The day after the inquest, Sidney Bolton's body was buried in Gartley

churchyard. Owing to the nature of the death, and the publicity given

to the murder by the press, a great concourse of people assembled to

witness the interment, and there was an impressive silence when the

corpse was committed to the grave. Afterwards, as was natural, much

discussion followed on the verdict at the inquest. It was the

common opinion that the jury could have brought in no other verdict,

considering the nature of the evidence supplied; but many people

declared that Captain Hervey of The Diver should have been called. If

the deceased had enemies, said these wiseacres, it was probable that he

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would have talked about them to the skipper. But they forgot that the

witnesses called at the inquest, including the mother of the dead man,

had insisted that Bolton had no enemies, so it is difficult to see what

they expected Captain Hervey to say.

After the funeral, the journals made but few remarks about the mystery.

Every now and then it was hinted that a clue had been found, and that

the police would sooner or later track down the criminal. But all this

loose chatter came to nothing, and as the days went by, the public--in

London, at all events--lost interest in the case. The enterprising

weekly paper that had offered the furnished house and the life income

to the person who found the assassin received an intimation from

the Government that such a lottery could not be allowed. The paper,

therefore, returned to Limericks, and the amateur detectives, like so

many Othellos, found their occupation gone. Then a political crisis took

place in the far East, and the fickle public relegated the murder

of Bolton to the list of undiscovered crimes. Even the Scotland Yard

detectives, failing to find a clue, lost interest in the matter, and it

seemed as though the mystery of Bolton's death would not be solved until

the Day of Judgment.

In the village, however, people still continued to be keenly interested,

since Bolton was one of themselves, and, moreover, Widow Anne kept up a

perpetual outcry about her murdered boy. She had lost the small weekly

sum which Sidney had allowed her out of his wages, so the neighbors, the

gentry of the surrounding country, and the officers at the Fort sent

her ample washing to do. Widow Anne in a few weeks had quite a large

business, considering the size of the village, and philosophically

observed to a neighbor that "It was an ill wind which blew no one any

good," adding also that Sidney was more good to her dead than alive. But

even in Gartley the villagers grew weary of discussing a mystery which

could never be solved, and so the case became rarely talked about. In

these days of bustle and worry and competition, it is wonderful how

people forget even important events. If a blue sun arose to lighten

the world instead of a yellow one, after nine days of wonder, man would

settle down quite comfortably to a cerulean existence. Such is the

wonderful adaptability of humanity.




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