At Rodman’s startling announcement
Conductor Tobin sprang to his feet, reached for the
bell-cord, and gave it two sharp pulls. A single
whistle blast from the locomotive made instant reply
that his signal was received and understood.
So promptly was it obeyed that as the conductor and
his two brakemen ran to the front platform to swing
far out and look along the sides of the express cars
ahead of them, the grinding brakes were already reducing
the speed of the flying train.
Suddenly a pistol shot rang angrily
out, and a bullet crashed into the woodwork close
above Rod Blake’s head. He and the conductor
were leaning out on one side while the other brakeman
occupied the opposite one.
“Give the signal to go ahead
at once, or I’ll come back there and blow your
brains out!” came in a hoarse voice from a side
door of the money car.
“All right, I’ll do it;
only don’t shoot,” shouted Conductor Tobin
in answer, giving the desired signal to the engineman,
by raising and lowering his lantern vertically, as
he spoke. At the same time he said hurriedly
to the brakeman on the opposite side of the platform,
and thus concealed from the robber’s view:
“Drop off, Tom, and run back
to number 10. Telegraph ahead to all stations,
and we’ll bag that fellow yet!”
The man did as directed, swinging
low and giving a forward spring that landed him safely
beside the track, though the train was still moving
fully twenty miles an hour.
The engineman, though greatly puzzled
at receiving the signal to go ahead immediately after
being ordered to stop, had obeyed it, thrown off brakes,
and the train was again gathering its usual headway.
“Now Rod,” said Conductor
Tobin, as the other brakeman disappeared; “I
want you to make your way over the top of the train
to the engine, and tell Eli what is taking place.
Tell him to keep her wide open till we reach Millbank,
and not to give her the “air” till we are
well up with the station. It’s a tough
job for you, and one I hate to send you on. At
the same time it’s got to be done, and after
your experience on the freight deck, I believe you
are the lad to undertake it. Anyway, you’ll
be safe from that pistol when once you reach the cab.”
“But I don’t like to leave
you here alone to be shot,” remonstrated Rod.
“Never mind me. I don’t
believe I’ll get shot. At any rate, this
is my place, and here I must stay. Now move along,
and God bless you.”
There was a strong hand-clasp between
the conductor and brakeman, and then the latter started
on the perilous journey he had been ordered to undertake.
It was no easy task to maintain a footing on the rounded
roofs of those express cars as they were hurled on
through the night at the rate of nearly a mile a minute;
while to leap from one to another seemed almost suicidal.
Not more than one brakeman in a thousand could have
done it; but Rod Blake, with his light weight, athletic
training, and recent experience combined with absolute
fearlessness, was that one. His inclination was
to get down on his hands and knees and crawl along
the slippery roofs. If he had yielded to it he
would never have accomplished the trip. He believed
that the only way to make it was by running and clearing
the spaces between cars with flying leaps, and, incredible
as it may seem, that is the way he did it. He
had kicked off his shoes before starting, and now
ran with stockinged feet.
The occupants of the cab were as startled
by his appearance beside them as though he had been
a ghost, and when his story was told the engineman
wanted to stop the train at once and go back to the
assistance of the imperilled messenger. Rod however
succeeded in persuading him that, as the messenger’s
fate was probably already decided, their only hope
of capturing the robber lay in carrying out Conductor
Tobin’s plan of running at such speed that he
would not dare jump from the train until a station
prepared for his reception was reached.
When the engineman finally agreed
to this, and before he could utter the remonstrance
that sprang to his lips, Rodman clambered back over
the heaped-up coal of the tender, swung himself to
the roof of the forward car and began to retrace his
perilous journey to the rear end of the train.
He argued that if Conductor Tobin’s place was
back there exposed to the shots of a desperate man,
his brakeman’s place was beside him. Even
if Rod had not been a railroad boy, or “man,”
as he now called himself, his natural bravery and
sense of honor would have taken him back to that coach.
Ever since he had enlisted in the service that demands
as strict obedience as that required of a soldier
and an equal contempt of danger, this lad was doubly
alert to the call of whatever he regarded as duty.
There is no service in the world, outside of the army,
so nearly resembling it in requirements and discipline
as that of a railroad. It is no place for cowards
nor weaklings; but to such a lad as Rod Blake it adds
the stimulus of excitement and ever-present danger
and the promise of certain promotion and ample reward
for the conscientious performance of every-day duties.
So Rod, feeling in duty bound to do
so, made his way back over the reeling roofs of that
on-rushing train to the side of his superior officer.
As he scrambled and slipped and leaped from car to
car he fully realized the imminent peril of his situation,
but was at the same time filled with a wild exhilaration
and buoyance of spirits such as he had never before
known.
Conductor Tobin, standing just inside
the coach door with pale face and set lips, was amazed
to see him. For a moment he fancied the lad had
been daunted by the task imposed upon him and had
turned back without reaching the locomotive.
When he realized that Rod had not only made the perilous
trip once, but twice, his admiration was unbounded,
and though he tried to scold him for his foolhardiness
the words refused to come. He shook the young
brakeman’s hand so heartily instead that the
action conveyed a volume of praise and appreciation.
Now, as they watched together with
an intense eagerness for the lights of Millbank they
became conscious of a yellow glare, like that of an
open furnace, streaming from the side door of the
money car.
“The scoundrel has set the car
on fire!” gasped Conductor Tobin.
“Don’t you think we ought
to break in the door with an axe and make a rush for
him?” asked Rod.
Before the other could reply, a long,
ear-splitting whistle blast announcing their approach
to a station sounded from the locomotive.