So well did Truman Stump and his young
fireman understand each other, that, as locomotive
number 10 sprang away on her race after the special,
there was no necessity for words between them.
Only after Rod had done everything in his power to
ensure a full head of steam and paused for a moment’s
breathing-spell, did he step up behind the engineman
and ask, “What is it, True?”
“Minkskill bridge gone!
We are trying to catch the special,” answered
the driver, briefly, without turning his head.
It was enough; and Rod instantly comprehended the
situation. There was a choking sensation in his
throat, as he remembered the face disclosed by the
lightning a few moments before, and realized the awful
danger that now threatened the sunny-haired girl who
had been his playmate, and was still his friend.
With a desperate energy he flung open the furnace-door,
and toiled to feed the roaring flames behind it.
They almost licked his face in their mad leapings,
as their scorching breath mingled with his. He
was bathed in perspiration; and, when the front windows
of the cab were forced open by the fierce pressure
of the gale, he welcomed the cold blast and hissing
rain that swept through it.
Number 10 had now attained a fearful
speed, and rocked so violently from side to side that
its occupants were obliged to brace themselves and
cling to the solid framework. It was a miracle
that she kept the track. At each curve, and there
were many of them on this section, Rod held his breath,
fully expecting the mighty mass of iron to leap from
the rails and plunge headlong into the yawning blackness.
But she clung to them, and the steady hand at the
throttle opened it wider, and still a little wider,
until the handle had passed any limit that even the
old engineman had ever seen. Still the young
fireman, with set teeth and nerves like steel, watched
the dial on the steam-gauge, and flung coal to the
raging flames behind the glowing furnace-door.
Mile after mile was passed in half
the same number of minutes, and outside objects were
whirled backward in one continuous, undistinguishable
blur. The limb of a tree, flung to the track
by the mighty wind, was caught up by the pilot and
dashed against the head-light, instantly extinguishing
it. So they rushed blindly on, through a blackness
intensified by gleams of electric light, that every
now and then ran like fiery serpents along the rails,
or bathed the flying engine with its pallid flames.
They were not more than two miles
from the deadly bridge when they first saw the red
lights on the rear of the special. The engineman’s
hand clutched the whistle lever; and, high above the
shriek of the storm, sounded the quick, sharp blasts
of the danger signal. A moment later they swept
past a glare of red fire blazing beside the track.
The enginemen of the special had not understood their
signal, and had thrown out a fusee to warn them of
his presence immediately in front of them.
“I’ll have to set you
aboard, Rod,” shouted Truman Stump, and the young
fireman knew what he meant. He did not answer;
but crawling through the broken window and along the
reeling foot-board, using his strength and agility
as he had never used them before, the boy made his
way to the pilot of the locomotive. Crouching
there, and clinging to its slippery braces, he made
ready for the desperate spring that should save or
lose everything.
Foot by foot, in reality very quickly,
but seemingly at a laggard pace, he was borne closer
and closer to the red lights, until they shone full
in his face. Then, with all his energies concentrated
into one mighty effort, he launched himself forward,
and caught, with outstretched hands, the iron railing
of the platform on which were the lights. Drawing
himself up on it, he dashed into the astonished group
standing in the glass-surrounded observation-room,
that occupied the rear of the car, crying:
“Stop the train! Stop it for your lives!”
Prompt obedience to orders, without
pausing to question them, comes so naturally to a
railroad man, that President Vanderveer himself now
obeyed this grimy-faced young fireman as readily as
though their positions had been reversed. With
a quick movement he touched a button at one side of
the car, and instantly a clear-voiced electric bell,
in the cab of the locomotive that was dragging his
train toward destruction, rang out an imperative call
for brakes. The engineman’s right hand sought
the little brass “air” lever as he heard
the sound. With his left he shut off steam.
Ten seconds later the special stood motionless, with
its pilot pointing out over the Minkskill bridge.
President Vanderveer had not recognized
the panting, coal-begrimed, oil-stained young fireman
who had so mysteriously boarded his car while it was
running at full speed; but Eltje knew his voice.
Now, as her father turned from the electric button
to demand an explanation, he saw the girl seize the
stranger’s hand. “It’s Rod,
father! It’s Rodman Blake!” she cried.
“So it is!” exclaimed
the President, grasping the lad’s other hand,
and scanning him closely. “But what is
the matter, Rodman? How came you here? Why
have you stopped us, and what is the meaning of this
disguise?”
A few words served to explain the situation.
Then the President, with Rod and the
conductor of the special, left the car, lanterns in
hand, to go ahead and discover how far they were from
the treacherous bridge. As they reached the ground
they were joined by Truman Stump, who had slowed the
terrific speed of his locomotive at the moment of
his fireman’s leap from its pilot, and brought
it to a standstill close behind the special.
In a voice trembling with emotion the old engineman
said:
“It was the finest thing I’ve
seen done in thirty years of running, Rod, and I thank
God for your nerve.”
A minute later, when President Vanderveer
realized the full extent of the threatened danger,
and the narrowness of their escape, he again held the
young fireman’s hand, as he said:
“And I thank God, Rodman, not
only for your nerve, but that he permitted you to
be on time. A few seconds later and our run on
this line would have been ended forever.”
After a short consultation it was
decided that the special should remain where it was,
while locomotive number 10 should run back to the station,
where its train still waited, bearing a message to
be telegraphed to the nearest gang of bridge carpenters.
How different was that backward ride
from the mad, breathless race, with all its dreadful
uncertainties, that Truman Stump and Rod Blake had
just made over the same track. How silent they
had been then, and how they talked now. How cheerily
their whistle sounded as they approached the station!
How lustily Rod pulled at the bell-rope, that the glad
tidings of number 10’s glorious run might the
sooner be guessed by the anxious watchers, who awaited
their coming. What an eager throng gathered round
the old locomotive as it rolled proudly up to the station.
It almost seemed conscious of having performed a splendid
deed. Long afterwards, in cab and caboose, or
wherever the men of the N. Y. and W. road gathered,
all fast time was compared with the great run made
by number 10 on that memorable night.
The storm had passed and the moon
was shining when the station was reached. Already
men were at work repairing the telegraph line, and
an hour later a bridge gang, with a train of timber-laden
flats, was on its way to the Minkskill bridge.
Number 10 drew this train, and Rod was delighted to
have this opportunity to learn something of bridge
building. He was glad, too, to escape from the
praises of the railroad men; for Truman Stump insisted
on telling the story of his young fireman’s brave
deed to each new crew as it reached the station, and
they were equally determined to make a hero of him.