“You put me in an awkward position,”
muttered Bucks, looking out of the window.
“But it is grace itself compared
with the position I should be in now among the Pittsburgers,”
objected Glover, shifting his legs again.
“If you won’t go, I must,
that’s all,” continued the general manager.
“I can’t send Tom, Dick, or Harry with
these people, Ab. Gentlemen must be entertained
as such. On the hunting do the best you can;
they want chiefly to see the country and I can’t
have them put through it on a tourist basis.
I want them to see things globe-trotters don’t
see and can’t see without someone like you.
You ought to do that much for our President Henry
S. Brock is not only a national man, and a big one
in the new railroad game, but besides being the owner
of this whole system he is my best friend. We
sat at telegraph keys together a long time before
he was rated at sixty million dollars. I care
nothing for the party except that it includes his
own family and is made up of his friends and associates
and he looks to me here as I should look to him in
the East were circumstances reversed.”
Bucks paused. Glover stared
a moment. “If you put it in that way let
us drop it,” said he at last. “I
will go.”
“The blunder was not a life
and death matter. In the mountains where we
don’t see one woman a year it might happen that
any man expecting one young lady should mistake another
for her. Miss Brock is full of mischief, and
the temptation to her to let you deceive yourself was
too great, that’s all. If I could go without
sacrificing the interests of all of us in the reorganization
I shouldn’t ask you to go.”
“Let it pass.”
The day had been planned for the little
reception to the visitors. The arrival of two
more private cars had added the directors, the hunting
party and more women to the company. The women
were to drive during the day, and the men had arranged
to inspect the roundhouse, the shops, and the division
terminals and to meet the heads of the operating department.
In the evening the railroad men were
to call on their guests at the train. This was
what Glover had hoped he should escape until Bucks
arriving in the morning asked him not only to attend
the reception but to pilot Mr. Brock’s own party
through a long mountain trip. To consent to
the former request after agreeing to the latter was
of slight consequence.
In the evening the special train twinkling
across the yard looked as pretty as a dream.
The luxury of the appointments, subdued by softened
lights, and the simple hospitality of the Pittsburgers those
people who understand so well how to charm and bow
to repel was a new note to the mountain
men. If self-consciousness was felt by the least
of them at the door it could hardly pass Mr. Brock
within; his cordiality was genuine.
Following Bucks came some of his mountain
staff, whom he introduced to the men whose interests
they now represented. Morris Blood, the superintendent,
was among those he brought forward, and he presented
him as a young railroad man and a rising one.
Glover followed because he was never very far from
the mountain superintendent and the general manager
when the two were in sight.
For Glover there was an uncomfortable
moment prospect, and it came almost at once.
Mr. Brock, in meeting him as the chief of construction
who was to take the party on the mountain trip, left
his place and took him with Blood black to his own
car to be introduced to his sister, Mrs. Whitney.
The younger Miss Brock, Marie, the invalid, a sweet-faced
girl, rose to meet the two men. Mrs. Whitney
introduced them to Miss Donner. At the table
Gertrude Brock was watching a waiter from the dining-car
who was placing a coffee urn.
She turned to meet the young men that
were coming forward with her father, and Glover thought
the awful moment was upon him; yet it happened that
he was never to be introduced to Gertrude Brock.
Marie was already engaging him where
he stood with gentle questions, and to catch them
he had to bend above her. When the waiter went
away, Morris Blood was helping Gertrude Brock to complete
her arrangements. Others came up; the moment
passed. But Glover was conscious all the time
of this graceful girl who was so frankly cordial to
those near her and so oblivious of him.
He heard her laughing voice in her
conversation with his friends and noted in the utterance
of her sister and her aunt the same unusual inflections
that he had first heard from her in his office.
To his surprise these Eastern women were very easy
to talk to. They asked about the mountains,
and as their train conductor had long ago hinted when
himself apologizing for mountain stories, well told
but told at second hand Glover knew the
mountains.
Discussing afterward the man that
was to plan the summer trip for them, Louise Donner
wished it might have been the superintendent, because
he was a Boston Tech man.
“Oh, but I think Mr. Glover
is going to be interesting,” declared Mrs. Whitney.
“He drawls and I like that sort of men; there’s
always something more to what they say, after you
think they’re done, don’t you know?
He drank two cups of coffee, didn’t he, Gertrude?
Didn’t you like him?”
“The tall one? I didn’t
notice; he is amazingly homely, isn’t he?”
“Don’t abuse him, for
he is delightful,” interposed Marie.
“I accused him right soon of
being a Southerner,” Mrs. Whitney went on.
“He admitted he was a Missourian. When
I confessed I liked his drawl he told me I ought to
hear his brother, a lawyer, who stutters. Mr.
Glover says he wins all his cases through sympathy.
He stumbles along until everyone is absolutely convinced
that the poor fellow would have a perfectly splendid
case if he could only stammer through it; then, of
course, he gets the verdict.”
The party had not completed the first
day out of Medicine Bend under Glover’s care
before they realized that Mrs. Whitney was right.
Glover could talk and he could listen. With
the men it was mining or railroading or shooting.
If things lagged with the ladies he had landmarks
or scenery or early-day stories. With Mrs. Whitney
he could in extremity discuss St. Louis. Marie
Brock he could please by placing her in marvellous
spots for sketching. As for Gertrude and Louise
Donner the men of their own party left them no dull
moments.
The first week took the party north
into the park country. Two days of the time,
on horses, partly, put everyone in love with the Rockies.
On Saturday they reached the main line again, and
at Sleepy Cat, Superintendent Blood joined the party
for the desert run to the Heart Mountains. Glover
already felt the fatigue of the unusual week, nor
could any ingenuity make the desert interesting to
strenuous people. Its beauties are contemplative
rather than pungent, and the travellers were frankly
advised to fall back on books and ping-pong.
Crawling across an interminable alkali basin in the
late afternoon their train was laid out a long time
by a freight wreck.
Weary of the car, Gertrude Brock,
after the sun had declined, was walking alone down
the track when Glover came in sight. She started
for the train, but Glover easily overtook her.
Since he had joined the party they had not exchanged
one word.
“I wonder whether you have ever
seen anything like these, Miss Brock?” he asked,
coming up to her. She turned; he had a handful
of small, long-stemmed flowers of an exquisite blue.
“How beautiful!” she exclaimed,
moved by surprise. “What are they?”
“Desert flowers.”
“Such a blue.”
“You expressed a regret this morning
“Oh, you heard
“I overheard
“What are they called?”
“I haven’t an idea.
But once in the Sioux country ”
They were at the car-step. “Marie?
See here,” she called to her sister within.
“Won’t you take them?” asked Glover.
“No, no. I
“With an apology for my
“Marie, dear, do look here
“ Stupidity the other day?”
“How shall I ever reach that
step?” she exclaimed, breaking in upon her own
words and obstinately buffeting his own as she gazed
with more than necessary dismay at the high vestibule
tread.
“Would you hold the flowers
a moment ” he asked her
sister appeared at the door “so I
may help you?” continued the patient railroad
man.
“See, Marie, these dear flowers!”
Marie clapped her hands as she ran forward.
He held the flowers up. “Are they for
me?” she cried.
“Will you take them?”
he asked, as she bent over the guard-rail. “Oh,
gladly.” He turned instantly, but Gertrude
had gained the step. “Thank you, thank
you,” exclaimed Marie. “What is their
name, Mr. Glover?”
“I don’t know any name
for them except an Indian name. The Sioux, up
in their country, call them sky-eyes.”
“Sky-eyes! Isn’t that dear? sky-eyes.”
“You are heated,” continued
Marie, looking at him, “you have walked a long
way. Where in all this desolate, desolate country
could you find flowers such as these?”
“Back a little way in a canyon.”
“Are there many in a desert like this?”
“I know of none at
least within many miles yet there may be
others in nearby hiding-places. The desert is
full of surprises.”
“You are so warm, are you not coming up to sit
down while I get a bowl?”
“I will go forward, thank you,
and see when we are to get away. Your sister,”
he added, looking evenly at Marie as Gertrude stood
beside her, “asked this morning why there were
no flowers in this country, and while we were delayed
I happened to recollect that canyon and the sky-eyes.”
“I think your stupid man the
most interesting we have met since we left home, Gertrude,”
remarked Marie at her embroidery after dinner.
“I told you he would be,”
said Mrs. Whitney, suppressing a yawn. Gertrude
was playing ping-pong with Doctor Lanning. “But
isn’t he homely?” she exclaimed, sending
a cut ball into the doctor’s watch-chain.
Louise returned soon with Allen Harrison
from the forward car.
“The programme for the evening
is arranged,” she announced, “and it’s
fine. We are to have a big campfire over near
that butte right out under the stars.
And Mr. Blood is going to tell a story, and while
he’s telling it, Mr. Glover oh, drop
your ping-pong, won’t you, and listen has
promised to make taffy and we are to pull it won’t
that be jolly? and then the coyotes are to howl.”
A little later all left the car together.
Above the copper edge of the desert ranges the moon
was rising full and it brought the nearer buttes up
across the stretches of the night like sentinels.
In the sky a multitude of stars trembled, and wind
springing from the south fanned the fire growing on
the plateau just off the right of way.
The party disposed themselves in camp-chairs
and on ties about the big fire. Near at hand,
Glover, who already had a friend in Clem, the cook,
was feeding chips into a little blaze under a kettle
slung with his taffy mixture, which the women in turn
inspected, asked questions about, and commented sceptically
upon.
Doctor Lanning brought his banjo,
and when the party had settled low about the fire
it helped to keep alive the talk. Every few minutes
the taffy and the coyotes were demanded in turn, and
Glover was kept busy apologizing for the absence of
the wolves and the slowness of his kettle, under which
he fed the small chips regularly.
As the night air grew sharper more
wraps were called for. When Doctor Lanning and
Mrs. Whitney started after them they asked Gertrude
what they should bring her, but she said she needed
nothing.
As she sat, she could see Glover,
her sister Marie on a stool beside him, watching the
boiling taffy. With one foot doubled under him
for a seat, and an elbow supported on his knee he
steadied himself like a camp cook behind his modest
fire; but even as he crouched the blaze threw him
up astonishingly tall. Heedless of the chatter
around the big fire the man whose business was to
bridle rivers, fight snowslides, raze granite hills,
and dispute for their dizzy passes with the bighorn
and the bear, bent patiently above his pot of molasses,
a coaxing stick in one hand and a careful chip in
the other.
“Where, pray, Mr. Glover, did
you learn that?” demanded Marie Brock.
He had been explaining the chemical changes that follow
each stage of the boiling in sugar. “I
learned the taffy business from the old negro mammy
that ‘raised’ me down on the Mississippi,
Aunt Chloe. She taught me everything I know except
mathematics and mathematics I don’t
know anyway.” Mrs. Whitney was distributing
the wraps. “I would have brought your
Newmarket if I could have found it, Gertrude.”
“Her Newmarket!” exclaimed
Allen Harrison. “Gertrude hasn’t
told the Newmarket story, eh? She threw it over
a tramp asleep in the rain down at the Spider Water
bridge.”
“What?”
“ And was going to
disown me because I wouldn’t give up my overcoat
for a tarpaulin.”
“Gertrude Brock!” exclaimed
Mrs. Whitney. “Your Newmarket! Then
you deserve to freeze,” she declared, settling
under her fur cape. “What will
she do next? Now, Mr. Blood, we are all here;
what about that story?”
Morris Blood turned. Glover,
Marie Brock watching, tested the foaming candy.
Doctor Lanning, on a cushion, strummed his banjo.
In front of Gertrude, Harrison, inhaling
a cigarette, stretched before the fire. Declining
a stool, Gertrude was sitting on a chair of ties.
One, projecting at her side, made a rest for her elbow
and she reclined her head upon her hand as she watched
the flames leap.
“The incident Miss Donner asked
about occurred when I was despatching,” began
the superintendent.
“Oh, are you a despatcher, too?”
asked Louise, clasping her hands upon her knee as
she leaned forward.
“They would hardly trust me
with a train-sheet now; this was some time ago.”