When Rod Blake was left standing alone
beside the train, after the short but sharp encounter
with tramps described in the preceding chapter, he
was as bewildered by its sudden termination as he
had been, on awaking from a sound sleep, to find himself
engaged in it. He knew what had become of two
of the tramps, for one of them he had sent staggering
backward down the embankment, and Brakeman Joe was
at that moment pursuing the second; but the disappearance
of the others was a mystery. What could have become
of them? They must have slipped away unnoticed,
and taken advantage of the darkness to make good their
escape. “Yes, that must be it; for tramps
are always cowards,” thought the boy. “But
four of them ought to have whipped two of us easy
enough.”
Then he wondered what the object of
the attack could have been, and what the tramps were
after. All at once it flashed into his mind that
the M. S. and T. car number 50, beside which he was
standing, was filled with costly silks and laces from
France which were being sent West in bond. He
had overheard Conductor Tobin say so; and, now, there
was the door of that very car half-way open.
The tramps must have learned of its valuable contents
in some way, and been attempting to rob it when Brakeman
Joe discovered them. What a plucky fellow Joe
was to tackle them single-handed.
“I wonder if they got anything
before he caught them?” thought the boy; and,
to satisfy his curiosity on this point, he went to
his own car for the lantern that was still hanging
in it, and returned to car number 50, determined to
have a look at its interior. As he could not see
much of it from the ground, he set the lantern just
within the open doorway, and began to climb in after
it. He had hardly stepped inside, and was stooping
to pick up his lantern, when he was knocked down by
a heavy blow, and immediately seized by two men who
sprang from out of the darkness on either side of
him. Without a word they bound his wrists with
a stout bit of cord, and, thrusting his own handkerchief
into his mouth, fastened it securely so that he could
not utter a sound. Then they allowed him to rise
and sit on a box, where they took the precaution of
passing a rope about his body and making it fast to
an iron stanchion near the door.
Having thus secured him, one of the
men, holding the lantern close to the boy’s
face, said in a threatening tone: “Now,
my chicken, perhaps this’ll be a lesson to you
never to interfere again in a business that doesn’t
concern you.”
“Hello!” exclaimed the
other, as he recognized Rod’s features, “if
this ere hain’t the same cove wot set the dog
onto me last night. Oh, you young willin, I’ll
get even with you now!”
With this he made a motion as though
to strike the helpless prisoner; but the other tramp
restrained him, saying: “Hold on, Bill,
we hain’t got no time for fooling now.
Don’t you hear the engine coming back? I’ll
take this lantern and give ’em the signal to
go ahead, in case that fool of a brakeman doesn’t
turn up on time, which I don’t believe he will.”
Here the fellow chuckled meaningly. “You,”
he continued, “want to stay right here, and
begin to pitch out the boxes as soon as she starts,
and the rest of us’ll be on hand to gather ’em
in. You can easy jump out when she slows up at
the top of the grade. You want to be sure, though,
and shut the door behind you so as nothing won’t
be suspected, and so this chap’ll have a good,
long ride undisturbed by visitors; see?”
If Rod could not talk, he could still
hear; and, by paying close attention to this conversation,
he formed a very clear idea of the tramps’ plans.
They meant to rob car number 50 of as many of its valuable
packages as Bill could throw from it while the train
was on the grade. He felt satisfied that they
had, in some way, disposed of Brakeman Joe. Now,
they intended to get rid of him by leaving him in
the closed car, helplessly bound, and unable to call
for assistance. What would become of him?
That car might be going to San Francisco for aught
he knew, and its door might not be opened for days,
or even weeks. It might not be opened until he
was dead of thirst or starvation. What tortures
might he not suffer in this moving prison? It
seemed as though these thoughts would drive him crazy,
and he realized that if he wished to retain his senses
and think out a way of escape, he must not dwell upon
them.
So he tried to think of plans for
outwitting the tramps. The chances of so doing
seemed slender enough; but he felt certain there must
be some way. In the meantime one of his assailants
had left the car, very nearly closing the door as
he did so for fear lest somebody might come along and
notice it if it were wide open. He had taken the
lantern with him, the train was in motion, the young
tramp called Bill was already preparing to carry out
his part of the programme and begin throwing out the
boxes. Suddenly, like a flash of lightning, a
plan that would not only save the car from being robbed,
but would ensure its door being opened before he could
die of either thirst or hunger, darted into Rod’s
mind.
He knew that the car door closed with
a spring latch that could only be opened from the
outside. He knew that no one could board the train,
now that it was in motion, to open the door.
Above all he knew that if the young tramp were shut
in there with him he would not suffer long from hunger
and thirst before raising his voice and making his
presence known to outsiders. Rod could reach
the door with his foot. A quick push, the welcome
click of the latch as it sprang sharply into place,
and the plan was carried out.
It took Bill, the young tramp, several
minutes to find out what had happened, and that the
door could not be opened from the inside. When
he finally realized his position he broke out with
a torrent of yells and threats against his recent
companions. It never occurred to him that Rod
had closed the door. He imagined that it must
have been done from the outside, by one of his fellow
thieves, and his rage against them knew no bounds.
If he had for a moment suspected the captive, whom
he regarded as helplessly bound, he would undoubtedly
have directed his fury towards him, and Rod might
have suffered severely at his hands. As it was,
he only yelled and kicked against the door until the
train began to slow up at the top of the grade.
Then, fearful of attracting undesirable attention,
he subsided into a sullen silence.
While these things were happening
to Rod, Brakeman Joe was suffering even greater misfortunes.
His left arm had been broken by the pistol shot, that
was one of the first sounds of the fight by which the
young stockman was awakened; and when he started in
pursuit of the flying tramp, he was weaker than he
realized, from loss of blood. The tramp quickly
discovered that he could easily keep out of his pursuer’s
way. Judging from this that the Brakeman must
be either wounded or exhausted, he gradually slackened
his pace, until Joe was close upon him. Then springing
to one side, and whirling around, the tramp dealt
the poor fellow a blow on the head with the butt of
a revolver, that stretched him senseless across the
rails of the west-bound track. After satisfying
himself that his victim was not in a condition to
molest him again for some time to come, and brutally
leaving him where he had fallen, directly in the path
of the next west-bound train, the tramp began leisurely
to retrace his steps toward Freight Number 73, in
the plunder of which he now hoped to take a part.