The special was the first train to
cross the Minkskill bridge after it was repaired and
pronounced safe, and as it was followed by all the
delayed passenger trains, the through freight did
not pull out for more than an hour later. As
the special moved at the rate of nearly three miles
to the freight’s one, and as it made but one
stop, which was at Euston, where Eltje was left, President
Vanderveer reached the terminus of the road in the
evening; while Rod Blake did not get there until the
following morning.
After devoting some time to the discussion
of important business matters with Superintendent
Hill, the President suddenly asked: “By
the way, Hill, do you happen to have a personal acquaintance
with a young fireman in our employ named Rodman Blake?”
“Yes, indeed I have,”
replied the Superintendent, and he related the incidents
connected with the first meeting between himself and
Rod. He also told of the imputation cast upon
the lad’s character by his private secretary.
“In regard to this,” he said, “I
have been awaiting your return, before taking any
action, because my secretary came to me with your
recommendation. After Brown finished with the
matter of the freight thieves, I sent him to Euston
to make a thorough investigation of this charge against
young Blake, and here is his report.”
President Vanderveer read the report
carefully, and without comment, to the end; but a
pained expression gradually settled on his face.
As he handed it back, he said, “So Brown thinks
Appleby did it himself?”
“He has not a doubt of it,” replied Mr.
Hill.
“Well,” said the President,
“I am deeply grieved and disappointed; but justice
is justice, and the innocent must not be allowed to
suffer for the guilty, if it can be helped. I
am going to Euston to-night, and I wish that, without
mentioning this affair to him, you would send Appleby
out there to see me in the morning.”
“Very well, sir,” replied
the Superintendent, and then they talked of other
matters.
In the meantime, during the long run
in from the Minkskill bridge, Rod had plenty of time
to think over his recent interview with President
Vanderveer. He recalled all the kindness shown
him by his uncle, and realized now, what he had not
allowed himself even to suspect before, that a selfish
pride had been the motive of his whole course of action,
ever since that unfortunate bicycle race. Pride
had driven him from his uncle’s house.
Pride had restrained him from letting that uncle know
where he was, or what he was doing. Even now,
though he knew that his dear mother’s only brother
was willing and anxious to receive him again, pride
forbade him to go to him. Should he continue
to be the slave of pride, and submit to its dictates?
or should he boldly throw off its yoke and declare
himself free and independent? “Yes, I will,”
he said aloud; “I won’t give in to it any
longer.”
“Will what, and won’t
what?” asked the engineman, whose curiosity was
aroused by these words. Then Rod told him of the
struggle that had been going on in his mind, and of
the decision he had just reached. When he finished,
the other exclaimed: “Right, you are, lad!
and True Stump thinks more of you for expressing those
sentiments than he did when he saw you board the special
last night, and that is saying a good deal. To
fight with one’s own pride and whip it, is a
blamed sight harder thing to do than anything else
that I know of in this world.”
They had already passed Euston, and
Rod could not have left his post of duty then, even
if they had not; but he determined to return on the
very first train from the city, and seek a complete
reconciliation with his uncle.
The day express had already left when
the freight got in, and so he was obliged to wait
for an excursion train that was to go out an hour later.
It was made up of several coaches and a baggage car;
but Rod did not care to ride in any of these.
He already felt more at home on the locomotive than
on any other part of the train, and so he swung himself
into the cab, where he was cordially welcomed by the
engineman and his assistant. They were glad of
the chance to learn from him all the particulars of
what had happened up the road during the great storm,
and plied him with questions.
In spite of their friendliness, and
of his recent resolution, Rod could not help feeling
some uneasiness at the sight of Snyder Appleby sauntering
down the platform and stepping aboard the train just
as it started. He hoped his adopted cousin was
not going to Euston. That is just where Snyder
was going, though; and, having missed the express which
he had been ordered to take, by his failure to be
on time for it, he was obliged to proceed by the “excursion
extra.” He was feeling particularly self-important
that morning, in consequence of having been sent for
on business by the President, and he sauntered through
the train with an offensive air of proprietorship
and authority. Not choosing to remain in one
of the ordinary coaches, with ordinary excursionists,
he walked into the empty baggage car, and stood looking
through the window in its forward door. The moment
he spied Rod, comfortably seated in the cab of the
locomotive, all his old feeling of jealousy was aroused.
He had applied to the engineman for permission to
ride there a few minutes before Rod appeared, and
it had been refused. Now to see the person whom
he had most deeply injured, and consequently most
thoroughly disliked, riding where he could not, was
particularly galling to his pride.
During the first stop made by the
train, he walked to the locomotive, and, in a most
disagreeable tone, asked Rod if he had a written order
permitting him to ride there.
“I have not,” answered the young fireman.
“Then I shall consider it my
duty to report both you and the engineman, for a violation
of rule 116, which provides that no person, except
those employed upon it, shall be permitted to ride
on a locomotive without a written order from the proper
authority,” said Snyder, as he turned away.
This unwarranted assumption of authority
made Rod furious; and, as he looked back and saw Snyder
regarding him from the baggage car, he longed for
an opportunity of giving the young man a piece of his
mind. His feelings were fully shared by the other
occupants of the cab. While they were still discussing
the incident, the train plunged into a tunnel, just
east of the Euston grade. Here, before it quite
reached the other end, it became involved in one of
the most curious and startling accidents known in
the history of railroads.