They walked back to the parlors.
Doctor Lanning and Marie were picking up the rackets
at the ping-pong table. Mrs. Whitney had gone
into the office for the evening mail.
Passing the piano, Gertrude sat down
and swung around toward the keys. Glover took
music from the table. Unwilling to admit a trace
of the unusual in the beating of her heart, or in
her deeper breathing, she could not entirely control
either; there was something too fascinating in defying
the light that she now knew glowed in the dull eyes
at her side. She avoided looking; enough that
the fire was there without directly exposing her own
eyes to it. She drummed with one hand, then
with both, at a gavotte on the rack before her.
Overcome merely at watching her fingers
stretch upon the keys he leaned against the piano.
“Why did you ask me to come up?”
As he muttered the words she picked
again and again with her right hand at a loving little
phrase in the gavotte. When it went precisely
right she spoke in the same tone, still caressing
the phrase, never looking up. “Are you
sorry you came?”
“No; I’d rather be trod under foot than
not be near you.”
“May we not be friends without
either of us being martyred? I shall be afraid
ever to ask you to do anything again. Was I wrong
in assuming it would give you as well as
all of us pleasure to dine together this evening?”
“No. You know better than
that. I am insanely presumptuous, I know it.
Let me ask one last favor
The gavotte rippled under her fingers. “No.”
He turned away. She swung on
the stool toward him and looked very kindly and frankly
up. “You have been too courteous to all
of us for that. Ask as many favors as you like,
Mr. Glover,” she murmured, “but not, if
you please, a last one.”
“It shall be the last, Miss Brock. I only
“You only what?”
“Will you let me know what day you are going,
so I may say good-by?”
“Certainly I will. You
will be at Medicine Bend in any case, won’t
you?”
“No. I have fifteen hundred miles to cover
next week.”
“What for oh, it isn’t any
of my business, is it?”
“Looking over the snowsheds. Will you
telegraph me?”
“Where?”
“At the Wickiup; it will reach me.”
“You might have to come too far. We shall
start in a few days.”
“Will you telegraph me?”
“If you wish me to.”
Eight days later, when suspense had
grown sullen and Glover had parted with all hope of
hearing from her, he heard. In the depths of
the Heart River range her message reached him.
Every day Giddings, hundreds of miles
away at the Wickiup, had had his route-list.
Giddings, who would have died for the engineer, waited,
every point in the repeating covered, day after day
for a Glen Tarn message that Glover expected.
For four days Glover had hung like a dog around the
nearer stretches of the division. But the season
was advanced, he dared not delegate the last vital
inspection of the year, and bitterly he retreated
from shed to shed until he was buried in the barren
wastes of the eighth district.
The day in the Heart River mountains
is the thin, gray day of the alkali and the sage.
On Friday afternoon Glover’s car lay sidetracked
at the east end of the Nine Mile shed waiting for a
limited train to pass. The train was late and
the sun was dropping into an ashen strip of wind clouds
that hung cold as shrouds to the north and west when
the gray-powdered engine whistled for the siding.
Motionless beside the switch Glover
saw down the gloom of the shed the shoes wringing
fire from the Pullman wheels, and wondered why they
were stopping. The conductor from the open vestibule
waved to him as the train slowed and ran forward with
the message.
“Giddings wired me to wait for
your answer, Mr. Glover,” said the conductor.
Glover was reading the telegram:
“I may start Saturday.
“G. B.”
There was one chance to make it; that
was to take the limited train then and there.
Bidding the conductor wait he hastened to his car,
called for his gripsack, gave his assistant a volley
of orders, and boarded a Pullman. Not the preferred
stock of the whole system would have availed at that
moment to induce an inspection of Nine Mile shed.
There were men that he knew in the
sleepers, but he shunned acquaintance and walked on
till he found an empty section into which he could
throw himself and feast undisturbed on his telegram.
He studied it anew, tried to consider coolly whether
her message meant anything or nothing, and gloated
over the magic of the letters that made her initials:
and when he slept, the word last in his heart was Gertrude.
In the morning he breakfasted late
in the sunshine of the diner, passed his friends again
and secluded himself in his section. Never before
had she said “I”; always it had been “we.”
With eyes half-closed upon the window he repeated
the words and spoke her name after them, because every
time the speaking drugged him like lotus, until, yielding
again to the exhaustion of the week’s work and
strain, he fell asleep.
When he woke the car was dark; the
train conductor, Sid Francis, was sitting beside him,
laughing.
“You’re sleepy to-day, Mr. Glover.”
“Sid, where are we?” asked
Glover, looking at his watch; it was four o’clock.
“Grouse Creek.”
“Are we that late? What’s the matter?”
The conductor nodded toward the window. “Look
there.”
The sky was gray with a driving haze;
a thin sweep of snow flying in the sand of the storm
was whitening the sagebrush.
Glover, waking wide, turned to the window. “Where’s
the wind, Sid?”
“Northwest.”
“What’s the thermometer?”
“Thirty at Creston; sixty when we left MacDill
at noon.”
“Everything running?”
“They’ve been getting
the freights into division since noon. There’ll
be something doing to-night on the range. They
sent stock warnings everywhere this morning, but they
can’t begin to protect the stock between here
and Medicine in one day. Pulling hard, isn’t
she? We’re not making up anything.”
The porter was lighting the lamps.
While they talked it had grown quite dark.
Losing time every mile of the way, the train, frost-crusted
to the eyelids, got into Sleepy Cat at half-past six
o’clock; four hours late.
The crowded yard, as they pulled through
it, showed the tie-up of the day’s traffic.
Long lines of freight cars filled the trackage, and
overloaded switch engines struggled with ever-growing
burdens to avert the inevitable blockade of the night.
Glover’s anxiety, as he left the train at the
station, was as to whether he could catch anything
on the Glen Tarn branch to take him up to the Springs
that night, for there he was resolved to get before
morning if he had to take an engine for the run.
As he started up the narrow hall leading
to the telegraph office he heard the rustle of skirts
above. Someone was descending the stairway,
and with his face in the light he halted.
“Oh, Mr. Glover.”
“Why Miss Brock!” It was Gertrude.
“What in the world ”
he began. His broken voice was very natural,
she thought, but there was amazement in his utterance.
He noticed there was little color in her face; the
deep boa of fur nestling about her throat might account
for that.
“What a chance that I should
meet you!” she exclaimed, her back hard against
the side wall, for the hall was narrow and brought
them face to face. She spoke on. “Did
you get my?”
“Did I?” he echoed slowly;
“I have travelled every minute since yesterday
afternoon to get here
Her uneasy laugh interrupted him.
“It was hardly worth while, all that.”
“ and I was just
going up to find out about getting to Glen Tarn.”
“Glen Tarn! I left Glen
Tarn this afternoon all alone to go to Medicine Bend papa
is there, did you know? He came yesterday with
all the directors. Our car was attached for
me to the afternoon train coming down.”
She was certainly wrought up, he thought. “But
when we reached here the train I should have taken
for Medicine Bend had not come
“It is here now.”
“Thank heaven, is it?”
“I came in on it.”
“Then I can start at last!
I have been so nervous. Is this our train?
They said our car couldn’t be attached to this
train, and that I should have to go down in one of
the sleepers. I don’t understand it at
all. Will you have the car sent back to Glen
Tarn in the morning, Mr. Glover? And would you
get my handbag? I was nearly run over a while
ago by some engine or other. I mustn’t
miss this train
“Never fear, never fear,” said Glover.
“But I cannot miss it. Be very,
very sure, won’t you?”
“Indeed, I shall. The
train won’t start for some time yet. First
let me take you to your car and then make some inquiries.
Is no one down with you?”
“No one; I am alone.”
“Alone?”
“I expected to have been with
papa by this time. It takes so little time to
run down, you know, and I telegraphed papa I should
come on to meet him. Isn’t it most disagreeable
weather?”
Glover laughed as he shielded her
from the wind. “I suppose that’s
a woman’s name for it.”
The car, coupled to a steampipe, stood
just east of the station, and Glover, helping her
into it, went back after a moment to the telegraph
office. It seemed a long time that he was gone,
and he returned covered with snow. She advanced
quickly to him in her wraps. “Are they
ready?”
He shook his head. “I’m
afraid you can’t get to Medicine to-night.”
“Oh, but I must.”
“They have abandoned Number Six.”
“What does that mean?”
“The train will be held here
to-night on account of the storm. There will
be no train of any kind down before morning; not then
if this keeps up.”
“Is there danger of a blockade?”
“There is a blockade.”
“Then I must get to papa to-night.”
She spoke with disconcerting firmness.
“May I suggest?” he asked.
“Certainly.”
“Would it not be infinitely better to go back
to the Springs?”
“No, that would be infinitely worse.”
“It would be comparatively easy an
engine to pull your car up on a special order?”
“I will not go back to the Springs
to-night, and I will go to Medicine Bend,” she
exclaimed, apprehensively. “May I not have
a special there as well as to the Springs?”
Until that moment he had never seen
anything of her father in her; but her father spoke
in every feature; she was a Brock.
Glover looked grave. “You
may have, I am sure, every facility the division offers.
I make only the point,” he said, gently, “that
it would be hazardous to attempt to get to the Bend
to-night. I have just come from the telegraph
office. In the district I left this morning
the wires are all down to-night. That is where
the storm is coming from. There is a lull here
just now, but
“I thank you, Mr. Glover, believe
me, very sincerely for your solicitude. I have
no choice but to go, and if I must, the sooner the
better, surely. Is it possible for you to make
arrangements for me?”
“It is possible, yes,” he answered, guardedly.
“But you hesitate.”
“It is a terrible night.”
“I like snow, Mr. Glover.”
“The danger to-night is the wind.”
“Are you afraid of the wind?”
There was a touch of ridicule in her half-laughing
tone.
“Yes,” he answered, “I am afraid
of the wind.”
“You are jesting.”
She saw that he flushed just at the eyes; but he spoke
still gently.
“You feel that you must go?”
“I must.”
“Then I will get orders at once.”