Half an hour later Scribner, who was frequently back on the first division during these dragging days, was informed that Mr. Carhart wished to see him at once. Walking back to the engineers’ tent he found the chief at his table. “You wanted me, Mr. Carhart?” “Oh,”—the chief looked up—“Yes, Harry, we’ve got to get away from this absolute dependence on that man Peet. I want you to ride up ahead and bore for water. You can probably start inside of an hour. I’m putting it in your hands. Take what men, tools, and wagons you need—but find water.” With a brief “All right, Mr. Carhart,” Scribner left the tent and set about the necessary arrangements. Carhart, this matter dis The assistant cook—huge, raw-boned, with a good-natured and not unintelligent face—lounged before the tent for some moments before he was observed. Then, in the crisp way he had with the men, Carhart told him to step in. “Well,” began the boss, looking him over, “what kind of a cook are you?” A slow blush spread over the broad features. “Speak up. What were you doing when I sent for you?” “I—I—you see, sir, Jack Flagg was gone, and there wasn’t anything being done about dinner, and I—” “And you took charge of things, eh?” “Well—sort of, sir. You see—” “That’s the way to do business. Go back and stick at it. Wait a minute, though. Has Flagg been hanging around any?” “I guess he has. All his things was took off, and some of mine.” “Take any money?” “All I had.” “I’m not surprised. Money was what he was here for. He would have cleaned you out, anyway, before long.” “I’m not so sure of that, sir. We cleaned him out last time.” “And you weren’t smart enough to see into that?” “Well—no, I—” “Take my advice and quit gambling. It isn’t what you were built for. What did you say your name was?” “Charlie.” “Well, Charlie, you go back and get up your dinner. See that it is a good one.” Charlie backed out of the tent and returned to his kettles and pans and his boy assistants. He was won, completely. Late on Thursday evening that mythical train really rolled in, and half the night was spent “What do you think of this!” had been Young Van’s exclamation when the second train appeared. “It’s too good to be true,” was the reply of his grizzled brother. Old Vandervelt was right: it was too good to be true. Soon the days were getting away from them again; provisions and water were running short, and Peet was sending on the most skilful lot of excuses he had yet offered. For the second time the tracklaying had to stop; and Carhart, slipping a revolver into his holster, rode forward alone to find Scribner. He found him in a patch of sage-brush not far from a hill. The heat was blistering, the ground baked to a powder. There had been no rain for five months. Scribner, “Glad to see you, Mr. Carhart!” he cried. “You are just in time. I think I’ve struck it.” “That’s good news,” the chief replied, dismounting. They stepped aside while Scribner gave an account of himself. “I first drove a small bore down about three hundred feet, and got this.” He produced a tin pail from his tent, which contained a dark, odorous liquid. Carhart sniffed, and said:— “Sulphur water, eh!” “Yes, and very bad. It wouldn’t do at all. But before moving on, I thought I’d better look around a little. That hill over there is sandstone, and a superficial examination led me to think that the sandstone dips under this spot.” “That might mean a very fair quality of water.” “That’s what I think. So I inserted a “How far?” “A thousand feet. I’m expecting to strike it any moment now.” “Your men seem to think they have struck something. They’re calling you.” The engineers returned to the well in time to see the water gushing to the surface. “There’s enough of it,” muttered Scribner. The chief bent over it and shook his head. “Smell it, Harry,” he said. Scribner threw himself on the ground and drank up a mouthful from the stream. But he promptly spit it out. “It’s worse than the other!” he cried. They were silent a moment. Then Carhart said, “Well—keep at it, Harry. I may look you up again after a little.” He walked over to his horse, mounted, nodded a good-by, and cantered back toward the camp. Scribner watched him ride off, then soberly turned and prepared to pack up Over a range of low waste hills, through a village of prairie-dogs,—and he fired humorously at them with his revolver as they sat on their mounds, and chuckled when they popped down out of sight,—across a plain studded from horizon to horizon with the bleached bones and skulls of thousands of buffaloes, past the camp and the grade where the men of the first division were at work, Paul Carhart rode, until, finally, the main camp and the trains and wagons came into view. It was supper-time. The red, spent sun hung low in the west; the parched earth was awaiting the night breeze. Cantering easily on, Carhart soon reached the grade, and turned in toward the tents. The endless quiet of the desert gave place to an odd, tense quiet in the camp. The groups of laborers, He dismounted, walked rapidly to the headquarters tent, and found the two Vandervelts in anxious conversation. He had never observed so sharply the contrast between the brothers. The younger was smooth shaven, slender, with brown hair, and frank blue eyes that were dreamy at times; he would have looked the poet were it not for a square forehead, a straight, incisive mouth, and a chin as uncompromising as the forehead. There was in his face the promise of great capacity for work, dominated by a sympathetic imagination. The face of his brother was another story; some of the stronger qualities were there, but they were not tempered with the gentler. His stocky frame, his strong neck, the deep Evidently they were not in agreement. Both started at the sight of their chief—the younger brother with a frank expression of relief. Carhart threw off his hat and gauntlet gloves, took his seat at the table, and looked from one to the other. The elder brother nodded curtly. “Go ahead, Gus,” he said. “Give Paul your view of it.” Thus granted the floor, Young Van briefly laid out the situation. “We put your orders into effect this morning, Mr. Carhart, and shortened the allowance of drinking water. In an hour the men began to get surly—just as they did the other time. But we kept them under until an hour or so ago. Then the sheriff of Clark County—a man named Lane, Bow-legged Bill Lane,”—Young Van smiled slightly as he pronounced the name,—“rode in with a large posse. It seems he is on “Send half-a-dozen wagons forward to him to-morrow, under Dimond,” said Carhart, briefly. “See that they carry rifles and cartridges “All right; I will attend to it. I told the sheriff we came down here as peaceful railroad builders, not as border fighters; but he said what we came for hasn’t much to do with it,—I couldn’t repeat his language if I tried,—it’s how we’re going back that counts; whether it’s to be on a ‘red plush seat, or up in the baggage car on ice.’ But so much for that. It seems that his men, mixing in with ours, found out that we are short of water. They promptly said that there is a first-rate pool, with all the water we could use, only about thirty-five miles southwest of here.” He was coming now, having purposely brought up the minor matters first, to the real business. Carhart heard him out. “It didn’t take long to see that something was the matter with the men. Before the posse rode off the sheriff spoke to me about it, and offered to let us have a man to guide us to the pool if we wanted “That’s it! That’s it!” Old Van broke out angrily. “Always give in to those d—n rascals! There’s just one thing to do, I tell you. Order them to their quarters and stand a guard over them from the iron squad.” “But you forget,” Young Van replied hotly, “that they are not to blame.” “Not to blame! What the—!” “Wait a minute!—They are actually suffering “Wait, boys,” said Carhart. “Gus is right. This trouble has its roots away down in human nature. If water is to be had, those men have a right to it. If we should put them under guard, and they should go crazy and make a break for it, what then? What if they call our bluff? We must either let them go—or shoot.” “Then I say shoot,” cried Old Vandervelt. “No, Van,” Carhart replied, “you’re wrong. As Gus says, we are uncomfortably close to a panic. Well, let them have their panic. Put them on the wagons and let them run off their heat. Organize this panic with ourselves at the head of it.” His voice took on a crisper quality. “Van, you stay here in charge of the camp. Pick out a dozen of the iron squad, give them rifles, and keep three at a time on extra watch all night.” “Hold on,” said the veteran, bewildered, “when are you going to start on this—?” “Now.” “Now? To-night?” “To-night. Gus, you find your sheriff. He can’t be far off.” “No; half a mile down the line.” “You find him, explain the situation, and tell him we want that man in half an hour.” The conference broke up sharply. Gus Vandervelt hurried out, saddled his horse, and rode off into the thickening dusk. Old Van went to select his guards. Carhart saw them go; then, pausing to note with satisfaction the prospect of only moderate darkness, he set about organizing his force. All the empty casks and barrels were loaded on wagons. Mules were hitched four and six in hand. Water, beyond a canteen for each man, could not be spared; but Charlie packed provisions enough—so he thought—for twenty-four hours. The tremulous, brilliant afterglow faded Suddenly the babel quieted—the laborers Paul Carhart had organized the panic; now he was resolved to “work it out of them,” as he explained aside to Young Van. He estimated that they should reach the pool before eight o’clock in the morning. That would mean continuous driving, but the endurance Wonderfully they held the pace, over mile after mile of rough plain. Then, after a time, came the hills,—low at first, but rising steadily higher. In the faint light the sage-brush slipped by like the ghosts of dead vegetation. The rocks and the heaps of bones gave the wheels many a wrench. The steady climb was telling on the mules. They hung back, slowed to a walk all along the line, and under the whip merely plunged or kicked. Up and up they climbed, winding through the low range by a pass known only to the guide. One mule, a leader in a team of six, stumbled among the rocks, fell to his knees, and was dragged and pushed along in a tangle of harness before his fellows came to a stop. In a moment a score of men were crowding around. Up ahead the wagons were winding on out of sight; behind, the line was blocked. “Vat you waiting for?” cried a New Orleans man, feverishly. He had been drinking, and had lost his way among the languages. “Laissez passer! Laissez passer!” The boys were cooler than the men—not knowing so well what it all meant. “Hi there, Oui-Oui, gimme a knife!” cried the youthful driver, shrilly. He slashed at the harness, cut the mule loose, and drove on. And one by one the wagons circled by the struggling beast and Eight hours were got through. It was four in the morning. The hills lay behind, an alkaline waste before. The mules were tugging heavily and dejectedly through the sand. Certain of the drivers sat upright with lined faces and ringed eyes, others lay sleeping on the seats with the reins tied. All were subdued. The penetrating dust aggravated their thirst. Carhart pricked forward beside the guide. “How much farther?” he asked. “Well, it ain’t easy to say. We might be halfway there.” “Halfway! Do you mean to say we’ve done only fifteen or eighteen miles in eight hours?” “No, I didn’t say that.” “Look here. How far is it to this pool!” “Well, it’s hard to say.” Carhart frowned and gave it up. The “thirty or thirty-five miles” had apparently been the roughest sort of an estimate. Then the sun came up and beat upon them, and the sand began to radiate heat by way of an earnest of the day to follow; and then the wheels sank so deeply that the chief and Young Van tossed their reins to the guide and walked by the wagons to lend a hand now and then at the spokes. All the crazy energy of the evening was gone; men and mules were alike sullen and dispirited. Of the latter, many gave out and fell, and these were cut out and left there to die. So it went all through that blazing forenoon. They halted at twelve for lunch; but the dry bread and salt pork were hardly stimulating. Carhart again sought the guide. “Do you know yourself where the pool is?” The guide shaded his eyes and searched the horizon. “It was in a spot that looked something like this here,” he said in a weak, confidential sort of way. Carhart answered sharply, “Why don’t you say you are lost, and be done with it!” “Well, I ain’t lost exactly. I wouldn’t like to say that.” “But you haven’t the least idea where the pool is.” “Well, now, you see—” “Is there any other water on ahead?” “Oh, yes.” “Where?” “The Palos River can’t be more than a dozen miles beyond the place where we found the pool.” He had unconsciously raised his voice. A laborer overheard the remark, whipped out his knife, hacked at the harness of the nearest mule,—it would have been simpler to loosen the braces, but he was past all thinking,—threw himself on the animal’s back, and rode off, lashing behind him with the end of the reins. The panic broke loose again. Man after man, the guide among them, followed after, until only the wagons and about half the animals remained. “Come, Gus,” called the chief, “let them go.” Young Van turned wearily, mounted his Half an hour later, Young Van’s horse stumbled and fell, barely giving his rider time to spring clear. “Is he done for?” asked Carhart, reining up. “It looks like it.” “What’s the matter—done up yourself?” “A little. I’ll sit here a minute. You go ahead. I’ll follow on foot.” “Not a bit of it. Here—can you swing up behind me?” “That won’t do. Texas can’t carry double. Go ahead; I’m all right.” But Carhart dismounted, lifted his assistant, protesting, into the saddle, and pushed on, himself on foot, leading the horse. They went on in this way for nearly an hour. Young Van found it all he could do to hold himself in the saddle. Then the horse took to staggering, and finally came to his knees. Carhart helped his assistant to the ground, His eyes came back to the fainting man at his feet. Young Van had lost all sense of the world about him. Carhart saw that his lips were moving, and knelt beside him. Then he smiled, a curious, unhumorous smile; for the young engineer was muttering those words which had of late been his brother’s favorites among all the words in our rich language: “D—n Peet!” The chief stood up again to think. And as he gazed off eastward in the general direction of Sherman, toward the place where the arch enemy of the Sherman and Western sat in his office, perhaps devising new excuses to send to the front, those same two expressive words might have been used to sum up his own thoughts. What could the man be thinking of, who had brought the work practically to a stop, who was now in the coolest imaginable fashion leaving a thousand men to mingle their bones with the bones of the buffalo—that grim, broadcast expression of the spirit of the desert. But these were unsafe thoughts. His own head was none too clear. It was reeling with heat and thirst and with the monotony of this desolate land. He drew a flask from his pocket,—an almost empty flask,—and placed it against Young Van’s hand. With their two hats propped together he shaded his face. Then, a canteen slung over each shoulder, he pushed ahead, on foot. “The Palos River can’t be more than a dozen miles—” had said the guide, pointing southward. That was all. Somewhere off there in the desert it lay, flowing yellow and aimless. Perhaps it was a lie. Perhaps the guide was mistaken, as he had been in the search for the pool. But the last feeble tie In the rush for mounts two men, a half-breed from the Territory and a Mexican, plunged at the same animal. The half-breed was hacking at the nigh trace and the Mexican at the off rein when their eyes met. The mule both had chosen was the nigh leader in a double team. But instead of turning to one of the other three, the men, each with a knife in his hand, fell to fighting; and while they struggled and fell and rolled over and over in the sand, a third man mounted their prize and galloped away. But it was the boys who suffered most. The Palos River is probably the most uninviting stream in the Southwest. It was at this time sluggish and shallow. The water was so rich with silt that a pailful of it, after standing an hour, would deposit three inches The second man reached the bank on foot, for his mule had fallen within sight of the promised land. He paused there, apparently bewildered, watching his fortunate comrade in the water. Then, with dazed deliberation, he removed his clothes, piled them neatly under a bush, and walked out naked, stepping gingerly on the heated sand. But halfway to the channel a glimmer of intelligence sparkled in his eyes, and he suddenly dashed forward and threw himself into the water. One by one the others came crashing through the bushes, and rode or ran down the bank, swearing, laughing, shouting, sobbing. And not one of them could have told afterward whether he drank on the upstream or the downstream side of the mules. When Paul Carhart, a long while later, parted the bushes and stood out in relief on the bank, leaning on a shrub for support, he saw a strange spectacle. For a quarter They were playing leap-frog. Carhart walked across to the upstream side of the mules and drank. Then, after filling two canteens, he returned to the bank and sat down in such small shade as he could find. It was at this moment that the men caught sight of him. The game stopped abruptly, and for a moment the players stood awkwardly about, as schoolboys would at the appearance of the teacher. Then, first one, and another, and a group of two or three more, and finally, Now the chief roused himself. “Here, you two!” he cried. “Take these canteens and the freshest mules you can find, and go back to Mr. Vandervelt. Ride hard.” And almost at the word, eager, responsive, the men he had addressed were off. As soon as the worst of the shakiness passed out of his legs, Carhart rose. His next task was to get the mules back to the wagons, and bring them on to the river in order to fill the barrels, and this promised a greater expenditure of time and strength than he liked to face. But there was no alternative, it seemed, so he caught a mule, mounted it, and rode back. And the men trailed after him, riding and walking, in a line half a mile long. Carhart found Young Van sitting up, too weak to talk, supported by the two men whom he had sent back. “How is he?” asked the chief. “It’s hard to say, Mr. Carhart,” replied one of the men. “He don’t seem quite himself.” Carhart dismounted, felt the pulse of the young man, and then bathed his temples with the warmish water. “Carry him over into the shade of that wagon, boys,” he said. “Here, I’ll give you a hand.” The earth, even beneath the wagon, was warm, and Carhart and the two laborers spread out their coats before they laid him down. The chief poured a little water on his handkerchief, and laid it on Young Van’s forehead. And then, when Carhart had got to his feet and was looking about, holding down his hat-brim to shade his eyes, an expression of inquiry, which had come into his face some little time before, slowly deepened. “Boys,” he said, “what’s become of the mules that were left here?” The men looked up. “Don’t know, Mr. Carhart,” replied the more talkative one. “I ain’t seen ’em.” Carhart turned away, and again his eyes roved about over the beaten ground. Very slowly and thoughtfully he began walking around the deserted wagons in widening circles. Those of the men who were back from the river watched him curiously. After a time he stopped and looked at some tracks in the sand, and then, still walking slowly, followed them off to the right. A few of the men, the more observant ones, fell in behind him, but he did not glance around. The foremost laborer stopped a moment and waited for the man next behind. “The boss is done up,” he said in a low voice. The other man nodded. “Unsteady in the legs,” he replied. “And he’s gone white. I see it when we was at the river.” The tracks were distinct enough, but Carhart did not quicken his pace. He was talking to himself, half aloud: “It’ll go on until it’s settled,—those things have to, out here. He’s a coward, but he’ll drink it down every day “What’s the matter with me, anyway!” he muttered. “This is a pretty spectacle!” And he walked deliberately on. The trail led him, and the quiet little file of men behind him, over and around a low ridge and a chain of knolls. “This heat keeps a dead rein on you,” he said, again speaking half aloud. “Let’s see, what was I thinking,—oh, the boys at the camp, they needed water too; I was going to load up and hurry back to help them out.” And then, as he walked on with a solemn precision not unlike that of a drunken man, the scene shifted, and another scene—one which had long ago slipped out of his waking thoughts,—took its place. He was fishing a trout stream in the Adirondacks. He had found a series of pools in a narrow gorge where the brook came leaping merrily down from one low ledge to another. The underbrush The wilderness had always before seemed man’s playground. It suddenly became a And now the desert was showing its teeth, and Carhart knew that he was trembling again on the brink of the horrors. He understood the sort of thing very well. He had seen men grow crafty and cowardly or ugly and murderous out there on the frontier. He had been in Death Valley. And as he had seen the symptoms in other men’s faces, so he now felt them coming into his own. He knew how a man’s sense of proportion can go awry,—how a mere railroad, with its very important banker-officials in top hats and its very elaborate and impressive organization, could seem a child’s toy here in the desert where the wonderful spaces and the unearthly atmosphere and the morning and evening colors lie very close to the borders of another realm, and where the eye of God blazes forever down on the just and the unjust. None of the little devices of a sophisticated world pass current in the desert. Carhart On the summit of a knoll he stopped short, and looked down at something on the farther side. The men came up, one by one, and joined him; and they, too, stopped short and looked. And then Carhart raised his eyes and watched their faces steadily, eagerly wondering if they saw what he saw,—a water-hole, fringed “Will you have a little of this, Mr. Carhart?” A big renegade with the face of a criminal was holding out a flask. The chief took it, and gulped down a few swallows. “Thank you,” he said quietly. “One of the boys found this here, down among them tin cans, Mr. Carhart.” It was the crumpled first page of the Pierrepont Enterprise. Carhart stiffened up, spread it out on his knees, and read the date line. The paper was only two days old. “Where’s Pierrepont?” he asked. “About a day’s journey down the river, sir.” Again the chief’s eyes ran over the sheet. Suddenly they lighted up. Here is what he saw:— The rest of it was torn off, but he read these headings three times. Then he lowered his knees, with the paper still lying across them, and looked over it at the little group of men and mules about the water-hole. “Can that be true, or can’t it?” he asked himself. “And what am I going to do about it? I don’t believe He tossed it away, and then, catching sight for the first time of the other side, he took it up again. The second page was nearly covered with crude designs, made with a blue pencil. There were long rows of scallops, and others of those aimless markings a man will make when pencil and paper are before him. And in the middle, surrounded by a sort of decorative border, was printed out “MR. CARHART,” then a blank space and the name “JACK FLAGG.” Carhart rose to his feet, folded the paper, Slowly and not without difficulty he walked back. But the unsteadiness in his legs no longer disturbed him. The panic was over,—and something else was over too. |