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"After a time, I suppose, they came to accept the fact that Wallace kept on being young while they were growing old. The wonder wore off it and they probably didn't talk about it a great deal, even among themselves. New generations accepted it because their elders saw in it nothing too unusual-and anyhow no one saw much of Wallace because he kept strictly to himself.
"And in the nearby areas the thing, when it was thought of at all, grew to be just a sort of legend- another crazy tale that wasn't worth looking into. Maybe just a joke among those folks down Dark Hollow way. A Rip Van Winkle sort of business that probably didn't have a word of truth in it. A man might look ridiculous if he went prying into it."
"But your man looked into it."
"Yes. Don't ask me why."
"Yet he wasn't assigned to follow up the job."
"He was needed somewhere else. And besides he was known back there."
"And you?"
"It took two years of work."
"But now you know the story."
"Not all of it. There are more questions now than there were to start with."
"You've seen this man."
"Many times," said Lewis. "But I've never talked with him. I don't think he's ever seen me. He takes a walk each day before he goes to get the mail. He never moves off the place, you see. The mailman brings out the little stuff he needs. A bag of flour, a pound of bacon, a dozen eggs, cigars, and sometimes liquor."
"But that must be against the postal regulations."
"Of course it is. But mailmen have been doing it for years. It doesn't hurt a thing until someone screams about it. And no one's going to. The mailmen probably are the only friends he has ever had."
"I take it this Wallace doesn't do much farming."
"None at all. He has a little vegetable garden, but that is all he does. The place has gone back pretty much to wilderness."
"But he has to live. He must get money somewhere."
"He does," said Lewis. "Every five or ten years or so he ships off a fistful of gems to an outfit in New York."
"Legal?"
"If you mean, is it hot, I don't think so. If someone wanted to make a case of it, I suppose there are illegalities. Not to start with, when he first started sending them, back in the old days. But laws change and I suspect both he and the buyer are in defiance of any number of them."
"And you don't mind?"
"I checked on this firm," said Lewis, "and they were rather nervous. For one thing, they'd been stealing Wallace blind. I told them to keep on buying. I told them that if anyone came around to check, to refer them straight to me. I told them to keep their mouths shut and not change anything."
"You don't want anyone to scare him off," said Hardwicke.
"You're damned right, I don't. I want the mailman to keep on acting as a delivery boy and the New York firm to keep on buying gems. I want everything to stay just the way it is. And before you ask me where the stones come from, I'll tell you I don't know."
"He maybe has a mine."
"That would be quite a mine. Diamonds and rubies and emeralds, all out of the same mine."
"I would suspect, even at the prices that he gets from them, he picks up a fair income."
Lewis nodded. "Apparently he only sends a shipment in when he runs out of cash. He wouldn't need too much. He lives rather simply, to judge from the grub he buys. But he subscribes to a lot of daily papers and news magazines and to dozens of scientific journals. He buys a lot of books."
"Technical books?"
"Some of them, of course, but mostly keeping up with new developments. Physics and chemistry and biology-all that sort of stuff."
"But I don't…"
"Of course you don't. Neither do I. He's no scientist. Or at least he has no formal education in the sciences. Back in the days when he went to school there wasn't much of it-not in the sense of today's scientific education. And whatever he learned then would be fairly worthless now in any event. He went through grade school-one of those one-room country schools-and spent one winter at what was called an academy that operated for a year or two down in Millville village. In case you don't know, that was considerably better than par back in the 1850s. He was, apparently, a fairly bright young man."
Hardwicke shook his head. "It sounds incredible. You've checked on all of this?"
"As well as I could. I had to go at it gingerly. I wanted no one to catch on. And one thing I forgot-he does a lot of writing. He buys these big, bound record books, in lots of a dozen at the time. He buys ink by the pint."
Hardwicke got up from his desk and paced up and down the room.
"Lewis," he said, "if you hadn't shown me your credentials and if I hadn't checked on them, I'd figure all of this to be a very tasteless joke."
He went back and sat down again. He picked up the pencil and started rolling it between his palms once more.
"You've been on the case two years," he said. "You have no ideas?"
"Not a one," said Lewis. "I'm entirely baffled. That is why I'm here."
"Tell me more of his history. After the war, that is."
"His mother died," said Lewis, "while he was away. His father and the neighbors buried her right there on the farm. That was the way a lot of people did it then. Young Wallace got a furlough, but not in time to get home for the funeral. There wasn't much embalming done in those days and the traveling was slow. Then he went back to the war. So far as I can find, it was his only furlough. The old man lived alone and worked the farm, batching it and getting along all right. From what I can pick up, he was a good farmer, an exceptionally good farmer for his day. He subscribed to some farm journals and was progressive in his ideas. He paid attention to such things as crop rotation and the prevention of erosion. The farm wasn't much of a farm by modern standards, but it made him a living and a little extra he managed to lay by.
"Then Enoch came home from the war and they farmed the place together for a year or so. The old man bought a mower-one of those horse-drawn contraptions with a sickle bar to cut hay or grain. It was the progressive thing to do. It beat a scythe all hollow.
"Then one afternoon the old man went out to mow a hayfield. The horses ran away. Something must have scared them. Enoch's father was thrown off the seat and forward, in front of the sickle bar. It was not a pretty way to die."
Hardwicke made a grimace of distaste. "Horrible," he said.
"Enoch went out and gathered up his father and got the body to the house. Then he took a gun and went hunting for the horses. He found them down in the corner of the pasture and he shot the two of them and he left them. I mean exactly that. For years their skeletons lay there in the pasture, where he'd killed them, still hitched to the mower until the harness rotted.
"Then he went back to the house and laid his father out. He washed him and he dressed him in the good black suit and laid him on a board, then went out to the barn and carpentered a coffin. And after that, he dug a grave beside his mother's grave. He finished it by lantern light, then went back to the house and sat up with his father. When morning came, he went to tell the nearest neighbor and that neighbor notified the others and someone went to get a preacher. Late in the afternoon they had the funeral, and Enoch went back to the house. He has lived there ever since, but he never farmed the land. Except the garden, that is."
"You told me these people wouldn't talk to strangers. You seem to have learned a lot."
"It took two years to do it. I infiltrated them. I bought a beat-up car and drifted into Millville and I let it out that I was a ginseng hunter."
"A what?"
"A ginseng hunter. Ginseng is a plant."
"Yes, I know. But there's been no market for it for years."
"A small market and an occasional one. Exporters will take on some of it. But I hunted other medicinal plants as well and pretended an extensive knowledge of them and their use. ‘Pretended' isn't actually the word; I boned up plenty on them."