A CHANGE OF BASE
We did not reach Flagstaff till seven,
and I told the stage-load to take possession of their
car, while I went to my own. It took me some
time to get freshened up, and then I ate my breakfast;
for after riding seventy-two miles in one night even
the most heroic purposes have to take the side-track.
I think, as it was, I proved my devotion pretty well
by not going to sleep, since I had been up three nights,
with only such naps as I could steal in the saddle,
and had ridden over a hundred and fifty miles to boot.
But I couldn’t bear to think of Miss Cullen’s
anxiety, and the moment I had made myself decent,
and finished eating, I went into 218.
The party were all in the dining-room,
but it was a very different-looking crowd from the
one with which that first breakfast had been eaten,
and they all looked at me as I entered as if I were
the executioner come for victims.
“Mr. Cullen,” I began,
“I’ve been forced to do a lot of things
that weren’t pleasant, but I don’t want
to do more than I need. You’re not the
ordinary kind of road agents, and, as I presume your
address is known, I don’t see any need of arresting
one of our own directors as yet. All I ask is
that you give me your word, for the party, that none
of you will try to leave the country.”
“Certainly, Mr. Gordon,”
he responded. “And I thank you for your
great consideration.”
“I shall have to report the
case to our president, and, I suppose, to the Postmaster-General,
but I sha’n’t hurry about either.
What they will do, I can’t say. Probably
you know how far you can keep them quiet.”
“I think the local authorities
are all I have to fear, provided time is given me.”
“I have dismissed the sheriff
and his posse, and I gave them a hundred dollars for
their work, and three bottles of pretty good whiskey
I had on my car. Unless they get orders from elsewhere,
you will not hear any further from them.”
“You must let me reimburse what
expense we have put you to, Mr. Gordon. I only
wish I could as easily repay your kindness.”
Nodding my head in assent, as well
as in recognition of his thanks, I continued, “It
was my duty, as an official of the K. & A., to recover
the stolen mail, and I had to do it.”
“We understand that,”
said Mr. Cullen, “and do not for a moment blame
you.”
“But,” I went on, for
the first time looking at Madge, “it is not
my duty to take part in a contest for control of the
K. & A., and I shall therefore act in this case as
I should in any other loss of mail.”
“And that is ?” asked Frederic.
“I am about to telegraph for
instructions from Washington,” I replied.
“As the G. S. by trickery has dishonestly tied
up some of your proxies, they ought not to object
if we do the same by honest means; and I think I can
manage so that Uncle Sam will prevent those proxies
from being voted at Ash Forks on Friday.”
If a galvanic battery had been applied
to the group about the breakfast table, it wouldn’t
have made a bigger change. Madge clapped her
hands in joy; Mr. Cullen said “God bless you!”
with real feeling; Frederic jumped up and slapped
me on the shoulder, crying, “Gordon, you’re
the biggest old trump breathing;” while Albert
and the captain shook hands with each other, in evident
jubilation. Only Lord Ralles remained passive.
“Have you breakfasted?”
asked Mr. Cullen, when the first joy was over.
“Yes,” I said. “I
only stopped in on my way to the station to telegraph
the Postmaster-General.”
“May I come with you and see
what you say?” cried Fred, jumping up.
I nodded, and Miss Cullen said, questioningly,
“Me too?” making me very happy by the
question, for it showed that she would speak to me.
I gave an assent quite as eagerly and in a moment we
were all walking towards the platform. Despite
Lord Ralles, I felt happy, and especially as I had
not dreamed that she would ever forgive me.
I took a telegraph blank, and, putting
it so that Miss Cullen could see what I said, wrote,
“Postmaster-General, Washington,
D. C. I hold, awaiting your instructions, the three
registered letters stolen from N Overland Missouri
Western Express on Monday, October fourteenth, loss
of which has already been notified you.”
Then I paused and said, “So
far, that’s routine, Miss Cullen. Now comes
the help for you,” and I continued:
“The letters may have been tampered
with, and I recommend a special agent. Reply
Flagstaff, Arizona. Richard Gordon,
Superintendent K. & A. R. R.”
“What will that do?” she asked.
“I’m not much at prophecy, and we’ll
wait for the reply,” I said.
All that day we lay at Flagstaff,
and after a good sleep, as there was no use keeping
the party cooped up in their car, I drummed up some
ponies and took the Cullens and Ackland over to the
Indian cliff-dwellings. I don’t think Lord
Ralles gained anything by staying behind in a sulk,
for it was a very jolly ride, or at least that was
what it was to me. I had of course to tell them
all how I had settled on them as the criminals, and
a general history of my doings. To hear Miss
Cullen talk, one would have inferred I was the greatest
of living detectives.
“The mistake we made,”
she asserted, “was not securing Mr. Gordon’s
help to begin with, for then we should never have needed
to hold the train up, or if we had we should never
have been discovered.”
What was more to me than this ill-deserved
admiration were two things she said on the way back,
when we two had paired off and were a bit behind the
rest.
“The sandwiches and the whiskey
were very good,” she told me, “and I’m
so grateful for the trouble you took.”
“It was a pleasure,” I said.
“And, Mr. Gordon,” she
continued, and then hesitated for a moment, “my Frederic
told me that you you said you honored me
for ?”
“I do,” I exclaimed energetically,
as she paused and colored.
“Do you really?” she cried.
“I thought Fred was only trying to make me less
unhappy by saying that you did.”
“I said it, and I meant it,” I told her.
“I have been so miserable over
that lie,” she went on; “but I thought
if I let you have the letters it would ruin papa.
I really wouldn’t mind poverty myself, Mr. Gordon,
but he takes such pride in success that I couldn’t
be the one to do it. And then, after you told
me that train-robbers were hung, I had to lie to save
them. I ought to have known you would help us.”
I thought this a pretty good time
to make a real apology for my conduct on the trail,
as well as to tell her how sorry I was at not having
been able to repack her bag better. She accepted
my apology very sweetly, and assured me her belongings
had been put away so neatly that she had wondered
who did it. I knew she only said this out of
kindness, and told her so, telling also of my struggles
over that pink-beribboned and belaced affair, in a
way which made her laugh. I had thought it was
a ball gown, and wondered at her taking it to the
Canyon; but she explained that it was what she called
a “throw” which I told her accounted
for the throes I had gone through over it. It
made me open my eyes, thinking that anything so pretty
could be used for the same purposes for which I use
my crash bath-gown, and while my eyes were open I
saw the folly of thinking that a girl who wore such
things would, or in fact could, ever get along on my
salary. In that way the incident was a good lesson
for me, for it made me feel that, even if there had
been no Lord Ralles, I still should have had no chance.
On our return to the cars there was
a telegram from the Postmaster-General awaiting me.
After a glance at it, as the rest of the party looked
anxiously on, I passed it over to Miss Cullen, for
I wanted her to have the triumph of reading it aloud
to them. It read,
“Hold letters pending arrival
of special agent Jackson, due in Flagstaff October
twentieth.”
“The election is the eighteenth,”
Frederic laughed, executing a war dance on the platform.
“The G. S.’s dough is cooked.”
“I must waltz with some one,”
cried Madge, and before I could offer she took hold
of Albert and the two went whirling about, much to
my envy. The Cullens were about the most jubilant
road agents I had ever seen.
After consultation with Mr. Cullen,
we had 218 and 97 attached to N when it arrived,
and started for Ash Forks. He wanted to be on
the ground a day in advance, and I could easily be
back in Flagstaff before the arrival of the special
agent.
I took dinner in 218, and they toasted
me, as if I had done something heroic instead of merely
having sent a telegram. Later four sat down to
poker, while Miss Cullen, Fred, and I went out and
sat on the platform of the car while Madge played on
her guitar and sang to us. She had a very sweet
voice, and before she had been singing long we had
the crew of a “dust express” as
we jokingly call a gravel train standing
about, and they were speedily reinforced by many cowboys,
who deserted the medley of cracked pianos or accordions
of the Western saloons to listen to her, and who,
not being over-careful in the terms with which they
expressed their approval, finally by their riotous
admiration drove us inside. At Miss Cullen’s
suggestion we three had a second game of poker, but
with chips and not money. She was an awfully
reckless player, and the luck was dead in my favor,
so Madge kept borrowing my chips, till she was so
deep in that we both lost account. Finally, when
we parted for the night she held out her hand, and,
in the prettiest of ways, said,
“I am so deeply in your debt,
Mr. Gordon, that I don’t see how I can ever
repay you.”
I tried to think of something worth
saying, but the words wouldn’t come, and I could
only shake her hand. But, duffer as I was, the
way she had said those words, and the double meaning
she had given them, would have made me the happiest
fellow alive if I could only have forgotten the existence
of Lord Ralles.