THE TRAIN COMES IN
There is in Orham a self-appointed
committee whose duty it is to see the train come in.
The committeemen receive no salary for their services;
the sole compensation is the pleasure derived from
the sense of duty done. Rain, snow, or shine,
the committee is on hand at the station the
natives, of course, call it the “deepo” to
consume borrowed tobacco and to favor Providence with
its advice concerning the running of the universe.
Also it discusses local affairs with fluency and more
or less point.
Mr. “Squealer” Wixon,
a lifelong member of this committee, was the first
to sight Captain Eri as the latter strolled across
the tracks into the circle of light from the station
lamps. The Captain had moored Daniel to a picket
in the fence over by the freight-house. He had
heard the clock in the belfry of the Methodist church
strike eight as he drove by that edifice, but he heard
no whistle from the direction of the West Orham woods,
so he knew that the down train would arrive at its
usual time, that is, from fifteen to twenty minutes
behind the schedule.
“Hey!” shouted Mr. Wixon
with enthusiasm. “Here’s Cap’n
Eri! Well, Cap, how’s she headin’?”
“‘Bout no’theast
by no’th,” was the calm reply. “Runnin’
fair, but with lookout for wind ahead.”
“Hain’t got a spare chaw
nowheres about you, have you, Cap’n?” anxiously
inquired “Bluey” Batcheldor. Mr. Batcheldor
is called “Bluey” for the same reason
that Mr. Wixon is called “Squealer,” and
that reason has been forgotten for years.
Captain Eri obligingly produced a
black plug of smoking tobacco, and Mr. Batcheldor
bit off two-thirds and returned the balance. After
adjusting the morsel so that it might interfere in
the least degree with his vocal machinery, he drawled:
“I cal’late you ain’t
heard the news, Eri. Web Saunders has got his
original-package license. It come on the noon
mail.”
The Captain turned sharply toward
the speaker. “Is that a fact?” he
asked. “Who told you?”
“See it myself. So did
Squealer and a whole lot more. Web was showin’
it round.”
“We was wonderin’,”
said Jabez Smalley, a member of the committee whose
standing was somewhat impaired, inasmuch as he went
fishing occasionally and was, therefore, obliged to
miss some of the meetings, “what kind of a fit
John Baxter would have now. He’s been pretty
nigh distracted ever sence Web started his billiard
room, callin’ it a ‘ha’nt of sin’
and a whole lot more names. There ain’t
been a ‘Come-Outers’ meetin’ ’sence
I don’t know when that he ain’t pitched
into that saloon. Now, when he hears that Web’s
goin’ to sell rum, he’ll bust a biler
sure.”
The committee received this prophecy
with an hilarious shout of approval and each member
began to talk. Captain Eri took advantage of this
simultaneous expression of opinion to walk away.
He looked in at the window of the ticket-office, exchanged
greetings with Sam Hardy, the stationmaster, and then
leaned against the corner of the building furthest
removed from Mr. Wixon and his friends, lit his pipe
and puffed thoughtfully with a troubled expression
on his face.
From the clump of blackness that indicated
the beginning of the West Orham woods came a long-drawn
dismal “toot”; then two shorter ones.
The committee sprang to its feet and looked interested.
Sam Hardy came out of the ticket office. The
stage-driver, a sharp-looking boy of about fourteen,
with a disagreeable air of cheap smartness sticking
out all over him, left his seat in the shadow of Mr.
Batcheldor’s manly form, tossed a cigarette
stump away and loafed over to the vicinity of the
“depot wagon,” which was backed up against
the platform. Captain Eri knocked the ashes from
his pipe and put that service-stained veteran in his
pocket. The train was really “coming in”
at last.
If this had been an August evening
instead of a September one, both train and platform
would have been crowded. But the butterfly summer
maiden had flitted and, as is his wont, the summer
man had flitted after her, so the passengers who alighted
from the two coaches that, with the freight car, made
up the Orham Branch train, were few in number and
homely in flavor. There was a very stout lady
with a canvas extension case and an umbrella in one
hand and a bulging shawl-strap and a pasteboard box
in the other, who panted and wheezed like the locomotive
itself and who asked the brakeman, “What on airth
do they have such high steps for?” There
was a slim, not to say gawky, individual with a chin
beard and rubber boots, whom the committee hailed as
“Andy” and welcomed to its bosom.
There were two young men, drummers, evidently, who
nodded to Hardy, and seemed very much at home.
Also, there was another young man, smooth-shaven and
square-shouldered, who deposited a suit-case on the
platform and looked about him with the air of being
very far from home, indeed.
The drummers and the stout lady got
into the stage. The young man with the suit-case
picked up the latter and walked toward the same vehicle.
He accosted the sharp boy, who had lighted another
cigarette.
“Can you direct me to the cable station?”
he asked.
“Sure thing!” said the
youth, and there was no Cape Cod twist to his accent.
“Git aboard.”
“I didn’t intend to ride,” said
the stranger.
“What was you goin’ to do? Walk?”
“Yes, if it’s not far.”
The boy grinned, and the members of
the committee, who had been staring with all their
might, grinned also. The young man’s mention
of the cable station seemed to have caused considerable
excitement.
“Oh, it ain’t too far!”
said the stage-driver. Then he added: “Say,
you’re the new electrician, ain’t you?”
The young man hesitated for a moment.
Then he said, “Yes,” and suggested, “I
asked the way.”
“Two blocks to the right; that’s
the main road, keep on that for four blocks, then
turn to the left, and if you keep on straight ahead
you’ll get to the station.”
“Blocks?” The stranger
smiled. “I think you must be from New York.”
“Do you?” inquired the
youthful prodigy, climbing to the wagon seat.
“Don’t forget to keep straight ahead after
you turn off the main road. Git dap! So
long, fellers!” He leaned over the wheel, as
the stage turned, and bestowed a wink upon the delighted
“Squealer,” who was holding one freckled
paw over his mouth; then the “depot wagon”
creaked away.
The square-shouldered young man looked
after the equipage with an odd expression of countenance.
Then he shrugged his shoulders, picked up the suitcase,
and walked off the platform into the darkness.
Mr. Wixon removed the hand from his
mouth and displayed a mammoth grin, that grew into
a shriek of laughter in which every member of the
committee joined.
“Haw! haw!” bellowed “Bluey,”
“so that’s the feller that done Parker
out of his job! Well, he may be mighty smart,
but if that Joe Bartlett ain’t smarter then
I’m a skate, that’s all! Smartest
boy ever I see! ’If you keep on straight
ahead you’ll git to the station!’ Gosh!
he’ll have to wear rubbers!”
“Maybe he’s web-footed,”
suggested Smalley, and they laughed again.
A little later Captain Eri, with a
dozen new, clean-smelling cranberry barrels in the
wagon behind him, drove slowly down the “depot
road.” It was a clear night, but there
was no moon, and Orham was almost at its darkest,
which is very dark, indeed. The “depot road” please
bear in mind that there are no streets in Orham was
full of ruts, and although Daniel knew his way and
did his best to follow it, the cranberry barrels rattled
and shook in lively fashion. There are few homes
near the station, and the dwellers in them conscientiously
refrain from showing lights except in the ends of
the buildings furthest from the front. Strangers
are inclined to wonder at this, but when they become
better acquainted with the town and its people, they
come to know that front gates and parlors are, by
the majority of the inhabitants, restricted in their
use to occasions such as a funeral, or, possibly, a
wedding. For the average Orham family to sit
in the parlor on a week evening would be an act bordering
pretty closely on sacrilege.
It is from the hill by the Methodist
church that the visitor to Orham gets his best view
of the village. It is all about him, and for the
most part below him. At night the lights in the
houses show only here and there through the trees,
but those on the beaches and at sea shine out plainly.
The brilliant yellow gleam a mile away is from the
Orham lighthouse on the bluff. The smaller white
dot marks the light on Baker’s Beach. The
tiny red speck in the distance, that goes and comes
again, is the flash-light at Setuckit Point, and the
twinkle on the horizon to the south is the beacon
of the lightship on Sand Hill Shoal.
It is on his arrival at this point,
too, that the stranger first notices the sound of
the surf. Being a newcomer, he notices this at
once; after he has been in the village a few weeks,
he ceases to notice it at all. It is like the
ticking of a clock, so incessant and regular, that
one has to listen intently for a moment or two before
his accustomed ear will single it out and make it
definite. One low, steady, continuous roar, a
little deeper in tone when the wind is easterly, the
voice of the old dog Ocean gnawing with foaming mouth
at the bone of the Cape and growling as he gnaws.
It may be that the young man with
the square shoulders and the suit-case had paused
at the turn of the road by the church to listen to
this song of the sea; at any rate he was there, and
when Captain Eri steered Daniel and the cranberry
barrels around the corner and into the “main
road,” he stepped out and hailed.
“I beg your pardon,” he
said; “I’m afraid I’m mixed in my
directions. The stage-driver told me the way
to the cable station, but I’ve forgotten whether
he said to turn to the right when I reached here, or
to the left.”
Captain Eri took his lantern from
the floor of the wagon and held it up. He had
seen the stranger when the latter left the train, but
he had not heard the dialogue with Josiah Bartlett.
“How was you cal’latin’ to go to
the station?” he asked.
“Why, I intended to walk.”
“Did you tell them fellers at the depot that
you wanted to walk?”
“Certainly.”
“Well, I swan! And they give you the direction?”
“Yes,” a little impatiently;
“why shouldn’t they? So many blocks
till I got to the main street, or road, and so many
more, till I got somewhere else, and then straight
on.”
“Blocks, hey? That’s
Joe Bartlett. That boy ought to be mastheaded,
and I’ve told Perez so more’n once.
Well, Mister, I guess maybe you’d better not
try to walk to the cable station to-night. You
see, there’s one thing they forgot to tell you.
The station’s on the outer beach, and there’s
a ha’f mile of pretty wet water between here
and there.”
The young man whistled. “You don’t
mean it!” he exclaimed.
“I sartin do, unless there’s
been an almighty drought since I left the house.
I tell you what! If you’ll jump in here
with me, and don’t mind waitin’ till I
leave these barrels at the house of the man that owns
’em, I’ll drive you down to the shore and
maybe find somebody to row you over. That is,”
with a chuckle, “if you ain’t dead set
on walkin’.”
The stranger laughed heartily.
“I’m not so stubborn as all that,”
he said. “It’s mighty good of you,
all the same.”
“Don’t say a word,”
said the Captain. “Give us your satchel.
Now your flipper! There you are! Git dap,
Dan’l!”
Daniel accepted the Captain’s
command in a tolerant spirit. He paddled along
at a jog-trot for perhaps a hundred yards, and then,
evidently feeling that he had done all that could
be expected, settled back into a walk. The Captain
turned towards his companion on the seat:
“I don’t know as I mentioned
it,” he observed, “but my name is Hedge.”
“Glad to meet you, Mr. Hedge,”
said the stranger. “My name is Hazeltine.”
“I kind of jedged it might be
when you said you wanted to git to the cable station.
We heard you was expected.”
“Did you? From Mr. Langley, I presume.”
“No-o, not d’rectly.
Of course, we knew Parker had been let go, and that
somebody would have to take his place. I guess
likely it was one of the operators that told it fust
that you was the man, but anyhow it got as fur as
M’lissy Busteed, and after that ‘twas plain
sailin’. You come from New York, don’t
you?”
“Yes.”
“Well, you know how ’tis
when a thing gits into the papers. Orham ain’t
big enough to have a paper of its own, so the Almighty
give us M’lissy, I jedge, as a sort of substitute.
She can spread a little news over more country than
anybody I know. If she spreads butter the same
way, she could make money keepin’ boarders.
Is this your fust visit to the Cape?”
“Yes. I hardly know why
I’m here now. I have been with the Cable
Company at their New York experimental station for
some years, and the other day the General Manager
called me into his office and told me I was expected
to take the position of electrician here. I thought
it might add to my experience, so I accepted.”
“Humph! Did he say anything
about the general liveliness of things around the
station?”
Mr. Hazeltine laughed. “Why,”
he answered, “now that you speak of it, I remember
that he began by asking me if I had any marked objection
to premature burial.”
The Captain chuckled. “The
outer beach in winter ain’t exactly a camp-meeting
for sociableness,” he said. “And the
idea of that Bartlett boy tellin’ you how to
walk there!”
“Is he a specimen of your Cape Cod youngsters?”
“Not exactly. He’s
a new shipment from New York. Grand-nephew of
a messmate of mine, Cap’n Perez Ryder.
Perez, he’s a bachelor, but his sister’s
daughter married a feller named Bartlett. Maybe
you knew him; he used to run a tugboat in the Sound.”
Mr. Hazeltine, much amused, denied the acquaintance.
“Well, I s’pose you wouldn’t,
nat’rally,” continued the Captain.
“Anyhow, Perez’s niece’s husband
died, and the boy sort of run loose, as yer might
say. Went to school when he had to, and raised
Ned when he didn’t, near’s I can find
out. ’Lizabeth, that’s his ma, died
last spring, and she made Perez promise he
being the only relation the youngster had to
fetch the boy down here and sort of bring him up.
Perez knows as much about bringing up a boy as a hen
does about the Ten Commandments, and ’Lizabeth
made him promise not to lick the youngster and a whole
lot more foolishness. School don’t commence
here till October, so we got him a job with Lem Mullett
at the liv’ry stable. He’s boardin’
with Lem till school opens. He ain’t a reel
bad boy, but he knows too much ’bout some things
and not ha’f enough ’bout others.
You’ve seen fellers like that, maybe?”
Hazeltine nodded. “There
are a good many of that kind in New York, I’m
afraid,” he said.
Captain Eri smiled. “I
shouldn’t wonder,” he observed. “The
boys down here think Josiah’s the whole crew,
and the girls ain’t fur behind. There’s
been more deviltry in this village sence he landed
than there ever was afore. He needs somethin’,
and needs it bad, but I ain’t decided jest what
it is yit. Are you a married man?”
“No.”
“Same here. Never had the
disease. Perez, he’s had symptoms every
once in a while, but nothin’ lastin’.
Jerry’s the only one of us three that’s
been through the mill. His wife died twenty year
ago. I don’t know as I told you, but Jerry
and Perez and me are keepin’ house down by the
shore. That is, we call it keepin’ house,
but ”
Here the Captain broke off and seemed to meditate.
Ralph Hazeltine forbore to interrupt,
and occupied himself by scrutinizing the buildings
that they were passing. They were nearing the
center of the town now, and the houses were closer
together than they had been on the “depot road,”
but never so close as to be in the least crowded.
Each house had its ample front yard, and the new arrival
could smell the box hedges and see, now and then, the
whiteness of the kalsomined stones that bordered a
driveway. It was too dark for the big seashells
at the front steps to be visible, but they were there,
all the same; every third house of respectability
in Orham has them. There was an occasional shop,
too, with signs like “Cape Cod Variety Store,”
or “The Boston Dry Goods Emporium,” over
their doors. On the platform of one a small crowd
was gathered, and from the interior came shouts of
laughter and the sound of a tin-panny piano.
“That’s the billiard saloon,”
volunteered Captain Eri, suddenly waking from his
trance. “Play pool, Mr. Hazeltine?”
“Sometimes.”
“What d’ye play it with?”
“Why, with a cue, generally speaking.”
“That so! Most of the fellers
in there play it with their mouths. Miss a shot
and then spend the rest of the evenin’ tellin’
how it happened.”
“I don’t think I should care to play it
that way,” said Ralph, laughing.
“Well, it has its good p’ints.
Kind of all-round exercise; develops the lungs and
strengthens the muscles, as the patent-medicine almanac
says. Parker played it considerable.”
“I judge that your opinion of my predecessor
isn’t a high one.”
“Who? Oh, Parker!
He was all right in his way. Good many folks in
this town swore by him. I understand the fellers
over at the station thought he was about the ticket.”
“Mr. Langley included?”
“Oh, Mr. Langley, bein’
manager, had his own ideas, I s’pose! Langley
don’t play pool much; not at Web Saunders’
place, anyhow. We turn in here.”
They rolled up a long driveway, very
dark and overgrown with trees, and drew up at the
back door of a good-sized two-story house. There
was a light in the kitchen window.
“Whoa, Dan’l!” commanded
the Captain. Then he began to shout, “Ship
ahoy!” at the top of his lungs.
The kitchen door opened and a man
came out, carrying a lamp, its light shining full
upon his face. It was an old face, a stern face,
with white eyebrows and a thin-lipped mouth.
Just such a face as looked on with approval when the
executioner held up the head of Charles I., at Whitehall.
There was, however, a tremble about the chin that told
of infirm health.
“Hello, John!” said Captain
Eri heartily. “John, let me make you acquainted
with Mr. Hazeltine, the new man at the cable station.
Mr. Hazeltine, this is my friend, Cap’n John
Baxter.”
The two shook hands, and then Captain Eri said:
“John, I brought down them barrels
for you. Hawkins got ’em here, same as
he always does, by the skin of his teeth. Stand
by now, ’cause I’ve got to deliver Mr.
Hazeltine at the station, and it’s gittin’
late.”
John Baxter said nothing, beyond thanking
his friend for the good turn, but he “stood
by,” as directed, and the barrels were quickly
unloaded. As they were about to drive out of
the yard, Captain Eri turned in his seat and said:
“John, guess I’ll be up
some time to-morrow. I want to talk with you
about that billiard-room business.”
The lamp in Baxter’s hand shook.
“God A’mighty’s
got his eye on that place, Eri Hedge,” he shouted,
“and on them that’s runnin’ it!”
“That’s all right,”
said the Captain. “Then the job’s
in good hands, and we ain’t got to worry.
Good-night.”
But, in spite of this assurance, Hazeltine
noticed that his driver was silent and preoccupied
until they reached the end of the road by the shore,
when he brought the willing Daniel to a stand still
and announced that it was time to “change cars.”
It is a fifteen-minute row from the
mainland to the outer beach, and Captain Eri made
it on schedule time. Hazeltine protested that
he was used to a boat, and could go alone and return
the dory in the morning, but the Captain wouldn’t
hear of it. The dory slid up on the sand and
the passenger climbed out. The sound of the surf
on the ocean side of the beach was no longer a steady
roar, it was broken into splashing plunges and hisses
with, running through it, a series of blows like those
of a muffled hammer. The wind was wet and smelt
salty.
“There’s the station,”
said the Captain, pointing to a row of lighted windows
a quarter of a mile away. “It is straight
ahead this time, and the walkin’s better’n
it has been for the last few minutes. Good-night!”
The electrician put his hand in his
pocket, hesitated, and then withdrew it, empty.
“I’m very much obliged
to you for all this,” he said. “I’m
glad to have made your acquaintance, and I hope we
shall see each other often.”
“Same here!” said the
Captain heartily. “We’re likely to
git together once in a while, seein’ as we’re
next-door neighbors, right across the road, as you
might say. That’s my berth over yonder,
where you see them lights. It’s jest ’round
the corner from the road we drove down last.
Good-night! Good luck to you!”
And he settled himself for the row home.