Glover looked at his watch; it was
Giddings’ trick at Medicine Bend, and he made
little doubt of getting what he asked for. He
walked to the eating-house and from there directly
across to the roundhouse, and started a hurry call
for the night foreman. He found him at a desk
talking with Paddy McGraw, the engineer that was to
have taken out Number Six.
“Paddy,” said Glover, “do you want
to take me to Medicine to-night?”
“They’ve just cancelled Number Six.”
“I know it.”
“You don’t have to go to-night, do you?”
“Yes, with Mr. Brock’s
car. This isn’t as bad as the night you
and I and Jack Moore bucked snow at Point of Rocks,”
said Glover, significantly. “Do you remember
carrying me from the number seven culvert clean back
to the station after the steampipe broke?”
“You bet I do, and I never thought
you’d see again after the way your eyes were
cooked that night. Well, of course, if you want
to go to-night, it’s go, Mr. Glover. You
know what you’re about, but I’d never
look to see you going out for fun a night like this.”
“I can’t help it.
Yet I wouldn’t want any man to go out with me
to-night unwillingly, Paddy.”
“Why, that’s nothing.
You got me my first run on this division. I’d
pull you to hell if you said so.”
Glover turned to the night foreman.
“What’s the best engine in the house?”
“There’s the 1018 with steam and a plough.”
Glover started. “The 1018?”
“She was to pull Six.”
The mountain man picked up the telephone, and getting
the operators, sent a rush message to Giddings.
Leaving final instructions with the two men he returned
to the telegraph office. When Giddings’s
protest about ordering a train out on such a night
came, Glover, who expected it, choked it back assuming
all responsibility gave no explanations
and waited. When the orders came he inspected
them himself and returned to the car. Gertrude,
in the car alone, was drinking coffee from a hotel
tray on the card table. “It was very kind
of you to send this in,” she said, rising cordially.
“I had forgotten all about dinner. Have
you succeeded?”
“Yes. Could you eat what they sent?”
“Pray look. I have left
absolutely nothing and I am very grateful. Do
I not seem so?” she added, searchingly.
“I want to because I am.”
He smiled at her earnestness.
Two little chairs were drawn up at the table, and
facing each other they sat down while Gertrude finished
her coffee and made Glover take a sandwich.
When the train conductor came in ten
minutes later Glover talked with him. While
the men spoke Gertrude noticed how Glover overran the
dainty chair she had provided. She scrutinized
his rough-weather garb, the heavy hunting boots, the
stout reefer buttoned high, and the leather cap crushed
now with his gloves in his hand. She had been
asking him where he got the cap, and a moment before,
while her attention wandered, he had told her the
story of a company of Russian noblemen and engineers
from Vladivostok, who, during the summer, had been
his guests, nominally on a bear hunt, though they knew
better than to hunt bears in summer. It was
really to pick up points on American railroad construction.
He might go, he thought, the following spring to
Siberia himself, perhaps to stay this man
that feared the wind he had had a good
offer. The cap was a present.
The two men went out and she was left
alone. A flagman, hat in hand, passed through
the car. The shock of the engine coupler striking
the buffer hardly disturbed her reverie; for her the
night meant too much.
Glover was with the operators giving
final instructions to Giddings for ploughs to meet
them without fail at Point of Rocks. Hastening
from the office he looked again at the barometer.
It promised badly and the thermometer stood at ten
degrees above zero.
He had made his way through the falling
snow to where they were coupling the engine to the
car, watched narrowly, and going forward spoke to
the engineer. When he re-entered the car it was
moving slowly out of the yard.
Gertrude, with a smile, put aside
her book. “I am so glad,” she said,
looking at her watch. “I hope we shall
get there by eleven o’clock; we should, should
we not, Mr. Glover?”
“It’s a poor night for
making a schedule,” was all he said. The
arcs of the long yard threw white and swiftly passing
beams of light through the windows, and the warmth
within belied the menace outside.
At the rear end of the car the flagman
worked with one of the tail-lights that burned badly,
and the conductor watched him. Gertrude laid
aside her furs and threw open her jacket. Her
hat she kept on, and sitting in a deep chair told
Glover of her father’s arrival from the East
on Wednesday and explained how she had set her heart
on surprising him that evening at Medicine Bend.
“Where are we now?” she asked, as the
rumble of the whirling trucks deepened.
“Entering Sleepy Cat Canyon, the Rat River
“Oh, I remember this.
I ride on the platform almost every time I come through
here so I may see where you split the mountain.
And every time I see it I ask myself the same question.
How came he ever to think of that?”
It needed even hardly so much of an
effort to lull her companion’s uneasiness.
He was a man with no concern at best for danger, except
as to the business view of it, and when personally
concerned in the hazard his scruples were never deep.
Not before had he seen or known Gertrude Brock, for
from that moment she gave herself to bewilderment and
charm.
The great engine pulling them made
so little of its load that they could afford to forget
the night; indeed, Gertrude gave him no moments to
reflect. From the quick play of their talk at
the table she led him to the piano. When, sitting
down, she drew off her gloves. She drew them
off lazily. When he reminded her that she still
had on her jacket she did not look up, but leaning
forward she studied the page of a song on the rack,
running the air with her right hand, while she slowly
extended her left arm toward him and let him draw the
tight sleeve over her wrist and from her shoulder.
Then his attempt to relieve her of the second sleeve
she wholly ignored, slipping it lightly off and pursuing
the song with her left hand while she let the jacket
fall in a heap on the floor. By the time Glover
had picked it up and she had frowned at him she might
safely have asked him, had the fancy struck her, to
head the engine for the peak of Sleepy Cat Mountain.
Half-way through a teasing Polish
dance she stopped and asked suddenly whether he had
had any supper besides the sandwich; and refusing to
receive assurances forthwith abandoned the piano, rummaged
the staterooms and came back bearing in one hand a
very large box of candy and in the other a banjo.
She wanted to hear the darky tunes he had strummed
at the desert campfire, and making him eat of the chocolates,
picked meantime at the banjo herself.
He was so hungry that unconsciously
he despatched one entire layer of the box while she
talked. She laughed heartily at his appetite,
and at his solicitation began tasting the sweetmeats
herself. She led him to ask where the box had
come from and refused to answer more than to wonder,
as she discarded the tongs and proffered him a bonbon
from her fingers, whether possibly she was not having
more pleasure in disposing of the contents than the
donor of the box had intended. Changing the
subject capriciously she recalled the night in the
car that he had assisted in Louise Bonner’s
charade, and his absurdly effective pirouetting in
a corner behind the curtain where Louise and he thought
no one saw them.
“And, by the way,” she
added, “you never told me whether your stenographer
finally came that day you tried to put me at work.”
Glover hung his head.
“Did she?”
“Yes.”
“What is she like?”
He laughed and was about to reply
when the train conductor coming forward touched him
on the shoulder and spoke. Gertrude could not
hear what he said, but Glover turned his head and
straightened in his chair. “I can’t
smell anything,” he said, presently. With
the conductor he walked to the hind end of the car,
opened the door, and the three men went out on the
platform.
“What is it?” asked Gertrude, when Glover
came back.
“One of the journals in the
rear truck is heating. It is curious,”
he mused; “as many times as I’ve ridden
in this car I’ve never known a box to run hot
till to-night just when we don’t want
it to.”
He drew down the slack of the bell
cord, pulled it twice firmly and listened. Two
freezing pipes from the engine answered; they sounded
cold. A stop was made and Glover, followed by
the trainmen, went outside. Gertrude walking
back saw them in the driving snow beneath the window.
Their lamps burned bluishly dim. From the journal
box rose a whipping column of black smoke expanding,
when water was got on the hot steel, into a blinding
explosion of white vapor that the storm snatched away
in rolling clouds. There was running to and from
the engine and the delay was considerable, but they
succeeded at last in rigging a small tank above the
wheel so that a stream of water should run into the
box.
The men re-entered with their faces
stung by the cold, the engine hoarsely signalled and
the car started. Glover made little of the incident,
but Gertrude observed some preoccupation in his manner.
He consulted frequently his watch. Once when
he was putting it back she asked to see it.
His watch was the only thing of real value he had and
he was pleased to show it. It contained a portrait
of his mother, and Gertrude, to her surprise and delight,
found it. She made him answer question after
question, asked him to let her take the watch from
the chain and studied the girlish face of this man’s
mother until she noticed its outlines growing dim
and looked impatiently up at the deck burner:
the gas was freezing in the storage tanks.
Glover walked to the rear; the journal
they told him was running hot again. The engineer
had asked not to be stopped till they reached Soda
Buttes, where he should have to take water. When
he finally slowed for the station the box was ablaze.
The men hastening out found their
drip-tank full of ice: there was nothing for
it but fresh brasses, and Glover getting down in the
snow set the jack with his own hands so it should
be set right. The conductor passed him a bar,
but Gertrude could not see; she could only hear the
ring of the frosty steel. Then with a scream
the safety valve of the engine popped and the wind
tossed the deafening roar in and out of the car, now
half dark. Stunned by the uproar and disturbed
by the failing light she left her chair, and going
over sat down at the window beneath which Glover was
working; some instinct made her seek him. When
the car door opened, the flagman entered with both
hands filled with snow.
“Are you ready to start?”
asked Gertrude. He shook his head and bending
over a leather chair rubbed the snow vigorously between
his fingers.
“Oh, are you hurt?”
“I froze my fingers and Mr.
Glover ordered me in,” said the boy. Gertrude
noticed for the first time the wind and listened; standing
still the car caught the full sweep and it rang in
her ears softly, a far, lonely sound.
While she listened the lights of the
car died wholly out, but the jargon of noises from
the truck kept away some of the loneliness. She
knew he would soon come and when the sounds ceased
she waited for him at the door and opened it hastily
for him. He looked storm-beaten as he held his
lantern up with a laugh. Then he examined the
flagman’s hand, followed Gertrude forward and
placed the lantern on the table between them, his
face glowing above the hooded light. They were
running again, very fast, and the rapid whipping of
the trucks was resonant with snow.
“How far now to Medicine?” she smiled.
“We are about half-way.
From here to Point of Rocks we follow an Indian trail.”
The car was no longer warm.
The darkness, too, made Gertrude restless and they
searched the storage closets vainly for candles.
When they sat down again they could hear the panting
of the engine. The exhaust had the thinness
of extreme cold. They were winding on heavy grades
among the Buttes of the Castle Creek country, and when
the engineer whistled for Castle station the big chime
of the engine had shrunk to a baby’s treble;
it was growing very cold.
As the car slowed, Glover caught an
odor of heated oil, and going back found the coddled
journal smoking again, and like an honest man cursed
it heartily, then he went forward to find out what
the stop was for. He came back after some moments.
Gertrude was waiting at the door for him. “What
did you learn?”
He held his lantern up to light her
face and answered her question with another.
“Do you think you could stand a ride in the
engine cab?”
“Surely, if necessary. Why?”
“The engine isn’t steaming
overly well. When we leave this point we get
the full wind across the Sweetgrass plains. There’s
no fit place at this station for you no
place, in fact or I should strongly advise
staying here. But if you stayed in the car there’s
no certainty we could heat it another hour.
If we sidetrack the car here with the conductor and
flagman they can stay with the operator and you and
I can take the cab into Medicine Bend.”
“Whatever you think best.”
“I hate to suggest it.”
“It is my fault. Shall we go now?”
“As soon as we sidetrack the
car. Meantime” he spoke earnestly “remember
it may mean life bundle yourself up in everything
warm you can find.”
“But you?”
“I am used to it.”