<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
<h3>THE MISUNDERSTANDING</h3></div>
<p>No attempt was made to minimize the truth
that the blow to the division was a staggering
one. The loss of Smoky Creek Bridge put
almost a thousand miles of the mountain division
out of business. Perishable freight and time freight
were diverted to other lines. Passengers were
transferred; lunches were served to them in the deep
valley, and they were supplied by an ingenuous advertising
department with pictures of the historic
bridge as it had long stood, and their addresses
were taken with the promise of a picture of the
ruins. Smoky Creek Bridge had long been famous
in mountain song and story. For one generation
of Western railroad men it had stood as a monument
to the earliest effort to conquer the Rockies
with a railroad. Built long before the days of
steel, this high and slender link in the first transcontinental
line had for thirty years served faithfully
at its danger-post, only to fall in the end at the
hands of a bridge assassin; nor has the mystery of
its fate ever completely been solved, though
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_77' name='page_77'></SPAN>77</span>
it is believed to lie with Murray Sinclair in the
Frenchman hills. The engineering department
and the operating department united in a tremendous
effort to bring about a resumption of traffic.
Glover’s men, pulled off construction, were sent
forward in trainloads. Dancing’s linemen strung
arc-lights along the creek until the canyon twinkled
at night like a mountain village, and men in three
shifts worked elbow to elbow unceasingly to run
the switchbacks down to the creek-bed. There,
by cribbing across the bottom, they got in a
temporary line.</p>
<p>Train movement was thrown into a spectacle of
confusion. Upon the incessant and well-ordered
activities of the road the burning of the bridge fell
like the heel of a heavy boot on an ant-hill; but the
railroad men like ants rose to the emergency, and,
where the possible failed, achieved the impossible.</p>
<p>McCloud spent his days at the creek and his
nights at Medicine Bend with his assistant and his
chief despatcher, advising, counselling, studying
out trouble reports, and steadying wherever he
could the weakened lines of his operating forces.
He was getting his first taste of the trials of the
hardest-worked and poorest-paid man in the operating
department of a railroad––the division
superintendent.</p>
<p>To these were added personal annoyances. A
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_78' name='page_78'></SPAN>78</span>
trainload of Duck Bar steers, shipped by Lance
Dunning from the Crawling Stone Ranch, had been
caught west of the bridge the very night of the
fire. They had been loaded at Tipton and shipped
to catch a good market, and under extravagant
promises from the live-stock agent of a quick run
to Chicago. When Lance Dunning learned that
his cattle had been caught west of the break and
would have to be unloaded, he swore up a horse in
hot haste and started for Medicine Bend. McCloud,
who had not closed his eyes for sixty hours,
had just got into Medicine Bend from Smoky
Creek and was sitting at his desk buried in a mass
of papers, but he ordered the cattleman admitted.
He was, in fact, eager to meet the manager of the
big ranch and the cousin of Dicksie. Lance Dunning
stood above six feet in height, and was a handsome
man, in spite of the hard lines around his
eyes, as he walked in; but neither his manner nor
his expression was amiable.</p>
<p>“Are you Mr. McCloud? I’ve been here three
times this afternoon to see you,” said he, ignoring
McCloud’s answer and a proffered chair. “This
is your office, isn’t it?”</p>
<p>McCloud, a little surprised, answered again
and civilly: “It certainly is; but I have been at
Smoky Creek for two or three days.”</p>
<p>“What have you done with my cattle?”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_79' name='page_79'></SPAN>79</span></div>
<p>“The Duck Bar train was run back to Point of
Rocks and the cattle were unloaded at the yard.”</p>
<p>Lance Dunning spoke with increasing harshness:
“By whose order was that done? Why wasn’t
I notified? Have they had feed or water?”</p>
<p>“All the stock caught west of the bridge was
sent back for feed and water by my orders. It
has all been taken care of. You should have been
notified, certainly; it is the business of the stock
agent to see to that. Let me inquire about it while
you are here, Mr. Dunning,” suggested McCloud,
ringing for his clerk.</p>
<p>Dunning lost no time in expressing himself. “I
don’t want my cattle held at Point of Rocks!” he
said angrily. “Your Point of Rocks yards are
infected. My cattle shouldn’t have been sent
there.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no! The old yards where they had a
touch of fever were burned off the face of the earth
a year ago. The new yards are perfectly sanitary.
The loss of the bridge has crippled us, you know.
Your cattle are being well cared for, Mr. Dunning,
and if you doubt it you may go up and give our
men any orders you like in the matter at our
expense.”</p>
<p>“You’re taking altogether too much on yourself
when you run my stock over the country in this
way,” exclaimed Dunning, refusing to be placated.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_80' name='page_80'></SPAN>80</span></div>
<p>“How am I to get to Point of Rocks––walk
there?”</p>
<p>“Not at all,” returned McCloud, ringing up
his clerk and asking for a pass, which was brought
back in a moment and handed to Dunning. “The
cattle,” continued McCloud, “can be run down,
unloaded, and driven around the break to-morrow––with
the loss of only two days.”</p>
<p>“And in the meantime I lose my market.”</p>
<p>“It is too bad, certainly, but I suppose it will be
several days before we can get a line across Smoky
Creek.”</p>
<p>“Why weren’t the cattle sent through that way
yesterday? What have they been held at Point
of Rocks for? I call the thing badly managed.”</p>
<p>“We couldn’t get the empty cars up from Piedmont
for the transfer until to-day; empties are
very scarce everywhere now.”</p>
<p>“There always have been empties here when
they were wanted until lately. There’s been no
head or tail to anything on this division for six
months.”</p>
<p>“I’m sorry that you have that impression.”</p>
<p>“That impression is very general,” declared the
stockman, with an oath, “and if you keep on discharging
the only men on this division that are
competent to handle a break like this, it is likely to
continue!”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_81' name='page_81'></SPAN>81</span></div>
<p>“Just a moment!” McCloud’s finger rose
pointedly. “My failure to please you in caring
for your stock in an emergency may be properly
a matter for comment; your opinion as to
the way I am running this division is, of course,
your own: but don’t attempt to criticise the retention
or discharge of any man on my payroll!”</p>
<p>Dunning strode toward him. “I’m a shipper
on this line; when it suits me to criticise you or your
methods, or anybody else’s, I expect to do so,” he
retorted in high tones.</p>
<p>“But you cannot tell me how to run my business!”
thundered McCloud, leaning over the table
in front of him.</p>
<p>As the two men glared at each other Rooney
Lee opened the door. His surprise at the situation
amounted to consternation. He shuffled to
the corner of the room, and while McCloud and
Dunning engaged hotly again, Rooney, from the
corner, threw a shot of his own into the quarrel.
“On time!” he roared.</p>
<p>The angry men turned. “What’s on time?”
asked McCloud curtly.</p>
<p>“Number One; she’s in and changing engines.
I told them you were going West,” declared
Rooney in so deep tones that his fiction would
never have been suspected. If his cue had been,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_82' name='page_82'></SPAN>82</span>
“My lord, the conductor waits,” it could not have
been rung in more opportunely.</p>
<p>Dunning, to emphasize, without a further word,
his disgust for the situation and his contempt for
the management, tore into scraps the pass that had
been given him, threw the scraps on the floor, took
a cigar from his pocket and lighted it; insolence
could do no more.</p>
<p>McCloud looked over at the despatcher. “No,
I am not going West, Rooney. But if you will be
good enough to stay here and find out from this
man just how this railroad ought to be run, I will
go to bed. He can tell you; the microbe seems to
be working in his mind right now,” said McCloud,
slamming down the roll-top of his desk. And
with Lance Dunning glaring at him, somewhat
speechless, he put on his hat and walked out of
the room.</p>
<p>It was but one of many disagreeable incidents
due to the loss of the bridge. Complications arising
from the tie-up followed him at every turn. It
seemed as if he could not get away from trouble
following trouble. After forty hours further of toil,
relieved by four hours of sleep, McCloud found
himself, rather dead than alive, back at Medicine
Bend and in the little dining-room at Marion’s.
Coming in at the cottage door on Fort Street, he
dropped into a chair. The cottage rooms were
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_83' name='page_83'></SPAN>83</span>
empty. He heard Marion’s voice in the front
shop; she was engaged with a customer. Putting
his head on the table to wait a moment, nature
asserted itself and McCloud fell asleep. He woke
hearing a voice that he had heard in dreams. Perhaps
no other voice could have wakened him, for
he slept for a few minutes a death-like sleep. At
all events, Dicksie Dunning was in the front room
and McCloud heard her. She was talking with
Marion about the burning of Smoky Creek Bridge.</p>
<p>“Every one is talking about it yet,” Dicksie was
saying. “If I had lost my best friend I couldn’t
have felt worse; you know, my father built it. I
rode over there the day of the fire, and down into
the creek, so I could look up where it stood. I
never realized before how high and how long it
was; and when I remembered how proud father
always was of his work there––Cousin Lance has
often told me––I sat down right on the ground and
cried. Really, the ruins were the most pathetic
thing you ever saw, Marion, with great clouds of
smoke rolling up from the canyon that day; the
place looked so lonely when I rode away that every
time I turned to look back my eyes filled with tears.
Poor daddy! I am almost glad he didn’t live to
see it. How times have changed in railroading,
haven’t they? Mr. Sinclair was over just the
other night, and he said if they kept using this new
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_84' name='page_84'></SPAN>84</span>
coal in the engines they would burn up everything
on the division. Do you know, I have been waiting
in town three or four hours now for Cousin
Lance? I feel almost like a tramp. He is coming
from the West with the stock train. It was due
here hours ago, but they never seem to know when
anything is to get here the way things are run on
the railroad now. I want to give Cousin Lance
some mail before he goes through.”</p>
<p>“The passenger trains crossed the creek over
the switchbacks hours ago, and they say the emergency
grades are first-rate,” said Marion Sinclair,
on the defensive. “The stock trains must have
followed right along. Your cousin is sure to be
here pretty soon. Probably Mr. McCloud will
know which train he is on, and Mr. Lee telephoned
that Mr. McCloud would be over here at three
o’clock for his dinner. He ought to be here now.”</p>
<p>“Oh, dear, then I must go!”</p>
<p>“But he can probably tell you just when your
cousin will be in.”</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t meet him for worlds!”</p>
<p>“You wouldn’t? Why, Mr. McCloud is delightful.”</p>
<p>“Oh, not for worlds, Marion! You know he
is discharging all the best of the older men, the
men that have made the road everything it is, and
of course we can’t help sympathizing with them
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_85' name='page_85'></SPAN>85</span>
over our way. For my part, I think it is terrible,
after a man has given all of his life to building up
a railroad, that he should be thrown out to starve
in that way by new managers, Marion.”</p>
<p>McCloud felt himself shrinking within his weary
clothes. Resentment seemed to have died. He
felt too exhausted to undertake controversy, even
if it were to be thought of, and it was not.</p>
<p>Nothing further was needed to complete his
humiliation. He picked up his hat and with the
thought of getting out as quietly as he had come
in. In rising he swept a tumbler at his elbow from
the table. The glass broke on the floor, and Marion
exclaimed, “What is that?” and started for
the dining-room.</p>
<p>It was too late to get away. McCloud stepped
to the portières of the trimming-room door and
pushed them aside. Marion stood with a hat in
her hand, and Dicksie, sitting at the table, was
looking directly at the intruder as he appeared in
the doorway. She saw in him her pleasant acquaintance
of the wreck at Smoky Creek, whose
name she had not learned. In her surprise she
rose to her feet, and Marion spoke quickly: “Oh,
Mr. McCloud, is it you? I did not hear you
come in.”</p>
<p>Dicksie’s face, which had lighted, became a
spectacle of confusion after she heard the name.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_86' name='page_86'></SPAN>86</span>
McCloud, conscious of the awkwardness of his
position and the disorder of his garb, said the
worst thing at once: “I fear I am inadvertently
overhearing your conversation.”</p>
<p>He looked at Dicksie as he spoke, chiefly because
he could not help it, and this made matters
hopeless.</p>
<p>She flushed more deeply. “I cannot conceive
why our conversation should invite a listener.”</p>
<p>Her words did not, of course, help to steady
him. “I tried to get away,” he stammered,
“when I realized I was a part of it.”</p>
<p>“In any event,” she exclaimed hastily, “if you
are Mr. McCloud I think it unpardonable to do
anything like that!”</p>
<p>“I am Mr. McCloud, though I should rather
be anybody else; and I am sorry that I was unable
to help hearing what was said; I–––”</p>
<p>“Marion, will you be kind enough to give me
my gloves?” said Dicksie, holding out her hand.</p>
<p>Marion, having tried once or twice to intervene,
stood between the firing-lines in helpless amazement.
Her exclamations were lost; the two before
her gave no heed to ordinary intervention.</p>
<p>McCloud flushed at being cut off, but he bowed.
“Of course,” he said, “if you will listen to no
explanation I can only withdraw.”</p>
<div class='figtag'>
<SPAN name='linki_3' id='linki_3'></SPAN></div>
<div class='figcenter'>
<ANTIMG src='images/p0086-insert.jpg' alt='' title='' width-obs='403' height-obs='277' /><br/>
<p class='caption'>
HELEN HOLMES AS MARION SINCLAIR IN THE PHOTO-PLAY PRODUCTION OF “WHISPERING SMITH.” © <i>American Mutual Studio</i>.<br/></p>
</div>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_87' name='page_87'></SPAN>87</span></div>
<p>He went back, dinnerless, to work all night;
but the switchbacks were doing capitally, and all
night long, trains were rolling through Medicine
Bend from the West in an endless string. In the
morning the yard was nearly cleared of westbound
tonnage. Moreover, the mail in the morning
brought compensation. A letter came from Glover
telling him not to worry himself to death over the
tie-up, and one came from Bucks telling him to
make ready for the building of the Crawling Stone
Line.</p>
<p>McCloud told Rooney Lee that if anybody
asked for him to report him dead, and going to
bed slept twenty-four hours.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_88' name='page_88'></SPAN>88</span></div>
<hr class='toprule' />
<div class='chsp'>
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_X_SWEEPING_ORDERS' id='CHAPTER_X_SWEEPING_ORDERS'></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />