In regard to Rod Blake’s new
appointment, nothing more was said that day; but,
sure enough, he received an order the following morning
to report to the master mechanic for duty as fireman
on engine number 10.
Proud enough of his promotion, the
lad promptly obeyed the order; and when that same
evening he climbed into the cab of number 10, as the
huge machine with a full head of steam on stood ready
to start out with Freight Number 73, he felt that
one of his chief ambitions was in a fair way of being
realized. He tried to thank Truman Stump for getting
him the job; but the old engineman only answered “Nonsense,
you won the place for yourself, and I’m glad
enough to have such a chap as you. The only trouble
is that you’ll learn too quick, and be given
an engine of your own, just as you are getting the
hang of my ways. I won’t teach you anything
though, except how to fire properly, so you needn’t
expect it.”
That is what he said. What he
did was to take every opportunity for showing the
young fireman the different parts of the wonderful
machine on which they rode, and of explaining them
to him in the clearest possible manner. He encouraged
him to ask questions, often allowed him to handle
the throttle for short distances, and evidently took
the greatest pride in the rapid progress made by his
pupil.
Since first obtaining employment on
the railroad, Rod had, according to his promise, written
several times to his faithful friend Dan the stable
boy on his uncle’s place with requests that he
would keep him informed of all that took place in
the village. Dan sent his answers through the
station agent at Euston, and Rod had only been a fireman
a few days when he received a note which read as follows:
“DEAR MR. ROD:
“They is a man here, who I don’t
know, but who is asking all about you. He
asked me many questions, and has talk with your uncle.
He may mean good or he may mean bad, I don’t
know which. If I find out ennything more
I will let you know. Yours respectful,
“DAN.”
Rod puzzled over this note a good
deal, and wondered who on earth could be making inquiries
about him. If he had known that it was Brown the
railroad detective, he would have wondered still more.
He finally decided that, as he was not conscious of
having done anything wrong, he had no cause for worry.
So he dismissed the affair, and devoted his whole attention
to learning to be a fireman.
Most people imagine it to be a very
simple matter to shovel coal into a locomotive furnace,
and so it is; but this is only a small part of a fireman’s
responsibility. He must know when to begin shovelling
coal, and when to stop; when to open the blower and
when to shut it off; when to keep the furnace door
closed, and when to open it; how to regulate the dampers;
when and how to admit water to the boiler; when to
pour oil into the lubricating cups of the cylinder
valves and a dozen other places; when to ring the
bell, and when and how to do a multitude of other things,
every one of which is important. He must keep
a constant watch of the steam-gauge, and see that
its pointer does not fall below a certain mark.
The water-gauge also comes in for a share of his attention.
Above all, he must learn, as quickly as possible,
how to start, stop, and reverse the engine, and how
to apply, or throw off the air brakes, so that he can
readily do any of these things in an emergency, if
his engineman happens to be absent.
In acquiring all this information,
and at the same time attending to his back-breaking
work of shovelling coal, Rod found himself so fully
and happily occupied that he could spare but few thoughts
to the stranger who was inquiring about him in Euston.
After a few days of life in the cab of locomotive
number 10, he became so accustomed to dashing through
tunnels amid a blackness so intense that he could
not see a foot beyond the cab windows, to whirling
around sharp curves, to rattling over slender trestles
a hundred feet or more up in the air, and to rushing
with undiminished speed through the darkness of storm-swept
nights, when the head-lights seemed of little more
value than a tallow candle, that he ceased to think
of the innumerable dangers connected with his position
as completely as though they had not existed.
There came a day, however, when they
were recalled to his mind in a startling manner.
It was late in the fall, and for a week there had been
a steady down-pour of rain that filled the streams
to overflowing, and soaked the earth until it seemed
like a vast sponge. It made busy work for the
section gangs, who had their hands more than full with
landslides, undermined culverts, and overflowing ditches,
and it caused enginemen to strain their eyes along
the lines of wet track, with an unusual carefulness.
At length the week of rain ended with a storm of terrific
violence, accompanied by crashing thunder and vivid
lightnings. While this storm was at its height,
locomotive number 10, drawing a heavy freight, pulled
in on the siding of a station to wait for the passing
of a passenger special, and a regular express.
Truman Stump sat on his side of the
cab, calmly smoking a short, black pipe; and his fireman
stood at the other side, looking out at the storm as
the special, consisting of a locomotive and two cars,
rushed by without stopping. As it was passing,
a ball of fire, accompanied by a rending crash of
thunder, illumined the whole scene with an awful, blinding
glare. For an instant Rod saw a white face pressed
against one of the rear windows of the flying train.
He was almost certain that it was the face of Eltje
Vanderveer.
A moment later the telegraph operator
of that station came running toward them, bareheaded,
and coatless, through the pitiless rain. The head-light
showed his face to be bloodless and horror-stricken.
“Cut loose from the train, Rod!”
he cried in a voice husky and choked with a terrible
dread. “True, word was just coming over
the wire that the centre pier of Minkskill bridge
had gone out from under the track, and for me to stop
all trains, when that last bolt struck the line, and
cut me off. If you can’t catch that special
there’s no hope for it. It’s the only
thing left to try.”
Without waiting to hear all this Rod
had instantly obeyed the first order, sprung to the
rear of the tender, drawn the coupling-pin, and was
back in the cab in less time than it takes to write
of it. Truman Stump did not utter a word; but,
before the operator finished speaking, number 10 was
in motion. He had barely time to leap to the
ground as she gathered headway and began to spring
forward on the wildest race for life or death ever
run on the New York and Western road.