They had planned a quick relief with
a small party, for every hour of exposure lessened
the missing man’s chances. Glover chose
for his companions two men: Dancing far
and away the best climber in the telegraph corps,
and Smith Young, roadmaster, a chainman of Glover’s
when he ran the Pilot line. Dancing and Glover
were large men of unusual strength, and Young, lighter
and smaller, had been known in a pinch to handle an
ordinary steel rail. But above everything each even
Glover, the youngest was a man of resource
and experience in mountain craft.
They left the track near the twin
bridges with only ropes and picks and skis, and carrying
stimulants and food. Without any attempt to catch
his trail from where they knew Blood must have started
they made their way as directly as possible down the
side of the mountain and in the direction of the gap.
The stupendous difficulties of making headway across
the eastern slope did not become apparent until the
rescuing party was out of sight of those they had
left, but from where they floundered in ragged washouts
or spread in line over glassy escarpments they could
see far up the mountain the rotary throwing a white
cloud into the sunshine and hear the far-off clamor
of the engines on the hill.
Below the snow-field which they crossed
they found the superintendent’s trail, and saw
that his effort had been to cross the gap at that point
and make his way out toward the western grade, where
an easy climb would have brought him to the track;
or where by walking some distance he could reach the
track without climbing a foot, the grade there being
nearly four per cent.
They saw, too, why he had been forced
to give up that hope, for what would have been difficult
for three fresh men with shoes was an impossibility
for a spent man in the snow alone. They knew
that what they had covered in two hours had probably
cost him ten, for before they had followed him a dozen
feet they saw that he was dragging a leg; farther,
the snow showed stains and they crossed a field where
he had sat down and bandaged his leg after it had
bled for a hundred yards.
The trail began, as they went on,
to lose its character. Whether from weakness
or uncertainty Blood’s steps had become wandering,
and they noticed that he paid less attention to directness,
but shunned every obstacle that called for climbing,
struggling great distances around rough places to
avoid them. They knew it meant that he was husbanding
failing strength and was striving to avoid reopening
his wound.
Twice they marked places in which
he had sat to adjust his bandages, and the strain
of what they read in the snow quickened their anxiety.
Since that day Smith Young, superintendent now of the
mountain division, has never hunted, because he could
never afterward follow the trail of a wounded animal.
They found places where he had hunted
for fuel, and firing signals regularly they reached
the spot where he had camped the night before, and
saw the ashes of his fire. He was headed south;
not because there was more hope that way there
was less but as if he must keep moving,
and that were easiest. A quarter of a mile below
where he had spent the night they caught sight of
a man sitting on a fallen tree resting his leg.
The next moment three men were in a tumbling race
across the slope, and Blood, weakly hurrahing, fainted
in Glover’s arms.
His story was short. He reminded
his rescuers of the little spring on the hill at the
point where the wreck had occurred. The ice that
always spread across the track and over the edge of
the gulch had been chopped out by the shovellers the
afternoon before, but water trickling from the rock
had laid a fresh trap for unwary feet during the night.
In jumping from the gangway at the moment of the wreck
Blood’s heels had landed on smooth ice and he
had tumbled and slid six hundred feet. Recovering
consciousness at the bottom of a washout he found the
calf of one leg ripped a little, as he put it.
The loss of one side of his mustache, swept away
in the slide, and leaving on his face a peculiarly
forlorn expression, he did not take account of declaring
on the whole, as he smiled into the swimming eyes
around him, that with the exception of tobacco he
was doing very well.
They got him in front of a big fire,
plied him with food and stimulants, and Glover, from
a surgical packet, bandaged anew the wound in his
leg. Then came the question of retreat.
They discussed two plans. The
first to retrace their steps entirely; the second,
to go back to where the gap could be attempted and
the western track gained below the hill. Each
meant long and severe climbing, each presented its
particular difficulties, and three men of the four
felt that if the torn artery opened once more their
victory would be barren that Blood needed
surgical aid promptly if at all. But Dancing
had a third plan.
It was while they still consulted
at this point that their fire was seen on Pilot Hill
and reported to Bucks at the Brock car, from which
the rapidly moving party had been seen only at long
intervals during the morning.
The fire was the looked-for signal
that the superintendent had been reached, and the
word went from group to group of men up the hill.
Through the strong glass that Glover had left with
her, Gertrude could see the smoke, and the storming
signals of the panting engines above her made sweeter
music after she caught with her eye the faint column
in the distant gap. Even her father, feeling
still something like a conscript, brightened up at
the general rejoicing. He had produced his own
glass and let Gertrude with eager prompting help him
to find the smoke. The moment the position of
Glover’s party was made definite, Bucks ordered
the car run down the Hog’s Back to a point so
much closer that across the broad canyon, flanking
Pilot on the south, they could make out with their
glasses the figures of the three men and, when they
began to move, the smaller figure of Morris Blood.
Callahan had joined his chief to watch
the situation, and they speculated as to how the four
would get out of the gulf in which they were completely
hemmed. Gertrude and her father stood near.
The eyes of the two bronzed railroad
men at her side were like pilot guides to Gertrude.
When she lost the wayfarers in the gullies or along
the narrow defiles that gave them passage between towering
rocks, their eyes restored the plodding line.
Callahan was the first to detect the change from
the expected course. “They are working
east,” said he, after a moment’s careful
observation.
“East?” echoed Bucks. “You
mean west.”
Callahan hung to his glass.
“No,” he repeated, “east and
south. Here.”
Bucks took the glass and looked a
long time. “I do not understand,”
said he; “they are certainly working east.
What can they be after, east? Well, they can’t
go very far that way without bridging the Devil’s
Canyon. Callahan,” he exclaimed, with sure
instinct, “they will head south. Walt
now till they appear again.”
He relinquished the glass to explain
to Mr. Brock where next to look for them. There
was a long interval during which they did not reappear.
Then the little file emerging from the shadow of a
rock skirted a field of snow straight to the south.
There were but three men in line. One, a little
ahead, breaking path; following, two large men tramping
close together, the foremost stooping under the weight
of a man lying face upward on his back, while the
man behind supported the legs under his arms.
“They are carrying Morris Blood.
He is hurt that was to be expected.
What?” exclaimed Bucks, hardly a moment afterward,
“they are crossing the snow. Callahan,
by heaven, they are walking for the south side of
Pilot, that’s what it means. It is a forced
march; they are making for the mines.”
Mount Pilot, from the crest that divides
at Devil’s Gap, rises abruptly in a three-faced
peak, the pinnacle of which lies to the south.
Several hundred feet above the base lie the group of
gold-mines behind the mountain, and a short railroad
spur blasted across the southern face runs to them
from Glen Tarn. Below, the mountain wall breaks
in long steps almost vertically to the base, toward
which Glover’s party was heading.
The move made new dispositions necessary.
Orders flew from Bucks like curlews, for it was more
essential than ever to open the hill speedily.
The private car was run across the
Hog’s Back, and the news sent to the rotary
crew with injunctions to push with all effort as far
at least as the mine switch, that help might be sent
out on the spur to meet the party on the climb.
The increased activity apparent far
up and down the mountain as the word went round, the
bringing up of the last reserve engines for the hill
battery, the effort to get into communication by telegraph
with the mine hospital and Glen Tarn Springs, the
feverish haste of the officials in the car to make
the new dispositions, all indicated to Gertrude the
approach of a crisis the imminence of a
supreme effort to save one life if the endeavor enlisted
the men and resources of the whole division.
New gangs of shovellers strung on flat-cars were being
pushed forward. Down the hill, spent and disabled
engines were returning from the front, and while they
took sidings, fresh engines, close-coupled, steamed
slowly like leviathans past them up the hill.
The moment the track was clear, the
private car was backed again down the ridge.
Following the serpentine winding of the right of way,
the general manager was able to run the car far around
the mountain, and it stopped opposite the southern
face, which rose across the broad canyon. When
the party in the car got their glasses fixed, the little
company beyond the gulf had begun their climb and
were strung like marionettes up the base of Pilot.
The south face of the mountain, sheer
for nearly a thousand feet, is broken by narrow ledges
that make an ascent possible, and not until the peak
passes the timber does snow ordinarily find lodgment
upon that side. Swept by the winds from the
Spanish Sinks, the vertical reaches above the base
usually offer no obstruction to a rapid climb, though
except perhaps by early prospectors, the arête
had never been scaled. Glover, however, in locating,
had covered every stretch of the mountain on each
of its sides, and Dancing’s poles and brackets,
like banderillas stung into the tough hide of
a bull, circled Pilot from face to face. These
two men were leading the ascent; below them could
be distinguished the roadmaster and the injured superintendent.
Stripped to the belt and lashed in
the party rope, the leader, gaunt and sinewy, stretched
like an earthworm up the face of the arête crossing,
recrossing, climbing, retreating, his spiked feet
settling warily into fresh holes below, his sensitive
hands spreading like feelers high over the smooth
granite for new holds above. Slowly, always,
and with the deliberate reserve that quieted with confidence
the feverish hearts watching across the gulf, the leaders
steadily scaled the height that separated them from
the track. Like sailors patiently warping home,
the three men in advance drew and lifted the fourth,
who doughtily helped himself with foot and hand as
chance allowed and watched patiently from below while
his comrades disputed with the sheer wall for a new
step above.
Bucks and Callahan, following every
move, mapped the situation to their companions as
its features developed. With each triumph on
the arête, bursts of commendation and surprise
came from the usually taciturn men watching the struggle
with growing wonder. Bucks, apprehensive of
delays in the track-opening on the hill, sent Callahan
back in the car with instructions to pick a gang of
ten men and pack them somewhom across the snow to
the mine spur, that they might be ready to meet the
climbing party and carry the superintendent down to
the mine hospital.
Thirty feet below the mine track and
as far above where Glover at that moment was sitting his
rope made fast and his legs hanging over a ledge,
while his companions reached new positions a
granite wall rises to where the upper face has been
blasted away from the roadbed. To the east,
this wall hangs without a break up or down for a hundred
feet, but to the west it roughens and splits away
from the main spur, forming a crevice or chimney from
two to three feet wide, opening at the top to ten
feet, where a small bridge carries the track across
it. This chimney had been Dancing’s quest
from the moment the ascent began, for he had lost
a man in that chimney when stringing the mine wires,
and knew precisely what it was.
The chimney once gained, Dancing figured
that the last thirty feet should be easy work, and
he had made but one miscalculation when
he had descended it to pull up his lineman, it was
summer. Without extraordinary difficulty, Glover
gained the ledge where the chimney opened and waited
for his companions to ascend. When all were up,
they rested a few moments on their dizzy perch, and,
while Bill Dancing investigated the chimney, Glover
took the chance to renew once more Morris Blood’s
bandages, which, strained by the climbing, caused
continual anxiety.
Bucks, with the party in his glass,
could see every move. He saw Dancing disappear
into the rock while his comrades rested, and made him
out, after some delay, reappearing from the cleft.
What he could not make out was the word that Dancing
brought back; the chimney was a solid mass of ice.
Standing with the two men, Gertrude
used her glass constantly. Frequently she asked
questions, but frequently she divined ahead of her
companions the directions and the movements.
The hesitation that followed Dancing’s return
did not escape her. Up and down the narrow step
on which they stood, the three men walked, scanning
anxiously the wall that stretched above them.
So, hounds at fault on a trail double
on their steps and move uneasily to and fro, nosing
the missing scent. As lions flatten behind their
cagebars, the climbers laid themselves against the
rock and pushed to the right and the left seeking
an avenue of escape. They had every right to
expect that help would already have reached them, but
on the hill, through haste and confusion of orders,
the new rotary had stripped a gear, and an hour had
been lost in getting in the second plough. For
safety, the climbers had in their predicament nothing
to fear. The impelling necessity for action
was the superintendent’s condition; his companions
knew he could not last long without a surgeon.
When suspense had become unbearable,
Dancing re-entered the chimney. He was gone a
long time. He reappeared, crawling slowly out
on an unseen footing, a mere flaw in the smooth stretch
of granite half way up to the track. By cutting
his rope and throwing himself a dozen times at death,
old Bill Dancing had gained a foothold, made fast a
line, and divided the last thirty feet to be covered.
One by one, his companions disappeared from sight not
into the chimney, but to the side of it where Dancing
had blazed a few dizzy steps and now had a rope dangling
to make the ascent practicable.
One by one, Gertrude saw the climbers,
reappearing above, crawl like flies out on the face
of the rock and, with craning necks and cautious steps,
seek new advantage above. They discovered at
length the remains of a scrub pine jutting out below
the railroad track. The tree had been sawed
off almost at the root, when the roadbed was levelled,
and a few feet of the trunk was left hugging upward
against the granite wall.
Glover, Young, and Dancing consulted
a moment. The thing was not impossible; the
superintendent was bleeding to death.
Spectators across the gap saw movements
they could not quite comprehend. Safety lines
were overhauled for the last time, the picks put in
the keeping of Morris Blood, who lay flat on the ledge.
Glover and Bill Dancing, facing outward, planted
themselves side by side against the rocky wall.
Smith Young, facing inward, flattened himself in
Glover’s arms, passed across him and, pushing
his safety-girdle well up under his arms, stood a
moment between the two big men. Glover and Dancing,
getting their hands through the belt from either side,
gripped him, and Young uncoiled from his right hand
a rope noosed like a lariat. Steadied by his
companions and swinging his arms in a cautious segment
on the wall, he tried to hitch the noose over the trunk
of the pine.
With the utmost skill and patience,
he coaxed the loop up again and again into the air
overhead, but the brush of the short branches against
the rock defeated every attempt to get a hold.
He rested, passed the rope into his
other hand, and with the same collected persistence
endeavored to throw it over from the left.
Sweat beaded Bucks’ forehead
as he looked. Gertrude’s father, the man
of sixty millions, with nerves bedded in ice, crushed
an unlighted cigar between his teeth, and tried to
steady the glass that shook in his hand. Gertrude,
resting one hand on a bowlder against which she steadied
herself, neither spoke nor moved. The roadmaster
could not land his line.
The two men released him and, with
arms spread wide, he slipped over to where Morris
Blood lay, took from him the two picks, and cautiously
rejoined his comrades. Two of the men reversing
their positions, faced the rock wall. They fixed
a pick into a cranny between their heads, crouched
together, and the third, planting his feet first on
their knees and then their shoulders, was raised slowly
above them.
The glasses turned from afar caught
a sheen of sunshine that spread for an instant across
the face of the mountain and sharply outlined the
flattened form high on the arête. The figure
seemed brought by the dazzling light startlingly near,
and those looking could distinguish in his hand a
pick, which, with his right arm extended, he slowly
swung up and up the face of the rock until he should
swing it high to hook through the roots of the pine.
Gertrude asked Bucks who it was that
spread himself above his comrades, and he answered,
Dancing; but it was Glover.
Deliberately his extended arm rose
and fell in the arc he was following, higher and higher,
till the pick swung above his head and lodged where
he sent it among the pine-tree roots. At the
very moment, one of the men supporting him moved the
pick had dislodged a heavy chip of granite; in falling
it struck his crouching supporter on the head.
The man steadied himself instantly, but the single
instant cost the balance of the upmost figure.
With a suppressed struggle, heartbreaking half a
mile away, the man above strove to right himself.
Like light his second hand reached for the pick handle;
he could not recover it. The pyramid wavered
and Glover, helpless, spread his hands wide.
By an instinct deeper than life, she
knew him then, and cried out and out in agony.
But the pyramid was dissolving before his eyes, and
she saw a strange figure with outstretched arms, a
figure she no longer knew, slowly slipping headlong
down a blood-red wall that burned itself into her
brain.