<hr /><h2><SPAN name="XVI" name="XVI"></SPAN>XVI.</h2><h2>SKAGGS'S THEORY</h2>
<p>There was, perhaps, more depth to Mr. Skaggs than most people gave him
credit for having. However it may be, when he got an idea into his head,
whether it were insane or otherwise, he had a decidedly tenacious way of
holding to it. Sadness had been disposed to laugh at him when he
announced that Joe's drunken story of his father's troubles had given
him an idea. But it was, nevertheless, true, and that idea had stayed
with him clear through the exciting events that followed on that fatal
night. He thought and dreamed of it until he had made a working theory.
Then one day, with a boldness that he seldom assumed when in the sacred
Presence, he walked into the office and laid his plans before the
editor. They talked together for some time, and the editor seemed hard
to convince.</p>
<p>"It would be a big thing for the paper," he said, "if it only panned
out; but it is such a rattle-brained, harum-scarum thing. No one under
the sun would have thought of it but you, Skaggs."</p>
<p>"Oh, it 's bound to pan out. I see the thing as clear as day. There 's
no getting around it."</p>
<p>"Yes, it looks plausible, but so does all fiction. You 're taking a
chance. You 're losing time. If it fails----"</p>
<p>"But if it succeeds?"</p>
<p>"Well, go and bring back a story. If you don't, look out. It 's against
my better judgment anyway. Remember I told you that."</p>
<p>Skaggs shot out of the office, and within an hour and a half had boarded
a fast train for the South.</p>
<p>It is almost a question whether Skaggs had a theory or whether he had
told himself a pretty story and, as usual, believed it. The editor was
right. No one else would have thought of the wild thing that was in the
reporter's mind. The detective had not thought of it five years before,
nor had Maurice Oakley and his friends had an inkling, and here was one
of the New York <i>Universe's</i> young men going miles to prove his idea
about something that did not at all concern him.</p>
<p>When Skaggs reached the town which had been the home of the Hamiltons,
he went at once to the Continental Hotel. He had as yet formulated no
plan of immediate action and with a fool's or a genius' belief in his
destiny he sat down to await the turn of events. His first move would be
to get acquainted with some of his neighbours. This was no difficult
matter, as the bar of the Continental was still the gathering-place of
some of the city's choice spirits of the old r�gime. Thither he went,
and his convivial cheerfulness soon placed him on terms of equality with
many of his kind.</p>
<p>He insinuated that he was looking around for business prospects. This
proved his open-sesame. Five years had not changed the Continental
frequenters much, and Skaggs's intention immediately brought Beachfield
Davis down upon him with the remark, "If a man wants to go into
business, business for a gentleman, suh, Gad, there 's no finer or
better paying business in the world than breeding blooded dogs--that is,
if you get a man of experience to go in with you."</p>
<p>"Dogs, dogs," drivelled old Horace Talbot, "Beachfield 's always talking
about dogs. I remember the night we were all discussing that Hamilton
nigger's arrest, Beachfield said it was a sign of total depravity
because his man hunted 'possums with his hound." The old man laughed
inanely. The hotel whiskey was getting on his nerves.</p>
<p>The reporter opened his eyes and his ears. He had stumbled upon
something, at any rate.</p>
<p>"What was it about some nigger's arrest, sir?" he asked respectfully.</p>
<p>"Oh, it was n't anything much. Only an old and trusted servant robbed
his master, and my theory----"</p>
<p>"But you will remember, Mr. Talbot," broke in Davis, "that I proved your
theory to be wrong and cited a conclusive instance."</p>
<p>"Yes, a 'possum-hunting dog."</p>
<p>"I am really anxious to hear about the robbery, though. It seems such an
unusual thing for a negro to steal a great amount."</p>
<p>"Just so, and that was part of my theory. Now----"</p>
<p>"It 's an old story and a long one, Mr. Skaggs, and one of merely local
repute," interjected Colonel Saunders. "I don't think it could possibly
interest you, who are familiar with the records of the really great
crimes that take place in a city such as New York."</p>
<p>"Those things do interest me very much, though. I am something of a
psychologist, and I often find the smallest and most
insignificant-appearing details pregnant with suggestion. Won't you let
me hear the story, Colonel?"</p>
<p>"Why, yes, though there 's little in it save that I am one of the few
men who have come to believe that the negro, Berry Hamilton, is not the
guilty party."</p>
<p>"Nonsense! nonsense!" said Talbot; "of course Berry was guilty, but, as
I said before, I don't blame him. The negroes----"</p>
<p>"Total depravity," said Davis. "Now look at my dog----"</p>
<p>"If you will retire with me to the further table I will give you
whatever of the facts I can call to mind."</p>
<p>As unobtrusively as they could, they drew apart from the others and
seated themselves at a more secluded table, leaving Talbot and Davis
wrangling, as of old, over their theories. When the glasses were filled
and the pipes going, the Colonel began his story, interlarding it
frequently with comments of his own.</p>
<p>"Now, in the first place, Mr. Skaggs," he said when the tale was done,
"I am lawyer enough to see for myself how weak the evidence was upon
which the negro was convicted, and later events have done much to
confirm me in the opinion that he was innocent."</p>
<p>"Later events?"</p>
<p>"Yes." The Colonel leaned across the table and his voice fell to a
whisper. "Four years ago a great change took place in Maurice Oakley. It
happened in the space of a day, and no one knows the cause of it. From a
social, companionable man, he became a recluse, shunning visitors and
dreading society. From an open-hearted, unsuspicious neighbour, he
became secretive and distrustful of his own friends. From an active
business man, he has become a retired brooder. He sees no one if he can
help it. He writes no letters and receives none, not even from his
brother, it is said. And all of this came about in the space of
twenty-four hours."</p>
<p>"But what was the beginning of it?"</p>
<p>"No one knows, save that one day he had some sort of nervous attack. By
the time the doctor was called he was better, but he kept clutching his
hand over his heart. Naturally, the physician wanted to examine him
there, but the very suggestion of it seemed to throw him into a frenzy;
and his wife too begged the doctor, an old friend of the family, to
desist. Maurice Oakley had been as sound as a dollar, and no one of the
family had had any tendency to heart affection."</p>
<p>"It is strange."</p>
<p>"Strange it is, but I have my theory."</p>
<p>"His actions are like those of a man guarding a secret."</p>
<p>"Sh! His negro laundress says that there is an inside pocket in his
undershirts."</p>
<p>"An inside pocket?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"And for what?" Skaggs was trembling with eagerness.</p>
<p>The Colonel dropped his voice lower.</p>
<p>"We can only speculate," he said; "but, as I have said, I have my
theory. Oakley was a just man, and in punishing his old servant for the
supposed robbery it is plain that he acted from principle. But he is
also a proud man and would hate to confess that he had been in the
wrong. So I believed that the cause of his first shock was the finding
of the money that he supposed gone. Unwilling to admit this error, he
lets the misapprehension go on, and it is the money which he carries in
his secret pocket, with a morbid fear of its discovery, that has made
him dismiss his servants, leave his business, and refuse to see his
friends."</p>
<p>"A very natural conclusion, Colonel, and I must say that I believe you.
It is strange that others have not seen as you have seen and brought the
matter to light."</p>
<p>"Well, you see, Mr. Skaggs, none are so dull as the people who think
they think. I can safely say that there is not another man in this town
who has lighted upon the real solution of this matter, though it has
been openly talked of for so long. But as for bringing it to light, no
one would think of doing that. It would be sure to hurt Oakley's
feelings, and he is of one of our best families."</p>
<p>"Ah, yes, perfectly right."</p>
<p>Skaggs had got all that he wanted; much more, in fact, than he had
expected. The Colonel held him for a while yet to enlarge upon the views
that he had expressed.</p>
<p>When the reporter finally left him, it was with a cheery "Good-night,
Colonel. If I were a criminal, I should be afraid of that analytical
mind of yours!"</p>
<p>He went upstairs chuckling. "The old fool!" he cried as he flung himself
into a chair. "I 've got it! I 've got it! Maurice Oakley must see me,
and then what?" He sat down to think out what he should do to-morrow.
Again, with his fine disregard of ways and means, he determined to trust
to luck, and as he expressed it, "brace old Oakley."</p>
<p>Accordingly he went about nine o'clock the next morning to Oakley's
house. A gray-haired, sad-eyed woman inquired his errand.</p>
<p>"I want to see Mr. Oakley," he said.</p>
<p>"You cannot see him. Mr. Oakley is not well and does not see visitors."</p>
<p>"But I must see him, madam; I am here upon business of importance."</p>
<p>"You can tell me just as well as him. I am his wife and transact all of
his business."</p>
<p>"I can tell no one but the master of the house himself."</p>
<p>"You cannot see him. It is against his orders."</p>
<p>"Very well," replied Skaggs, descending one step; "it is his loss, not
mine. I have tried to do my duty and failed. Simply tell him that I came
from Paris."</p>
<p>"Paris?" cried a querulous voice behind the woman's back. "Leslie, why
do you keep the gentleman at the door? Let him come in at once."</p>
<p>Mrs. Oakley stepped from the door and Skaggs went in. Had he seen
Oakley before he would have been shocked at the change in his
appearance; but as it was, the nervous, white-haired man who stood
shiftily before him told him nothing of an eating secret long carried.
The man's face was gray and haggard, and deep lines were cut under his
staring, fish-like eyes. His hair tumbled in white masses over his
pallid forehead, and his lips twitched as he talked.</p>
<p>"You 're from Paris, sir, from Paris?" he said. "Come in, come in."</p>
<p>His motions were nervous and erratic. Skaggs followed him into the
library, and the wife disappeared in another direction.</p>
<p>It would have been hard to recognise in the Oakley of the present the
man of a few years before. The strong frame had gone away to bone, and
nothing of his old power sat on either brow or chin. He was as a man who
trembled on the brink of insanity. His guilty secret had been too much
for him, and Skaggs's own fingers twitched as he saw his host's hands
seek the breast of his jacket every other moment.</p>
<p>"It is there the secret is hidden," he said to himself, "and whatever it
is, I must have it. But how--how? I can't knock the man down and rob him
in his own house." But Oakley himself proceeded to give him his first
cue.</p>
<p>"You--you--perhaps have a message from my brother--my brother who is in
Paris. I have not heard from him for some time."</p>
<p>Skaggs's mind worked quickly. He remembered the Colonel's story.
Evidently the brother had something to do with the secret. "Now or
never," he thought. So he said boldly, "Yes, I have a message from your
brother."</p>
<p>The man sprung up, clutching again at his breast. "You have? you have?
Give it to me. After four years he sends me a message! Give it to me!"</p>
<p>The reporter looked steadily at the man. He knew that he was in his
power, that his very eagerness would prove traitor to his discretion.</p>
<p>"Your brother bade me to say to you that you have a terrible secret,
that you bear it in your breast--there--there. I am his messenger. He
bids you to give it to me."</p>
<p>Oakley had shrunken back as if he had been struck.</p>
<p>"No, no!" he gasped, "no, no! I have no secret."</p>
<p>The reporter moved nearer him. The old man shrunk against the wall, his
lips working convulsively and his hand tearing at his breast as Skaggs
drew nearer. He attempted to shriek, but his voice was husky and broke
off in a gasping whisper.</p>
<p>"Give it to me, as your brother commands."</p>
<p>"No, no, no! It is not his secret; it is mine. I must carry it here
always, do you hear? I must carry it till I die. Go away! Go away!"</p>
<p>Skaggs seized him. Oakley struggled weakly, but he had no strength. The
reporter's hand sought the secret pocket. He felt a paper beneath his
fingers. Oakley gasped hoarsely as he drew it forth. Then raising his
voice gave one agonised cry, and sank to the floor frothing at the
mouth. At the cry rapid footsteps were heard in the hallway, and Mrs.
Oakley threw open the door.</p>
<p>"What is the matter?" she cried.</p>
<p>"My message has somewhat upset your husband," was the cool answer.</p>
<p>"But his breast is open. Your hand has been in his bosom. You have taken
something from him. Give it to me, or I shall call for help."</p>
<p>Skaggs had not reckoned on this, but his wits came to the rescue.</p>
<p>"You dare not call for help," he said, "or the world will know!"</p>
<p>She wrung her hands helplessly, crying, "Oh, give it to me, give it to
me. We 've never done you any harm."</p>
<p>"But you 've harmed some one else; that is enough."</p>
<p>He moved towards the door, but she sprang in front of him with the
fierceness of a tigress protecting her young. She attacked him with
teeth and nails. She was pallid with fury, and it was all he could do to
protect himself and yet not injure her. Finally, when her anger had
taken her strength, he succeeded in getting out. He flew down the
hall-way and out of the front door, the woman's screams following him.
He did not pause to read the precious letter until he was safe in his
room at the Continental Hotel. Then he sprang to his feet, crying,
"Thank God! thank God! I was right, and the <i>Universe</i> shall have a
sensation. The brother is the thief, and Berry Hamilton is an innocent
man. Hurrah! Now, who is it that has come on a wild-goose chase? Who is
it that ought to handle his idea carefully? Heigho, Saunders my man, the
drinks 'll be on you, and old Skaggsy will have done some good in the
world."</p>
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