“There are mountains a man can
do business with,” muttered Bucks in the private
car, his mustache drooping broadly above his reflecting
words. “Mountains that will give and take
once in a while, play fair occasionally. But
Pilot has fought us every inch of the way since the
day we first struck a pick into it. It is savage
and unrelenting. I’d rather negotiate
with Sitting Bull for a right of way through his private
bathroom than to ask an easement from Pilot for a tamarack
tie. I don’t know why it was ever called
Pilot: if I named it, it should be Sitting Bull.
What the Sioux were to the white men, what the Spider
Water is to the bridgemen, that, and more, Pilot has
been to the mountain men.
“There was no compromise with
Pilot even after we got in on it. Snowslides,
washouts, bowlders, forest-fires and yet
the richest quartz mines in the world lie behind it.
This little branch, Mr. Brock, forty-eight miles,
pays the operating expenses of the whole mountain
division, and has done so almost since the day it was
opened. But I’d rather lose the revenue
ten times every year than to lose Morris Blood.”
The second vice-president was talking to Mr. Brock.
Their car was just rounding the curve into the gap
in front of Mount Pilot.
“What do you think of Blood’s chances?”
asked Mr. Brock.
“I don’t know. A mountain man has
nine lives.”
“What does Glover think?”
“He doesn’t say.”
“Who built this line?”
“Two pretty good men ran the
first thirty miles, but neither of them could give
me a practicable line south of the gap; this last eighteen
miles up and down and around Pilot was Glover’s
first work in the mountains. It’s engineering.
Every trick ever played in the Rockies, and one or
two of Brodie’s old combinations in the Andes,
they tell me, are crowded into these eighteen miles.
There, there’s old Sitting Bull in all his
clouds and his glory.”
Glover had left the car at Sleepy
Cat, going ahead with the relief train. Picked
men from every district on the division had been assembling
all the afternoon to take up the search for the missing
superintendent. Section men from the Sweetgrass
wastes, and bridgemen from the foothills, roadmasters
from the Heart Mountains home of the storm
and the snow and Rat Canyon trackwalkers
that could spot a break in the dark under twelve inches
of ballast; Morgan, the wrecker, and his men, and
the mountain linemen with their foreman, old Bill
Dancing fiend drunk and giant sober were
scattered on Mount Pilot, while a rotary ahead of
a battery of big engines was shoved again and again
up the snow-covered hill.
Anxious to get the track open in the
belief that Blood could best be got at from beyond
the S bridge, Glover, standing with the branch roadmaster,
Smith Young, on the ledge above the engines directed
the fight for the hill. He had promised Gertrude
he would keep out of the cab, and far across the curve
below he could see the Brock car, where Bucks was
directing the search on the eastern side of the gulch.
Callahan and the linemen were spreading
both ways through the timber on the plateau opposite,
but the snow made the work extremely difficult, and
the short day allowed hardly more than a start.
On the hill Glover’s men advanced barely a
hundred feet in three hours: darkness spread
over the range with no sign of the missing man, and
with the forebodings that none could shake off of
what the night’s exposure, even if he were uninjured,
might mean.
Supper was served to the men in the
relief trains, and outside fires were forbidden by
Glover, who asked that every foot of the track as far
as the gap be patrolled all night.
It was nearly ten o’clock when
Glover, supperless, reached the car with his dispositions
made for the night. While he talked with the
men, Clem, the star cook of the Brock family, under
special orders grilled a big porterhouse steak and
presently asked him back to the dining-table, where,
behind the shaded candles, Gertrude waited.
They sat down opposite each other;
but not until Glover saw there were two plates instead
of one, and learned that Gertrude had eaten no dinner
because she was waiting for him, did he mutter something
about all that an American girl is capable of in the
way of making a man grateful and happy. There
was nothing to hurry them back to the other end of
the car, and they did not rejoin Mr. Brock and Bucks,
who were smoking forward, until eleven o’clock.
Callahan came in afterward, and sitting together
Mr. Brock and Gertrude listened while the three railroad
men planned the campaign for the next day.
Parting late, Glover said good-night
and left with Callahan to inspect the rotary.
The fearful punishment of the day’s work on
the knives had shown itself, and since dark, relays
of mechanics from the Sleepy Cat shops had been busy
with the cutting gear, and the companion plough had
already been ordered in from the eighth district.
Glover returned to the car at one
o’clock. The lights were low, and Clem,
a night-owl, fixed him in a chair near the door.
For an hour everything was very still, then Gertrude,
sleeping lightly, heard voices. Glover walked
back past the compartments; she heard him asking Clem
for brandy Bill Dancing, the lineman, had
come with news.
The negro brought forward a decanter
and Glover poured a gobletful for the old man, who
shook from the chill of the night air.
“The boys claim it’s imagination,”
Dancing, steadied by the alcohol, continued, “but
it’s a fire way over below the second bridge.
I’ve watched it for an hour; now you come.”
They went away and were gone a long
time. Glover returned alone Clem
had disappeared; a girlish figure glided out of the
gloom to meet him.
“I couldn’t sleep,”
she whispered. “I heard you leave and dressed
to wait.” She looked in the dim light
as slight as a child, and with his hand at her waist
he sunk on his knee to look up into her face.
“How can I deserve it all?”
She blinded his upturned eyes in her
hands, and not until she found her fingers were wet
did she understand all he had tried to put into his
words.
“Have you any news?” she murmured, as
he rose.
“I believe they have found him.”
She clasped her hands. “Heaven be praised.
Oh, is it sure?”
“I mean, Dancing, the old lineman,
has seen his fire. At least, we are certain
of it. We have been watching it two hours.
It’s a speck of a blaze away across toward
the mines. It never grows nor lessens, just a
careful little campfire where fuel is scarce as
it is now with all the snow. We’ve lighted
a big beacon on the hill for an answer, and at daybreak
we shall go after him. The planning is all done
and I am free now till we’re ready to start.”
She tried to make him lie down for
a nap on the couch. He tried to persuade her
to retire until morning, and in sweet contention they
sat talking low of their love and their happiness and
of the hills a reckless girl romped over in old Allegheny,
and of the shingle gunboats a sleepy-eyed boy launched
in dauntless fleets upon the yellow eddies of the
Mississippi; and of the chance that should one day
bring boy and girl together, lovers, on the crest
of the far Rockies.
Lights were moving up and down the
hill when they rose from Clem’s astonishing
breakfast.
“You will be careful,”
she said. He had taken her in his arms at the
door, and promising he kissed her and whispered good-by.