<h2>XXVI</h2>
<p>There was a fire in Richard's temples as he reeled out of
Lawyer Perkins's office. It was now twelve o'clock, and the
streets were thronged with the motley population disgorged by the
various mills and workshops. Richard felt that every eye was upon
him; he was conscious of something wild in his aspect that must
needs attract the attention of the passers-by. At each step he
half expected the leveling of some accusing finger. The pitiless
sunshine seemed to single him out and stream upon him like a
calcium light. It was intolerable. He must get away from this
jostling crowd, this babel of voices. What should he do, where
should he go? To return to the yard and face the workmen was not
to be thought of; if he went to his lodgings he would be called
to dinner, and have to listen to the inane prattle of the
school-master. That would be even more intolerable than this
garish daylight, and these careless squads of men and women who
paused in the midst of their laugh to turn and stare. Was there
no spot in Stillwater where a broken man could hide himself long
enough to collect his senses?</p>
<p>With his hands thrust convulsively into the pockets of his
sack-coat, Richard turned down a narrow passage-way fringing the
rear of some warehouses. As he hurried along aimlessly his
fingers encountered something in one of his pockets. It was the
key of a new lock which had been put on the scullery door of the
house in Welch's Court. Richard's heart gave a quick throb. There
at least was a temporary refuge; he would go there and wait until
it was time for him to surrender himself to the officers.</p>
<p>It appeared to Richard that he was nearly a year reaching the
little back yard of the lonely house. He slipped into the
scullery and locked the door, wondering if his movements had been
observed since he quitted the main street. Here he drew a long
breath and looked around him; then he began wandering restlessly
through the rooms, of which there were five or six on the
ground-floor. The furniture, the carpets, and all the sordid
fixtures of the house were just as Richard had known them in his
childhood. Everything was unchanged, even to the faded
peacock-feather stuck over the parlor looking-glass. As he
regarded the familiar objects and breathed the snuffy atmosphere
peculiar to the place, the past rose so vividly before him that
he would scarcely have been startled if a lean, gray old man had
suddenly appeared in one of the doorways. On a peg in the front
hall hung his cousin's napless beaver hat, satirically ready to
be put on; in the kitchen closet a pair of ancient shoes, worn
down at the heel and with taps on the toe, had all the air of
intending to step forth. The shoes had been carefully blacked,
but a thin skin of mould had gathered over them. They looked like
Lemuel Shackford. They had taken a position habitual with him.
Richard was struck by the subtile irony which lay in these
inanimate things. That a man's hat should outlast the man, and
have a jaunty expression of triumph! That a dead man's shoes
should mimic him!</p>
<p>The tall eight-day clock on the landing had run down. It had
stopped at twelve, and it now stood with solemnly uplifted
finger, as if imposing silence on those small, unconsidered
noises which commonly creep out, like mice, only at midnight. The
house was full of such stealthy sounds. The stairs creaked at
intervals, mysteriously, as if under the weight of some heavy
person ascending. Now and then the woodwork stretched itself with
a snap, as though it had grown stiff in the joints with remaining
so long in one position. At times there were muffled
reverberations of footfalls on the flooring overhead. Richard had
a curious consciousness of not being alone, but of moving in the
midst of an invisible throng of persons who elbowed him softly
and breathed in his face, and vaguely impressed themselves upon
him as being former occupants of the premises. This populous
solitude, this silence with its busy interruptions, grew
insupportable as he passed from room to room.</p>
<p>One chamber he did not enter,--the chamber in which his
cousin's body was found that Wednesday morning. In Richard's
imagination it was still lying there, white and piteous, by the
hearth. He paused at the threshold and glanced in; then turned
abruptly and mounted the staircase.</p>
<p>On gaining his old apartment in the gable, Richard seated
himself on the edge of the cot-bed. His shoulders sagged down and
a stupefied expression settled upon his face, but his brain was
in a tumult. His own identity was become a matter of doubt to
him. Was he the same Richard Shackford who had found life so
sweet when he awoke that morning? IT must have been some other
person who had sat by a window in the sunrise thinking of
Margaret Slocum's love,--some Richard Shackford with unstained
hands! This one was accused of murdering his kinsman; the weapon
with which he had done it, the very match he had used to light
him in the deed, were known! The victim himself had written out
the accusation in black and white. Richard's brain reeled as he
tried to fix his thought on Lemuel Shackford's letter. That
letter!--where had it been all this while, and how did it come
into Taggett's possession? Only one thing was clear to Richard in
his inextricable confusion,--he was not going to be able to prove
his innocence; he was a doomed man, and within the hour his shame
would be published to the world. Rowland Slocum and Lawyer
Perkins had already condemned him, and Margaret would condemn him
when she knew all; for it was evident that up to last evening she
had not been told. How did it happen that these overwhelming
proofs had rolled themselves up against him? What malign
influences were these at work, hurrying him on to destruction,
and not leaving a single loophole of escape? Who would believe
the story of his innocent ramble on the turnpike that Tuesday
night? Who could doubt that he had gone directly from the
Slocums' to Welch's Court, and then crept home red-handed through
the deserted streets?</p>
<p>Richard heard the steam-whistles recalling the operatives to
work, and dimly understood it was one o'clock; but after that he
paid no attention to the lapse of time. It was an hour later,
perhaps two hours,--Richard could not tell,--when he roused
himself from his stupor, and descending the stairs passed through
the kitchen into the scullery. There he halted and leaned against
the sink, irresolute, as though his purpose, if he had had a
purpose, were escaping him. He stood with his eyes resting
listlessly on a barrel in the further corner of the apartment. It
was a heavy-hooped wine-cask, in which Lemuel Shackford had been
wont to keep his winter's supply of salted meat. Suddenly Richard
started forward with an inarticulate cry, and at the same instant
there came a loud knocking at the door behind him. The sound
reverberated through the empty house, filling the place with
awful echoes,--like those knocks at the gate of Macbeth's castle
the night of Duncan's murder. Richard stood petrified for a
second; then he hastily turned the key in the lock, and Mr.
Taggett stepped into the scullery.</p>
<p>The two men exchanged swift glances. The bewildered air of a
moment before had passed from Richard; the dullness had faded out
of his eyes, leaving them the clear, alert expression they
ordinarily wore. He was self-possessed, but the effort his
self-possession cost him was obvious. There was a something in
his face--a dilation of the nostril, a curve of the under
lip--which put Mr. Taggett very much on his guard. Mr. Taggett
was the first to speak.</p>
<p>"I've a disagreeable mission here," he said slowly, with his
hand remaining on the latch of the door, which he had closed on
entering. "I have a warrant for your arrest, Mr. Shackford."</p>
<p>"Stop a moment!" said Richard, with a glow in his eyes. "I
have something to say."</p>
<p>"I advise you not to make any statement."</p>
<p>"I understand my position perfectly, Mr. Taggett, and I shall
disregard the advice. After you have answered me one or two
questions, I shall be quite at your service."</p>
<p>"If you insist, then."</p>
<p>"You were present at the examination of Thomas Blufton and
William Durgin, were you not?"</p>
<p>"I was."</p>
<p>"You recollect William Durgin's testimony?"</p>
<p>"Most distinctly."</p>
<p>"He stated that the stains on his clothes were from a certain
barrel, the head of which had been freshly painted red."</p>
<p>"I remember."</p>
<p>"Mr. Taggett, <i>the head of that barrel was painted
blue!"</i></p>
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