Slingerland appeared younger to Neale. The burden of loneliness did
not weigh upon him, and the habit of silence had been broken. Neale
guessed why, and was actually jealous.
"Wal, it's beyond my calculatin'," the trapper said, out by the
spring, where Neale followed him. "She jest changed thet's all. Not
so much at first, though she sparked up after I give her your ring.
I reckon it" come little by little. An' one day, why, the cabin was
full of sunshine! ... Since then I've seen how she's growed an'
brightened. Workin', runnin' after me--an' always watchin' fer you.
Allie's changed to what she is now. Onct, fur back, I recollect she
said she had you to live fer. Mebbe thet's the secret. Anyhow, she
loves you as I never seen any man loved.... An', son, I reckon you
oughter be somewhars near the kingdom of heaven!"
Neale stole oil by himself and walked in the twilight. The air was
warm and sultry, full of fragrance and the low chirp of crickets.
Within his breast was a full uneasy sensation of imminent
catastrophe. Something was rising in him--great--terrible--precious.
It bewildered him to try to think of himself, of his strange
emotions, when his mind seemed to hold only Allie.
What then had happened? After a long absence up in the mountains he
had returned to Slingerland's valley home, and to the little girl he
had rescued and left there. He had left her frail, sick-minded,
silent, somber, a pale victim to a horrible memory. He had found her
an amazing contrast to what she had been in the past. She had grown
strong, active, swift. She was as lovely as a wild rose. No dream of
his idle fancy, but a fact! Then last--stirring him even as he tried
to clarify and arrange this magic, this mystery--had come the
unbelievable, the momentous and dazzling assurance that she loved
him. It was so plain that it seemed unreal. While near her he saw
it, yet could not believe his eyes; he felt it, but doubted his
sensibilities. But now, away from the distraction of her presence
and with Slingerland's eloquent words ringing in his ears, he
realized the truth. Love of him had saved the girl's mind and had
made her beautiful and wonderful. He had heard of the infinite
transforming power of love; here in Allie Lee was its manifestation.
Whether or not he deserved such a blessing was not the question. It
was his, and he felt unutterably grateful and swore he would be
worthy of this great gift.
Darkness had set in when Neale returned to the cabin, the interior
of which was lighted by blazing sticks in a huge stone fireplace.
Slingerland was in the shadow, busy as usual, but laughing at some
sally of Larry's. The cowboy and Allie, however, were in plain
sight. Neale needed only one look at Larry to divine what had come
over that young man. Allie appeared perplexed.
"He objects to my calling him Mr. King and even Larry," she said.
"Allie, this cowboy is a bad fellow with guns, ropes, horses--and I
suspect with girls," replied Neale, severely.
"Neale, he doesn't look bad," she rejoined. "You're fooling me....
He wants me to call him Reddy."
"Ahuh!" grunted Neale. He laughed grimly at himself, for again he
had felt a pang of jealousy. He knew what to expect from Larry or
any other young man who ever had the wonderful good luck to get near
Allie Lee. "All right, call him Reddy," he went on. "I guess I can
allow my future wife so much familiarity with my pard."
This confused Allie out of her sweet gravity, and she blushed.
"Shore you're mighty kind," drawled Larry, recovering. "More 'n I
reckoned on from a fellar who's shore lost his haid."
"I've lost more 'n that," retorted Neale, "and I'm afraid a certain
wild young cowboy I know has lost as much."
"Wal, I reckon somethin' abbot this heah place of Slingerland's
draws on a fellar," admitted Larry, resignedly.
Allie did not long stay embarrassed by their sallies.
"See heah, Allie, if you call me Reddy an' him only Neale--why he's
a-goin' to pitch into me," interrupted Larry, with twinkling eyes.
"An' he's shore a bad customer when he's r'iled."
"Allie, my name is Warren," said Neale. "You've forgotten."
"Oh! ... Well, it's always been Neale--and always will be."
Larry rose and stretched his long arms for the pipe on the rude
stone chimney.
"Slingerland," he drawled, "these heah young people need to find out
who they are. An' I reckon we'd do wal to go out an' smoke an'
talk."
The trapper came forth from the shadows, and as he filled his pipe
his keen, bright gaze shifted from the task to his friends.
"It's good to see you an' hyar you," he said. "I was a youngster
once I missed--but thet's no matter.... Live while you may! ...
Larry, come with me. I've got a trap to set yit."
"Wal, child, any excuse is better 'n none. Neale wouldn't never git
to hyar you say all thet sweet talk as is comin' to him--if two old
fools hung round."
"Slingerland, I've throwed a gun for less 'n thet," drawled Larry.
"Aboot the fool part I ain't shore, but I was twenty-five yesterday-
-an' I'm sixteen to-day."
They lit their pipes with red embers scraped from the fire, and with
wise nods at Neale and Allie passed out into the dark.
Allie's eyes were upon Neale, with shy, eloquent intent, and
directly the others had departed she changed her seat to one close
to Neale; she nestled against his shoulder, her face to the fire.
"They thought we wanted to make love, didn't they?" she said,
dreamily.
He was intensely fascinated. Did she want him to make love to her? A
look at her face was enough to rebuke him for the thought. The
shadows from the flickering fire played over her.
"Tell me all about yourself," she said. "Then about your work."
Neale told all that he thought would interest her about his youth in
the East with a widowed mother, the home that was broken up after
she died, and his working his way through a course of civil
engineering.
"I was twenty when I first read about this U. P. railroad project,"
he went on. "That was more than three years ago. It decided me on my
career. I determined to be an engineer and be in the building of the
road. No one had any faith in the railroad. I used to be laughed at.
But I stuck. And--well, I had to steal some rides to get as far west
as Omaha.
"That was more than a year ago. I stayed there--waiting. Nothing was
sure, except that the town grew like a mushroom. It filled with
soldiers--and the worst crowd I ever saw. You can bet I was shaky
when I finally got an audience with General Lodge and his staff.
They had an office in a big storehouse. The place was full of men--
soldiers and tramps. It struck me right off what a grim and
discouraged bunch those engineers looked. I didn't understand them,
but I do now.... Well, I asked for a job. Nobody appeared to hear
me. It was hard to make yourself heard. I tried again--louder. An
old engineer, whom I know now--Henney--waved me aside. Just as if a
job was unheard of!"
Neale quickened and warmed as he progressed, aware now of a little
hand tight in his, of an interest that would have made any story-
telling a pleasure.
"Well, I felt. sick. Then mad. When I get mad I do things. I yelled
at that bunch: 'Here, you men! I've walked and stole rides to get
here. I'm a surveyor. You're going to build a railroad. I want a job
and I'm going to get it.'
"My voice quieted the hubbub. The old engineer, Henney, looked
queerly at me.
"'Young man, there's not going to be any railroad.'
"Then I blurted out that there was going to be a railroad. Some one
spoke up: 'Who said that? Fetch him here.' Pretty soon I was looking
at Major-General Lodge. He was just from the war and he looked it.
Stern and dark, with hard lines and keen eyes. He glanced me over.
"'There is going to be a railroad?' he questioned sharply.
"'Of course there is,' I replied. I felt foolish, disappointed.
"'You're right,' he said, and I'll never forget his eyes.
'I can use a few more young fellows like you.' And that's how I got
on the staff.
"Well, we ran a quick survey west to the Bad Lands--for it was out
here that we must find success or failure. And Allie, it's all been
like the biggest kind of an adventure. The troops and horses and
camps and trails--the Indian country with its threats from out of
the air--the wild places with their deer, buffalo, panthers,
trappers like Slingerland, scouts, and desperadoes. It began to get
such a hold on me that I was wild. That might have been bad for me
but for my work. I did well. Allie, I ran lines for the U. P. that
no other engineer could run."
Neale paused, as much from the squeeze Allie suddenly gave him as
for an instant's rest to catch his breath.
"I mean I had the nerve to tackle cliffs and dangerous slopes," he
went on. Then he told how Larry Red King had saved his life, and
that recollection brought back his service to the cowboy; then
naturally followed the two dominating incidents of the summer.
Allie lifted a blanched face and darkening eyes. "Neale! You were in
danger."
"He saved you again! ... I--I'll never forget that."
"Anyway, we're square, for he'd have got shot sure the day the
Indian sneaked up on him." Allie shuddered and shrank back to Neale,
while he hastily resumed his story. "We're great pards now, Red and
I. He doesn't say much, but his acts tell. He will not let me alone.
He follows me everywhere. It's a joke among the men.... Well Allie,
it seems unbelievable that we have crossed the mountains and the
desert--grade ninety feet to the mile! The railroad can and will be
built. I wish I could tell you how tremendously all this has worked
upon me--upon all the engineers. But somehow I can't. It chokes me.
The idea is big. But the work--what shall I call that? ... Allie, if
you can, imagine some spirit seizing hold of you and making you see
difficulties as joys--impossible tasks as only things to strike fire
from genius, perils of death as merely incidents of daring adventure
to treasure in memory--well that's something like it. The idea of
the U. P. has got me. I believe in it. I shall see it
accomplished.... I'll live it all."
Allie moved her head on his shoulder, and, looking up at him with
eyes that made him ashamed of his egotism, she said, "Then, when
it's done you'll be chief of engineers or superintendent of
maintenance of way?"
"Allie, I hope so," he replied, thrilling at her faith. "I'll work--
I'll get some big position."
Next day ushered in for Neale a well-earned rest, and he proceeded
to enjoy it to the full.
The fall had always been Neale's favorite season. Here, as
elsewhere, the aspect of it was flaming and golden, but different
from what he had known hitherto. Dreaming silence of autumn held the
wildness and loneliness of the Wyoming hills. The sage shone gray
and purple, the ridges yellow and gold; the valleys were green and
amber and red. No dust, no heat, no wind--a clear, blue, cloudless
sky, sweet odors in the still air--it was a beautiful time.
Days passed and nights passed, as if on wings. Every waking hour
drew him closer to this incomparable girl who had arisen upon his
horizon like a star. He knew the hour was imminent when he must read
his heart. He fought it off; he played with his bliss. Allie was now
his shadow instead of the faithful Larry, although the cowboy was
often with them, adapting himself to the changed conditions, too big
and splendid to be envious or jealous. They fished down the brook,
and always at the never-to-be-forgotten ford he would cross first
and turn to see her follow. She could never understand why Neale
would delight in carrying her across at other points, yet made her
ford this one by herself.
"It's such a bother to take off moccasins and leggings," she would
say.
They rode horseback up and down the trails that Slingerland assured
them were safe. And it was the cowboy Larry who lent his horse and
taught her a flying mount; he said she would make a rider.
In the afternoons they would climb the high ridge, and on the summit
sit in the long whitening grass and gaze out over the dim and purple
vastness of the plains. In the twilight they walked under the pines.
When night set in and the air grew cold they would watch the ruddy
fire on the hearth and see pictures of the future there, and feel a
warmth on hand and cheek that was not all from the cheerful blaze.
Neale found it strange to realize how his attachment for Larry had
changed to love. All Neale's spiritual being was undergoing a great
and vital change, but this was not the reason he loved Larry. It was
because of Allie. The cowboy was a Texan and he had inherited the
Southerner's fine and chivalric regard for women. Neale never knew
whether Larry had ever had a sister or a sweetheart or a girl
friend. But at sight Larry had become Allie's own; not a brother or
a friend or a lover, but something bigger and higher. The man
expanded under her smiles, her teasing, her playfulness, her
affection. Neale had no pang in divining the love Larry bore Allie.
Drifter, cowboy, gun-thrower, man-killer, whatever he had been, the
light of this girl's beautiful eyes, her voice, her touch, had
worked the last marvel in man--forgetfulness of self. And so Neale
loved him.
It made Neale quake inwardly to think of the change being wrought in
himself. It made him thoughtful of many things. There was much in
life utterly new to him. He had listened to a moan in his keen ear;
he had felt a call of something helpless; he had found a gleam of
chestnut hair; he had stirred two other men to help him befriend a
poor, broken-hearted, half-crazed orphan girl. And, lo! the world
had changed, his friends had grown happier in their unloved lives, a
strange strength had come to him, and, sweetest, most wonderful of
all, in the place of the helpless and miserable waif appeared a
woman, lovely of face and form, with only a ghost of sadness
haunting her eyes, a woman adorable and bright, with the magic of
love on her lips.
October came. In the early morning and late afternoon a keen cold
breath hung in the air. Slingerland talked of a good prospect for
fur. He chopped great stores of wood. Larry climbed the hills with
his rifle. Neale walked the trails hand in hand with Allie.
He had never sought to induce her to speak of her past, though at
times the evidence of refinement and education and mystery around
her made strong appeal to him. She could, tell her story whenever
she liked or never--it did not greatly matter.
Then,--one day, quite naturally, but with a shame she did not try to
conceal, she confided to him part of the story her mother had told
her that dark night when the Sioux were creeping upon the caravan.
Neale was astounded, agitated, intensely concerned.
"How should I know? It was in New Orleans that mother ran off from
him. I--I never blamed her--since she said what she said.... Do you?
Will this--make any difference to you?"
"My God, no! But I'm so--so thunderstruck.... This man--this Durade-
-tell me more of him."
"He was a Spaniard of high degree, an adventurer, a gambler. He was
mad to gamble. He forced my mother to use her beauty to lure men to
his gambling-hell.... Oh, it's terrible to remember. She said he
meant to use me for that purpose. That's why she left him. But in a
way he was good to me. I can see so many things now to prove he was
wicked.... And mother said he would follow her--track her to the end
of the world."
"Allie! If he should find you some day!" exclaimed Neale, hoarsely.
She put her arms up round his neck. And that, following a terrible
pang of dread in Neale's breast, was too much for him. The tide
burst. Love had long claimed him, but its utterance had been
withheld. He had been happy in her happiness. He had trained himself
to spare her.
"But some day--I'll be--your wife," she whispered.
In the sweetness of that embrace, in the simplicity and answering
passion of her kiss, in the overwhelming sense of her gift of
herself, heart and soul, he found a strength, a restraint, a nobler
fire that gave him peace.
Allie was to amaze Neale again before the sun set on that memorable
day.
"I forgot to tell you about the gold!" she exclaimed, her face
paling.
"Listen! Horn had gold. How much I don't know. But it must have been
a great deal. He owned the caravan with which we left California.
Horn grew to like me. But he hated all the rest.... That night we
ended the awful ride! The wagons stalled! ... The grayness of dawn--
the stillness--oh, I feel them now! ... That terrible Indian yell
rang out. All my life I'll hear it! ... Then Horn dug a hole. He
buried his gold.... And he said whoever escaped could have it. He
had no hope."
"Allie, you're a mine of surprises. Buried gold! What next?"
"Neale, I wonder--did the Sioux find that gold?" she asked.
"It's not likely. There certainly wasn't any hole left open around
that place. I saw every inch of ground under those trees.... Allie,
I'll go there to-morrow and hunt for it."
"Let me go," she implored. "Ah! I forgot! No--no! ... There must be
my mother's grave."
"Yes, it's there. I saw. I will mark it.... Allie, how glad I am
that you can speak of her--of her past--her grave there without
weakening. You are brave! But forget ... Allie, if I find that gold
it'll be yours."
Next day, without acquainting Slingerland or Larry with his purpose,
Neale rode down the valley trail.
He expected the road to cross the old St. Vrain and Laramie Trail,
but if it did cross he could not find the place. It was easy to lose
bearings in these hills. Neale had to abandon the hunt for that day,
and turning back, with some annoyance at his failure, he decided
that it would be best to take Larry and Slingerland into his
confidence.
"I reckon I'd done thet anyhow--without knowin' you was rich--if it
hadn't been fer this heah U. P. surveyor fellar."
And then the joke was on Allie, as her blushes proved. Neale came to
her rescue and told the story of Horn's buried gold, and of his own
search that day for the place.
"Shore I'll find it," declared Larry. "We'll go to-morrow...."
Neale listened while he was watching Allie's parted lips and
speaking eyes. A low, whining wind swept through the trees and over
the roof of the cabin.
Neale went outside. The wind struck him cold and keen, with a sharp
edge to it. The stars showed pale and dim through hazy atmosphere.
Assuredly there was a storm brewing. Neale returned to the fire,
shivering and holding his palms to the heat.
"Cold, you bet, with the wind rising," he said. "But, Slingerland,
suppose it does snow. Can't we go, anyhow?"
"It ain't likely. You see, it snows up hyar. Mebbe we'll be snowed
in fer a spell. An' thet valley is open down thar. In deep snow what
could we find? We'll wait an' see."
On the morrow a storm raged and all was dim through a ghostly,
whirling pall. The season of drifting snow had come, and Neale's
winter work had begun.
Five miles by short cut over the ridges curved the long survey over
which Neale must keep watch; and the going and coming were Neale's
hardest toil. It was laborsome to trudge up and down in soft snow.
That first snow of winter, however, did not last long, except in the
sheltered places. Fortunately for Neale, almost all of his section
of the survey ran over open ground. But this fact augured seriously
for his task when the dry and powdery snow of midwinter began to
fall and sweep before the wind and drift over the lee side of the
ridge.
During the first week of tramping he thoroughly learned the lay of
the land, the topography of his particular stretch of Sherman Pass.
And one day, taking an early start from camp, he set forth to make
his first call upon his nearest associate in this work, the engineer
Service. Once high up on the pass he found the snow had not all
melted, and still higher it lay white and unbroken as far as he
could see. The air was keener up there. Neale gathered that Service
would have a colder job than his own, if it was not so long and
hard.
He found Service at home in his dugout, warm and comfortable and in
excellent spirits. They compared notes, and even in this early work
they decided it would be a wise plan for the engineering staff to
study the problem of drifting snow.
Neale enjoyed a meal with Service, and then, early in the afternoon,
he started back on his long tramp homeward. He gathered from his
visit that Service did not mind the lonesomeness, but that he did
suffer from the cold more than he had expected. Service was not an
active, full-blooded man, and Neale had some misgivings. Judging
from the trapper's remarks, winter high up in the Wyoming hills was
something to dread.
November brought the real storms--the gray banks of rolling cloud,
the rain and sleet and snow and ice, and the wind. Neale concluded
he had never before faced a real wind, and when, one day on a ridge-
top, he was blown off his feet he was sure of it. Some days he could
not go out at all. Other days it was not imperative, for it was only
during and after snow-storms that he could make observations. He
learned to travel on snow-shoes, and ten miles of such traveling up
and down the steep slopes was the most killing hard toil he had ever
attempted. After such trips he would reach the cabin utterly fagged
out, too tired to eat, too weary, to talk, almost too dead to hear
the solicitations of his friends or to appreciate Allie's tender,
anxious care. If he had not been strong and robust and in good
training to begin with, he would have failed under the burden.
Gradually he grew used to the strenuous toil, and became hardened,
tough, and enduring.
Though Neale hated the cold and the wind, there were moments when an
exceedingly keen exhilaration uplifted him. These experiences
visited him while on the heights, looking far over the snowy ridges
to, the white, monotonous plain or up toward the shining peaks. All
seemed barren and cold. He never saw a living creature or a track
upon those slopes. When the sun shone all was so dazzlingly,
glaringly white that his eyes were struck by temporary blindness.
Upon one of the milder days, which were getting rarer in mid-
December, Neale again visited his comrade on the summit. He found
Service in bad shape. In falling down a slippery ledge he had
injured or broken his lame leg. Neale, with great concern, tried to
ascertain the nature and extent of the harm done, but he was unable
to do so. Service was practically helpless, although not suffering
any great pain. The two of them decided, at length, that he had not
broken any bones, but that it was necessary to move him to where he
could be waited upon and treated, or else some one must be brought
in to take care of him. Neale deliberated a moment.
"I'll tell you what," he said, finally. "You can be moved down to
Slingerland's cabin without pain to you. I'll get Slingerland and
his sled. You'll be more comfortable there. It'll be better all
around."
So that was decided upon. And Neale, after doing all he could for
Service, and assuring him that he would return in less than twenty-
four hours, turned his steps for the valley.
The sunset that night struck him as singularly dull, pale, menacing.
He understood its meaning later, when Slingerland said they were in
for another storm. Before dark the wind began to moan through the
trees like lost spirits. The trapper shook his shaggy head
ominously.
"Reckon thet sounds bad to me," he said. And from moan it rose to
wail, and from wail to roar.
That alarmed Neale. He went outside and Slingerland followed. Snow
was sweeping down-light, dry, powdery. The wind was piercingly cold.
Slingerland yelled something, but Neale could not distinguish what.
When they got back inside the trapper said:
"Wal, no use to worry about Service," argued the trapper. "If it is
a blizzard we can't git up thar, thet's all. Mebbe this'll not be so
bad. But I ain't bettin' on thet."
Even Allie couldn't cheer Neale that night. Long after she and the
others had retired he kept up the fire and listened to the roar of
the wind. When the fire died down a little the cabin grew
uncomfortably cold, and this fact attested to a continually dropping
temperature. But he hoped against hope and finally sought his
blankets.
Morning came, but the cabin was almost as dark as by night. A
blinding, swirling snow-storm obscured the sun.
A blizzard raged for forty-eight hours. When the snow finally ceased
falling the cold increased until Neale guessed the temperature might
be forty degrees below zero. The trapper claimed sixty. It was
necessary to stay indoors till the weather moderated.
On the fifth morning Slingerland was persuaded to attempt the trip
to aid Service. Larry wanted to accompany them, but Slingerland said
he had better stay with Allie. So, muffled up, the two men set out
on snow-shoes, dragging a sled. A crust had frozen on the snow,
otherwise traveling would have been impossible. Once up on the slope
the north wind hit them square in the face. Heavily clad as he was,
Neale thought the very marrow in his bones would freeze. That wind
blew straight through him. There were places where it took both men
to hold the sled to keep it from getting away. They were blown back
one step for every two steps they made. On the exposed heights they
could not walk upright. At last, after hours of desperate effort,
they got over the ridge to a sheltered side along which they labored
up to Service's dugout.
Up there the snow had blown away in places, leaving bare spots,
bleak, icy, barren, stark. No smoke appeared to rise above the
dugout. The rude habitation looked as though no man had been there
that winter. Neale glanced in swift dismay at Slingerland.
"Son, look fer the wust," he said. "An' we hain't got time to
waste."
They pushed open the canvas framework of a door and, stooping low,
passed inside. Neale's glance saw first the fireplace, where no fire
had burned for days. Snow had sifted into the dugout and lay in
little drifts everywhere. The blankets on the bunk covered Service,
hiding his face. Both men knew before they uncovered him what his
fate had been.
Service lay white, rigid, like stone, with no sign of suffering upon
his face.
"He jest went to sleep--an' never woke up," declared Slingerland.
"Thank God for that!" exclaimed Neale. "Oh, why did I not stay with
him?"
"Too late, son. An' many a good man will go to his death before thet
damn railroad is done."
Neale searched for Service's notes and letters and valuables which
could be turned over to the engineering staff.
Slingerland found a pick and shovel, which Neale remembered to have
used in building the dugout; and with these the two men toiled at
the frozen sand and gravel to open up a grave; It was like digging
in stone. At length they succeeded. Then, rolling Service in the
blankets and tarpaulin, they lowered him into the cold ground and
hurriedly filled up his grave.
It was a grim, gruesome task. Another nameless grave! Neale had
already seen nine graves. This one was up the slope not a hundred
feet from the line of survey.
"Slingerland," exclaimed Neale, "the railroad will run along there!
Trains will pass this spot. In years to come travelers will look out
of the train windows along here. Boys riding away to seek their
fortunes! Bride and groom on their honeymoon! Thousands of people--
going, coming, busy, happy at their own affairs, full of their own
lives--will pass by poor Service's grave and never know it's there!"
"Wal, son, if people must hev railroads, they must kill men to build
them," replied the trapper.
Neale conceived the idea that Slingerland did, not welcome the
coming of the steel rails. The thought shocked him. But then, he
reflected, a trapper would not profit by the advance of
civilization.
With the wind in their backs Neale and Slingerland were practically
blown home. They made it up between them to keep knowledge of the
tragedy from Allie. So ended the coldest and hardest and grimmest
day Neale had ever known.
The winter passed, the snows melted, the winds quieted, and spring
came.
Long since Neale had decided to leave Allie with Slingerland that
summer. She would be happy there, and she wished to stay until Neale
could take her with him. That seemed out of the question for the
present. A construction camp full of troopers and laborers was no
place for Allie. Neale dreaded the idea of taking her to Omaha.
Always in his mind were haunting fears of this Spaniard, Durade, who
had ruined Allie's mother, and of the father whom Allie had never
seen. Neale instinctively felt that these men were to crop up
somewhere in his life, and before they did appear he wanted to marry
Allie. She was now little more than sixteen years old.
Neale's plans for the summer could not be wholly known until he had
reported to the general staff, which might be at Fort Fetterman or
North Platte or all the way back in Omaha. But it was probable that
he would be set to work with the advancing troops and trains and
laborers. Engineers had to accompany both the grading gangs and the
rail gangs.
Neale, in his talks with Larry and Slingerland, had dwelt long and
conjecturingly upon what life was going to be in the construction
camps.
To Larry what might happen was of little moment. He lived in the
present. But Neale was different. He had to be anticipating events;
he lived in the future, his mind was centered on future work,
achievement, and what he might go through in attaining his end.
Slingerland was his appreciative listener.
"Wal," he would say, shaking his grizzled head, "I reckon I don't
believe all your General Lodge says is goin' to happen."
"But, man, can't you imagine what it will be?" protested Neale.
"Take thousands of soldiers--the riffraff of the war--and thousands
of laborers of all classes, niggers, greasers, pigtail chinks, and
Irish. Take thousands of men who want to earn an honest dollar, but
not honestly. All the gamblers, outlaws, robbers, murderers,
criminals, adventurers in the States, and perhaps many from abroad,
will be on the trail. Think, man, of the money--the gold! Millions
spilled out in these wilds! ... And last and worst--the bad women!"
Slingerland showed his amazement at the pictures drawn by Neale,
especially at the final one.
"Wal, I reckon thet's all guff too," he said. "A lot of bad women
out in these wilds ain't to be feared. Supposin' thar was a lot of
them which ain't likely--how'd they ever git out to the camps?"
"Slingerland, the trains--the trains will follow the laying of the
rails!"
"Oho! An' you mean thar'll be towns grow up overnightall full of bad
people who ain't workin' on the railroad, but jest followin' the
gold?"
"Exactly. Now listen. Remember all these mixed gangs--the gold--and
the bad women--out here in the wild country--no law--no restraint--
no fear, except of death--drinking-hells--gambling-hells--dancing-
hells! What's going to happen?"
The trapper meditated a while, stroking his beard, and then he said:
"Wal, thar ain't enough gold to build thet railroad--an' if thar was
it couldn't never be done!"
"Ah!" cried Neale, raising his head sharply. "It's a matter of gold
first. Streams of gold! And then--can it be done?"
One day, as the time for Neale's departure grew closer,
Slingerland's quiet and peaceful valley was violated by a visit from
four rough-looking men.
They rode in without packs. It was significant to Neale that Larry
swore at sight of them, and then in his cool, easy way sauntered
between them and the cabin door, where Allie stood with astonishment
fixed on her beautiful face. The Texan always packed his heavy gun,
and certainly no Western men would mistake his quality. These
visitors were civil enough, asked for a little tobacco, and showed
no sign of evil intent.
"Red, can you look at men and tell whether or not there's danger in
them?" inquired Neale.
"I shore can. One man could bluff thet outfit.... But I reckon I'd
hate to have them find Allie aboot heah alone."
"I can take care of myself," spoke up Allie, spiritedly.
Neale and Slingerland, for all their respect for the cowboy's
judgment, regarded the advent of these visitors as a forerunner of
an evil time for lonely trappers.
"I'll hev to move back deeper in the mountains, away from the
railroad," said Slingerland.
This incident also put a different light upon the intention Neale
had of hunting for the buried gold. Just now he certainly did not
want to risk being seen digging gold or packing it away; and
Slingerland was just as loath to have it concealed in or near his
cabin.
"Wal, seein' we're not sure it's really there, let's wait till you
come back in summer or fall," he suggested. "If it's thar it'll stay
thar."
All too soon the dawn came for Neale's departure with Larry. Allie
was braver than he. At the last he was white and shaken. She kissed
Larry.
"Reddy, you'll take care of yourself--and him," she said.
"Allie, I shore will. Good-by." Larry rode down the trail in the dim
gray dawn.
"Watch sharp for Indians," she breathed, and her face whitened
momentarily. Then the color returned. Her eyes welled full of sweet,
soft light.
"Allie, I can't go," said Neale, hoarsely. The clasp of her arms
unnerved him.
"You must. It's your work. Remember the big job! ... Dearest!
Dearest! Hurry--and--go!"
Neale could no longer see her face clearly. He did not know what he
was saying.