It was ten days later when the band
dropped out of the mountains into the Murchison Pass—a
singular place for a train robbery, Andrew could not
help thinking. They were at the southwestern end
of the pass, where the mountains gave back in a broad
gap. Below them, not five miles away, was the
city of Gidding Creek; they could see its buildings
and parks tumbled over a big area, for there was a
full twenty-five thousand of inhabitants in Gidding
Creek. Indeed, the whole country was dotted with
villages and towns, for it was no longer a cattle region,
but a semifarming district cut up into small tracts.
One was almost never out of sight of at least one
house.
It worried Andrew, this closely built
country, and he knew that it worried the other men
as well; yet there had not been a single murmur from
among them as they jogged their horses on behind Allister.
Each of them was swathed from head to heels in a vast
slicker that spread behind, when the wind caught it,
as far as the tail of the horse. And the rubber
creaked and rustled softly. Whatever they might
have been inclined to think of this daring raid into
the heart of a comparatively thickly populated country,
they were too accustomed to let the leader do their
thinking for them to argue the point with him.
And Andrew followed blindly enough. He saw, indeed,
one strong point in their favor. The very fact
that the train was coming out of the heart of the mountains,
through ravines which afforded a thousand places for
assault, would make the guards relax their attention
as they approached Gidding Creek. And, though
there were many people in the region, they were a fat
and inactive populace, not comparable with the lean
fellows of the north.
There was bitter work behind them.
Ten days before they had made a feint to the north
of Martindale that was certain to bring out Hal Dozier;
then they doubled about and had plodded steadily south,
choosing always the most desolate ground for their
travel. There had been two changes of horses
for the others, but Andrew kept to Sally. To her
that journey was play after the labor she had passed
through before; the iron dust of danger and labor
was in her even as it was in Andrew. Three in
all that party were fresh at the end of the long trail.
They were Allister, Sally, and Andrew. The others
were poisoned with weariness, and their tempers were
on edge; they kept an ugly silence, and if one of them
happened to jostle the horse of the other, there was
a flash of teeth and eyes—a silent warning.
The sixth man was Scottie, who had long since been
detached from the party. His task was one which,
if he failed in it, would make all that long ride
go for nothing. He was to take the train far
up, ride down as blind baggage to the Murchison Pass,
and then climb over the tender into the cab, stick
up the fireman and the engineer, and make them bring
the engine to a halt at the mouth of the pass, with
Gidding Creek and safety for all that train only five
minutes away. There was a touch of the Satanic
in this that pleased Andrew and made Allister show
his teeth in self-appreciation.
So perfectly had their journey been
timed that the train was due in a very few minutes.
They disposed their horses in the thicket, and then
went back to take up their position in the ambush.
The plan of work was carefully divided. To Jeff
Rankin, that nicely accurate shot and bulldog fighter,
fell what seemed to be a full half of the total risk
and labor. He was to go to the blind side of
the job. In other words, he was to guard the
opposite side of the train to that on which the main
body advanced. It was always possible that when
a train was held up the passengers—at least
the unarmed portion, and perhaps even some of the
armed men—would break away on the least
threatened side. Jeff Rankin on that blind side
was to turn them back with a hurricane of bullets from
his magazine rifle. Firing from ambush and moving
from place to place, he would seem more than one man.
Probably three or four shots would turn back the mob.
In the meantime, having made the engineer and fireman
stop the train, Scottie would be making them continue
to flood the fire box. This would delay the start
of the engine on its way and gain precious moments
for the fugitives. Two of the band would be thus
employed while Larry la Roche went through the train
and turned out the passengers. There was no one
like Larry for facing a crowd and cowing it. His
spectral form, his eyes burning through the holes in
his mask, stripped them of any idea of resistance.
While the crowd turned out, Andrew,
standing opposite the middle of the train, rifle in
hand, would line them up, while Allister and Joe Clune
attended to overpowering the guards of the safe, and
Larry la Roche came out and went through the line
of passengers for personal valuables, and Clune and
Allister fixed the soup to blow the safe. Last
of all, there was the explosion, the carrying off
of the coin in its canvas sacks to the horses.
Each man was to turn his horse in a direction carefully
specified, and, riding in a roundabout manner, which
was also named, he was to keep on until he came, five
days later, to a deserted, ruinous shack far up in
the mountains on the side of the Twin Eagles peaks.
These were the instructions which
Allister went over carefully with each member of his
crew before they went to their posts. There had
been twenty rehearsals before, and each man was letter
perfect. They took their posts, and Allister
came to the side of Andrew among the trees.
“How are you?” he asked.
“Scared to death,” said
Andrew truthfully. “I’d give a thousand
dollars, if I had it, to be free of this job.”
Andrew saw that hard glint come in
the eyes of the leader.
“You’ll do—later,”
nodded Allister. “But keep back from the
crowd. Don’t let them see you get nervous
when they turn out of the coaches. If you show
a sign of wavering they might start something.
Once they make a surge, shooting won’t stop
’em.”
Andrew nodded. There was more
practical advice on the heels of this. Then they
stood quietly and waited.
For days and days a northeaster had
been blowing; it had whipped little drifts of rain
and mist that stung the face and sent a chill to the
bone, and, though there had been no actual downpour,
the cold and the wet had never broken since the journey
started. Now the wind came like a wolf down the
Murchison Pass, howling and moaning. Andrew, closing
his eyes, felt that the whole thing was dreamlike.
Presently he would open his eyes and find himself
back beside the fire in the house of Uncle Jasper,
with the old man prodding his shoulder and telling
him that it was bedtime. When he opened his eyes,
in fact, they fell upon a solitary pine high up on
the opposite slope, above the thicket where Jeff Rankin
was hiding. It was a sickly tree, half naked of
branches, and it shivered like a wretched animal in
the wind. Then a new sound came down the pass,
wolflike, indeed; it was repeated more clearly—the
whistle of a train.
It was the signal arranged among them
for putting on the masks, and Andrew hastily adjusted
his.
“Did you hear that?” asked
Allister as the train hooted in the distance again.
Andrew turned and started at the ghostly
thing which had been the face of the outlaw a moment
before; he himself must look like that, he knew.
“What?” he asked.
“That voicelike whistle,”
said Allister. “There’s no luck in
this day—for me.”
“You’ve listened to Larry
la Roche too much,” said Andrew. “He’s
been growling ever since we started on this trail.”
“No, no!” returned Allister.
“It’s another thing, an older thing than
Larry la Roche. My mother—”
He stopped. Whatever it was that
he was about to say, Andrew was never to hear it.
The train had turned the long bend above, and now the
roar of its wheels filled the canyon and covered the
sound of the wind.
It looked vast as a mountain as it
came, rocking perceptibly on the uneven roadbed.
It rounded the curve, the tail of the train flicked
around, and it shot at full speed straight for the
mouth of the pass. How could one man stop it?
How could five men attack it after it was stopped?
It was like trying to storm a medieval fortress with
a popgun.
The great black front of the engine
came rocking toward them, gathering impetus on the
sharp grade. Had Scottie missed his trick?
But when the thunder of the iron on iron was deafening
Andrew, and the engine seemed almost upon them, there
was a cloud of white vapor that burst out on either
side of it and the brakes were jumped on; the wheels
skidded, screaming on the tracks. The engine
lurched past; Andrew caught a glimpse of Scottie,
a crouched, masked form in the cab of the engine,
with a gun in either hand. For Scottie was one
of the few natural two-gun men that Andrew was ever
to know. The engineer and the fireman he saw
only as two shades before they were whisked out of
his view. The train rumbled on; then it went
from half speed to a stop with one jerk that brought
a cry from the coaches. During the next second
there was the successive crashing of couplings as
the coaches took up their slack.
Andrew, stepping out with his rifle
balanced in his hands, saw Larry la Roche whip into
the rear car. Then he himself swept the windows
of the train, blurred by the mist, with the muzzle
of his gun, keeping the butt close to his shoulder,
ready for a swift snapshot in any direction. In
fact, his was that very important post, the reserve
force, which was to come instantly to the aid of any
overpowered section of the active workers. He
had rebelled against this minor task, but Allister
had assured him that, in former times, it was the
place which he took himself to meet crises in the
attack.
The leader had gone with Joe Clune
straight for the front car. How would they storm
it? Two guards, armed to the teeth, would be in
it, and the door was closed.
But the guards had no intention to
remain like rats in a trap, while the rest of the
train was overpowered and they themselves were blasted
into small bits with a small charge of soup.
The door jerked open, the barrels of two guns protruded.
Andrew, thrilling with horror, recognized one as a
sawed-off shotgun. He saw now the meaning of the
manner in which Allister and Clune made their attack.
For Allister had run slowly straight for the door,
while Clune skirted in close to the cars, going more
swiftly. As the gun barrels went up Allister plunged
headlong to the ground, and the volley of shot missed
him cleanly; but Clune the next moment leaped out
from the side of the car, and, thereby getting himself
to an angle from which he could deliver a cross fire,
pumped two bullets through the door. Andrew saw
a figure throw up its arms, a shadow form in the interior
of the car, and then a man pitched out headlong through
the doorway and flopped with horrible limpness on the
roadbed. While this went on Allister had snapped
a shot, while he still lay prone, and his single bullet
brought a scream. The guards were done for.
Two deaths, Andrew supposed.
But presently a man was sent out of the car at the
point of Clune’s revolver. He climbed down
with difficulty, clutching one hand with the other.
He had been shot in the most painful place in the
body—the palm of the hand. Allister
turned over the other form with a brutal carelessness
that sickened Andrew. But the man had been only
stunned by a bullet that plowed its way across the
top of his skull. He sat up now with a trickle
running down his face. A gesture from Andrew’s
rifle made him and his companion realize that they
were covered, and, without attempting any further
resistance, they sat side by side on the ground and
tended to each other’s wounds—a ludicrous
group for all their suffering.
In the meantime, Clune and Allister
were at work in the car; the water was hissing in
the fire box as a vast cloud of steam came rushing
out around the engine; the passengers were pouring
out of the cars. They acted like a group of actors,
carefully rehearsed for the piece. Not once did
Andrew have to speak to them, while they ranged in
a solid line, shoulder to shoulder, men, women, children.
And then Larry la Roche went down the line with a
saddlebag and took up the collection. “Passin’
the hat so often has give me a religious touch, ladies
and gents,” Andrew heard the ruffian say.
“Any little contributions I’m sure grateful
for, and, if anything’s held back, I’m
apt to frisk the gent that don’t fork over.
Hey, you, what’s that lump inside your coat?
Lady, don’t lie. I seen you drop it inside
your dress. Why, it’s a nice little set
o’ sparklers. That ain’t nothin’
to be ashamed of. Come on, please; a little more
speed. Easy there, partner; don’t take both
them hands down at once. You can peel the stuff
out of your pockets with one hand, I figure.
Conductor, just lemme see your wallet. Thanks!
Hate to bother you, ma’am, but you sure ain’t
traveling on this train with only eighty-five cents
in your pocketbook. Just lemme have a look at
the rest. See if you can’t find it in your
stocking. No, they ain’t anything here
to make you blush. You’re among friends,
lady; a plumb friendly crowd. Your poor old pa
give you this to go to school on, did he? Son,
you’re gettin’ a pile more education out
of this than you would in college. No, honey,
you just keep your locket. It ain’t worth
five dollars. Did you? That jeweler ought
to have my job, ’cause he sure robbed you!
You call that watch an heirloom? Heirloom is my
middle name, miss. Just get them danglers out’n
your ears, lady. Thanks! Don’t hurry,
mister; you’ll bust the chain.”
His monologue was endless; he had
a comment for every person in the line, and he seemed
to have a seventh sense for concealed articles.
The saddlebag was bulging before he was through.
At the same time Allister and Clune jumped from the
car and ran. Larry la Roche gave the warning.
Every one crouched or lay down. The soup exploded.
The top of the car lifted. It made Andrew think,
foolishly enough, of someone tipping a hat. It
fell slowly, with a crash that was like a faint echo
of the explosion. Clune ran back, and they could
hear his shrill yell of delight: “It ain’t
a safe!” he exclaimed. “It’s
a baby mint!”
And a baby mint it was! It was
a gold shipment. Gold coin runs about ninety
pounds to ten thousand dollars, and there was close
to a hundred pounds apiece for each of the bandits.
It was the largest haul Allister’s gang had
ever made. Larry la Roche left the pilfering of
the passengers and went to help carry the loot.
They brought it out in little loose canvas bags and
went on the run with it to the horses.
Someone was speaking. It was
the gray-headed man with the glasses and the kindly
look about the eyes. “Boys, it’s the
worst little game you’ve ever worked. I
promise you we’ll keep on your trail until we’ve
run you all into the ground. That’s really
something to remember. I speak for Gregg and
Sons.”
“Partner,” said Scottie
Macdougal from the cab, where he still kept the engineer
and fireman covered, “a little hunt is like an
after-dinner drink to me.”
To the utter amazement of Andrew the
whole crowd—the crowd which had just been
carefully and systematically robbed—burst
into laughter. But this was the end. There
was Allister’s whistle; Jeff Rankin ran around
from the other side of the train; the gang faded instantly
into the thicket. Andrew, as the rear guard—his
most ticklish moment—backed slowly toward
the trees. Once there was a waver in the line,
such as precedes a rush. He stopped short, and
a single twitch of his rifle froze the waverers in
their tracks.
Once inside the thicket a yell came
from the crowd, but Andrew had whirled and was running
at full speed. He could hear the others crashing
away. Sally, as he had taught her, broke into
a trot as he approached, and the moment he struck
the saddle she was in full gallop. Guns were
rattling behind him; random shots cut the air sometimes
close to him, but not one of the whole crowd dared
venture beyond that unknown screen of trees.