<h2>V</h2>
<p>The humblest painter of real life, if he could have his
desire, would select a picturesque background for his figures;
but events have an inexorable fashion for choosing their own
landscape. In the present instance it is reluctantly conceded
that there are few uglier or more commonplace towns in New
England than Stillwater,--a straggling, overgrown village, with
whose rural aspects are curiously blended something of the
grimness and squalor of certain shabby city neighborhoods. Being
of comparatively recent date, the place has none of those
colonial associations which, like sprigs of lavender in an old
chest of drawers, are a saving grace to other quite as dreary
nooks and corners.</p>
<p>Here and there at what is termed the West End is a neat brick
mansion with garden attached, where nature asserts herself in
dahlias and china-asters; but the houses are mostly frame houses
that have taken a prevailing dingy tint from the breath of the
tall chimneys which dominate the village. The sidewalks in the
more aristocratic quarter are covered with a thin, elastic paste
of asphalt, worn down to the gravel in patches, and emitting in
the heat of the day an astringent, bituminous odor. The
population is chiefly of the rougher sort, such as breeds in the
shadow of foundries and factories, and if the Protestant pastor
and the fatherly Catholic priest, whose respective lots are cast
there, have sometimes the sense of being missionaries dropped in
the midst of a purely savage community, the delusion is not
wholly unreasonable.</p>
<p>The irregular heaps of scoria that have accumulated in the
vicinity of the iron works give the place an illusive air of
antiquity; bit it is neither ancient nor picturesque. The oldest
and most pictorial thing in Stillwater is probably the marble
yard, around three sides of which the village may be said to have
sprouted up rankly, bearing here and there an industrial blossom
in the shape of an iron-mill or a cardigan-jacket manufactory.
Rowland Slocum, a man of considerable refinement, great kindness
of heart, and no force, inherited the yard from his father, and a
the period this narrative opens (the summer of 187-) was its sole
proprietor and nominal manager, the actual manager being Richard
Shackford, a prospective partner in the business and the
betrothed of Mr. Slocum's daughter Margaret.</p>
<p>Forty years ago every tenth person in Stillwater was either a
Shackford or a Slocum. Twenty years later both names were nearly
extinct there. That fatality which seems to attend certain New
England families had stripped every leaf but two from the
Shackford branch. These were Lemuel Shackford, then about
forty-six, and Richard Shackford, aged four. Lemuel Shackford had
laid up a competency as ship-master in the New York and Calcutta
trade, and in 1852 had returned to his native village, where he
found his name and stock represented only by little Dick, a very
cheerful orphan, who stared complacently with big blue eyes at
fate, and made mud-pies in the lane whenever he could elude the
vigilance of the kindly old woman who had taken him under her
roof. This atom of humanity, by some strange miscalculation of
nature, was his cousin.</p>
<p>The strict devotion to his personal interests which had
enabled Mr. Shackford to acquire a fortune thus early caused him
to look askance at a penniless young kinsman with stockings down
at heel, and a straw hat three sizes too large for him set on the
back of his head. But Mr. Shackford was ashamed to leave little
Dick a burden upon the hands of a poor woman of no relationship
whatever to the child; so little Dick was transferred to that
dejected house which has already been described, and was then
known as the Sloper house.</p>
<p>Here, for three of four years, Dick grew up, as neglected as a
weed, and every inch as happy. It should be mentioned that for
the first year or so a shock-headed Cicely from the town-farm had
apparently been hired not to take care of him. But Dick asked
nothing better than to be left to his own devices, which,
moreover, were innocent enough. He would sit all day in the lane
at the front gate pottering with a bit of twig or a case-knife in
the soft clay. From time to time passers-by observed that the
child was not making mud-pies, but tracing figures, comic or
grotesque as might happen, and always quite wonderful for their
lack of resemblance to anything human. That patch of
reddish-brown clay was his sole resource, his slate, his
drawing-book, and woe to anybody who chanced to walk over little
Dick's arabesques. Patient and gentle in his acceptance of the
world's rebuffs, this he would not endure. He was afraid of Mr.
Shackford, yet one day, when the preoccupied man happened to
trample on a newly executed hieroglyphic, the child rose to his
feet white with rage, his fingers clenched, and such a blue fire
flashing in the eyes that Mr. Shackford drew back aghast.</p>
<p>"Why, it's a little devil!"</p>
<p>While Shackford junior was amusing himself with his primitive
bas-reliefs, Shackford senior amused himself with his lawsuits.
From the hour when he returned to the town until the end of his
days Mr. Shackford was up to his neck in legal difficulties. Now
he resisted a betterment assessment, and fought the town; now he
secured an injunction on the Miantowona Iron Works, and fought
the corporation. He was understood to have a perpetual case in
equity before the Marine Court in New York, to which city he made
frequent and unannounced journeys. His immediate neighbors stood
in terror of him. He was like a duelist, on the alert to twist
the slightest thing into a <i>casus belli</i>. The law was his
rapier, his recreation, and he was willing to bleed for it.</p>
<p>Meanwhile that fairy world of which every baby becomes a
Columbus so soon as it is able to walk remained an undiscovered
continent to little Dick. Grim life looked in upon him as he lay
in the cradle. The common joys of childhood were a sealed volume
to him. A single incident of those years lights up the whole
situation. A vague rumor had been blown to Dick of a practice of
hanging up stockings at Christmas. It struck his materialistic
mind as a rather senseless thing to do; but nevertheless he
resolved to try it one Christmas Eve. He lay awake a long while
in the frosty darkness, skeptically waiting for something
remarkable to happen; once he crawled out of the cot-bed and
groped his way to the chimney place. The next morning he was
scarcely disappointed at finding nothing in the piteous little
stocking, except the original holes.</p>
<p>The years that stole silently over the heads of the old man
and the young child in Welch's Court brought a period of wild
prosperity to Stillwater. The breath of war blew the forges to a
white heat, and the baffling problem of the mediæval
alchemists was solved. The baser metals were transmuted into
gold. A disastrous, prosperous time, with the air rent
periodically by the cries of newsboys as battles were fought, and
by the roll of the drum in the busy streets as fresh recruits
were wanted. Glory and death to the Southward, and at the North
pale women in black.</p>
<p>All which interested Dick mighty little. After he had learned
to read at the district school, he escaped into another world.
Two lights were now generally seen burning of a night in the
Shackford house: one on the ground-floor where Mr. Shackford sat
mouthing his contracts and mortgages, and weaving his webs like a
great, lean, gray spider; and the other in the north gable, where
Dick hung over a tattered copy of Robinson Crusoe by the flicker
of the candle-ends which he had captured during the day.</p>
<p>Little Dick was little Dick no more: a tall, heavily built
blond boy, with a quiet, sweet disposition, that at first offered
temptations to the despots of the playground; but a sudden
flaring up once or twice of that unexpected spirit which had
broken out in his babyhood brought him immunity from serious
persecution.</p>
<p>The boy's home life at this time would have seemed pathetic to
an observer,--the more pathetic, perhaps, in that Dick himself
was not aware of its exceptional barrenness. The holidays that
bring new brightness to the eyes of happier children were to him
simply days when he did not go to school, and was expected to
provide an extra quantity of kindling wood. He was housed, and
fed, and clothed, after a fashion, but not loved. Mr. Shackford
did not ill-treat the lad, in the sense of beating him; he merely
neglected him. Every year the man became more absorbed in his law
cases and his money, which accumulated magically. He dwelt in a
cloud of calculations. Though all his interests attached him to
the material world, his dry, attenuated body seemed scarcely a
part of it.</p>
<p>"Shackford, what are you going to do with that scapegrace of
yours?"</p>
<p>It was Mr. Leonard Tappleton who ventured the question. Few
persons dared to interrogate Mr. Shackford on his private
affairs.</p>
<p>"I am going to make a lawyer of him," said Mr. Shackford,
crackling his finger-joints like stiff parchment.</p>
<p>"You couldn't do better. You <i>ought</i> to have an attorney
in the family."</p>
<p>"Just so," assented Mr. Shackford, dryly. "I could throw a bit
of business in his way now and then,--eh?"</p>
<p>"You could make his fortune, Shackford. I don't see but you
might employ him all the time. When he was not fighting the
corporations, you might keep him at it suing you for his
fees."</p>
<p>"Very good, very good indeed," responded Mr. Shackford, with a
smile in which his eyes took no share, it was merely a momentary
curling up of crisp wrinkles. He did not usually smile at other
people's pleasantries; but when a person worth three or four
hundred thousand dollars condescends to indulge a joke, it is not
to be passed over like that of a poor relation. "Yes, yes,"
muttered the old man, as he stooped and picked up a pin, adding
it to a row of similarly acquired pins which gave the left lapel
of his threadbare coat the appearance of a miniature harp, "I
shall make a lawyer of him."</p>
<p>It had long been settled in Mr. Shackford's mind that Richard,
so soon as he had finished his studies, should enter the
law-office of Blandmann & Sharpe, a firm of rather sinister
reputation in South Millville.</p>
<p>At fourteen Richard's eyes had begun to open on the situation;
at fifteen he saw very clearly; and one day, without much
preliminary formulating of his plan, he decided on a step that
had been taken by every male Shackford as far back as tradition
preserves the record of his family.</p>
<p>A friendship had sprung up between Richard and one William
Durgin, a school-mate. This Durgin was a sallow, brooding boy, a
year older than himself. The two lads were antipodal in
disposition, intelligence, and social standing; for though
Richard went poorly clad, the reflection of his cousin's wealth
gilded him. Durgin was the son of a washerwoman. An intimacy
between the two would perhaps have been unlikely but for one
fact: it was Durgin's mother who had given little Dick a shelter
at the period of his parents' death. Though the circumstance did
not lie within the pale of Richard's personal memory, he
acknowledged the debt by rather insisting on Durgin's friendship.
It was William Durgin, therefore, who was elected to wait upon
Mr. Shackford on a certain morning which found that gentleman
greatly disturbed by an unprecedented occurrence,--Richard had
slept out of the house the previous night.</p>
<p>Durgin was the bearer of a note which Mr. Shackford received
in some astonishment, and read deliberately, blinking with weak
eyes behind the glasses. Having torn off the blank page and laid
it aside for his own more economical correspondence (the rascal
had actually used a whole sheet to write ten words!), Mr.
Shackford turned, and with the absorbed air of a naturalist
studying some abnormal bug gazed over the steel bow of his
spectacles at Durgin.</p>
<p>"Skit!"</p>
<p>Durgin hastily retreated.</p>
<p>"There's a poor lawyer saved," muttered the old man, taking
down his overcoat from a peg behind the door, and snapping off a
shred of lint on the collar with his lean forefinger. Then his
face relaxed, and an odd grin diffused a kind of wintry glow over
it.</p>
<p>Richard had run away to sea.</p>
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