<SPAN name="chapter_11"></SPAN><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page116" title="116"> </SPAN>
<h2><span class="chapter_no" title="eleven">XI</span><br/>THE BARON AS A RUNNER</h2>
<p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">The</span> Twins had been on the lookout for the
Baron for at least an hour, and still he did
not come, and the little Imps were beginning to feel
blue over the prospect of getting the usual Sunday
afternoon story. It was past four o’clock, and
for as long a time as they could remember the
Baron had never failed to arrive by three o’clock.
All sorts of dreadful possibilities came up before
their mind’s eye. They pictured the Baron in accidents
of many sorts. They conjured up visions of
him lying wounded beneath the ruins of an apartment
house, or something else equally heavy that
might have fallen upon him on his way from his
rooms to the station, but that he was more than
wounded they did not believe, for they knew that
the Baron was not the sort of man to be killed by
anything killing under the sun.</p>
<p>“I wonder where he can be?” said Angelica,
uneasily to her brother, who was waiting with
equal anxiety for their common friend.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page117" title="117"> </SPAN>“Oh, he’s all right!” said Diavolo, with a confidence
he did not really feel. “He’ll turn up all
right, and even if he’s two hours late he’ll be here
on time according to his own watch. Just you
wait and see.”</p>
<p>And they did wait and they did see. They waited
for ten minutes, when the Baron drove up, smiling
as ever, but apparently a little out of breath. I
should not dare to say that he was really out of
breath, but he certainly did seem to be so, for he
panted visibly, and for two or three minutes after
his arrival was quite unable to ask the Imps the
usual question as to their very good health.
Finally, however, the customary courtesies of the
greeting were exchanged, and the decks were
cleared for action.</p>
<p>“What kept you, Uncle Munch?” asked the
Twins, as they took up their usual position on the
Baron’s knees.</p>
<p>“What what?” replied the warrior. “Kept me?
Why, am I late?”</p>
<p>“Two hours,” said the Twins. “Dad gave you
up and went out for a walk.”</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page118" title="118"> </SPAN>“Nonsense,” said the Baron. “I’m never that
late.”</p>
<p>Here he looked at his watch.</p>
<p>“Why I do seem to be behind time. There must
be something wrong with our time-pieces. I can’t
be two hours late, you know.”</p>
<p>“Well, let’s say you are on time, then,” said the
Twins. “What kept you?”</p>
<p>“A very funny accident on the railroad,” said the
Baron lighting a cigar. “Queerest accident that
ever happened to me on the railroad, too. Our
engine ran away.”</p>
<p>The Twins laughed as if they thought the Baron
was trying to fool them.</p>
<p>“Really,” said the Baron. “I left town as usual
on the two o’clock train, which, as you know, comes
through in half an hour, without a stop. Everything
went along smoothly until we reached the
Vitriol Reservoir, when much to the surprise of
everybody the train came to a stand-still. I supposed
there was a cow on the track, and so kept
in my seat for three or four minutes as did every
one else. Finally the conductor came through and
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page119" title="119"> </SPAN>called to the brakeman at the end of our car to see
if his brakes were all right.</p>
<p>“‘It’s the most unaccountable thing,’ he said to
me. ‘Here’s this train come to a dead stop and I
can’t see why. There isn’t a brake out of order on
any one of the cars, and there isn’t any earthly reason
why we shouldn’t go ahead.’</p>
<p>“‘Maybe somebody’s upset a bottle of glue on
the track,’ said I. I always like to chaff the conductor,
you know, though as far as that is concerned,
I remember once when I was travelling on a South
American Railway our train was stopped by highwaymen,
who smeared the tracks with a peculiar
sort of gum. They’d spread it over three miles of
track, and after the train had gone lightly over two
miles of it the wheels stuck so fast ten engines
couldn’t have moved it. That was a terrible affair.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think we ever heard of that, did we?”
asked Angelica.</p>
<p>“I don’t remember it,” said Diavolo.</p>
<p>“Well, you would have remembered it, if you had
ever heard of it,” said the Baron. “It was too
dreadful to be forgotten—not for us, you know,
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page120" title="120"> </SPAN>but for the robbers. It was one of the Imperial
trains in Brazil, and if it hadn’t been for me the
Emperor would have been carried off and held for
ransom. The train was brought to a stand-still by
this gluey stuff, as I have told you, and the desperadoes
boarded the cars and proceeded to rifle us of
our possessions. The Emperor was in the car back
of mine, and the robbers made directly for him,
but fathoming their intention I followed close upon
their heels.</p>
<p>“‘You are our game,’ said the chief robber, tapping
the Emperor on the shoulder, as he entered
the Imperial car.</p>
<p>“‘Hands off,’ I cried throwing the ruffian to one
side.</p>
<p>“He scowled dreadfully at me, the Emperor
looked surprised, and another one of the robbers
requested to know who was I that I should speak
with so much authority. ‘Who am I?’ said I, with
a wink at the Emperor. ‘Who am I? Who else
but Baron Munchausen of the Bodenwerder
National Guard, ex-friend of Napoleon of France,
intimate of the Mikado of Japan, and famed the
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page121" title="121"> </SPAN>world over as the deadliest shot in two hemispheres.’</p>
<p>“The desperadoes paled visibly as I spoke, and
after making due apologies for interfering with the
train, fled shrieking from the car. They had heard
of me before.</p>
<p>“‘I thank you, sir,’ began the Emperor, as the
would-be assassins fled, but I cut him short. ‘They
must not be allowed to escape,’ I said, and with that
I started in pursuit of the desperate fellows, overtook
them, and glued them with the gum they had
prepared for our detention to the face of a precipice
that rose abruptly from the side of the railway,
one hundred and ten feet above the level. There I
left them. We melted the glue from the tracks
by means of our steam heating apparatus, and were
soon booming merrily on our way to Rio Janeiro
when I was fêted and dined continuously for weeks
by the people, though strange to say the Emperor’s
behaviour toward me was very cool.”</p>
<p>“And did the robbers ever get down?” asked the
Twins.</p>
<p>“Yes, but not in a way they liked,” Mr. Munchausen
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page122" title="122"> </SPAN>replied. “The sun came out, and after a
week or two melted the glue that held them to the
precipice, whereupon they fell to its base and were
shattered into pieces so small there wasn’t an atom
of them to be found when a month later I passed
that way again on my return trip.”</p>
<p>“And didn’t the Emperor treat you well, Uncle
Munch?” asked the Imps.</p>
<p>“No—as I told you he was very cool towards
me, and I couldn’t understand it, then, but I do
now,” said the Baron. “You see he was very much
in need of ready cash, the Emperor was, and as the
taxpayers were already growling about the expenses
of the Government he didn’t dare raise the
money by means of a tax. So he arranged with the
desperadoes to stop the train, capture him, and
hold him for ransom. Then when the ransom came
along he was going to divide up with them. My
sudden appearance, coupled with my determination
to rescue him, spoiled his plan, you see, and so he
naturally wasn’t very grateful. Poor fellow, I was
very sorry for it afterward, because he really was
an excellent ruler, and his plan of raising the
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page123" title="123"> </SPAN>money he needed wasn’t a bit less honest than most
other ways rulers employ to obtain revenue for
State purposes.”</p>
<p>“Well, now, let’s get back to the runaway engine,”
said the Twins. “You can tell us more
about South America after you get through with
that. How did the engine come to run away?”</p>
<p>“It was simple enough,” said the Baron. “The
engineer, after starting the train came back into the
smoking car to get a light for his pipe, and while he
was there the coupling-pin between the engine and
the train broke, and off skipped the engine twice as
fast as it had been going before. The relief from the
weight of the train set its pace to a mile a minute
instead of a mile in two minutes, and there we were
at a dead stop in front of the Vitriol Station with
nothing to move us along. When the engineer saw
what had happened he fainted dead away, because
you know if a collision had occurred between the
runaway engine and the train ahead he would have
been held responsible.”</p>
<p>“Couldn’t the fireman stop the engine?” asked
the Twins.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page124" title="124"> </SPAN>“No. That is, it wouldn’t be his place to do it,
and these railway fellows are queer about that
sort of thing,” said the Baron. “The engineers
would go out upon a strike if the railroad were to
permit a stoker to manage the engine, and besides
that the stoker wouldn’t undertake to do it at a
stoker’s wages, so there wasn’t any help to be
looked for there. The conductor happened to be
nearsighted, and so he didn’t find out that the engine
was missing until he had wasted ten or twenty
minutes examining the brakes, by which time, of
course, the runaway was miles and miles up the
track. Then the engineer came to, and began to
wring his hands and moan in a way that was heart-rending.
The conductor, too, began to cry, and all
the brakemen left the train and took to the woods.
They weren’t going to have any of the responsibility
for the accident placed on their shoulders. Whether
they will ever turn up again I don’t know. But I
realised as soon as anybody else that something
had to be done, so I rushed into the telegraph office
and telegraphed to all the station masters between
the Vitriol Reservoir and Cimmeria to clear the
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page125" title="125"> </SPAN>track of all trains, freight, local, or express, or
somebody would be hurt, and that I myself would
undertake to capture the runaway engine. This
they all promised to do, whereupon I bade good-bye
to my fellow-travellers, and set off up the track
myself at full speed. In a minute I strode past
Sulphur Springs, covering at least eight ties at a
stretch. In two minutes I thundered past Lava
Hurst, where I learned that the engine had twenty
miles start of me. I made a rapid calculation mentally—I
always was strong in mental arithmetic,
which showed that unless I was tripped up or got
side-tracked somewhere I might overtake the runaway
before it reached Noxmere. Redoubling my
efforts, my stride increased to twenty ties at a
jump, and I made the next five miles in two minutes.
It sounds impossible, but really it isn’t so.
It is hard to run as fast as that at the start, but
when you have got your start the impetus gathered
in the first mile’s run sends you along faster in the
second, and so your speed increases by its own force
until finally you go like the wind. At Gasdale I
had gained two miles on the engine, at Sneakskill
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page126" title="126"> </SPAN>I was only fifteen miles behind, and upon my arrival
at Noxmere there was scarcely a mile between
me and the fugitive. Unfortunately a large crowd
had gathered at Noxmere to see me pass through,
and some small boy had brought a dog along with
him and the dog stood directly in my path. If I
ran over the dog it would kill him and might trip
me up. If I jumped with the impetus I had there
was no telling where I would land. It was a hard
point to decide either way, but I decided in favour
of the jump, simply to save the dog’s life, for I love
animals. I landed three miles up the road and
ahead of the engine, though I didn’t know that
until I had run ten miles farther on, leaving the
engine a hundred yards behind me at every stride.
It was at Miasmatica that I discovered my error
and then I tried to stop. It was almost in vain;
I dragged my feet over the ties, but could only slow
down to a three-minute gait. Then I tried to turn
around and slow up running backward; this
brought my speed down ten minutes to the mile,
which made it safe for me to run into a hay-stack
at the side of the railroad just this side of Cimmeria. <!-- Original location of illo10 -->
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page127" title="127"> </SPAN>Then, of course, I was all right. I could sit down
and wait for the engine, which came booming along
forty minutes later. As it approached I prepared
to board it, and in five minutes was in full control.
That made it easy enough for me to get back here
without further trouble. I simply reversed the
lever, and back we came faster than I can describe,
and just one hour and a half from the time of the
mishap the runaway engine was restored to its
deserted train and I reached your station here in
good order. I should have walked up, but for my
weariness after that exciting run, which as you see
left me very much out of breath, and which made it
necessary for me to hire that worn-out old hack
instead of walking up as is my wont.”</p>
<div id="illo10" class="illo">
<SPAN href="images/illo10.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/illo10-thumb.jpg" width-obs="300" height-obs="418" alt="Baron barrels into a haystack" /></SPAN>
<p class="caption">“This brought my speed down ten minutes
to the mile, which made it safe for me to run
into a haystack.” <span class="illo_ch">Chapter XI.</span></p>
</div>
<p>“Yes, we see you are out of breath,” said the
Twins, as the Baron paused. “Would you like to
lie down and take a rest?”</p>
<p>“Above all things,” said the Baron. “I’ll take
a nap here until your father returns,” which he proceeded
at once to do.</p>
<p>While he slept the two Imps gazed at him curiously,
Angelica, a little suspiciously.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page128" title="128"> </SPAN>“Bub,” said she, in a whisper, “do you think
that was a true story?”</p>
<p>“Well, I don’t know,” said Diavolo. “If anybody
else than Uncle Munch had told it, I wouldn’t
have believed it. But he hates untruth. I know
because he told me so.”</p>
<p>“That’s the way I feel about it,” said Angelica.
“Of course, he can run as fast as that, because he
is very strong, but what I can’t see is how an engine
ever could run away from its train.”</p>
<p>“That’s what stumps me,” said Diavolo.</p>
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