<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
<h3>THE TURN IN THE STORM</h3></div>
<p>The beginning of the Crawling Stone Line
marked the first determined effort under
President Bucks, while undertaking the reconstruction
of the system for through traffic, to develop
the rich local territory tributary to the mountain
division. New policies in construction dated from
the same period. Glover, with an enormous capital
staked for the new undertakings, gave orders to
push the building every month in the year, and for
the first time in mountain railroad-building winter
was to be ignored. The older mountain men
met the innovation as they met any departure from
their traditions, with curiosity and distrust. On the
other hand, the new and younger blood took hold
with confidence, and when Glover called, “Yo,
heave ho!” at headquarters, they bent themselves
clear across the system for a hard pull together.</p>
<p>McCloud, resting the operating on the shoulders
of his assistant Anderson, devoted himself wholly
to forwarding the construction plans, and his first
clash over winter road-building in the Rockies came
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_123' name='page_123'></SPAN>123</span>
with his own right-hand man, Mears. McCloud
put in a switch below Piedmont, opened a material-yard,
and began track-laying toward the lower
Crawling Stone Valley, when Mears said it was
time to stop work till spring. When McCloud
told him he wanted track across the divide and
into the lower valley by spring, Mears threw up
his hands. But there was metal in the old man,
and he was for orders all the time. He kept up
a running fire of protests and forebodings about
the danger of exposing men during the winter season,
but stuck to his post. Glover sent along the
men, and although two out of every three deserted
the day after they arrived, Mears kept a force in
hand, and crowded the track up the new grade as
fast as the ties and steel came in, working day in
and day out with one eye on the clouds and one on
the tie-line and hoping every day for orders to stop.</p>
<p>December slipped away to Christmas with the
steel still going down and the disaffected element
among the railroad men at Medicine Bend waiting
for disaster. The spectacle of McCloud handling
a flying column on the Crawling Stone work in the
face of the most treacherous weather in the mountain
year was one that brought out constant criticism
of him among Sinclair’s sympathizers and
friends, and while McCloud laughed and pushed
ahead on the work, they waited only for his discomfiture.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_124' name='page_124'></SPAN>124</span>
Christmas Day found McCloud at the
front, with men still very scarce, but Mears’s gang
at work and laying steel. The work train was in
charge of Stevens, the freight conductor, who had
been set back after the Smoky Creek wreck and
was slowly climbing back to position. They were
working in the usual way, with the flat cars ahead
pushed by the engine, the caboose coupled to the
tender being on the extreme hind end of the train.</p>
<p>At two o’clock on Christmas afternoon, when
there was not a cloud in the sky, the horizon thickened
in the east. Within thirty minutes the mountains
from end to end of the sky-line were lost in
the sweep of a coming wind, and at three o’clock
snow struck the valley like a pall. Mears, greatly
disturbed, ordered the men off the grade and into
the caboose. McCloud had been inspecting culverts
ahead, and had started for the train when the
snow drove across the valley. It blotted the landscape
from sight so fast that he was glad after an
anxious five minutes to regain the ties and find
himself safely with his men.</p>
<p>But when McCloud came in the men were bordering
on a panic. Mears, with his two foremen,
had gone ahead to hunt McCloud up, and had
passed him in the storm; it was already impossible
to see, or to hear an ordinary sound ten yards away.
McCloud ordered the flat cars cut off the train and
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_125' name='page_125'></SPAN>125</span>
the engine whistle sounded at short intervals, and,
taking Stevens, buttoned his reefer and started
up the grade after the three trackmen. They fired
their revolvers as they went on, but the storm
tossed their signals on the ears of Mears and his
companions from every quarter of the compass.
McCloud was standing on the last tie and planning
with his companion how best to keep the grade as
the two advanced, when the engine signals suddenly
changed. “Now that sounds like one of
Bill Dancing’s games,” said McCloud to his companion.
“What the deuce is it, Stevens?”</p>
<p>Stevens, who knew a little of everything, recognized
the signals in an instant and threw up his
hands. “It’s Morse code, Mr. McCloud, and
they are in––Mears and the foremen––and us for
the train as quick as the Lord will let us; that’s
what they’re whistling.”</p>
<p>“So much for an education, Stevens. Bully for
you! Come on!”</p>
<p>They regained the flat cars and made their way
back to the caboose and engine, which stood uncoupled.
McCloud got into the cab with Dancing
and Stevens. Mears, from the caboose
ahead, signalled all in, and, with a whistling
scream, the engine started to back the caboose
to Piedmont. They had hardly more than got
under full headway when a difficulty became apparent
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_126' name='page_126'></SPAN>126</span>
to the little group around the superintendent.
They were riding an unballasted track
and using such speed as they dared to escape from
a situation that had become perilous. But the light
caboose, packed like a sardine-box with men, was
dancing a hornpipe on the rail-joints. McCloud
felt the peril, and the lurching of the car could be
seen in the jerk of the engine tender to which it
was coupled. Apprehensive, he crawled back on
the coal to watch the caboose himself, and stayed
long enough to see that the rapidly drifting snow
threatened to derail the outfit any minute. He
got back to the cab and ordered a stop. “This
won’t do!” said he to Stevens and the engineman.
“We can’t back that caboose loaded with men
through this storm. We shall be off the track in
five minutes.”</p>
<p>“Try it slow,” suggested Stevens.</p>
<p>“If we had the time,” returned McCloud; “but
the snow is drifting on us. We’ve got to make a
run for it if we ever get back, and we must have
the engine in front of that way car with her pilot
headed for the drifts. Let’s look at things.”</p>
<p>Dancing and Stevens, followed by McCloud,
dropped out of the gangway. Mears opened the
caboose door and the four men went forward to
inspect the track and the trucks. In the lee of the
caboose a council was held. The roar of the wind
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_127' name='page_127'></SPAN>127</span>
was like the surge of many waters, and the snow
had whitened into storm. They were ten miles from
a habitation, and, but for the single track they
were travelling, might as well have been a hundred
miles so far as reaching a place of safety was concerned.
They were without food, with a caboose
packed with men on their hands, and they realized
that their supply of fuel for either engine or
caboose was perilously slender.</p>
<p>“Get your men ready with their tools, Pat,”
said McCloud to Mears.</p>
<p>“What are you going to do?”</p>
<p>“I’m going to turn the train around and put
the nose of the engine into it.”</p>
<p>“Turn the train around––why, yes, that would
make it easy. I’d be glad to see it turned around.
But where’s your turntable, Mr. McCloud?”
asked Mears.</p>
<p>“How are you going to turn your train around
on a single track?” asked Stevens darkly.</p>
<p>“I’m going to turn the track around. I know
about where we are, I think. There’s a little stretch
just beyond this curve where the grade is flush
with the ground. Ask your engineman to run back
very slowly and watch for the bell-rope. I’ll ride
on the front platform of the caboose till we get
to where we want to go to work. Lose no time,
Pat; tell your men it’s now or never. If we are
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_128' name='page_128'></SPAN>128</span>
caught here we may stay till they carry us home,
and the success of this little game depends on
having everything ready and working quick.”</p>
<p>Stevens, who stayed close to McCloud, pulled
the cord within five minutes, and before the caboose
had stopped the men were tumbling out of it. McCloud
led Mears and his foreman up the track.
They tramped a hundred yards back and forth,
and, with steel tapes for safety lines, swung a hundred
feet out on each side of the track to make
sure of the ground. “This will do,” announced
McCloud; “you waited here half a day for steel
a week ago; I know the ground. Break that joint,
Pat.” He pointed to the rail under his foot.
“Pass ahead with the engine and car about a thousand
feet,” he said to the conductor, “and when I
give you a signal back up slow and look out for a
thirty-degree curve––without any elevation, either.
Get out all your men with lining-bars.”</p>
<p>The engine and caboose faded in the blur of the
blizzard as the break was made in the track.
“Take those bars and divide your men into batches
of ten with foremen that can make signs, if they
can’t talk English,” directed McCloud. “Work
lively now, and throw this track to the south!”</p>
<p>Pretty much everybody––Japs, Italians, and
Greeks––understood the game they were playing.
McCloud said afterward he would match his Piedmont
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_129' name='page_129'></SPAN>129</span>
hundred in making a movable Y against
any two hundred experts Glover could pick; they
had had the experience, he added, when the move
meant their last counter in the game of mountain
life or death. The Piedmont “hundred,” to McCloud’s
mind, were after that day past masters in
the art of track-shifting. Working in a driving
cloud of grit and snow, the ignorant, the dull, and
the slow rose to the occasion. Bill Dancing, Pat
Mears and his foreman, and Stevens moved about
in the driving snow like giants. The howling storm
rang with the shouting of the foremen, the guttural
cries of the Japs, and the clank of the lining-bars
as rail-length after rail-length of the heavy track
was slued bodily from the grade alignment and
swung around in a short curve to a right angle
out on the open ground.</p>
<p>McCloud at last gave the awaited signal, and,
with keen-eyed, anxious men watching every revolution
of the cautious driving-wheels, the engine,
hissing and pausing as the air-brakes went off and
on, pushed the light caboose slowly out on the rough
spur to its extreme end and stopped with the pilot
facing the main track at right angles; but before it
had reached its halting-place spike-mauls were
ringing at the fish-plates where a moment before
it had left the line on the curve. The track at
that point was cut again, and under a long line of
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_130' name='page_130'></SPAN>130</span>
bars and a renewed shouting it was thrown gradually
quite across the long gap in the main line, and
the new joints in a very rough curve were made fast
just as the engine, running now with its pilot ahead,
steamed slowly around the new curve and without
accident regained the regular grade. It was
greeted by a screeching yell as the men climbed
into the caboose, for the engine stood safely headed
into the teeth of the storm for Piedmont. The
ten miles to cover were now a matter of less than
thirty minutes, and the construction train drew into
the Piedmont yards just as the telegraph wires were
heating from headquarters with orders annulling
freights, ordering ploughs on outgoing engines,
and battening the division hatches for a grapple
with a Christmas blizzard.</p>
<p>No man came back better pleased than Stevens.
“That man is all right,” said he to Mears, nodding
his head toward McCloud, as they walked up
from the caboose. “That’s all I want to say.
Some of these fellows have been a little shy about
going out with him; they’ve hounded me for
months about stepping over his way when Sinclair
and his mugs struck. I reckon I played my hand
about right.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_131' name='page_131'></SPAN>131</span></div>
<hr class='toprule' />
<div class='chsp'>
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XIV_THE_QUARREL' id='CHAPTER_XIV_THE_QUARREL'></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />