<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
<h3>SWEEPING ORDERS</h3></div>
<p>The burning of Smoky Creek Bridge was
hardly off the minds of the mountain men
when a disaster of a different sort befell the division.
In the Rat Valley east of Sleepy Cat the
main line springs between two ranges of hills with
a dip and a long supported grade in each direction.
At the point of the dip there is a switch from
which a spur runs to a granite quarry. The track
for two miles is straight and the switch-target and
lights are seen easily from either direction save
at one particular moment of the day––a moment
which is in the valley neither quite day nor
quite night. Even this disadvantage occurs to
trains east-bound only, because due to unusual
circumstances. When the sun in a burst of dawning
glory shows itself above the crest of the
eastern range an engineman, east-bound, may be
so blinded by the rays streaming from the rising
sun that he cannot see the switch at the foot of
the grade. For these few moments he is helpless
should anything be wrong with the quarry switch.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_89' name='page_89'></SPAN>89</span>
Down this grade, a few weeks after the Smoky
Creek fire, came a double-headed stock train from
the Short Line with forty cars of steers. The
switch stood open; this much was afterward abundantly
proved. The train came down the grade
very fast to gain speed for the hill ahead of it.
The head engineman, too late, saw the open target.
He applied the emergency air, threw his
engine over, and whistled the alarm. The mightiest
efforts of a dozen engines would have been
powerless to check the heavy train. On the quarry
track stood three flat cars loaded with granite
blocks for the abutment of the new Smoky Creek
Bridge. On a sanded track, rolling at thirty miles
an hour and screaming in the clutches of the
burning brakes, the heavy engines struck the switch
like an avalanche, reared upon the granite-laden
flats, and with forty loads of cattle plunged into
the canyon below; not a car remained on the rails.
The head brakeman, riding in the second cab, was
instantly killed, and the engine crews, who jumped,
were badly hurt.</p>
<p>The whole operating department of the road
was stirred. What made the affair more dreadful
was that it had occurred on the time of Number
Six, the east-bound passenger train, held that
morning at Sleepy Cat by an engine failure.
Glover came to look into the matter. The testimony
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_90' name='page_90'></SPAN>90</span>
of all tended to one conclusion––that the
quarry switch had been thrown at some time between
four-thirty and five o’clock that morning.
Inferences were many: tramps during the early
summer had been unusually troublesome and many
of them had been rigorously handled by trainmen;
robbery might have been a motive, as the express
cars on train Number Six carried heavy specie shipments
from the coast.</p>
<p>Yet a means so horrible as well as so awkward
and ineffective seemed unlike mountain outlaws.
Strange men from headquarters were on the
ground as soon as they could reach the wreck, men
from the special-service department, and a stock
inspector who greatly resembled Whispering
Smith was on the ground looking into the brands
of the wrecked cattle. Glover was much in consultation
with him, and there were two or three
of the division men, such as Anderson, Young, McCloud,
and Lee, who knew him but could answer
no inquiries concerning his long stay at the wreck.</p>
<p>A third and more exciting event soon put the
quarry wreck into the background. Ten days
afterward an east-bound passenger train was
flagged in the night at Sugar Buttes, twelve miles
west of Sleepy Cat. When the heavy train slowed
up, two men boarded the engine and with pistols
compelled the engineman to cut off the express
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_91' name='page_91'></SPAN>91</span>
cars and pull them to the water-tank a mile
east of the station. Three men there in waiting
forced the express car, blew open the safe, and the
gang rode away half an hour later loaded with
gold coin and currency.</p>
<p>Had a stick of dynamite been exploded under
the Wickiup there could not have been more excitement
at Medicine Bend. Within three hours
after the news reached the town a posse under
Sheriff Van Horn, with a carload of horseflesh and
fourteen guns, was started for Sugar Buttes. The
trail led north and the pursuers rode until nearly
nightfall. They crossed Dutch Flat and rode
single file into a wooded canyon, where they came
upon traces of a camp-fire. Van Horn, leading,
jumped from his horse and thrust his hand into
the ashes; they were still warm, and he shouted to
his men to ride up. As he called out, a rifle
cracked from the box-elder trees ahead of him.
The sheriff fell, shot through the head, and a
deputy springing from his saddle to pick him up
was shot in precisely the same way, through the
head. The riderless horses bolted; the posse,
thrown into a panic, did not fire a shot, and for an
hour dared not ride back for the bodies. After
dark they got the two dead men and at midnight
rode with them into Sleepy Cat.</p>
<p>When the news reached McCloud he was talking
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_92' name='page_92'></SPAN>92</span>
with Bucks over the wires. Bucks had got into
headquarters at the river late that night, and was
getting details from McCloud of the Sugar Buttes
robbery when the superintendent sent him the news
of the killing of Van Horn and the deputy. In
the answer that Bucks sent came a name new to
the wires of the mountain division and rarely seen
even in special correspondence, but Hughie Morrison,
who took the message, never forgot that name;
indeed, it was soon to be thrown sharply into the
spotlight of the mountain railroad stage. Hughie
repeated the message to get it letter-perfect; to
handle stuff at the Wickiup signed “J. S. B.” was
like handling diamonds on a jeweller’s tongs or
arteries on a surgeon’s hook; and, in truth, Bucks’s
words were the arteries and pulse-beat of the
mountain division. Hughie handed the message
to McCloud and stood by while the superintendent
read:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Whispering Smith is due in Cheyenne to-morrow. Meet
him at the Wickiup Sunday morning; he has full authority. I
have told him to get these fellows, if it takes all the money in
the treasury, and not to stop till he cleans them out of the Rocky
Mountains. J. S. B.</p>
</blockquote>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_93' name='page_93'></SPAN>93</span></div>
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