"No--I think not. Where do they store their explosives, Hiram?" I asked, not noticing the usual isolated brick or stone receptacle.
"They tunneled into the granite bluff about four hundred feet down the track. This road leads to it," he replied, pointing to a cart-track which led in that direction.
"You go and deliver your bills--I will stay and make a little diagram or map of the place." He glanced up the track at a heavily loaded locomotive laboring down toward the station, but when the engineer gave no signs of stopping he went over to the quarry office, while I took out my pencil and pad to make my map and notes.
As I drew with my pencil the full length of the pad to represent the railroad running midway between the river and the bluff, a most extraordinary thing occurred. I could not believe my senses. The point of my pencil sputtered like a parlor match, but before it reached the end of the pad it exploded like a firecracker and blackened the paper.
In an instant I recalled having used my pencil to gouge some of the sticky stuff off the box Hiram, Jr., was using as a seat. I then knew positively it was the lost case of dynamite.
CHAPTER IX
IN an instant my senses were flogged into a stupendous state of excitement, and my eyes must have bulged when I looked again at the blackened pad and then at the pencil point that had been blown off as though it had itself exploded. Then I thought of that crazy, love-sick Gus who had been driving nails into the case, and I sickened. Surely there is a Divine Providence that protects fools at least. Hiram had scratched matches against that case!
My knees shook and my hand trembled, and I do not think I could have uttered a sound. I looked for Strong. He was just coming out of the quarry office. I took one long step to rush back to the station, but saw the locomotive approaching, laboring hard with its immense load and throwing clouds of black smoke from its stack that slowly expanded into an immense dirigible in the still, sluggish atmosphere.
Should the conductor fling his report in at the window fastened to a spike or a piece of granite and hit that case of dynamite--what would happen? This had been done many times, and nothing occurred, but the law of average must prevail in due time. A sickening sensation took possession of me, and I became as rigid as stone. I felt as though ten pounds of lead was in the pit of my stomach; my mind was filled with monstrous forebodings, for one hundred persons were within easy range of that case of explosive--including Anna Bell. I could not prevent Hiram"s arrest and trial for criminal negligence if the facts became known. But Gus was the culprit, if any one.
As I looked back, Hiram was approaching. Somehow I did not want to tell him. It seemed unnecessary, and I could save him that much apprehension.
I must have looked strange to him when he came up to where I stood as one ossified. He took hold of my arm, and said fraternally: "Come on, Ben; you look as white as if you had seen a ghost." But I could not move. I only stared at the pa.s.sing train.
Hiram plucked my sleeve. "Ben, you look as though you were standing before a firing squad--just as I must have looked when the Gold-Beater told me to "git up and git.""
I could only raise my hand warningly and stare at the pa.s.sing train. It seemed to me the longest train I ever knew one locomotive to haul, and though it was moving at least twenty miles per hour it appeared to creep.
I raised my hand to my forehead and found it dripping with perspiration; Hiram grabbed my shoulders with both hands and shook me.
"Ben, have you gone stark mad?"
I had forgotten he was there and scarcely heard or felt him. I saw the way-car emerge from the trees and approach the station. I could not help raising my arm and point that way and did not lower it until we were both thrown violently to the ground.
It is useless to try to describe the crashing of the intonation on my ears. I thought my hearing was destroyed. Before the concussion threw us p.r.o.ne there was a fleeting impression of a dense red flame that came from the station. The instant the way-car pa.s.sed it was lifted from the track. I afterward learned it was detached from the cars ahead and rolled over twice.
The man who said there are words to describe everything groveled in ignorance. I saw Hiram running toward the station; he fairly flew, his legs moving rapidly as though motor-driven. I saw he did not even relax his speed when he ran around the deep hole where the station had stood a few moments before, but continued to D. R. Morgan"s store and beyond that to the residence--or maybe he was going to the river to do as he had advised the love-sick Gus. I only know what he told me about it afterward. How the conductor and rear brakeman, after being rattled about in the way-car as dice in a box, escaped with only bruises and cuts was a wonder to me, and when I finally learned that the fatalities were confined to a team of mules forced through the front of Morgan"s store, my relief was immense.
Gus escaped from the Morgan house in his night shirt, and ran down under the river bank, cowering and cringing, along with most of the black population. It was difficult to convince him he could go back to bed in safety. The darkies eventually realized that it was not Gabriel"s last call, and were coaxed away from the protecting bank to help remove the mules from the front of Morgan"s wrecked store.
When Hiram returned from the Morgan residence he was fairly composed. He came to me at once.
"This is pretty bad business; was any one killed?" he asked, bracing himself.
"No, but it is a marvel."
"They will blame me?"
"Yes, likely, at first. Make no statement to any one. Was your safe locked? How about cash and station records?"
"Yes, it is always locked; kept everything there since Gus acted luny; but hasn"t it been destroyed?"
"We"ll go and see."
The hole where once stood the depot would easily contain a freight house and more. Rails of the main track were ripped up and twisted as though made of wheat straw. We found the safe apparently intact, sticking out of the debris.
Railroad tickets were scattered about like fallen leaves. When he found his ticket stamp he was greatly relieved and almost laughed. How had he suddenly acquired such fort.i.tude and ac.u.men? Was it the Gold-Beater"s blood unleashed by work and decent living? When we found parts of the new typewriter he laughed grimly, tossing his head backward.
I thought it best for Hiram that he should not know how it happened until after he was grilled, as I knew he would soon be.
The Yazoo railroad did one thing quickly and well. In less than an hour they had a wrecker on the job, and by utilizing the outside track had established a detour which let Superintendent Kitch.e.l.l"s "special"
through from the north.
The wrecker reached into the debris with its long steel arm, picked up the safe, and swung it into the superintendent"s car. He told Hiram and Gus they were relieved, and to come with him to New Orleans.
Hiram obeyed the order without a murmur, but nevertheless took plenty of time to pack all of his belongings. He seemed to know he was through in Quarrytown. I suspected he was rather deliberate in bidding the Morgan family good-by, taking some time to do it, and was apparently much excited and flushed when he boarded the superintendent"s car and waved a cordial good-by to a girlish figure who stood in front of the Morgan store waving back at him.
CHAPTER X
THERE is something about the duties and ambitions of a railroad superintendent that make him wish to appear inscrutable. The reason, perhaps, is the man behind him who wants his job, or the man ahead whose job he wants--or both. Anyhow, an attempt at inscrutability is the typical refuge for the ignorant and the smaller the road the more futile the attempt. Though I established my ident.i.ty and purpose beyond a doubt, he at first refused to allow me pa.s.sage to New Orleans in his car. He seemed to be suspicious of me, perhaps that I intended to burglarize the safe, make off before his eyes with a locomotive or some of the numerous sc.r.a.p iron along the right-of-way. However, he finally became rational and reversed himself.
His car was divided about the center, one end being private to himself and his clerk. The other part was sort of a reception room, the "anxious" seat for subordinates. In this apartment they had placed the safe.
After we left Quarrytown, his undersized clerk emerged from the private quarters and requested Hiram to open the safe, which he did promptly and with a firm hand. The clerk took the contents to the superintendent.
Meanwhile Gus wore a very red face and sighed repeatedly, as though already on the way to the penitentiary instead of New Orleans.
After examination of Hiram"s records Gus was called in before the Superintendent and given the third degree. When he came out he was muchly upset and perspiring. Hiram, disgusted, looked upon him with contempt, which feeling was intensified when the flabby Gus dropped into a chair and glared back at him ominously. It may have been because of the high speed of the light engine and the solitary car, but I surely saw Gus"s knees knock together from sheer fright. He had likely overstated his alibi in an abandoned and frantic attempt to protect himself to Hiram"s disadvantage.
When the superintendent"s clerk finally came to the door and beckoned Hiram, the latter"s att.i.tude pleased me. Neither defiant nor disrespectful, he walked into the presence of his superior, and when he emerged from the interview he had not changed a hair.
Presently the little clerk stuck his head out of the dividing door and beckoned to me in the same curt manner he had signaled the two men who were under suspicion. I had no notion of being placed in the same category and made it clear to the clerk that such was the case. At once he became civil and led the way.
When I entered his sanctum the superintendent sat facing me at the flat top desk in the corner of the car. He was a short, stocky man, and evidenced much perturbation of mind by mopping his florid face. A Flounder had been clapped on his head and when it came away it brought all the hair under it, leaving only a slight fringe. His lips and cherubic mouth were pursed and screwed up to simulate an executive air.
As he jerked his thumb indicating a wicker chair opposite him, I noticed the little clerk sat at a small desk at the side of the car, with notebook and pencil poised significantly.
"What have you to say about this matter?" he asked without delay, withdrawing his eyes and winking violently as soon as they met mine.
"Nothing," I answered good naturedly.
"I understand you were here investigating the loss of the dynamite when the explosion occurred. Have you no theory as to how it occurred?"
"No, I have no theory: I _know_ how it occurred."
"Would you"--he hesitated, looking down and bringing his chubby hands together before him--"would you mind telling me what you know about it?"