The greatest people have their weak
points, and the best-behaved boys now and then yield
to temptation and get into trouble, as everybody knows.
Frank was considered a remarkably well-bred and proper
lad, and rather prided himself on his good reputation,
for he never got into scrapes like the other fellows.
Well, hardly ever, for we must confess that at rare
intervals his besetting sin overcame his prudence,
and he proved himself an erring, human boy. Steam-engines
had been his idols for years, and they alone could
lure him from the path of virtue. Once, in trying
to investigate the mechanism of a toy specimen, which
had its little boiler and ran about whistling and
puffing in the most delightful way, he nearly set
the house afire by the sparks that dropped on the
straw carpet. Another time, in trying experiments
with the kitchen tea-kettle, he blew himself up, and
the scars of that explosion he still carried on his
hands.
He was long past such childish amusements
now, but his favorite haunt was the engine-house of
the new railroad, where he observed the habits of
his pets with never-failing interest, and cultivated
the good-will of stokers and brakemen till they
allowed him many liberties, and were rather flattered
by the admiration expressed for their iron horses by
a young gentleman who liked them better even than
his Greek and Latin.
There was not much business doing
on this road as yet, and the two cars of the passenger-trains
were often nearly empty, though full freight-trains
rolled from the factory to the main road, of which
this was only a branch. So things went on in
a leisurely manner, which gave Frank many opportunities
of pursuing his favorite pastime. He soon knew
all about N, his pet engine, and had several rides
on it with Bill, the engineer, so that he felt at
home there, and privately resolved that when he was
a rich man he would have a road of his own, and run
trains as often as he liked.
Gus took less interest than his friend
in the study of steam, but usually accompanied him
when he went over after school to disport himself
in the engine-house, interview the stoker, or see if
there was anything new in the way of brakes.
One afternoon they found N on
the side-track, puffing away as if enjoying a quiet
smoke before starting. No cars were attached,
and no driver was to be seen, for Bill was off with
the other men behind the station-house, helping the
expressman, whose horse had backed down a bank and
upset the wagon.
“Good chance for a look at the
old lady,” said Frank, speaking of the engine
as Bill did, and jumping aboard with great satisfaction,
followed by Gus.
“I’d give ten dollars
if I could run her up to the bend and back,”
he added, fondly touching the bright brass knobs and
glancing at the fire with a critical eye.
“You couldn’t do it alone,”
answered Gus, sitting down on the grimy little perch,
willing to indulge his mate’s amiable weakness.
“Give me leave to try?
Steam is up, and I could do it as easy as not;”
and Frank put his hand on the throttle-valve, as if
daring Gus to give the word.
“Fire up and make her hum!”
laughed Gus, quoting Bill’s frequent order to
his mate, but with no idea of being obeyed.
“All right; I’ll just
roll her up to the switch and back again. I’ve
often done it with Bill;” and Frank cautiously
opened the throttle-valve, threw back the lever, and
the great thing moved with a throb and a puff.
“Steady, old fellow, or you’ll
come to grief. Here, don’t open that!”
shouted Gus, for just at that moment Joe appeared at
the switch, looking ready for mischief.
“Wish he would; no train for
twenty minutes, and we could run up to the bend as
well as not,” said Frank, getting excited with
the sense of power, as the monster obeyed his hand
so entirely that it was impossible to resist prolonging
the delight.
“By George, he has! Stop
her! Back her! Hold on, Frank!” cried
Gus, as Joe, only catching the words “Open that!”
obeyed, without the least idea that they would dare
to leave the siding.
But they did, for Frank rather lost
his head for a minute, and out upon the main track
rolled N as quietly as a well-trained horse taking
a familiar road.
“Now you’ve done it!
I’ll give you a good thrashing when I get back!”
roared Gus, shaking his fist at Joe, who stood staring,
half-pleased, half-scared, at what he had done.
“Are you really going to try
it?” asked Gus, as they glided on with increasing
speed, and he, too, felt the charm of such a novel
adventure, though the consequences bid fair to be
serious.
“Yes, I am,” answered
Frank, with the grim look he always wore when his
strong will got the upper hand. “Bill will
give it to us, any way, so we may as well have our
fun out. If you are afraid, I’ll slow down
and you can jump off,” and his brown eyes sparkled
with the double delight of getting his heart’s
desire and astonishing his friend at the same time
by his skill and coolness.
“Go ahead. I’ll jump
when you do;” and Gus calmly sat down again,
bound in honor to stand by his mate till the smash
came, though rather dismayed at the audacity of the
prank.
“Don’t you call this just
splendid?” exclaimed Frank, as they rolled along
over the crossing, past the bridge, toward the curve,
a mile from the station.
“Not bad. They are yelling
like mad after us. Better go back, if you can,”
said Gus, who was anxiously peering out, and, in spite
of his efforts to seem at ease, not enjoying the trip
a particle.
“Let them yell. I started
to go to the curve, and I’ll do it if it costs
me a hundred dollars. No danger; there’s
no train under twenty minutes, I tell you,”
and Frank pulled out his watch. But the sun was
in his eyes, and he did not see clearly, or he would
have discovered that it was later than he thought.
On they went, and were just rounding
the bend when a shrill whistle in front startled both
boys, and drove the color out of their cheeks.
“It’s the factory train!”
cried Gus, in a husky tone, as he sprang to his feet.
“No; it’s the five-forty
on the other road,” answered Frank, with a queer
thrill all through him at the thought of what might
happen if it was not. Both looked straight ahead
as the last tree glided by, and the long track lay
before them, with the freight train slowly coming down.
For an instant, the boys stood as if paralyzed.
“Jump!” said Gus, looking
at the steep bank on one side and the river on the
other, undecided which to try.
“Sit still!” commanded
Frank, collecting his wits, as he gave a warning whistle
to retard the on-coming train, while he reversed the
engine and went back faster than he came.
A crowd of angry men was waiting for
them, and Bill stood at the open switch in a towering
passion as N returned to her place unharmed,
but bearing two pale and frightened boys, who stepped
slowly and silently down, without a word to say for
themselves, while the freight train rumbled by on
the main track.
Frank and Gus never had a very clear
idea as to what occurred during the next few minutes,
but vaguely remembered being well shaken, sworn at,
questioned, threatened with direful penalties, and
finally ordered off the premises forever by the wrathful
depot-master. Joe was nowhere to be seen, and
as the two culprits walked away, trying to go steadily,
while their heads spun round, and all the strength
seemed to have departed from their legs, Frank said,
in an exhausted tone,
“Come down to the boat-house and rest a minute.”
Both were glad to get out of sight,
and dropped upon the steps red, rumpled, and breathless,
after the late exciting scene. Gus generously
forebore to speak, though he felt that he was the least
to blame; and Frank, after eating a bit of snow to
moisten his dry lips, said, handsomely,
“Now, don’t you worry,
old man. I’ll pay the damages, for it was
my fault. Joe will dodge, but I won’t,
so make your mind easy.
“We sha’n’t hear
the last of this in a hurry,” responded Gus,
relieved, yet anxious, as he thought of the reprimand
his father would give him.
“I hope mother won’t hear
of it till I tell her quietly myself. She will
be so frightened, and think I’m surely smashed
up, if she is told in a hurry;” and Frank gave
a shiver, as all the danger he had run came over him
suddenly.
“I thought we were done for
when we saw that train. Guess we should have
been if you had not had your wits about you. I
always said you were a cool one;” and Gus patted
Frank’s back with a look of great admiration,
for, now that it was all over, he considered it a very
remarkable performance.
“Which do you suppose it will
be, fine or imprisonment?” asked Frank, after
sitting in a despondent attitude for a moment.
“Shouldn’t wonder if it
was both. Running off with an engine is no joke,
you know.”
“What did possess me to be such
a fool?” groaned Frank, repenting, all too late,
of yielding to the temptation which assailed him.
“Bear up, old fellow, I’ll
stand by you; and if the worst comes, I’ll call
as often as the rules of the prison allow,” said
Gus, consolingly, as he gave his afflicted friend
an arm, and they walked away, both feeling that they
were marked men from that day forth.
Meantime, Joe, as soon as he recovered
from the shock of seeing the boys actually go off,
ran away, as fast as his legs could carry him, to
prepare Mrs. Minot for the loss of her son; for the
idea of their coming safely back never occurred to
him, his knowledge of engines being limited.
A loud ring at the bell brought Mrs. Pecq, who was
guarding the house, while Mrs. Minot entertained a
parlor full of company.
“Frank’s run off with
N, and he’ll be killed sure. Thought
I’d come up and tell you,” stammered Joe,
all out of breath and looking wild.
He got no further, for Mrs. Pecq clapped
one hand over his mouth, caught him by the collar
with the other, and hustled him into the ante-room
before any one else could hear the bad news.
“Tell me all about it, and don’t
shout. What’s come to the boy?” she
demanded, in a tone that reduced Joe to a whisper at
once.
“Go right back and see what
has happened to him, then come and tell me quietly.
I’ll wait for you here. I wouldn’t
have his mother startled for the world,” said
the good soul, when she knew all.
“Oh, I dar’sn’t!
I opened the switch as they told me to, and Bill will
half kill me when he knows it!” cried Joe, in
a panic, as the awful consequences of his deed rose
before him, showing both boys mortally injured and
several trains wrecked.
“Then take yourself off home
and hold your tongue. I’ll watch the door,
for I won’t have any more ridiculous boys tearing
in to disturb my lady.”
Mrs. Pecq often called this good neighbor
“my lady” when speaking of her, for Mrs.
Minot was a true gentlewoman, and much pleasanter to
live with than the titled mistress had been.
Joe scudded away as if the constable
was after him, and presently Frank was seen slowly
approaching with an unusually sober face and a pair
of very dirty hands.
“Thank heaven, he’s safe!”
and, softly opening the door, Mrs. Pecq actually hustled
the young master into the ante-room as unceremoniously
as she had hustled Joe.
“I beg pardon, but the parlor
is full of company, and that fool of a Joe came roaring
in with a cock-and-bull story that gave me quite a
turn. What is it, Mr. Frank?” she asked
eagerly, seeing that something was amiss.
He told her in a few words, and she
was much relieved to find that no harm had been done.
“Ah, the danger is to come,”
said Frank, darkly, as he went away to wash his hands
and prepare to relate his misdeeds.
It was a very bad quarter of an hour
for the poor fellow, who so seldom had any grave faults
to confess; but he did it manfully, and his mother
was so grateful for the safety of her boy that she
found it difficult to be severe enough, and contented
herself with forbidding any more visits to the too
charming N.
“What do you suppose will be
done to me?” asked Frank, on whom the idea of
imprisonment had made a deep impression.
“I don’t know, dear, but
I shall go over to see Mr. Burton right after tea.
He will tell us what to do and what to expect.
Gus must not suffer for your fault.”
“He’ll come off clear
enough, but Joe must take his share, for if he hadn’t
opened that confounded switch, no harm would have been
done. But when I saw the way clear, I actually
couldn’t resist going ahead,” said Frank,
getting excited again at the memory of that blissful
moment when he started the engine.
Here Jack came hurrying in, having
heard the news, and refused to believe it from any
lips but Frank’s. When he could no longer
doubt, he was so much impressed with the daring of
the deed that he had nothing but admiration for his
brother, till a sudden thought made him clap his hands
and exclaim exultingly,
“His runaway beats mine all
hollow, and now he can’t crow over me! Won’t
that be a comfort? The good boy has got into a
scrape. Hooray!”
This was such a droll way of taking
it, that they had to laugh; and Frank took his humiliation
so meekly that Jack soon fell to comforting him, instead
of crowing over him.
Jill thought it a most interesting
event; and, when Frank and his mother went over to
consult Mr. Burton, she and Jack planned out for the
dear culprit a dramatic trial which would have convulsed
the soberest of judges. His sentence was ten
years’ imprisonment, and such heavy fines that
the family would have been reduced to beggary but for
the sums made by Jill’s fancy work and Jack’s
success as a champion pedestrian.
They found such comfort and amusement
in this sensational programme that they were rather
disappointed when Frank returned, reporting that a
fine would probably be all the penalty exacted, as
no harm had been done, and he and Gus were such respectable
boys. What would happen to Joe, he could not
tell, but he thought a good whipping ought to be added
to his share.
Of course, the affair made a stir
in the little world of children; and when Frank went
to school, feeling that his character for good behavior
was forever damaged, he found himself a lion, and was
in danger of being spoiled by the admiration of his
comrades, who pointed him out with pride as “the
fellow who ran off with a steam-engine.”
But an interview with Judge Kemble,
a fine of twenty-five dollars, and lectures from all
the grown people of his acquaintance, prevented him
from regarding his escapade as a feat to boast of.
He discovered, also, how fickle a thing is public
favor, for very soon those who had praised began to
tease, and it took all his courage, patience, and pride
to carry him through the next week or two. The
lads were never tired of alluding to N, giving
shrill whistles in his ear, asking if his watch was
right, and drawing locomotives on the blackboard whenever
they got a chance.
The girls, too, had sly nods and smiles,
hints and jokes of a milder sort, which made him color
and fume, and once lose his dignity entirely.
Molly Loo, who dearly loved to torment the big boys,
and dared attack even solemn Frank, left one of Boo’s
old tin trains on the door-step, directed to “Conductor
Minot,” who, I regret to say, could not refrain
from kicking it into the street, and slamming the door
with a bang that shook the house. Shrieks of
laughter from wicked Molly and her coadjutor, Grif,
greeted this explosion of wrath, which did no good,
however, for half an hour later the same cars, all
in a heap, were on the steps again, with two headless
dolls tumbling out of the cab, and the dilapidated
engine labelled, “N after the collision.”
No one ever saw that ruin again, and
for days Frank was utterly unconscious of Molly’s
existence, as propriety forbade his having it out
with her as he had with Grif. Then Annette made
peace between them, and the approach of the Twenty-second
gave the wags something else to think of.
But it was long before Frank forgot
that costly prank; for he was a thoughtful boy, who
honestly wanted to be good; so he remembered this
episode humbly, and whenever he felt the approach of
temptation he made the strong will master it, saying
to himself “Down brakes!” thus saving
the precious freight he carried from many of the accidents
which befall us when we try to run our trains without
orders, and so often wreck ourselves as well as others.