Radway returned to camp by the 6th of January. He went on snowshoes
over the entire job; and then sat silently in the office smoking
"Peerless" in his battered old pipe. Dyer watched him amusedly,
secure in his grievance in case blame should be attached to him.
The jobber looked older. The lines of dry good-humor about his eyes
had subtly changed to an expression of pathetic anxiety. He attached
no blame to anybody, but rose the next morning at horn-blow, and the
men found they had a new master over them.
And now the struggle with the wilderness came to grapples. Radway
was as one possessed by a burning fever. He seemed everywhere at
once, always helping with his own shoulder and arm, hurrying eagerly.
For once luck seemed with him. The marsh was cut over; the "eighty"
on section eight was skidded without a break. The weather held cold
and clear.
Now it became necessary to put the roads in shape for hauling. All
winter the blacksmith, between his tasks of shoeing and mending,
had occupied his time in fitting the iron-work on eight log-sleighs
which the carpenter had hewed from solid sticks of timber. They were
tremendous affairs, these sleighs, with runners six feet apart, and
bunks nine feet in width for the reception of logs. The bunks were
so connected by two loosely-coupled rods that, when emptied, they
could be swung parallel with the road, so reducing the width of the
sleigh. The carpenter had also built two immense tanks on runners,
holding each some seventy barrels of water, and with holes so
arranged in the bottom and rear that on the withdrawal of plugs the
water would flood the entire width of the road. These sprinklers
were filled by horse power. A chain, running through blocks attached
to a solid upper framework, like the open belfry of an Italian
monastery, dragged a barrel up a wooden track from the water hole to
the opening in the sprinkler. When in action this formidable machine
weighed nearly two tons and resembled a moving house. Other men had
felled two big hemlocks, from which they had hewed beams for a V plow.
The V plow was now put in action. Six horses drew it down the road,
each pair superintended by a driver. The machine was weighted down
by a number of logs laid across the arms. Men guided it by levers,
and by throwing their weight against the fans of the plow. It was a
gay, animated scene this, full of the spirit of winter--the plodding,
straining horses, the brilliantly dressed, struggling men, the
sullen-yielding snow thrown to either side, the shouts, warnings,
and commands. To right and left grew white banks of snow. Behind
stretched a broad white path in which a scant inch hid the bare earth.
For some distance the way led along comparatively high ground. Then,
skirting the edge of a lake, it plunged into a deep creek bottom
between hills. Here, earlier in the year, eleven bridges had been
constructed, each a labor of accuracy; and perhaps as many swampy
places had been "corduroyed" by carpeting them with long parallel
poles. Now the first difficulty began.
Some of the bridges had sunk below the level, and the approaches
had to be corduroyed to a practicable grade. Others again were
humped up like tom-cats, and had to be pulled apart entirely. In
spots the "corduroy" had spread, so that the horses thrust their
hoofs far down into leg-breaking holes. The experienced animals
were never caught, however. As soon as they felt the ground giving
way beneath one foot, they threw their weight on the other.
Still, that sort of thing was to be expected. A gang of men who
followed the plow carried axes and cant-hooks for the purpose of
repairing extemporaneously just such defects, which never would
have been discovered otherwise than by the practical experience.
Radway himself accompanied the plow. Thorpe, who went along as one
of the "road monkeys," saw now why such care had been required of
him in smoothing the way of stubs, knots, and hummocks.
Down the creek an accident occurred on this account. The plow had
encountered a drift. Three times the horses had plunged at it, and
three times had been brought to a stand, not so much by the drag of
the V plow as by the wallowing they themselves had to do in the drift.
"No use, break her through, boys," said Radway. So a dozen men
hurled their bodies through, making an opening for the horses.
"Hi!Yup!" shouted the three teamsters, gathering up their reins.
The horses put their heads down and plunged. The whole apparatus
moved with a rush, men clinging, animals digging their hoofs in,
snow flying. Suddenly there came a check, then a crack, and then
the plow shot forward so suddenly and easily that the horses all
but fell on their noses. The flanging arms of the V, forced in a
place too narrow, had caught between heavy stubs. One of the arms
had broken square off.
There was nothing for it but to fell another hemlock and hew out
another beam, which meant a day lost. Radway occupied his men with
shovels in clearing the edge of the road, and started one of his
sprinklers over the place already cleared. Water holes of suitable
size had been blown in the creek bank by dynamite. There the
machines were filled. It was a slow process. Stratton attached
his horse to the chain and drove him back and forth, hauling the
barrel up and down the slideway. At the bottom it was capsized
and filled by means of a long pole shackled to its bottom and
manipulated by old man Heath. At the top it turned over by its
own weight. Thus seventy odd times.
Then Fred Green hitched his team on and the four horses drew the
creaking, cumbrous vehicle spouting down the road. Water gushed in
fans from the openings on either side and beneath; and in streams
from two holes behind. Not for an instant as long as the flow
continued dared the teamsters breathe their horses, for a pause
would freeze the runners tight to the ground. A tongue at either
end obviated the necessity of turning around.
While the other men hewed at the required beam for the broken V
plow, Heath, Stratton, and Green went over the cleared road-length
once. To do so required three sprinklerfuls. When the road should
be quite free, and both sprinklers running, they would have to keep
at it until after midnight.
And then silently the wilderness stretched forth her hand and pushed
these struggling atoms back to their place.
That night it turned warmer. The change was heralded by a shift of
wind. Then some blue jays appeared from nowhere and began to scream
at their more silent brothers, the whisky jacks.
"She's goin' to rain," said old Jackson. "The air is kind o' holler."
"I don' no," confessed Hines, "but she is. She jest feels that way."
In the morning the icicles dripped from the roof, and although the
snow did not appreciably melt, it shrank into itself and became
pock-marked on the surface.
"She's holdin' her own," said he, "but there ain't any use putting
more water on her. She ain't freezing a mite. We'll plow her out."
So they finished the job, and plowed her out, leaving exposed the
wet, marshy surface of the creek-bottom, on which at night a thin
crust formed. Across the marsh the old tramped road held up the
horses, and the plow swept clear a little wider swath.
"She'll freeze a little to-night," said Radway hopefully. "You
sprinkler boys get at her and wet her down."
Until two o'clock in the morning the four teams and the six men
creaked back and forth spilling hardly-gathered water--weird,
unearthly, in the flickering light of their torches. Then they
crept in and ate sleepily the food that a sleepy cookee set out
for them.
By morning the mere surface of this sprinkled water had frozen, the
remainder beneath had drained away, and so Radway found in his road
considerable patches of shell ice, useless, crumbling. He looked
in despair at the sky. Dimly through the gray he caught the tint
of blue.
The sun came out. Nut-hatches and wood-peckers ran gayly up the
warming trunks of the trees. Blue jays fluffed and perked and
screamed in the hard-wood tops. A covey of grouse ventured from the
swamp and strutted vainly, a pause of contemplation between each
step. Radway, walking out on the tramped road of the marsh, cracked
the artificial skin and thrust his foot through into icy water.
That night the sprinklers stayed in.
The devil seemed in it. If the thaw would only cease before the ice
bottom so laboriously constructed was destroyed! Radway vibrated
between the office and the road. Men were lying idle; teams were
doing the same. Nothing went on but the days of the year; and four
of them had already ticked off the calendar. The deep snow of the
unusually cold autumn had now disappeared from the tops of the
stumps. Down in the swamp the covey of partridges were beginning
to hope that in a few days more they might discover a bare spot in
the burnings. It even stopped freezing during the night. At times
Dyer's little thermometer marked as high as forty degrees.
"I often heard this was a sort 'v summer resort," observed Tom
Broadhead, "but danged if I knew it was a summer resort all the
year 'round."
The weather got to be the only topic of conversation. Each had his
say, his prediction. It became maddening. Towards evening the chill
of melting snow would deceive many into the belief that a cold snap
was beginning.
"She'll freeze before morning, sure," was the hopeful comment.
And then in the morning the air would be more balmily insulting
than ever.
"Old man is as blue as a whetstone," commented Jackson Hines, "an'
I don't blame him. This weather'd make a man mad enough to eat the
devil with his horns left on."
By and by it got to be a case of looking on the bright side of the
affair from pure reaction.
"I don't know," said Radway, "it won't be so bad after all. A
couple of days of zero weather, with all this water lying around,
would fix things up in pretty good shape. If she only freezes
tight, we'll have a good solid bottom to build on, and that'll be
quite a good rig out there on the marsh."
The inscrutable goddess of the wilderness smiled, and calmly,
relentlessly, moved her next pawn.
It was all so unutterably simple, and yet so effective. Something
there was in it of the calm inevitability of fate. It snowed.
All night and all day the great flakes zig-zagged softly down
through the air. Radway plowed away two feet of it. The surface
was promptly covered by a second storm. Radway doggedly plowed it
out again.
This time the goddess seemed to relent. The ground froze solid.
The sprinklers became assiduous in their labor. Two days later the
road was ready for the first sleigh, its surface of thick, glassy
ice, beautiful to behold; the ruts cut deep and true; the grades
sanded, or sprinkled with retarding hay on the descents. At the
river the banking ground proved solid. Radway breathed again, then
sighed. Spring was eight days nearer. He was eight days more behind.