
“Only name them, Mr. Root.”
“I have come to Boston to find a certain man who at last report was living here. He is an old man.”
“Older than you?”
“No, but he might seem older.”
“How old is he, then?”
“He watched the head of King Charles the First being chopped off.”
“At least threescore and four then.”
“Ah, I see you have been learning sums and differences.”
“And products and dividends, Mr. Root.”
“Work this into your reckonings, then: the one I seek had an excellent view of the beheading, for he was sitting upon his father’s shoulders.”
“Couldn’t have been more than a few years old then. Unless his father was a sturdy fellow indeed.”
“His father was sturdy in a sense,” says Enoch, “for Archbishop Laud had caused his ears and his nose to be cut off in Star Chamber some two decades before, and yet he was not daunted, but kept up his agitation against the King. Against all Kings.”
“He was a Barker.” Again, this word brings no sign of contempt to Ben’s face. Shocking how different this place is from London.
“But to answer your question, Ben: Drake was not an especially big or strong man.”
“So the son on his shoulders was small. By now he should be, perhaps, threescore and eight. But I do not know of a Mr. Drake here.”
“Drake was the father’s Christian name.”
“Pray, what then is the name of the family?”
“I will not tell you that just now,” says Enoch. For the man he wants to find might have a very poor character among these people-might already have been hanged on Boston Common, for all Enoch knows.
