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Falstaffian stripe, though not so much witty in himself as the cause of wit in others.

      "No, Jimmy, there isn't anything new," responded Dexter.

      "I suppose you didn't hear that the ole man done somethin' handsome for me in his last will and testyment."

      "No, Jemmy, I don't think he has made any provision whatever for an almshouse."

      "Sorry to hear that, Dexter," said Willson, absorbedly chasing a bit of lemon peel in his glass with the spoon handle, "for there isn't room for us all up at the town-farm. How's your grandmother? Finds it tol'rably comfortable?"

      They are a primitive, candid people in their hours of unlaced social intercourse in Stillwater. This delicate tu quoque was so far from wounding Dexter that he replied carelessly,--

      "Well, only so so. The old woman complains of too much chicken-sallid, and hot-house grapes all the year round."

      "Mr. Shackford must have left a large property," observed Mr. Ward, of the firm of Ward & Lock, glancing up from the columns of the Stillwater Gazette. The remark was addressed to Lawyer Perkins, who had just joined the group in the reading-room.

      "Fairly large," replied that gentleman crisply.

      "Any public bequests?"

      "None to speak of."

      Mr. Craggie smiled vaguely.

      "You see," said Lawyer Perkins, "there's a will and no will,--that is to say, the fragments of what is supposed to be a will were found, and we are trying to put the pieces together. It is doubtful if we can do it; it is doubtful if we can decipher it after we have done it; and if we decipher it it is a question whether the document is valid or not."

      "That is a masterly exposition of the dilemma, Mr. Perkins," said the school-master warmly.

      Mr. Perkins had spoken in his court-room tone of voice, with one hand thrust into his frilled shirt-bosom. He removed this hand for a second, as he gravely bowed to Mr. Pinkham.

      "Nothing could be clearer," said Mr. Ward. "In case the paper is worthless, what then? I am not asking you in your professional capacity," he added hastily; for Lawyer Perkins had been known to send in a bill on as slight a provocation as Mr. Ward's.

      "That's a point. The next of kin has his claims."

      "My friend Shackford, of course," broke in Mr. Craggie. "Admirable young man!--one of my warmest supporters."

      "He is the only heir at law so far as we know," said Mr. Perkins.

      "Oh," said Mr. Craggie, reflecting. "The late Mr. Shackford might have had a family in Timbuctoo or the Sandwich Islands."

      "That's another point."

      "The fact would be a deuced unpleasant point for young Shackford to run against," said Mr. Ward.

      "Exactly."

      "If Mr. Lemuel Shackford," remarked Coroner Whidden, softly joining the conversation to which he had been listening in his timorous, apologetic manner, "had chanced, in the course of his early sea-faring days, to form any ties of an unhappy complexion"--

      "Complexion is good," murmured Mr. Craggie. "Some Hawaiian lady!"

      --"perhaps that would be a branch of the case worth investigating in connection with the homicide. A discarded wife, or a disowned son, burning with a sense of wrong"--

      "Really, Mr. Whidden!" interrupted Lawyer Perkins witheringly, "it is bad enough for my client to lose his life, without having his reputation filched away from him."

      "I--I will explain! I was merely supposing"--

      "The law never supposes, sir!"

      This threw Mr. Whidden into great mental confusion. As coroner was he not an integral part of the law, and when, in his official character, he supposed anything was not that a legal supposition? But was he in his official character now, sitting with a glass of lemonade at his elbow in the reading-room of the Stillwater hotel? Was he, or was he not, a coroner all the time? Mr. Whidden stroked an isolated tuft of hair growing low on the middle of his forehead, and glared mildly at Mr. Perkins.

      "Young Shackford has gone to New York, I understand," said Mr. Ward, breaking the silence.

      Mr. Perkins nodded. "Went this morning to look after the real-estate interests there. It will probably keep him a couple of weeks,--the longer the better. He was of no use here. Lemuel's death was a great shock to him, or rather the manner of it was."

      "That shocked every one. They were first cousin's weren't they?" Mr. Ward was a comparatively new resident in Stillwater.

      "First cousins," replied Lawyer Perkins; "but they were never very intimate, you know."

      "I imagine nobody was ever very intimate with Mr. Shackford."

      "My client was somewhat peculiar in his friendships."

      This was stating it charitably, for Mr. Perkins knew, and every one present knew, that Lemuel Shackford had not had the shadow of a friend in Stillwater, unless it was his cousin Richard.

      A cloud of mist and rain was blown into the bar-room as the street door stood open for a second to admit a dripping figure from the outside darkness.

      "What's blowed down?" asked Durgin, turning round on his stool and sending up a ring of smoke which uncurled itself with difficulty in the dense atmosphere.

      "It's only some of Jeff Stavers's nonsense."

      "No nonsense at all," said the new-comer, as he shook the heavy beads of rain from his felt hat. "I was passing by Welch's Court--it's as black as pitch out, fellows--when slap went something against my shoulder; something like wet wings. Well, I was scared. It's a bat, says I. But the thing didn't fly off; it was still clawing at my shoulder. I put up my hand, and I'll be shot if it wasn't the foremast, jib-sheet and all, of the old weather-cock on the north gable of the Shackford house! Here you are!" and the speaker tossed the broken mast, with the mimic sails dangling from it, into Durgin's lap.

      A dead silence followed, for there was felt to be something weirdly significant in the incident.

      "That's kinder omernous," said Mr. Peters, interrogatively.

      "Ominous of what?" asked Durgin, lifting the wet mass from his knees and dropping it on the floor.

      "Well, sorter queer, then."

      "Where does the queer come in?" inquired Stevens, gravelly. "I don't know; but I'm hit by it."

      "Come, boys, don't crowd a feller," said Mr. Peters, getting restive. "I don't take the contract to explain the thing. But it does seem some way droll that the old schooner should be wrecked so soon after what has happened to the old skipper. If you don't see it, or sense it, I don't insist. What's yours, Denyven?"

      The person addressed as Denyven promptly replied, with a fine sonorous English accent, "a mug of 'alf an' 'alf,--with a head on it, Snelling."

      At the same moment Mr. Craggie, in the inner room was saying to the school-master,--

      "I must really take issue with you there, Mr. Pinkham. I admit there's a good deal in spiritualism which we haven't got at yet; the science is in its infancy; it is still attached to the bosom of speculation. It is a beautiful science, that of psychological phenomena, and the spiritualists will yet become an influential class of"--Mr. Craggie was going to say voters, but glided over it--"persons. I believe in clairvoyance myself to a large extent. Before my appointment to the post-office I had it very strong. I've no doubt that in the far future this mysterious factor will be made great use of in criminal cases; but at present I should resort to it only in the last extremity,--the very last extremity, Mr. Pinkham!"

      "Oh, of course," said the school-master deprecatingly. "I threw it out only as the merest suggestion. I shouldn't think of--of--you understand me?"

      "Is it beyond the dreams of probability," said Mr. Craggie, appealing to Lawyer Perkins, "that clairvoyants may eventually be introduced into cases in our courts?"

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