<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
<h3>THE FINAL APPEAL</h3></div>
<p>Sinclair’s discharge was a matter of comment
for the whole country, from the ranch-houses
to the ranges. For a time Sinclair himself
refused utterly to believe that McCloud could keep
him off the division. His determination to get
back led him to carry his appeal to the highest
quarters, to Glover and to Bucks himself. But
Sinclair, able as he was, had passed the limit of
endurance and had long been marked for an accounting.
He had been a railroad man to whom
the West spelled license, and, while a valuable man,
had long been a source of demoralization to the
forces of the division. In the railroad life clearly
defined plans are often too deeply laid to fathom,
and it was impossible for even so acute a man as
Sinclair to realize that he was not the victim of an
accident, but that he must look to his own record
for the real explanation of his undoing. He was
not the only man to suffer in the shake-out that
took place under the new superintendent; but he
seemed the only one unable to realize that Bucks,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_61' name='page_61'></SPAN>61</span>
patient and long-suffering, had put McCloud into
the mountain saddle expressly to deal with cases
such as his. In the West sympathy is quick but
not always discerning. Medicine Bend took Sinclair’s
grievance as its own. No other man in the
service had Sinclair’s following, and within a
week petitions were being circulated through the
town not asking merely but calling for his reinstatement.
The sporting element of the community
to a man were behind Sinclair because he
was a sport; the range men were with him because
his growing ranch on the Frenchman made him
one of them; his own men were with him because
he was a far-seeing pirate and divided liberally.
Among the railroad men, too, he had much sympathy.
Sinclair had always been lavish with presents;
brides were remembered by Sinclair, and
babies were not forgotten. He could sit up all
night with a railroad man that had been hurt, and
he could play poker all night with one that was
not afraid of getting hurt. In his way, he was a
division autocrat, whose vices were varnished by
virtues such as these. His hold on the people was
so strong that they could not believe the company
would not reinstate him. In spite of the appointment
of his successor, Phil Hailey, a mountain boy
and the son of an old-time bridge foreman, rumor
assigned again and again definite dates for Sinclair’s
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_62' name='page_62'></SPAN>62</span>
return to work; but the dates never materialized.
The bridge machinery of the big division
moved on in even rhythm. A final and determined
appeal from the deposed autocrat for a hearing
at last brought Glover and Morris Blood, the
general manager, to Medicine Bend for a final
conference. Callahan too was there with his pipe,
and they talked quietly with Sinclair––reminded
him of how often he had been warned, showed
him how complete a record they had of his plundering,
and Glover gave to him Bucks’s final word
that he could never again work on the mountain
division.</p>
<p>A pride grown monstrous with prestige long undisputed
broke under the final blow. The big fellow
put his face in his hands and burst into tears,
and the men before him sat confused and uncomfortable
at his outburst of feeling. It was only
for a moment. Sinclair raised his hand, shook his
long hair, and swore an oath against the company
and the men that curled the very smoke in Callahan’s
pipe, Callahan, outraged at the insolence,
sprang to his feet, resenting Sinclair’s fury.
Choking with anger he warned him not to go
too far. The two were ready to spring at each
other’s throat when Farrell Kennedy stepped between
them. Sinclair, drunk with rage, called for
McCloud; but he submitted quietly to Kennedy’s
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_63' name='page_63'></SPAN>63</span>
reproof, and with a semblance of self-control
begged that McCloud be sent for. Kennedy,
without complying, gradually pushed Sinclair out
of the room and, without seeming officious, walked
with him down the hall and quite out of the
building.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_64' name='page_64'></SPAN>64</span></div>
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