The sun rose the next morning upon
an eventful day in Bruce’s life. He was
backing his judgment-or was it only his
mulish obstinacy?-against the conviction
of the community. He knew that if it had not been
for their personal friendship for himself the married
men among his boatmen would have backed out.
There was excitement and tension in the air.
The wide, yellow river was running
like a mill-race, bending the willows, lapping hungrily
at the crumbling shore. The bank was black with
groups of people, tearful wives and whimpering children,
lugubrious neighbors, pessimistic citizens. Bruce
called the men together and assigned each boat its
place in line. Beyond explicit orders that no
boatman should attempt to pass another and the barges
must be kept a safe distance apart, he gave few instructions,
for they had only to follow his lead.
“But if you see I’m in
trouble, follow Saunders, who’s second.
And, Jim, do exactly as Smaltz tells you-you’ll
be on the hind sweep in the third boat with him.”
In addition to a head and hind sweepman each barge carried a bailer, for
there were rapids where at any stage of the water a boat partially filled.
The men now silently took their places and Bruce on his platform gripped the
sweep-handle and nodded-
“Cast off.”
The barge drifted a little distance
slowly, then faster; the current caught it and it
started on its journey like some great swift-swimming
bird. As he glided into the shadow of the bridge
Saunders started; before he turned the bend Smaltz
was waving his farewells, and as Meadows vanished
from his sight the fourth boat, the heaviest loaded,
was on its way. Bruce drew a deep breath, rest
was behind him, the next three days would be hours
of almost continual anxiety and strain.
The forenoon of the first day was
comparatively easy going, though there were places
enough for an amateur to wreck; but the real battle
with the river began at the Pine Creek Rapids-the
battle that no experienced boatman ever was rash enough
to prophesy the result. The sinister stream,
with its rapids and whirlpools, its waterfalls and
dangerous channel-rocks, had claimed countless victims
in the old days of the gold rush and there were years
together since the white people had settled at Meadows
that no boat had gone even a third of its length.
Wherever the name of the river was known its ill-fame
went with it, and those feared it most who knew it
best. Only the inexperienced, those too unfamiliar
with water to recognize its perils so long as nothing
happened, spoke lightly of its dangers.
Above the Pine Creek Rapids, Bruce
swung into an eddy to tie up for lunch; besides, he
wanted to see how Smaltz handled his sweep. Smaltz
came on, grinning, and Porcupine Jim, bare-headed,
his yellow pompadour shining in the sun like corn-silk,
responded instantly to every order with a stroke.
They were working together perfectly, Bruce noted with
relief, and the landing Smaltz made in the eddy was
quite as good as the one he had made himself.
Once more Bruce had to admit that
if Smaltz boasted he always made good his boast.
He believed there was little doubt but that he was
equal to the work.
An ominous roar was coming from the
rapids, a continuous rumble like thunder far back
in the hills. It was not the most cheerful sound
by which to eat and the meal was brief. The gravity
of the boatmen who knew the river was contagious and
the grin faded gradually from Smaltz’s face.
Life preservers were dragged out within
easy reach, the sweepmen replaced their boots with
rubber-soled canvas ties and cleared their platform
of every nail and splinter. When all were ready,
Bruce swung off his hat and laid both hands upon his
sweep.
“Throw off the lines,”
he said quietly and his black eyes took on a steady
shine.
There was something creepy, portentous,
in the seemingly deliberate quietness with which the
boat crept from the still water of the eddy toward
the channel.
The bailer in the stern changed color
and no one spoke. There was an occasional ripple
against the side of the boat but save for that distant
roar no other sound broke the strained stillness.
Bruce crouched over his sweep like some huge cat,
a cougar waiting to grapple with an enemy as wily
and as formidable as himself. The boat slipped
forward with a kind of stealth and then the current
caught it.
Faster it moved, then faster and faster.
The rocks and bushes at the water’s edge flew
by. The sound was now a steady boom! boom! growing
louder with every heart-beat, until it was like the
indescribable roar of a cloudburst in a canyon-an
avalanche of water dropping from a great height.
The boat was racing now with a speed
which made the flying rocks and foliage along the
shore a blur-racing toward a white stretch
of churning spray and foam that reached as far down
the river as it was possible to see. From the
water which dashed itself to whiteness against the
rocks there still came the mighty boom! boom! which
had put fear into many a heart.
The barge was leaping toward it as
though drawn by the invisible force of some great
suction pump. The hind sweepman gripped the handle
of the sweep until his knuckles went white and Bruce
over his shoulder watched the wild water with a jaw
set and rigid.
The heavy barge seemed to pause for
an instant on the edge of a precipice with half her
length in mid-air before her bow dropped heavily into
a curve of water that was like the hollow of a great
green shell. The roar that followed was deafening.
The sheet of water that broke over the boat for an
instant shut out the sun. Then she came up like
a clumsy Newfoundland, with the water streaming from
the platform and swishing through the machinery, and
all on board drenched to the skin.
Bruce stood at his post unshaken,
throwing his great strength on the sweep this way
and that-endeavoring to keep it in the centre
of the current-in the middle of the tortuous
channel through which the boat was racing like mad.
And the hind-sweepman, doing his part, responded,
with all the weight of body and strength he possessed,
to Bruce’s low-voiced orders almost before they
had left his lips.
Quick and tremendous action was imperative
for there were places where a single instant’s
tardiness meant destruction. There was no time
in that mad rush to rectify mistakes. A miscalculation,
a stroke of the sweep too little or too much, would
send the heavily loaded boat with that tremendous,
terrifying force behind it, crashing and splintering
on a rock like a flimsy-bottomed strawberry box.
For all of seven miles Bruce never
lifted his eyes, straining them as he wielded his
sweep for the deceptive, submerged granite boulders
over which the water slid in a thin sheet. Immovable,
tense, he steered with the sureness of knowledge and
grim determination until the boat ceased to leap and
ahead lay a little stretch of peace.
Then he turned and looked at the lolling
tongues behind him that seemed still reaching for
the boat and straightening up he shook his fist:
“You didn’t get me that
time, dog-gone you, and what’s more you won’t!”
All three boats were coming, rearing
and plunging, disappearing and reappearing. Anxiously
he watched Smaltz work until a bend of the river shut
them all from sight. It was many miles before
the river straightened out again but when it did he
saw them all riding safely, with Smaltz holding his
place in line.
Stretches of white water came at frequent
intervals all day but Bruce slept on the platform
of his barge that night more soundly than he ever
had dared hope. Each hour that passed, each rapid
that they put behind them, was so much done; he was
so much nearer his goal.
On the second night when they tied
up, with the Devil’s Teeth, the Black Canyon
and the Whiplash passed in safety, Bruce felt almost
secure, although the rapid that he dreaded most remained
for the third and last day.
The boatmen stood, a silent group,
at The Big Mallard. “She’s a bad one,
boys-and looking wicked as I’ve ever
seen her.” There was a furrow of anxiety
between Bruce’s heavy brows.
Every grave face was a shade paler
and Porcupine Jim’s eyes looked like two blue
buttons sewed on white paper as he stared.
“I wish I was back in Meennyso-ta.”
The unimaginative Swede’s voice was plaintive.
“We dare not risk the other
channel, Saunders,” said Bruce briefly, “the
water’s hardly up enough for that.”
“I don’t believe we could
make it,” Saunders answered; “it’s
too long a chance.”
Smaltz was studying the rocks and
current intently, as though to impress upon his mind
every twist and turn. His face was serious but
he made no comment and walked back in silence to the
eddy above where the boats were tied.
It was the only rapid where they had
stopped to “look out the trail ahead,”
but a peculiarity of the Big Mallard was that the channel
changed with the varying stages of the water and it
was too dangerous at any stage to trust to luck.
It was a stretch of water not easy
to describe. Words seem colorless-inadequate
to convey the picture it presented or the sense of
awe it inspired. Looking at it from among the
boulders on the shore it seemed the last degree of
madness for human beings to pit their Lilliputian
strength against that racing, thundering flood.
Certain it was that The Big Mallard was the supreme
test of courage and boatmanship.
The river, running like a mill-race,
shot straight and smooth down grade until it reached
a high, sharp, jutting ledge of granite, where it made
a sharp turn. The main current made a close swirl
and then fairly leaping took a sudden rush for a narrow
passageway between two great boulders, one of which
rose close to shore and the other nearer the centre
of the river. The latter being covered thinly
with a sheet of water which shot over it to drop into
a dark hole like a well, rising again to strike another
rock immediately below and curve back. For three
hundred yards or more the river seethed and boiled,
a stretch of roaring whiteness, as though its growing
fury had culminated in this foaming fit of rage, and
from it came uncanny sounds like children crying, women
screaming.
Bruce’s eyes were shining brilliantly
with the excitement of the desperate game ahead when
he put into the river, but nothing could exceed the
carefulness, the caution with which he worked his boat
out of the eddy so that when the current caught it
it should catch it right. Watching the landmarks
on either shore, measuring distances, calculating
the consequences of each stroke, he placed the clumsy
barge where he would have it, with all the accurate
skill of a good billiard player making a shot.
The boat reached the edge of the current;
then it caught it full. With a jump like a race-horse
at the signal it was shooting down the toboggan slide
of water toward the jutting granite ledge. The
blanched bailer in the stern could have touched it
with his hand as the boat whipped around the corner,
clearing it by so small a margin that it seemed to
him his heart stood still.
Bruce’s muscles turned to steel
as he gripped the sweep handle for the last mad rush.
He looked the personification of human daring.
The wind blew his hair straight back. The joy
of battle blazed in his eyes. His face was alight
with a reckless exultation. But powerful, fearless
as he was, it did not seem as though it were within
the range of human skill or possibilities to place
a boat in that toboggan slide of water so that it
would cut the current diagonally, miss the rock nearest
shore and shoot across to miss the channel boulder
and that yawning hole beneath. But he did, though
he skimmed the wide-mouthed well so close that the
bailer stared into its dark depths with bulging eyes.
The boat leaped in the spray below,
but the worst was passed and Bruce and his hind sweepman
exchanged the swift smile of satisfaction which men
have for each other at such a time.
“Keep her steady-straight
away.” He had not dared yet to lift his
eyes to look behind save for that one glance.
“My God! they’re comin’ right together!”
The sharp cry from the hind sweepman
made him turn. They had rounded the ledge abreast
and Smaltz’s boat inside was crowding Saunders
hard. Saunders and his helper were working with
superhuman strength to throw the boat into the outer
channel in the fraction of time before it started
on the final shoot. Could they do it! could they!
Bruce felt his lungs-his heart-something
inside him hurt with his sharp intake of breath as
he watched that desperate battle whose loss meant not
only sunk machinery but very likely death.
Bruce’s hands were still full
getting his own boat to safety. He dared not
look too long behind.
“They’re goin’ to
make it! They’re almost through! They’re
safe!” Then-shrilly-“They’re
gone! they’ve lost a sweep.”
Bruce turned quickly at his helper’s
cry of consternation, turned to see the hind-sweep
wildly threshing the air while the boat spun around
and around in the boiling water, disappearing, reappearing,
sinking a little lower with each plunge. Then,
at the risk of having every rib crushed in, they saw
the bailer throw his body across the sweep and hold
it down before it quite leaped from its pin.
The hind-sweepman was scrambling wildly to reach and
hold the handle as it beat the air. He got it-held
it for a second-then it was wrenched out of his hand. He tried again and
again before he held it, but finally Bruce said huskily-
“They’ll make it-they’ll
make it sure if Saunders can hold her a little longer
off the rocks.”
His own boat had reached quieter water.
Simultaneously, it seemed, both he and his helper
thought of Smaltz. They took their eyes from the
boat in trouble and the hind-sweepman’s jaw
dropped. He said unemotionally-dully-as
he might have said-“I’m sick;
I’m hungry”-“They’ve
struck.”
Yes-they had struck.
If Bruce had not been so absorbed he might have heard
the bottom splintering when she hit the rock.
Her bow shot high into the air and
settled at the stern. As she slid off, tilted,
filled and sunk, Smaltz and Porcupine Jim both jumped.
Then the river made a bend which shut it all from
Bruce’s sight. It was half a mile before
he found a landing. He tied up and walked back,
unexcited, not hurrying, with a curious quietness
inside.
Smaltz and Jim were fighting when
he got there. Smaltz was sitting astride the
latter’s chest. There were epithets and
recriminations, accusations, counter-charges, oaths.
The Swede was crying and a little stream of red was
trickling toward his ear. Bruce eyed him calmly,
contemplatively, thinking what a face he made, and
how ludicrous he looked with the sand matted in his
corn-silk hair and covering him like a tamale casing
of corn-meal as it stuck to his wet clothes.
He left them and walked up the river
where the rock rose like a monument to his hopes.
With his hands on his hips he watched the water rippling
around it, slipping over the spot where the boat lay
buried with some portion of every machine upon the
works while like a bolt from the blue the knowledge
came to him that since the old Edison type was obsolete
the factories no longer made duplicates of the parts.