There was no shade anywhere.
The terrible glare of the summer sun beat down upon
the whole length of the wooden platform at Amberley.
Hot as was the dry, bracing air, it was incomparable
with the blistering intensity of heat reflected from
the planking, which burned through to the soles of
the feet of the uniformed man who paced its length,
slowly, patiently.
This sunburnt, gray-eyed man, with
his loose, broad shoulders, his powerful, easy-moving
limbs, seemed quite indifferent to the irritating
climatic conditions of the moment. Even the droning
of the worrying mosquitoes had no power to disturb
him. Like everything else unpleasant in this
distant northwestern land, he accepted these things
as they came, and brushed them aside for the more important
affairs he was engaged upon.
He gazed out across the wide monotony
of prairie with its undulating wavelets, a tawny green
beneath the scorching summer sun. He was thinking
deeply; perhaps dreaming, although dreaming had small
enough place in his busy life. His lot was a
stern fight against crime, and, in a land so vast,
so new, where crime flourished upon virgin soil, it
left him little time for the more pleasant avenues
of thought.
Inspector Stanley Fyles came to a
halt at the eastern end of the long platform.
Miles of railroad track stretched away in a dead straight
line toward the distant, shimmering horizon. For
miles ahead the road was unbroken by a single moving
object, and, after a long, keen survey, the man abruptly
turned his back upon it.
In a moment he became aware of a hollow-chested
man hurrying toward him. He was coming from the
direction of the only building upon the platform the
railroad office, or, as it was grandiloquently called,
the “booking hall.”
Fyles recognized the man as the railroad
agent, Huntly, who controlled the affairs of his company
in this half-fledged prairie town.
He came up in a flurry of unusual excitement.
“She’s past New Camp,
inspector,” he cried. “Guess she’s
in the Broken Hills, an’ gettin’ near
White Point. I’d say she’d be along
in an hour sure.”
“Damn!”
For once in his life Stanley Fyles’s patience
gave way.
The man grinned.
“It ain’t no use cussin’,”
he protested, with a suggestion of malicious delight.
“Y’see, she’s just a bum freight.
Ain’t even a ‘through.’ I tell
you, these sort have emptied a pepper box of gray
around my head. Yes, sir, there’s more gray
to my head by reason of their sort than a hired man
could hoe out in half a year.”
“Twenty minutes ago you told me she’d
be in in half an hour.”
There was resentment as well as distrust in the officer’s
protest.
“Sure,” the man responded
glibly. “That was accordin’ to schedule.
Guess Ananias must have been the fellow who invented
schedules for local freights.”
The toe of Fyles’s well-polished
riding-boot tapped the superheated platform.
His gray eyes suddenly fixed and held
the ironical eyes of the other.
“See here, Huntly,” he
said at last, in that tone of quiet authority which
never deserted him for long. “I can rely
on that? There’s nothing to stop her by
the way now? Nothing at all?”
But the agent shook his head, and
his eyes still shone with their ironical light.
“I’d say the prophet business
petered out miser’bly nigh two thousand years
ago. I wouldn’t say this dogone prairie
’ud be the best place to start resurrectin’
it. No, sir! There’s too many chances
for that seein’ we’re on a
branch line. There’s the track it
might give way. You never can tell on a branch
line. The locomotive might drop dead of senile
decay. Maybe the train crew’s got drunk,
and is raisin’ hell at some wayside city.
You never can tell on a branch line. Then there’s
that cargo of liquor you’re yearnin’ to ”
“Cut it out, man,” broke
in the officer sharply. “You are sure about
the train? You know what you’re talking
about?”
The agent grinned harder than ever.
“This is a prohibition territory ”
he began.
But again Fyles cut him short.
The man’s irrepressible love of fooling, half
good-humored, half malicious, had gone far enough.
“Anyway you don’t usually
get drunk before sundown, so I guess I’ll have
to take your word for it.”
Then Inspector Fyles smiled back into
the other’s face, which had abruptly taken on
a look of resentment at the charge.
“I tell you what it is,”
he went on. “You boys get mighty close to
the wind swilling prohibited liquor. It’s
against the spirit of the law anyway.”
But the agent’s good humor warmed
again under the officer’s admission of his difficulties.
He was an irrepressible fellow when opportunity offered.
Usually he lived in a condition of utter boredom.
In fact, there were only two things that made life
tolerable for him in Amberley. These were the
doings of the Mounted Police, and the doings of those
who made their existence a necessity in the country.
Even while weighted down with the
oppressive routine of his work, it was an inspiriting
thing to watch the war between law and lawlessness.
Here in Amberley, situated in the heart of the Canadian
prairie lands, was a handful of highly trained men
pitted against almost a world of crime. Perhaps
the lightest of their duties was the enforcing of the
prohibition laws, formulated by a dear, grandmotherly
government in an excess of senile zeal for the welfare
of the health and morals of those far better able
to think for themselves.
The laws of prohibition! The
words stuck with Mr. Huntly as they stuck with every
full-grown man and woman in the country outside the
narrow circle of temperance advocates. The law
was anathema to him. Under its influence the
bettering, the purification of life in the Northwestern
Territories had received a setback, which optimistic
antagonists of the law declared was little less than
a quarter of a century. Drunkenness had increased
about one hundred per cent, since human nature had
been forbidden the importation and consumption of alcohol
in any form stronger than four per cent. beer.
Huntly knew that Inspector Fyles was
almost solely at work upon the capture of contraband
liquor. Also he knew, and hated the fact, that
his own duty required that he must give any information
concerning this traffic upon his railroad which the
police might require. Therefore there was an
added vehemence in his reply to the officer’s
warning.
“Sakes, man! What ’ud
you have us do?” he cried, with a laugh that
was more than half angry. “Do you think
we’re goin’ to sit around this darned
diagram of a town readin’ temperance tracts,
just because somebody guesses we haven’t the
right to souse liquor? Think we’re goin’
to suck milk out of a kid’s feeder, just because
you boys in red coats figure that way? No, sir.
Guess that ain’t doin’ anyway.
I’m sousing all the liquor I can get my hooks
on, an’ it’s all the sweeter because of
you boys. Outside my duty to the railroad company
I wouldn’t raise a finger to stop a gallon of
good rye comin’ into town, no, not if the penitentiary
was yearnin’ to swallow me right up.”
Fyles’s purposeful eyes surveyed
the man with a thoughtful smile.
“Just so,” he said coolly.
“That clause about ‘duty’ squares
the rest. You’ll need to do your duty about
these things. That’s all we want.
That’s all we intend to have. Do you get
me? I’m right here to see that duty done.
The first trip, my friend, and you won’t talk
of penitentiary so easily.”
The quietness with which he spoke did not rob his
words of their significance. Then he went on,
just a shade more sharply. “Now, see here.
When that freight gets in I hold you responsible that
the hindmost car next the caboose is
dropped here, and the seals are intact. It’s
billed loaded with barrels of cube sugar, for Calford.
Get me? That’s your duty just now.
See you do it.”
Huntly understood Fyles. Everybody
in Amberley understood him. And the majority
recognized the deliberate purpose lying behind his
calmest assurance. The agent knew that his protest
had touched the limit, consequently there was nothing
left him but to carry out instructions to the letter.
He hated the position.
His face twisted into a wry grin.
“Guess you don’t leave
much to the imagination, inspector,” he said
sourly.
Fyles was moving away. He replied over his shoulder.
“No. Just the local color
of the particular penitentiary,” he said, with
a laugh.