As Bucks looked through his embrasure
to see if all had been served, his eye fell on the
group in the corner and he heard the woman suppressing
the sobbing of her little girl. He walked out
into the waiting-room to ask what the trouble was.
He learned afterward that she was the wife of a gambler,
but she told him only that she had followed her husband
to Medicine Bend and was now trying to get back with
her two children to her parents in Iowa. When
she had ascertained the price of the railroad ticket
she found that she lacked five dollars of the sum
needed to make up the fare. Bucks had just a little
money of his own, but he had counted on using that
for his meals. While he was debating what to
do, the elder child tugging still at the mother’s
dress asked for something to eat, and while the mother
tried to quiet it Bucks felt he could manage somehow
without the price of the ticket better than this woman
could.
“Give me what money you have,”
he said. “I will get you a ticket.”
“But isn’t the train gone?”
“No.”
The black-bearded man dozing near
the stove had his ears open although his eyes were
closed. He had heard fragments of the talk and
saw the boy dig into his own pocket, as he would have
expressed it, to start the woman home. After
Bucks had given her the ticket and she was trying
to thank him and to quiet again the tired child, the
drowsy man rose, picked up the woman’s hand-bag
and told her gruffly he would put her on the train.
As he started with her out into the drizzling rain,
he carried her little girl, and, stopping down the
platform at a sheltered lunch-counter, he bought a
bag of doughnuts big enough to sink a ship. He
offered no money to the man at the counter, but his
credit seemed unquestioned. In the train the seats
appeared all to be taken, but the drowsy man again
showed his authority by rolling a tipsy fellow out
of a seat and piling him up in a corner near the stove which
fortunately had no fire in it.
During all this time he had not said
a word. But at the last, having placed the woman
and the children in two seats and made them comfortable,
he asked the mother one question her husband’s
name. She told him, and, without any comment
or good-bys, he left the car and started through the
rain uptown.
After the train pulled out, the wind
shifted and the rain changed into a snow which, driven
from the mountains, thickened on the wet window in
front of the operator’s table. A message
came for the night yardmaster, and the operator, seeing
the head-light of the switch-engine which was working
close by, put on his cap and stepped out to deliver
the message. As he opened the waiting-room door,
a man confronted him the bearded man who
had taken the woman and children to the train.
Bucks saw under the visor of a cloth cap, a straight
white nose, a dark eye piercingly keen, and a rather
long, glossy, black beard. It was the passenger
conductor, David Hawk. Without speaking, Hawk
held out his hand with a five-dollar bank note in it.
“What is this?” asked Bucks.
“The money you gave the woman.”
Bucks, taking the bill, regarded his
visitor with surprise. “Where did you get
this?”
“What’s that to you?”
“But ”
“Don’t ask questions,”
returned Hawk brusquely. “You’ve got
your money, haven’t you?”
“Yes, but ”
“That’s enough.”
And with Bucks staring at him, Hawk, without a word
or a smile, walked out of the station.
But Bill Dancing had seen the incident
and was ready to answer Bucks’s question as
he turned with the money in his hand. “That
is Dave Hawk,” explained Dancing. “Dave
hates a sneak. The way he got the money from
the woman’s husband was probably by telling him
if he didn’t pay for his wife’s ticket
and add enough to feed her and her babies to the river
he would blow his head off. Dave doesn’t
explain things especially.”
Bucks put the money in his pocket
and started on with his message. The yards covered
the wide flat along the river. Medicine Bend was
then the western operating point for the railroad
and the distributing point for all material used in
the advancing construction through the mountains.
Not until he left the shelter of the
station building did he realize the force of the storm
that was now sweeping across the flat. The wind
had swung into the northwest and blew almost a gale
and the snow stung his face as he started across the
dark yard. There were practically no lights at
all beyond the platform except those in the roundhouse,
too far away to be seen, but the operator saw the
moving head-light of the switch-engine and hastened
across the slippery tracks toward it. The crew
were making up a material train to send west and the
engine was snorting and puffing among long strings
of flat cars loaded with rails, ties, stringers, and
bridge timbers.
As Bucks neared the working engine
it receded from him, and following it up he soon found
his feet slipping in the wet mud and the wind at times
taking his breath. Conscious of the folly of running
farther, he halted for a moment and turning his back
to the storm resolved to wait till the engine returned.
He chose a spot under the lee of a box-car, and was
soon rewarded by hearing a new movement from the working
engine. By the increasing noise of the open cylinder
cocks he concluded it was backing toward him.
He stepped across the nearest track to reach a switch-stand,
a car-length away, whence he thought he could signal
the engine with his lantern. He had nearly reached
the switch when his foot slipped from a rail into
a frog that held him fast. Holding his lantern
down, he saw how he was caught and tried to free his
heel. It seemed as if it might easily be done,
but the more he worked the faster caught he found
himself. For a moment he still made sure he could
loosen his foot. Even when he realized that this
was not easy, he felt no alarm until he heard the switch-engine
whistle. Through the driving snow he could see
that it was coming toward him, pushing ahead of it
a lead of flat cars.
Bucks was no stranger to railroad
yards even then, and the realization of his peril
flashed across his mind. He renewed his efforts
to loosen his imprisoned heel. They were useless.
He stood caught in the iron vice. A sweat of
fear moistened his forehead. He hoped for an instant
that the moving cars were not coming on his track;
but almost at once he saw that they were being pushed
toward the very switch he was trying to reach.
Even where he stood, struggling, he was not six feet
away from the switch-stand and safety. It seemed
as if he could almost reach it, as he writhed and
twisted in his agony of apprehension.
He swung his lantern frantically,
hoping to catch the eye of one of the switching crew.
But the only answer was the heavy pounding of the
loaded cars over the rail joints as they were pushed
down upon the helpless operator. Worst of all,
while he was swinging his lantern high in the air,
the wind sucked the flame up into the globe and it
went out and left him helpless in the dark. Like
the hare caught in the steel teeth of a trap, the
boy stood in the storm facing impending death.
The bitterest feelings overwhelmed
him. After coming hundreds of miles and plunging
into his work with the most complacent self-confidence,
he stood before the close of the first day about to
be snuffed out of existence as if he were no more
than the flame of his useless lantern. A cruel
sense of pain oppressed his thoughts. Each second
of recollection seemed to cover the ground of years.
The dull, heavy jolting of the slow-coming cars shook
the ground. He twisted and writhed this way and
that and cried out, knowing there were none to hear
him: the wind swept away his appeal upon its heedless
wings; the nearest car was almost upon him. Then
a strange feeling of calm came over him. He felt
that death was knocking at his heart. Hope had
gone, and his lips were only moving in prayer, when
a light flashed out of the darkness at his very side
and he felt himself seized as if by a giant and wrenched
away from where he stood and through the air.
He heard a quick exclamation, saw
a lighted lantern fall to the ground, felt a stinging
pain in his right foot, and knew no more.
When he recovered consciousness, three
lanterns shone in his eyes. He was lying in the
mud near the switch with the engine crew standing
over him. One of the men knelt at his side and
he saw the thin, strong features of a face he had
seen among the railroad men, but one that he knew
then he was never to forget the face of
the yardmaster, Callahan. Callahan knelt in the
storm with a good-natured expression. The men
about the yardmaster were less kindly.
“Who are you, tar heels?”
demanded the engineman angrily.
Resentment, which would have been
quick in the operator a little earlier, had died in
the few moments in which he had faced death. He
answered only in the quietest way:
“I am the night operator.”
“The deuce you are!” exclaimed the man
bending over him.
“Who are you?” demanded the operator,
in turn.
“I am Callahan, the night yardmaster.”
“I have an order for you to
send a car of spikes on N, Callahan. I was
trying to find you when I got caught in the frog.”
The pain in his foot overcame Bucks as he spoke.
Another dread was in his mind and he framed a question
to which he dreaded to hear the answer. “Is
my foot gone?” he faltered.
The yardmaster hesitated a moment
and turned to an older man at his side wearing a heavy
cap. “How about it, doctor?” he asked.
Doctor Arnold, the railway surgeon,
a kindly but stern man, answered briefly, “We
won’t take it off this time. But if he is
that careless again we will take his head off.”
“How old are you, boy?” demanded Callahan.
“Seventeen.”
“Well, your foot isn’t
hurt,” he continued gruffly. “But
it’s only God’s mercy that I got here
in time to pull you out of the frog.”
The operator was already up.
“I hope I shan’t forget it,” he said,
putting out his hand. “Will you remember
the spikes?”
“I will,” responded Callahan grimly.
“And I guess ”
“Say it,” said the operator gamely, as
the yardmaster hesitated.
“I guess you will.”