Crouching under the mountains in the
grip of the storm Medicine Bend slept battened in
blankets and beds. All night at the Wickiup,
O’Neill and Giddings, gray with anxiety, were
trying to keep track of Glover’s Special.
It was the only train out that night on the mountain
division. For the first hour or two they kept
tab on her with little trouble, but soon reports began
to falter or fail, and the despatchers were reduced
at last to mere rumors. They dropped boards ahead
of Special 1018, only to find to their consternation
that she was passing them unheeded.
Once, at least, they knew that she
herself had slipped by a night station unseen.
Oftener, with blanched faces they would hear of her
dashing like an apparition past a frightened operator,
huddled over his lonely stove, a spectral flame shot
across the fury of the sky as if the dread
night breathing on the scrap-pile and the grave had
called from other nights and other storms a wraith
of riven engines and slaughtered men to one last phantom
race with death and the wind.
Within two hours of division headquarters
a train ran lost lost as completely as
if she were crossing the Sweetgrass plains on pony
trails instead of steel rails. Not once but
a dozen times McGraw and Glover, pawning their lives,
left the cab with their lanterns in a vain endeavor
to locate a station, a siding, a rock. Numbed
and bitten at last with useless exposure they cast
effort to the wind, gave the engine like a lost horse
her head, and ran through everything for headquarters
and life. Consultation was abandoned, worry put
away, one good chance set against every other chance
and taken in silence.
At five o’clock that morning
despatchers and night men under the Wickiup gables,
sitting moodily around the big stove, sprang to their
feet together. From up the distant gorge, dying
far on the gale, came the long chime blast of an engine
whistle; it was the lost Special.
They crowded to the windows to dispute
and listen. Again the heavy chime was sprung
and a second blast, lasting and defiant, reached the
Wickiup McGraw was whistling for the upper
yard and the long night of anxiety was ended.
Unable to see a car length into the storm howling
down the yard, save where the big arc-lights of the
platform glared above the semaphores, the men swarmed
to the windows to catch a glimpse of the belated engine.
When the rays of its electric headlight pierced the
Western night they shouted like boys, ran to the telephones,
and while the roundhouse, the superintendent, and
the master-mechanic were getting the news the Special
engine steamed slowly into sight through the whirling
snow and stopped at the semaphore. So a liner
shaken in the teeth of a winter storm, battered by
heading seas, and swept by stiffening spray, rides
at last, ice-bound, staggering, majestic, into port.
The moment they struck the mountain-path
into the Bend, McGraw and Glover caught their bearings
by the curves, and Glover, standing at Gertrude’s
elbow, told her they were safe.
Not until he had laughed into her
ear something that the silent McGraw, lying on his
back under the engine with a wrench, when he confessed
he never expected to see Medicine Bend again, had
said of her own splendid courage did the flood spring
from her eyes.
When Glover added that they were entering
the gorge, and laughingly asked if she would not like
to sound the whistle for the yard limits, she smiled
through tears and gave him her hand to be helped down,
cramped and chilled, from her corner.
At the moment that she left the cab
she faltered again. McGraw stripped his cap
from his head as she turned to speak. She took
from the breast of her blouse her watch, dainty as
a jewel, and begged him to take it, but he would not.
She drew her glove and stripped from her finger a
ring.
“This is for your wife,” she said, pressing
it into his hand.
“I have no wife.”
“Your sister.”
“Nor sister.”
“Keep it for your bride,”
she whispered, retreating. “It is yours.
Good-by, good-by!”
She sprang from the gangway to Glover’s
arms and the snow. The storm drove pitilessly
down the bare street as she clung to his side and
tried to walk the half block to the hotel. The
wind, even for a single minute, was deadly to face.
No light, no life was anywhere visible. He led
her along the lee of the low street buildings, and
mindful of the struggle it was to make headway at
all turned half between her and the wind to give her
the shelter of his shoulders, halting as she stumbled
to encourage her anew. He saw then that she was
struggling in the darkness for breath, and without
a word he bent over her, took her up like a child
and started on, carrying her in his arms.
If he frightened her she gave no sign.
She held herself for an instant uncertain and aloof,
though she could not but feel the heavy draught she
made on his strength. The wind stung her cheeks;
her breath caught again in her throat and she heard
him implore her to turn her face, to turn it from
the wind. He stumbled as he spoke, and as she
shielded her face from the deadly cold, one hand slipped
from her muff. Reaching around his head she drew
his storm-cap more closely down with her fingers.
When he thanked her she tried to speak and could not,
but her glove rested an instant where the wind struck
his cheek; then her head hid upon his shoulder and
her arms wound slowly and tightly around his neck.
He kicked open the door of the hotel
with one blow of his foot and set her down inside.
In the warm dark office, breathing
unsteadily, they faced each other. “Can
you, Gertrude, marry that man and break my heart?”
He caught up her two hands with his words.
“No,” she answered, brokenly.
“Are you sure you are not frozen ears
or cheeks or hands?”
“You won’t marry him,
Gertrude, and break my heart? Tell me you won’t
marry him.”
“No, I won’t.”
“Tell me again.”
“Shall I tell you everything?”
“If you have mercy for me as I have love for
you.”
“I ran away from him to-night.
He came out with the directors and telegraphed he
would be at the Springs in the afternoon for his answer,
and I ran away. He has his answer
long ago and I would not see him.”
“Brave girl!”
“Oh, I wasn’t brave, I was a dreadful
coward. But I thought
“What?”
“ I could be brave, if I found as
brave a man as you.”
“Gertrude, if I kiss you I never
can give you up. Do you understand what that
means? I never in life or death can give you
up, Gertrude, do you understand me?”
She was crying on his shoulder.
“Oh, yes, I understand,” and he heard
from her lips the maddening sweetness of his boy name.
“I understand,” she sobbed. “I
don’t care, Ab if only ,
you will be kind to me.”
It was only a moment later her
head had not yet escaped from his arm, for Glover
found for the first time that it is one thing to get
leave to kiss a lovely woman and wholly another to
get the necessary action on the conscience-stricken
creature she had not yet, I say, escaped,
when a locomotive whistle was borne from the storm
faintly in on their ears. To her it meant nothing,
but she felt him start. “What is it?”
she whispered.
“The ploughs!”
“The ploughs?”
“The snow-ploughs that followed
us. Twenty minutes behind twenty
minutes between us and death, Gertrude, in that blizzard,
think of it. That must mean we are to live.”
The solemn thought naturally suggested,
to Glover at least, a resumption of the status quo,
but as he was locating, in the dark, there came from
behind the stove a mild cough. The effect on
the construction engineer of the whole blizzard was
to that cough as nothing. Inly raging he seated
Gertrude indeed, she sunk quite faintly
into a chair, and starting for the stove Glover dragged
from behind it Solomon Battershawl. “What
are you doing here?” demanded Glover, savagely.
“I’m night clerk, Mr. Glover ow
“Night clerk? Very well,
Solomon,” muttered Glover, grimly, “take
this young lady to the warmest room in the house at
once.”
“Every room’s full, Mr.
Glover. Trains were all tied up last night.”
“Then show her to my room.”
“Your room’s occupied.”
“My room occupied, you villain?
What do you mean? Throw out whoever’s
in it instantly.”
“Mr. Brock is in your room.”
Gertrude had come over to the stove.
“Mr. Brock!”
“My father!”
“Yes, sir; yes, ma’am.”
Gertrude and Glover looked at one another.
“Mr. Blood brought him up last night,”
said Solomon.
“Where’s Mr. Blood?”
“He hasn’t come up from
the Wickiup. They said he was worried over a
special from the Cat that was caught in the blizzard.
Your laundry came in all right last night, Mr. Glover
“Hang the laundry.”
“I paid for it.”
“Will you cease your gabble?
If Mr. Blood’s room is empty take Miss Block
up there and rouse a chambermaid instantly to attend
her. Do you hear?”
“Shall I throw out Mr. Brock?”
“Let him alone, stupid. What’s the
matter with the lights?”
“The wires are down.”
“Get a candle for Miss Brock.
Now, will you make haste?” Solomon, when he
heard the name, stared at Miss Brock but
when he recognized her he started without argument
and was gone an unconscionably long time.
They sat down where they could feast
on each other’s eyes in the glow of the coal-stove.
“You have looked so worried
all night,” said Gertrude, in love’s solicitude;
“were you afraid we should be lost?”
“No, I didn’t intend we should be lost.”
“What was it? What is it that makes you
so careworn?”
“Nothing special.”
“But you mustn’t have any secrets from
me now. What is it?”
“Do you want to know?”
“Yes.”
“I couldn’t find time to get shaved before
we left Sleepy Cat
She rose with both hands uplifted:
“Shades of vain heroes! Have I wasted
my sympathy all night on a man who has been saving
my life with perfect calmness and worrying because
he couldn’t get shaved?”
“Can you dispassionately say that I don’t
need barbering?”
“No. But this is what
I will say, silly fellow you don’t
know much about a woman’s heart, do you, Ab?
When I first looked at you I thought you were the
homeliest man I had ever seen, do you know that?”
Glover fingered his offending chin
and looked at her somewhat pathetically.
“But last night” her
quick mouth was so eloquent “last
night I watched you. I saw your face lighted
by the anger of the storm. I knew then what
those heavy, homely lines below your eyes were for strength.
And I saw your eyes, to me so dull at first, wake
and fill with such a light and burn so steadily hour
after hour that I knew I had never seen eyes like
yours. I knew you would save me that
is what made me so brave, goosie. Sit right
where you are, please.”
She slipped out of her chair; he pursued.
“If you will say such things and then run into
the dark corners,” he muttered. But when
Solomon appeared with a water-pitcher they were ready
for him.
“Now what has kept you all this
time?” glared Glover, insincerely.
“I couldn’t find any ice-water.”
“Ice-water!”
“Every pipe is froze solid, but I chopped up
some ice and brought that.”
“Ice-water, you double-dyed idiot! Go
get your candle.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Don’t be so cross,”
whispered Gertrude. “You were so short
with that poor fireman to-night, and he told me such
a pitiful story about being ordered out and having
to go or lose his position
“Did Foley tell you that?”
“Yes.”
“Surely, nerve runs in his family
as well as his cousin’s. The rascal came
because I hung up a little purse for a fireman at the
roundhouse, and he nearly had a fight with another
fellow that wanted to cut him out of the job.”
“Such a cheat! How much did you offer
him?”
“Not very much.”
“But how much?”
“Twenty-five dollars, and, by
heavens, he dunned me for it just after we started.”
“But his poor wife hung to his neck when he
left
“No doubt. She has pulled
all the hair out of his head twice that I know of
“And I gave him my purse with all the money
I had in it.”
“How much?”
“About three hundred dollars.”
“Three hundred dollars!
Foley will lay off two months and take the whole
family back to Pittsburg. Now, here’s your
candle and chopped ice and Mr. Battershawl.”
Gertrude turned for a last whisper “What
should you say if papa came down?”
“What should I say? He
would probably say, ’Mr. Glover, I have your
room.’ ‘Don’t mention it,’
I should reply, ‘I have your daughter.’”
But Mr. Brock did not come down.
Barely half an hour later, while Glover
waited with anxiety at the foot of the stairs, Gertrude
reappeared, and with her loveliness all new, walked
shyly and haltingly down each step toward him.
Not a soul about the hotel office
had stirred, and Glover led her to the retired little
parlor, which was warm and dim, to reassure himself
that the fluttering girl was all his own. Unable
to credit the fulness of their own happiness they
sat confiding to each other all the sweet trifles,
now made doubly sweet, of their strange acquaintance.
Before six o’clock, and while their seclusion
was still their own, a hot breakfast was served to
them where they sat, and day broke on storm without
and lovers within.