, nor William
Durgin, nor any of the tramps subsequently obliged to drop into
autobiography could be connected with the affair.</p>
<p>These first failures served to stimulate Mr. Taggett; it
required a complex case to stir his ingenuity and sagacity. That
the present was not a complex case he was still convinced, after
four days' futile labor upon it. Mr. Shackford had been
killed--either with malice prepense or on the spur of the
moment--for his money. The killing had likely enough not been
premeditated; the old man had probably opposed the robbery. Now,
among the exceptionally rough population of the town there were
possibly fifty men who would not have hesitated to strike down
Mr. Shackford if he had caught them <i>flagrante delicto</i> and
resisted them, or attempted to call for succor. That the crime
was committed by some one in Stillwater or in the neighborhood
Mr. Taggett had never doubted since the day of his arrival. The
clumsy manner in which the staple had been wrenched from the
scullery door showed the absence of a professional hand. Then the
fact that the deceased was in the habit of keeping money in his
bedchamber was a fact well known in the village, and not likely
to be known outside of it, though of course it might have been.
It was clearly necessary for Mr. Taggett to carry his
investigation into the workshops and among the haunts of the
class which was indubitably to furnish him with the individual he
wanted. Above all, it was necessary that the investigation should
be secret. An obstacle obtruded itself here: everybody in
Stillwater knew everybody, and a stranger appearing on the
streets or dropping frequently into the tavern would not escape
comment.</p>
<p>The man with the greatest facility for making the requisite
searches would of course be some workman. But a workman was the
very agent not to be employed under the circumstances. How many
times, and by what strange fatality, had a guilty party been
selected to shadow his own movements, or those of an accomplice!
No, Mr. Taggett must rely only on himself, and his plan forthwith
matured. Its execution, however, was delayed several days, the
cooperation of Mr. Slocum and Mr. Richard Shackford being
indispensable.</p>
<p>At this stage Richard went to New York, where his cousin had
made extensive investments in real estate. For a careful man, the
late Mr. Shackford had allowed his affairs there to become
strangely tangled. The business would detain Richard a
fortnight.</p>
<p>Three days after his departure Mr. Taggett himself left
Stillwater, having apparently given up the case; a proceeding
which was severely criticized, not only in the columns of The
Stillwater Gazette, but by the townsfolks at large, who
immediately relapsed into a state of apprehension approximating
that of the morning when the crime was discovered. Mr. Pinkham,
who was taking tea that evening at the Danas', threw the family
into a panic by asserting his belief that this was merely the
first of a series of artistic assassinations in the manner of
those Memorable Murders recorded by De Quincey. Mr. Pinkham may
have said this to impress the four Dana girls with the variety of
his reading, but the recollection of De Quincey's harrowing paper
had the effect of so unhinging the young school-master that when
he found himself, an hour or two afterwards, in the lonely,
unlighted street he flitted home like a belated ghost, and was
ready to drop at every tree-box.</p>
<p>The next forenoon a new hand was taken on at Slocum's Yard.
The new hand, who had come on foot from South Millville, at which
town he had been set down by the seven o'clock express that
morning, was placed in the apprentice department,--there were
five or six apprentices now. Though all this was part of an
understood arrangement, Mr. Slocum nearly doubted the fidelity of
his own eyes when Mr. Taggett, a smooth-faced young fellow of one
and twenty, if so old, with all the traits of an ordinary workman
down to the neglected fingernails, stepped up to the desk to have
the name of Blake entered on the pay-roll. Either by chance or by
design, Mr. Taggett had appeared but seldom on the streets of
Stillwater; the few persons who had had anything like familiar
intercourse with him in his professional capacity were precisely
the persons with whom his present movements were not likely to
bring him into juxtaposition, and he ran slight risk of
recognition by others. With his hair closely cropped, and the
overhanging brown mustache removed, the man was not so much
disguised as transformed. "I shouldn't have known him!" muttered
Mr. Slocum, as he watched Mr. Taggett passing from the office
with his hat in his hand. During the ensuing ten or twelve days
Mr. Slocum never wholly succeeded in extricating himself from the
foggy uncertainty generated by that one brief interview. From the
moment Mr. Taggett was assigned a bench under the sheds, Mr.
Slocum saw little or nothing of him.</p>
<p>Mr. Taggett took lodging in a room in one of the most crowded
of the low boarding-houses,--a room accommodating two beds
besides his own: the first occupied by a brother neophyte in
marble-cutting, and the second by a morose middle-aged man with
one eyebrow a trifle higher than the other, as if it had been
wrenched out of line by the strain of habitual intoxication. This
man's name was Wollaston, and he worked at Dana's.</p>
<p>Mr. Taggett's initial move was to make himself popular in the
marble yard, and especially at the tavern, where he spent money
freely, though not so freely as to excite any remark except that
the lad was running through pretty much all his small pay,--a
recklessness which was charitably condoned in Snelling's
bar-room. He formed multifarious friendships, and had so many
sensible views on the labor problem, advocating the general
extinguishment of capitalists, and so on, that his admittance to
the Marble Workers' Association resolved itself into merely a
question of time. The old prejudice against apprentices was
already wearing off. The quiet, evasive man of few words was now
a loquacious talker, holding his own with the hardest hitters,
and very skillful in giving offense to no one. "Whoever picks up
Blake for a fool," Dexter remarked one night, "will put him down
again." Not a shadow of suspicion followed Mr. Taggett in his
various comings and goings. He seemed merely a good-natured,
intelligent devil; perhaps a little less devilish and a trifle
more intelligent than the rest, but not otherwise different.
Denyven, Peters, Dexter, Willson, and others in and out of the
Slocum clique were Blake's sworn friends. In brief, Mr. Taggett
had the amplest opportunities to prosecute his studies. Only for
a pained look which sometimes latterly shot into his eyes, as he
worked at the bench, or as he walked alone in the street, one
would have imagined that he was thoroughly enjoying the
half-vagabond existence.</p>
<p>The supposition would have been erroneous, for in the progress
of those fourteen days' apprenticeship Mr. Taggett had received a
wound in the most sensitive part of his nature: he had been
forced to give up what no man ever relinquishes without a
wrench,--his own idea.</p>
<p>With the exception of an accident in Dana's Mill, by which
Torrini's hand had been so badly mangled that amputation was
deemed necessary, the two weeks had been eventless outside of Mr.
Taggett's personal experience. What that experience was will
transpire in its proper place. Margaret was getting daily notes
from Richard, and Mr. Slocum, overburdened with the secret of Mr.
Taggett's presence in the yard,--a secret confined exclusively to
Mr. Slocum, Richard, and Justice Beemis,--was restlessly awaiting
developments.</p>
<p>The developments came that afternoon when Mr. Taggett walked
into the office and startled Mr. Slocum, sitting at the desk. The
two words which Mr. Taggett then gravely and coldly whispered in
Mr. Slocum's ear were,--</p>
<p>"RICHARD SHACKFORD."</p>
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