"Well, we"d just better make it," warned Bob. "Now I"m going down to the jam to see whether their alarm clock went off this morning.--Now, don"t slumber!"
After he had disappeared down the trail, Welton stepped into view.
"Oh, Charley!" he called.
One of the rivermen sprang ash.o.r.e.
"When did the rear leave Murdock"s?" he asked without preliminary.
"Thursday."
"You"ve made good time."
"Bet we have," replied Charley with pride.
"Who"s jam boss?"
"La.r.s.en."
"Who"s in charge of the river, then?" demanded Welton sharply.
"Why, young Orde!" replied the riverman, surprised.
"Since when?"
"Since he blew up Murdock"s piles."
"Oh, he did that, did he? I suppose he fired Darrell, too?"
"Sure. It was a peach of a sc.r.a.p."
"Sc.r.a.p?"
"Yep. That Orde boy is a wonder. He just _ruined_ Roaring d.i.c.k."
"He did, did he?" commented Welton. "Well, so long."
He followed Bob down the river trail. At the end of a half-mile he overtook the young fellow kneeling on a point gazing at a peeled stake planted at the edge of the river.
"Wish I knew how long this water was going to hold out," he murmured, as he heard a man pause behind him. "She"s dropped two inches by my patent self-adjusting gauge."
"Young man," said Welton, "are you on the payrolls of this company?"
Bob turned around, then instantly came to his feet.
"Oh, you"re here at last, Mr. Welton," he cried in tones of vast relief.
"Answer my question, please."
"What?" asked Bob with an expression of bewilderment.
"Are you on the payrolls of this company?"
"No, sir, of course not. You know that."
"Then what are you doing in charge of this river?"
"Why, don"t you see--"
"I see you"ve destroyed property and let us in for a big damage suit. I see you"ve discharged our employees without authority to do so. I see you"re bossing my men and running my drive without the shadow of a right."
"But something had to be done," expostulated Bob.
"What do you know about river-driving?" broke in Welton. "Not a thing."
"Men who told me did--"
"A bunch of river-hogs," broke in Welton contemptuously. "It strikes me, young man, that you have the most colossal cheek I"ve ever heard of."
But Bob faced him squarely.
"Look here," he said decidedly, "I"m technically wrong, and I know it.
But good men told me your measly old drive would hang if it stayed there two days longer; and I believed them, and I believe them yet. I don"t claim to know anything about river-driving, but here your confounded drive is well on its way. I kicked that drunk off the river because he was no good. I took hold here to help you out of a hole, and you"re out."
"But," said Welton, carefully, "don"t you see that you took chances on losing me a lot of property?"
Bob looked up at him a moment wearily.
"From my point of view I have nothing to regret," said he stiffly, and turned away.
The humorous lines about Welton"s eyes had been deepening throughout this interview.
"That tops it off," said he. "First you get me into trouble; then you fire my head man; then you run off with my property; finally you tell me to go to h.e.l.l! Son, you are a great man! Shake!"
Bob whirled in surprise to search Welton"s good-natured jolly face. The latter was smiling.
"Shake," he repeated, relapsing, as was his habit when much in earnest, into his more careless speech; "you done just right. Son, remember this:--it"s true--it ain"t _doing_ things that makes a man so much as _deciding_ things."
One of his great chuckles bubbled up.
"It took some nerve to jump in the way you did; and some sand to handle the flea-bitten bunch of river-hogs----"
"You"re mistaken about them," Bob broke in earnestly. "They"ve been maligned. They"re as good and willing a squad as I ever want to see----"
"Oh, sure," laughed Welton; "they"re a nice little job lot of tin angels. However, don"t worry. You sure saved the day, for I believe we would have hung if we hadn"t got over the riffles before this last drop of the water."
He began to laugh, at first, gently, then more and more heartily, until Bob stared at him with considerable curiosity and inquiry. Welton caught his look.