The Little Super
The Century Magazine cover March 1908 |
The Little Super
By Frank L. Packard
From
The Century Magazine, March 1908,
LXXV.
Digitized
November 2018 by Doug Frizzle for Stillwoods.Blogspot.Ca
MACLEOD
backed the big compound mogul down past the string of dark-green coaches that
he had pulled for a hundred and fifty miles, took the table with a slight jolt,
and came to a stop in the roundhouse. As he swung himself from the cab, Healy,
the turner, came up to him.
“He’s a great lad, that av
yours,” Healy began, with a shake of his head— “a great lad; but mind ye this,
Jimmy MacLeod, there’ll be trouble for me an’ you an’ him an’ the whole av us,
if you don’t watch him.”
“What’s the matter this
time, John?”
“Matter,” said Healy,
ruefully; “there’s matter enough. The little cuss come blame near running 429
into the pit a while back, so he did.”
“Where is he now?” MacLeod
asked, with a grin.
“Devil a bit I know. I
chased him out, an’ he started for over by the shops. An’ about an hour ago
your missus come down an’ said the bhoy was nowheres to be found, an’ that you
was to look for him.”
MacLeod pulled out his
watch. “Six-thirty. Well,” he said, “I’ll go over and see if Grumpy knows
anything about him. Next time the kid shows up around here, John, you give him
the soft side of a tommy-bar, and send him home.”
Healy scratched his head. “I
will,” he said; “I’ll do ut. He’s a foine
lad.”
MacLeod crossed the yard to
the gates of the big shops. They were still unlocked, and he went through into
the storekeeper’s office. Grumpy was sorting the brass time-checks. He glanced
up as MacLeod came in.
“I suppose you’re lookin’
fer yer kid again,” he said sourly.
“That’s what I am, Steve,”
MacLeod returned, diplomatically dispensing with the other’s nickname.
“Well, he ain’t here,”
Grumpy announced, returning to his checks. “I’ve just been through the shops,
an’ I’d seen him if he was.”
The engineer’s face clouded.
“He must be somewhere about, Steve. John said he saw him come over here, and
the wife was down to the roundhouse looking for him, so he didn’t go home.
Let’s go through the shops and see if we can’t find him.”
“I don’t get no overtime fer
chasin’ lost kids,” growled Grumpy.
Nevertheless, he got up and
walked through the door leading into the forge-shop, which MacLeod held open
for him. The place was gloomy and deserted. Here and there a forge-fire, dying,
still glowed dully. At the end of the room the men stopped, and Grumpy, noting
MacLeod’s growing anxiety, gave surly comfort.
“Wouldn’t likely be here,
anyhow,” he said. “Fitting-shop fer him; but we’ll try the machine-shop first
on the way through.”
The two men went forward,
prying behind planers, drills, shapers, and lathes. The machines took grotesque
shapes in the deepening twilight, and in the silence, so incongruous with the
usual noisy clang and clash of his surroundings, MacLeod’s nervousness
increased.
He hurried forward to the
fitting-shop. Engines on every hand were standing over their respective pits in
all stages of demolition, some on wheels, some blocked high toward the rafters,
some stripped to the bare boiler-shell. MacLeod climbed in and out of the cabs,
while Grumpy peered into the pits.
“Aw! he ain’t here,” said
Grumpy in disgust, wiping his hands on a piece of waste. “I told you he wasn’t.
He’s home, mabbe, by now.”
MacLeod
shook his head. “Bunty! Ho, Bunt-ee!” he called. And again: “Bun-tee!”
There
was no answer, and he turned to retrace his steps when Grumpy caught him by the
shoulder. The big iron door of the engine before them swung slowly back on its
hinges, and from the front end there emerged a diminutive pair of shoes, topped
by little short socks that had once been white, but now hung in grimy folds
over the tops of the boots. A pair of sturdy, but very dirty, bare legs came
gradually into view as their owner propelled himself forward on his stomach.
They dangled for a moment, seeking footing on the plate beneath; then a very
small boy, aged four, in an erstwhile immaculate linen sailor suit stood
upright on the foot-plate. The yellow curls were tangled with engine grease and
cemented with cinders and soot. Here and there in spots upon his face the skin
still retained its natural color.
Bunty
paused for a moment after his exertions to regain his breath, then, still
gripping a hammer in his small fist, he straddled the draw-bar, and slid down
the pilot to the floor.
Grumpy
burst into a guffaw.
Bunty
blinked at him reprovingly, and turned to his father.
“I’s
been fixin’ the ’iger-’ed,” he announced gravely.
MacLeod
surveyed his son grimly. “Fixing what?” he demanded.
“The
’iger-’ed,” Bunty repeated. Then reproachfully: “Don’t oo know w’at a ’iger-’ed is?”
“Oh,”
said MacLeod, “the nigger-head, eh? Well, I guess there’s another nigger-head
will get some fixing when your mother sees you, son.”
He
picked the lad up in his arms, and Bunty nestled confidingly, with one arm
around his father’s neck. His tired little head sank down on the paternal
shoulder, and before they had reached the gates Bunty was sound asleep.
In
the days that followed, Bunty found it no easy matter to elude his mother’s
vigilance; but that was only the beginning of his troubles. The shop gates were
always shut, and the latch was beyond his reach. Once he had found them open,
and had marched boldly through, to find his way barred by the only man of whom
he stood in awe. Grumpy had curtly ordered him away, and Bunty had taken to his
heels and run until his small body was breathless.
The
roundhouse was no better. Old John would have none of him, and Bunty marveled
at the change. He was a railroad man, and the shops were his heritage. His soul
protested vigorously at the outrage that was being heaped upon him.
It
took him some time to solve the problem, but at last he found the way. Each
afternoon Bunty would trudge sturdily along the track for a quarter of a mile
to the upper end of the shops, where the big, wide engine doors were always
open. Here four spur-tracks ran into the erecting-shop, and Bunty found no
difficulty in gaining admittance. Once safe among the fitting-gang, the little
Super, as the men called him, would strut around with important air, inspecting
the work with critical eyes.
One
lesson Bunty learned. Remembering his last interview with his mother, he took
good care not to be locked in the shops again. So each night when the whistle
blew he fell into line with the men, and, secure in their protection, would
file with them past Grumpy as they handed in their time-checks. And Grumpy,
unmindful of the spur-tracks, wondered how he got there, and scowled savagely.
When
Bunty was six, his father was holding down the swivel-chair in the Master
Mechanic’s office of the Hill Division, and Bunty’s allegiance to the shops
wavered. Not from any sense of disloyalty; but with his father’s promotion a
new world opened to Bunty, and fascinated him. It was now the yard-shunter and
headquarters that engaged his attention. The years, too, brought other changes
to Bunty. The curls had disappeared, and his hair was cut now like his
father’s. Long stockings had replaced the socks, and he wore real trousers;
short ones, it is true, but real trousers none the less, with pockets in them.
When
school was over, he would fly up and down the yard on the stubby little engine,
and Healy, doing the shunting then and forgetting past grievances, would let
Bunty sit on the driver’s seat. In time Bunty learned to pull the throttle, but
the reversing-lever was too much for his small stature, and the intricacies of the “air”
were still a little beyond him. But Healy swore he’d make a driver of him—and
he did.
The evenings at the office
Bunty loved fully as well. Headquarters were not much to boast about in those
days. That was before competition forced a double-track system, and the
train-despatcher, with his tissue sheets, still held undisputed sway. They
called them “offices” at the Junction out of courtesy—just the attic floor over
the station, with one room to it. The floor space each man’s desk occupied was
his office.
Here Bunty would sit curled
up in his father’s chair and listen to the men as they talked. If it was
anything about a locomotive, he understood; if it was traffic or bridges or
road-bed or despatching, he would pucker his brows perplexedly and ask
innumerable questions. But most of all he held MacDonald, the chief despatches
in deep reverence.
Once, to his huge delight,
MacDonald, holding his hand, had let him tap out an order. It is true that with
the O.K. came back an inquiry as to the brand the Junction despatcher had been
indulging in; but the sarcasm was lost on Bunty, for when MacDonald with a
chuckle read off the reply, Bunty gravely asked if there was any answer.
MacDonald shook his head and laughed. “No, son; I guess not,” he said. “We’ve
got to maintain our dignity, you know.”
That winter, on top of the
regular traffic, and that was not light, they began to push supplies from the
East over the Hill Division, preparing to double track the road from the
western side of the foot-hills as soon as spring opened up. And while the
thermometer crept steadily to zero, the Hill Division sweltered.
Everybody and everything got
it, the shops and the road-beds, the train crews and the rolling-stock. What
little sleep Stanton, the Super, got, he spent in formulating dream plans to
handle the business. Those that seemed good to him when he awoke were promptly
vetoed by the barons of the General Office in the far-off East.
MacLeod got no sleep. He
raced from one end of the division to the other, and he did his best. Engine
crews had to tinker anything less than a major injury for themselves; there was
no room in the shops for them.
But the men on the keys got
it most of all. As the days wore into months, MacDonald’s face grew careworn
and haggard; and the irritability from overwork of the men about him added to
his discomfort. Human nature needs a safety-valve, and one night near the end
of January when MacLeod and Stanton and MacDonald were gathered at the office,
with Bunty in his accustomed place in his father’s chair, the Master Mechanic
cut loose.
“It’s up to you, MacDonald,”
he cried savagely, bringing his fist down with a crash on the desk. “There
ain’t a pair of wheels on the division fit to pull a hand-car. Every engine’s a
cripple, and getting lamer every day. The engine ain’t built, nor never will
be, that’ll stand the schedule you’re putting them on through the hills,
especially through the Gap. That’s a four per cent, on each side, with the bed
like an S. You can’t make time there; you’ve got to crawl. You’re pulling the
stay-bolts out of my engines, that’s what you’re doing.”
Stanton, being in no angelic
mood, and glad to vent his feelings, growled assent.
MacDonald raised his head
from the keys, a red tinge of resentment on his cheeks. He picked up his pipe,
packing it slowly as he looked at MacLeod and the Super. “I’m taking all they’re
sending,” he said quietly. He reached over for the train-sheet and handed it to
the Super. “You and MacLeod here are growling about the schedule. It’s your
division, Stanton; but I ’m not sure you know just what we’re
handling every twenty-four hours. It’s push them through on top of each other
somehow, or tell them down-East we can’t handle them. Do you want to do that?”
“No,” said Stanton, “I
don’t; and what’s more, I won’t.”
MacDonald nodded. “I rather
figured that was your idea. Well, we’ve about all we can do without nagging one
another. I’m near in now, and so are you and MacLeod here, both of you. I’ve
got to make time, Gap or no Gap. There’s so much moving there isn’t siding
enough to cross them.”
“You’re right,” said
Stanton; “we can’t afford to jump each other. We’re all doing our best, and
each of us knows it. How’s Number One and Two to-night?”
MacDonald studied for a
moment before he answered: “Number One is forty minutes off, and Number Two’s
an hour to the bad.”
Stanton groaned. The
Imperial Limited East and West, officially known on the train-sheets as One and
Two, carried both the transcontinental mail and the de-luxe passengers. Of late
the East had been making pertinent suggestions to the Division Superintendent
that it would be as well if those trains ran off the Hill Division with a
little more regard for their established schedule. So Stanton groaned. He got
up and put on his hat and coat preparatory to going home. “Look here,” he said
from the doorway, “they’ll stand for ’most anything if we don’t misuse One and
Two. They’re getting mighty savage about that, and they’ll drop hard before
long. You fellows have got to take care of those trains, if nothing else on the
division moves. That’s orders. I’ll shoulder all kicks coming on the rest of
the traffic. Good night.”
When Bunty left the office
that night and walked home with his father, he had learned that there was
another side to railroading besides the building and repairing of engines, and
the delivery of magic tissue sheets to train crews that told them when and
where to stop and how to thread their way through hills and plains on a
single-track road, with heaps of other trains, some going one way, some
another. He understood vaguely and in a hazy kind of way that somewhere, many,
many miles away, were men who sat in judgment on the doings of his father and
MacDonald and Stanton; that these men were to be obeyed, that their word was
law, and that their names were President and Directors.
So Bunty, trotting beside
his father, pondered these things. Being too weighty for him, he appealed: “Daddy,
what’s President and Directors?”
MacLeod’s temper being still
ruffled, he answered shortly: “Fools, mostly.”
Bunty nodded gravely, and
his education as a railroad man was almost complete. The rest came quickly, and
the Gap did it.
The Gap! There was not a man
on the division, from track-walker to Superintendent, who would not jump like a
nervous colt if you said “Gap!” to them offhand and short-like. A peaceful
stretch of track it looked, a little crooked, as MacDonald said, hugging the
side of the mountain at the highest point of the division. The surroundings
were undeniably grand. A sheer drop of eighteen-hundred feet to the cañon
below, with the surrounding mountains rearing their snowcapped peaks skyward,
completed a picture of which the road had electrotypes and which it used in
their magazine-advertising. What the picture did not show was the two-mile drop
to the eastward, and the one, a mile longer, to westward, where the road-bed
took a straight four per cent, to the lower levels. So when Stanton or
MacDonald or MacLeod, reading their magazines, saw the picture, they shuddered,
and, remembering past history and fearful of the future, turned the page
hurriedly.
But to Bunty the Gap
possessed the fascination of the unknown. He was wakened early the next morning
by his father’s voice talking excitedly over the special wire with headquarters
about the Gap and a wreck. He sat bolt upright, and listened with all his
might; then he crawled noiselessly out of bed, and began to dress hastily. He
heard his father speaking to his mother, and presently the front door banged.
Bunty was dressed by that time and he crept down-stairs and opened the door
softly.
It was just turning daylight
as he started on a run for the yard. It was not far to the office,—a hundred
yards or so, —and Bunty reached there in record time. Across the tracks by the
roundhouse they were coupling on to the wrecker; and answering hasty summons,
men, running from all directions, were quickly gathering.
Bunty hesitated a minute on
the platform, then he entered the station and tiptoed softly up the stairs. The
office door was open, and from the top stair Bunty could see into the room. The
night lamp was still burning on the despatcher’s desk, and MacDonald was
sitting there, working with frantic haste to clear the line. In the center of
the room, the Super, his father, and Williams, the wrecking boss, were
standing.
“It’s a freight smash,”
Stanton was saying to Williams—“west edge of the Gap. You’ll have rights
through, and no limit on your permit. Tell Emmons if he doesn’t make it in
better than ninety minutes he’ll talk to me afterward. By the time you get
there, Number One will be crawling up the grade. She’s pulling the Old Man’s
car, and that means get her through somehow if you have to drop the wreck over
the cliff. You can back down to Riley’s to let her pass. We’ll do the patching
up afterward. Understand?”
Williams nodded, and glanced
impatiently at MacDonald.
The Super opened and shut
his watch. “Ready, Mac?” he asked shortly.
“Just a minute,” MacDonald
answered quietly.
Bunty waited to hear no
more. He turned and ran down the stairs and across the tracks as fast as his
legs would carry him. He scrambled breathlessly up the steps of the tool-car
and edged his way in among the men grouped near the door. He was fairly inside
before they noticed him.
“Hello,” cried Allan,
Bunty’s bosom friend of the fitting-gang days, “here’s the little Super! What
you doin’ here, kid?”
“I’m going up to the wreck,”
Bunty announced sturdily.
The men laughed.
“Well, I guess not much, you’re not,” said
Allan. “What do you think your father would say?”
“Nothing,” said Bunty,
airily. “I just comed from the office,” he added artfully, “and I’ll tell you
about the wreck if you like.”
The men grouped around him
in a circle.
“It’s at the Gap,” Bunty
began, sparring for time as through the window he saw Williams coming from the
office at a run. “And it’s a freight train, and— and it’s all smashed up, and—”
The train started with a
jerk that nearly took the men off their feet. At the same time Williams’s face
appeared at the car door.
“All here, boys?” he called.
Then he announced cheerfully: “The devil’s to pay up the line!”
Meanwhile, Bunty, taking
advantage of the interruption, had squirmed his way through the men to the far
end of the car, and the train had bumped over the switches on to the main line
before they remembered him. Then it was too late. They hauled him out from
behind a rampart of tools, where he had intrenched himself, and Williams shook
his fist, half-angrily, half-playfully, in Bunty’s face.
“You little devil, what are
you doing here, eh?” he demanded.
And Bunty answered as
before: “I’m going up to the wreck.”
“Humph!” said Williams, with
a grin. “Well, I guess you are, and I guess you’ll be sorry, too, when you get
back and your dad gets hold of you.”
But Bunty was safe now, and
he only laughed.
Breakfastless, he shared the
men’s grub and listened wide-eyed as they talked of wrecks in times gone by;
but most of all he listened to the story of how his father, when he was pulling
Number One, had saved the Limited by sticking to his post almost in the face of
certain death. Bunty’s father was his hero, and his small soul glowed with
happiness at the tale. He begged so hard for the story over again that Allan
told it, and when he had finished, he slapped Bunty on the back. “And I guess
you’re a chip of the old block,” he said.
And Bunty was very proud,
squaring his shoulders, and planting his feet firmly to swing with the motion
of the car.
The speed of the train
slackened as they struck the grade leading up the eastern side of the Gap.
Williams set the men busily at work overhauling the kit. He paused an instant
before Bunty. “Look here, kid,” he said, shaking a warning finger, “you keep
out of the way, and don’t get into trouble.”
It would have taken more
than words from Williams to have curbed Bunty’s eagerness; so when the train
came to a stop and the men tumbled out of the car with a rush, he followed.
What he saw caused him to purse his lips and cry excitedly, “Gee!”
Right in front of him a big
mogul had turned turtle. Ditched by a spread rail, she had pulled three
box-cars with her, and piled them up, mostly in splinters, on the tender. They
had taken fire, and were burning furiously. Behind these were eight or ten cars
still on the roadbed, but badly demolished from bumping over the ties when they
had left the rails. Still farther down the track in the rear were the rest of
the string, apparently uninjured. The snow was knee-deep at the side of the
track, but Bunty plowed manfully through it, climbing up the embankment to a
place of vantage.
His eyes blazed with
excitement as he watched the scene before him and listened to the hoarse shouts
of the men, the crash of pick and ax, and, above it all, the sharp crackle of
the fire as the flames, growing in volume, bit deeper and deeper into the
wreck. Fiercely as the men fought, the fire, with its long start, kept them
from making any headway against it. Already it had reached some of the cars
standing on the track.
From where Bunty stood he
could see the track dipping away in a long grade to the valley below. They
called that grade the Devil’s Slide, and the wreck was on the edge of it, with
the caboose and some half-dozen cars still resting on the incline. As he
looked, far below him he saw a trail of smoke. It was Number One climbing the
grade. By this time the excitement of his surroundings had worn off a little,
and the arrival of the Limited offered a new attraction.
He clambered down from his
perch and began to pick his way past the wreck. Williams, begrimed and dirty,
was talking to Emmons. “I don’t like to do it,” Bunty heard Williams say, “but
we’ll have to blow up that box-car if we can’t stop the fire any other way, or
we’ll have a blaze down the whole line. The train crew says there’s
turpentine—two cars of it—next the flat there, and if that catches—Hi, there,
kid,” he broke off to yell, as he caught sight of Bunty, “you get back to the
tool-car, and stay there!”
And Bunty ran—in the other
direction. He knew Number One would stop a little the other side of the wreck,
and that there would be a great big ten-wheeler pulling her, all as bright as a
new dollar and glistening in paint and gold-leaf. When he pulled up breathless
and happy by the side of Number One, Masters, the engineer, was giving Engine
901 an oil round, touching the journals critically with the back of his hand as
he moved along.
At sight of Bunty, the
engineer laid his oil-can on the slide-bars and grinned as he extended his
hand. “How are you, Bunty?” he asked.
And Bunty, accepting the
proffered hand, replied gravely: “I’m pretty well, Mr. Masters, thank you.”
“Glad to hear it, Bunty. How
did you get here?”
“I comed up with the
wrecker-train. It’s a’ awful smash.”
“Is it, now! Think they’ll
have the line cleared soon?”
“Oh, no,” Bunty replied,
eying the cab of the big engine wistfully. “Not for ever and ever so long.”
Masters’ eyes followed
Bunty’s glance. “Want to get up in the cab, Bunty?”
“Oh, please!” Bunty cried
breathlessly.
“All right,” said Masters,
boosting the lad through the gangway. Then warningly: “Don’t touch anything.”
And Bunty promised.
It was only four hundred
yards up to the wreck; but that was enough. Masters and his firemen left their
train and went to get a view at close quarters. When it was all over, it was up
to the wrecking boss and the engine crew of Number One. Williams swore he
blocked the trucks of the cars on the incline; but Williams lied, and he got
clear. Masters and his mate had no chance to lie, for they broke rules, and
they got their time.
Be that as it may, Bunty sat
on the driver’s seat of the Imperial Limited and watched the engineer and
fireman start up the track. He lost sight of the men long before they reached
the wreck. They were still in plain view, but he was very busy: he was playing
“pretend.”
Bunty’s imagination was
vivid enough to make the game a fascinating one whenever he indulged in it, and
that was often. But now it was almost reality, and his fancy was little taxed
to supply what was lacking. He was engineer of the Limited, and they had just
stopped at a station. He leaned out of the cab window to get the “go-ahead”
signal. Then his hand went through the motion of throwing over the
reversing-lever and opening the throttle. And now he was off; faster and
faster. He rocked his body to and fro to supply the motion of the cab. He sat
very grim and determined, peering straight ahead. He was booming along now at
full speed. They were coming to a crossing. “Too-oo-o, toot, toot!” cried Bunty at the top of
his shrill treble, for the rules said you must whistle at every crossing, and
Bunty knew the rules. Now they were coming to the next station, and he began to
slow up. “Ding-dong, ding—”
Bang!
Bunty nearly fell from his
seat with fright. Ahead of him, up the track, there was a column of smoke as a
mass of wreckage rose in the air, and then a crash. Williams had blown up a
car. Bunty stared, fascinated, not at the explosion, but at the rear end of the
wreck on the grade. He rubbed his eyes in bewilderment, then he scrambled over
the side of the seat. He paused half-way off, looking again through the front
window to make sure. There was no doubt of it: the cars were beginning to roll
down the track toward him. He waited for no more, but rushed to the gangway to
jump off. Then he stopped as the story Allan had told about his father came
back to him. Bunty’s heart thumped wildly as he turned white-faced and
determined. No truly engineer would leave his train; his father had not, and
Bunty did not.
The reversing-lever was in
the back notch where Masters had left it when he stopped the train. It was
Bunty’s task to reach and open the throttle. He climbed up on the seat and
stood on tiptoe. Leaning over, he grasped the lever with both hands and pulled
it open. What little science of engine-driving Bunty possessed, was lost in the
terror that gripped him. The runaway cars were only a couple of hundred yards
away now, and, gaining speed with every rail they traveled, spelt death and
destruction to the Imperial Limited, if they ever reached her. The men at the
top of the grade were yelling their lungs out and waving their arms in frantic
warning.
The train started with a
jolt that threw Bunty back on the seat. For an instant the big drivers raced
like pin-wheels, then they bit into the rails, and aided by the grade, Number
One began to back slowly down the hill.
Bunty picked himself up, his
little frame shaking with dry sobs. The freight-cars had gained on him in the
last minute, and had nearly reached him. Again he leaned over for the throttle,
and hanging grimly to it, pulled it open another notch, and then another, and then wide open.
901 took it like a frightened thoroughbred. Rearing herself from the track
under her two hundred and ten pounds of steam, she jumped into the cars behind
her for a starter with a shock that played havoc with the passengers’ nerves.
Then she settled down to travel. The Devil’s Slide is three miles long, and
some pretty fair running has been made on it in times of stress; but Bunty
holds the record,—it’s good yet,—and Bunty was only an amateur.
It
was neck and neck for a while, and there was almost a pile-up on the nose of
901’s pilot before she began to hold her own. Gradually she began to pull away,
and by the time they were half-way down the hill the distance between her and
the truant freight-cars was widening. The speed was terrific.
Pale
and terror-stricken, Bunty now crouched on the driver’s seat. Time and again
the engineer’s whistle in the cab over his head signaled, now entreatingly, now
with frantic insistence. But Bunty gave it no heed; his only thought was for
those cars in front of him that were always there. He cried to himself with
little moans.
There
was a sickening slur as they flew round a curve. 901 heeled to the tangent, one
set of drivers fairly lifted from the track. When she found her wheel base
again, Bunty, shaken from his hold, was clinging to the reversing-lever. He
shut his eyes as he pulled himself back to his seat. When he looked again, he
saw the freight-cars hit the curve above him, then slew as they jumped the
track and, with a crash that reached him above the roar and rattle of the
train, the booming whir of the great drivers beneath him, go pitching headlong
down the embankment.
Bunty
rose to his knees, and for the first time looked out of the side window, to
find a new terror there as the rocks and trees and poles flashed dizzily by
him. He turned and looked behind. A man was clinging to the hand-rail of the
mail-car, and another, lying flat, was crawling over the coal heaped high on
the tender. Bunty dashed the tears from his eyes; he was no “fraidy” kid. He
stood up, and holding on to the frame of the window, staggered toward the
throttle. As he reached for it, 901 lurched madly, and Bunty lost his balance and
fell headlong upon the iron floor plate of the cab. Then it was all dark.
Number
One
pulled into the Junction that night ten hours late, and it brought Bunty. His
father and Stanton and MacDonald and the shop-hands were on the platform. From
the private car, which carried the tail-lights, an elderly gentleman got off
with Bunty in his arms. The men cheered, and while the Master Mechanic rushed
forward to take his son, the Super and MacDonald drew back respectfully.
“Mr. MacLeod,” said the old
gentleman, with tears in his eyes, “you ought to be pretty proud of this little
lad.”
MacLeod tried to speak, but
the words choked somehow.
The old gentleman swung
himself back upon the car. “Good-by, Bunty!” he called.
And Bunty, from the depths
of the blanket they had wrapped around him, called back, “Good-by, sir!”
When Bunty was propped up in
bed, his father told him how the express messenger had stopped the train and
carried him back into the Pullmans.
Bunty listened gravely.
“Yes,” he said, nodding his head; “they was awful good to me, and the man that
tooked me off the train told me stories, and then I told him some, too.”
“What did you tell him?”
MacLeod asked.
“Oh, ’bout trains and shops
and presidents and directors and—and lots of things.”
“Presidents and directors!”
said MacLeod, in surprise. “What did you tell him about them?”
“I told him what you
said—that they was fools, and you knew, ’cause you ’d seen them.”
MacLeod whistled softly.
“And,” continued Bunty, “he
laughed, and when I asked him what he was laughing at, he gived me a piece of
paper and told me to give it to you, and you’d tell me.”
MacLeod groaned. “Guess it’s
my time all right,” he muttered. “Where’s the paper, Bunty?”
“He putted it in my pocket.”
MacLeod drew the chair with
Bunty’s clothing on it toward him, and began a hurried search. He fished out a
narrow slip of paper and unfolded it on his knee. It was a check for one
thousand dollars payable to Master Bunty MacLeod, and signed by the President
of the road.
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