<h2>XX</h2>
<p>Mr. Taggett's diary was precisely a diary,--disjoined, full of
curt, obscure phrases and irrelevant reflections,--for which
reason it will not be reproduced here. Though Mr. Slocum pondered
every syllable, and now and then turned back painfully to
reconsider some doubtful passage, it is not presumed that the
reader will care to do so. An abstract of the journal, with
occasional quotation where the writer's words seem to demand it,
will be sufficient for the narrative.</p>
<p>In the opening pages Mr. Taggett described his novel
surroundings with a minuteness which contrasted oddly with the
brief, hurried entries further on. He found himself, as he had
anticipated, in a society composed of some of the most
heterogeneous elements. Stillwater, viewed from a certain point,
was a sort of microcosm, a little international rag-fair to which
nearly every country on earth had contributed one of its shabby
human products. "I am moving," wrote Mr. Taggett, "in an
atmosphere in which any crime is possible. I give myself seven
days at the outside to light upon the traces of Shackford's
murder. I feel him in the air." The writer's theory was that the
man would betray his identity in one of two ways: either by
talking unguardedly, or by indulging in expenditures not
warranted by his means and position. If several persons had been
concerned in the crime, nothing was more likely than a
disagreement over the spoil, and consequent treachery on the part
of one of them. Or, again, some of the confederates might become
alarmed, and attempt to save themselves by giving away their
comrades. Mr. Taggett, however, leaned to the belief that the
assassin had had no accomplices.</p>
<p>The sum taken from Mr. Shackford's safe was a comparatively
large one,--five hundred dollars in gold and nearly double that
amount in bank-notes. Neither the gold nor the paper bore any
known mark by which it could be recognized; the burglar had
doubtless assured himself of this, and would not hesitate to
disburse the money. That was even a safer course, judiciously
worked, than to secrete it. The point was, Would he have
sufficient self-control to get rid of it by degrees? The chances,
Mr. Taggett argued, were ten to one he would not.</p>
<p>A few pages further on Mr. Taggett compliments the Unknown on
the adroit manner in which he is conducting himself. He has
neither let slip a suspicious word, nor made an incautious
display of his booty. Snelling's bar was doing an unusually light
business. No one appeared to have any money. Many of the men had
run deeply into debt during the late strike, and were now
drinking moderately. In the paragraph which closes the week's
record Mr. Taggett's chagrin is evident. He confesses that he is
at fault. "My invisible friend does not <i>materialize</i> so
successfully as I expected," is Mr. Taggett's comment.</p>
<p>His faith in the correctness of his theory had not abated; but
he continued his observation sin a less sanguine spirit. These
observations were not limited to the bar-room or the workshop; he
informed himself of the domestic surroundings of his comrades.
Where his own scrutiny could not penetrate, he employed the aid
of correspondents. He knew what workmen had money in the local
savings-bank, and the amount of each deposit. In the course of
his explorations of the shady side of Stillwater life, Mr.
Taggett unearthed many amusing and many pathetic histories, but
nothing that served his end. Finally, he began to be
discouraged.</p>
<p>Returning home from the tavern, one night, in a rather
desponding mood, he found the man Wollaston smoking his pipe in
bed. Wollaston was a taciturn man generally, but this night he
was conversational, and Mr. Taggett, too restless to sleep, fell
to chatting with him. Did he know much about the late Mr.
Shackford? Yes, he had known him well enough, in an off way,--not
to speak of him; everybody knew him in Stillwater; he was a sort
of miser, hated everybody, and bullied everybody. It was a wonder
somebody didn't knock the old silvertop on the head years
ago.</p>
<p>Thus Mr. Wollaston grimly, with his pores stopped up with
iron-fillings,--a person to whom it would come quite easy to
knock any one on the head for a slight difference of opinion. He
amused Mr. Taggett in his present humor.</p>
<p>No, he wasn't aware that Shackford had had trouble with any
particular individual; believed he did have a difficulty once
with Slocum, the marble man; but he was always fetching suits
against the town and shying lawyers at the mill directors,--a
disagreeable old cuss altogether. Adopted his cousin, one time,
but made the house so hot for him that the lad ran off to sea,
and since then had had nothing to do with the old bilk.</p>
<p>Indeed! What sort of fellow was young Shackford? Mr. Wollaston
could not say of his own knowledge; thought him a plucky chap; he
had put a big Italian named Torrini out of the yard, one day, for
talking back. Who was Torrini? The man that got hurt last week in
the Dana Mill. Who were Richard Shackford's intimates? Couldn't
say; had seen him with Mr. Pinkham, the school-master, and Mr.
Craggie,--went with the upper crust generally. Was going to be
partner in the marble yard and marry Slocum's daughter. Will
Durgin knew him. They lived together one time. He, Wollaston, was
going to turn in now.</p>
<p>Several of these facts were not new to Mr. Taggett, but Mr.
Wollaston's presentation of them threw Mr. Taggett into a
reverie.</p>
<p>The next evening he got Durgin alone in a corner of the
bar-room. With two or three potations Durgin became
autobiographical. Was he acquainted with Mr. Shackford outside
the yard? Rather. Dick Shackford? His (Durgin's) mother had kept
Dick from starving when he was a baby,--and no thanks for it.
Went to school with him, and knew all about his running off to
sea. Was near going with him. Old man Shackford never liked Dick,
who was a proud beggar; they couldn't pull together, down to the
last,--both of a piece. They had a jolly rumpus a little while
before the old man was fixed.</p>
<p>Mr. Taggett pricked up his ears at this.</p>
<p>A rumpus? How did Durgin know that? A girl told him. What
girl? A girl he was sweet on. What was her name? Well, he didn't
mind telling her name; it was Molly Hennessey. She was going
through Welch's Court one forenoon,--may be it was three days
before the strike,--and saw Dick Shackford bolt out of the house,
swinging his arms and swearing to himself at an awful rate. Was
Durgin certain that Molly Hennessey had told him this? Yes, he
was ready to take his oath on it.</p>
<p>Here, at last, was something that looked like a glimmer of
daylight.</p>
<p>It was possible that Durgin or the girl had lied; but the
story had an air of truth to it. If it were a fact that there had
recently been a quarrel between these cousins, whose uncousinly
attitude towards each other was fast becoming clear to Mr.
Taggett, then here was a conceivable key to an enigma which had
puzzled him.</p>
<p>The conjecture that Lemuel Shackford had himself torn up the
will--if it was a will, for this still remained in dispute--had
never been satisfactory to Mr. Taggett. He had accepted it
because he was unable to imagine an ordinary burglar pausing in
the midst of his work to destroy a paper in which he could have
no concern. But Richard Shackford would have the liveliest
possible interest in the destruction of a document that placed a
vast estate beyond his reach. Here was a motive on a level with
the crime. That money had been taken, and that the fragments of
the will had been carelessly thrown into a waste-paper basket,
just as if the old man himself had thrown them there, was a
stroke of art which Mr. Taggett admired more and more as he
reflected upon it.</p>
<p>He did not, however, allow himself to lay too much stress on
these points; for the paper might turn out to be merely an
expired lease, and the girl might have been quizzing Durgin. Mr.
Taggett would have given one of his eye-teeth just then for ten
minutes with Mary Hennessey. But an interview with her at this
stage was neither prudent nor easily compassed.</p>
<p>"If I have not struck a trail," writes Mr. Taggett, "I have
come upon what strongly resembles one; the least I can do is to
follow it. My first move must be to inspect that private workshop
in the rear of Mr. Slocum's house. How shall I accomplish it? I
cannot apply to him for permission, for that would provoke
questions which I am not ready to answer. Moreover, I have yet to
assure myself that Mr. Slocum is not implicated. There seems to
have been also a hostile feeling existing between him and the
deceased. Why didn't some one tell me these things at the start!
If young Shackford is the person, there is a tangled story to be
unraveled. <i>Mem:</i> Young Shackford is Miss Slocum's
lover."</p>
<p>Mr. Slocum read this passage twice without drawing breath, and
then laid down the book an instant to wipe the sudden
perspiration from his forehead.</p>
<p>In the note which followed, Mr. Taggett described the
difficulty he met with in procuring a key to fit the wall-door at
the rear of the marble yard, and gave an account of his failure
to effect an entrance into the studio. He had hoped to find a
window unfastened; but the window, as well as the door opening
upon the veranda, was locked, and in the midst of his operations,
which were conducted at noon-time, the approach of a servant had
obliged him to retreat.</p>
<p>Forced to lay aside, at least temporarily, his designs on the
workshop, he turned his attention to Richard's lodgings in Lime
Street. Here Mr. Taggett was more successful. On the pretext that
he had been sent for certain drawings which were to be found on
the table or in a writing-desk, he was permitted by Mrs. Spooner
to ascend to the bedroom, where she obligingly insisted on
helping him search for the apocryphal plans, and seriously
interfered with his purpose, which was to find the key of the
studio. While Mr. Taggett was turning over the pages of a large
dictionary, in order to gain time, and was wondering how he could
rid himself of the old lady's importunities, he came upon a
half-folded note-sheet, at the bottom of which his eye caught the
name of Lemuel Shackford. It was in the handwriting of the dead
man. Mr. Taggett was very familiar with that handwriting. He
secured the paper at a venture, and put it in his pocket without
examination.</p>
<p>A few minutes later, it being impossible to prolong the
pretended quest for the drawings, Mr. Taggett was obliged to
follow Mrs. Spooner from the apartment. As he did so he noticed a
bright object lying on the corner of the mantel-shelf,--a small
nickel-plated key. In order to take it he had only to reach out
his hand in passing. It was, as Mr. Taggett had instantly
surmised, the key of Richard's workshop.</p>
<p>If it had been gold, instead of brass or iron, that bit of
metal would have taken no additional value in Mr. Taggett's eyes.
On leaving Mrs. Spooner's he held it tightly clasped in his
fingers until he reached an unfrequented street, where he halted
a moment in the shadow of a building to inspect the paper, which
he had half forgotten in his satisfaction at having obtained the
key. A stifled cry rose to Mr. Taggett's lips as he glanced over
the crumpled note-sheet.</p>
<p>It contained three lines, hastily scrawled in lead-pencil,
requesting Richard Shackford to call at the house in Welch's
Court at eight o'clock on a certain Tuesday night. The note had
been written, as the date showed, on the day preceding the
Tuesday night in question--the night of the murder!</p>
<p>For a second or two Mr. Taggett stood paralyzed. Ten minutes
afterwards a message in cipher was pulsing along the wires to New
York, and before the sun went down that evening Richard Shackford
was under the surveillance of the police.</p>
<p>The doubtful, unknown ground upon which Mr. Taggett had been
floundering was now firm under his feet,--unexpected ground, but
solid. Meeting Mary Hennessey in the street, on his way to the
marble yard, Mr. Taggett no longer hesitated to accost her, and
question her as to the story she had told William Durgin. The
girl's story was undoubtedly true, and as a piece of
circumstantial evidence was only less important than the elder
Shackford's note. The two cousins had been for years on the worst
of terms. At every step Mr. Taggett had found corroboration of
Wollaston's statement to that effect.</p>
<p>"Where were Coroner Whidden's eyes and ears," wrote Mr.
Taggett,--the words were dashed down impatiently on the page, as
if he had sworn a little internally while writing them,--"when he
conducted that inquest! In all my experience there was never a
thing so stupidly managed."</p>
<p>A thorough and immediate examination of Richard Shackford's
private workshop was now so imperative that Mr. Taggett resolved
to make it even if he had to do so under the authority of a
search-warrant. But he desired as yet to avoid publicity.</p>
<p>A secret visit to the studio seemed equally difficult by day
and night. In the former case he was nearly certain to be
deranged by the servants, and in the latter a light in the
unoccupied room would alarm any of the household who might chance
to awaken. From the watchman no danger was to be apprehended, as
the windows of the extension were not visible from the
street.</p>
<p>Mr. Taggett finally decided on the night as the more
propitious time for his attempt,--a decision which his success
justified. A brilliant moon favored the in-door part of the
enterprise, though it exposed him to observation in his approach
from the marble yard to the veranda.</p>
<p>With the dense moonlight streaming outside against the
window-shades, he could safely have used a candle in the studio
instead of the screened lantern which he had provided. Mr.
Taggett passed three hours in the workshop,--the last hour in
waiting for the moon to go down. Then he stole through the marble
yard into the silent street, and hurried home, carrying two small
articles concealed under his blouse. The first was a chisel with
a triangular piece broken out of the centre of the bevel, and the
other was a box of safety-matches. The peculiarity of this box of
matches was--that just one match had been used from it.</p>
<p>Mr. Taggett's work was done.</p>
<p>The last seven pages of the diary were devoted to a review of
the case, every detail of which was held up in various lights,
and examined with the conscientious pains of a lapidary deciding
on the value of a rare stone. The concluding entries ran as
follow:--</p>
<p><i>"Tuesday Night</i>. Here the case passes into other hands.
I have been fortunate rather than skillful in unmasking the chief
actor in one of the most singular crimes that ever came under my
investigation. By destroying three objects, very easily
destroyed, Richard Shackford would have put himself beyond the
dream of suspicion. He neglected to remove these dumb witnesses,
and now the dumb witnesses speak! If it could be shown that he
was a hundred miles from Stillwater at the time of the murder,
instead of in the village, as he was, he must still be held, in
the face of the proofs against him, accessory to the deed. These
proofs, roughly summarized, are:--</p>
<p><i>"First</i>. The fact that he had had an altercation with
his cousin a short time previous to the date of the murder,--a
murder which may be regarded not as the result of a chance
disagreement, but of long years of bitter enmity between the two
men.</p>
<p><i>"Secondly</i>. The fact that Richard Shackford had had an
appointment with his cousin on the night the crime was committed,
and had concealed that fact from the authorities at the time of
the coroner's inquest.</p>
<p><i>"Thirdly</i>. That the broken chisel found in the private
workshop of the accused explains the peculiar shape of the wound
which caused Lemuel Shackford's death, and corresponds in every
particular with the plaster impression taken of that wound.</p>
<p><i>"Fourthly</i>. That the partially consumed match found on
the scullery floor when the body was discovered (a style of match
not used in the house in Welch's Court) completes the complement
of a box of safety-matches belonging to Richard Shackford, and
hidden in a closet in his workshop.</p>
<p>"Whether Shackford had an accomplice or not is yet to be
ascertained. There is nothing whatever to implicate Mr. Rowland
Slocum. I make the statement because his intimate association
with one party and his deep dislike of the other invited inquiry,
and at first raised an unjust suspicion in my mind."</p>
<p>The little red book slipped from Mr. Slocum's grasp and fell
at his feet. As he rose from the chair, the reflection which he
caught of himself in the dressing-table mirror was that of a
wrinkled, white old man.</p>
<p>Mr. Slocum did not believe, and no human evidence could have
convinced him, that Richard had deliberately killed Lemuel
Shackford; but as Mr. Slocum reached the final pages of the
diary, a horrible probability insinuated itself in his mind.
Could Richard have done it accidentally? Could he--in an instant
of passion, stung to sudden madness by that venomous old
man--have struck him involuntarily, and killed him? A certain
speech which Richard had made in Mr. Slocum's presence not long
before came back to him now with fearful emphasis:--</p>
<p><i>"Three or four times in my life I have been carried away by
a devil of a temper which I couldn't control, it seized me so
unawares."</i></p>
<p>"It seized me so unawares!" repeated Mr. Slocum, half aloud;
and then with a swift, unconscious gesture, he pressed his hands
over his ears, as if to shut out the words.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />