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"Bryce Cardigan," she sobbed. "I saw him--he was riding a top log on the train. He--ah, G.o.d help him!"
The Colonel shook her with sudden ferocity. "Young Cardigan," he cried sharply. "Riding the logs? Are you certain?"
She nodded, and her shoulders shook piteously.
"Then Bryce Cardigan is gone!" Pennington's p.r.o.nouncement was solemn, deadly with its flat finality. "No man could have rolled down into Mad River with a trainload of logs and survived. The devil himself couldn't." He heaved a great sigh, and added: "Well, that clears the atmosphere considerably, although for all his faults, I regret, for his father's sake, that this dreadful affair has happened. Well, it can't be helped, s.h.i.+rley. Don't cry, my dear. I know it's terrible, but--there, there my love. Do brace up. Poor devil! For all his d.a.m.nable treatment of me, I wouldn't have had this happen for a million dollars."
s.h.i.+rley burst into wild weeping. Bryce's heart leaped, for he understood the reason for her grief. She had sent him away in anger, and he had gone to his death; ergo it would be long before s.h.i.+rley would forgive herself. Bryce had not intended presenting himself before her in his battered and b.l.o.o.d.y condition, but the sight of her distress now was more than he could bear. He coughed slightly, and the alert Colonel glanced up at him instantly.
"Well, I'll be hanged!" The words fell from Pennington's lips with a heartiness that was almost touching. "I thought you'd gone with the train."
"Sorry to have disappointed you, old top," Bryce replied blithely, "but I'm just naturally stubborn. Too bad about the atmosphere you thought cleared a moment ago! It's clogged worse than ever now."
At the sound of Bryce's voice, s.h.i.+rley raised her head, whirled and looked up at him. He held his handkerchief over his gory face that the sight might not distress her; he could have whooped with delight at the joy that flashed through her wet lids.
"Bryce Cardigan," she commanded sternly, "come down here this instant."
"I'm not a pretty sight, s.h.i.+rley. Better let me go about my business."
She stamped her foot. "Come here!"
"Well, since you insist," he replied, and he slid down the bank.
"How did you get up there--and what do you mean by hiding there spying on me, you--you--oh, YOU!"
"Cuss a little, if it will help any," he suggested. "I had to get out of your way--out of your sight--and up there was the best place. I was on the roof of the caboose when it toppled over, so all I had to do was step ash.o.r.e and sit down."
"Then why didn't you stay there?" she demanded furiously.
"You wouldn't let me," he answered demurely. "And when I saw you weeping because I was supposed to be with the angels, I couldn't help coughing to let you know I was still hanging around, ornery as a book-agent."
"How did you ruin your face, Mr. Cardigan?"
"Tried to take a cast of the front end of the caboose in my cla.s.sic countenance--that's all."
"But you were riding the top log on the last truck--"
"Certainly, but I wasn't hayseed enough to stay there until we struck this curve. I knew exactly what was going to happen, so I climbed down to the b.u.mper of the caboose, uncoupled it from the truck, climbed up on the roof, and managed to get the old thing under control with the hand-brake; then I skedaddled up into the brush because I knew you were inside, and---By the way, Colonel Pennington, here is your axe, which I borrowed this afternoon. Much obliged for its use. The last up-train is probably waiting on the siding at Freshwater to pa.s.s the late lamented; consequently a walk of about a mile will bring you a means of transportation back to Sequoia. Walk leisurely--you have lots of time. As for myself, I'm in a hurry, and my room is more greatly to be desired than my company, so I'll start now."
He lifted his hat, turned, and walked briskly down the ruined track.
s.h.i.+rley made a little gesture of dissent, half opened her lips to call him back, thought better of it, and let him go. When he was out of sight, it dawned on her that he had risked his life to save hers.
"Uncle Seth," she said soberly, "what would have happened to us if Bryce Cardigan had not come up here to-day to thrash your woods- boss?"
"We'd both be in Kingdom Come now," he answered truthfully.
"Under the circ.u.mstances, then," s.h.i.+rley continued, "suppose we all agree to forget that anything unusual happened to-day--"
"I bear the young man no ill will, s.h.i.+rley, but before you permit yourself to be carried away by the splendour of his action in cutting out the caboose and getting it under control, it might be well to remember that his own precious hide was at stake also. He would have cut the caboose out even if you and I had not been in it."
"No, he would not," she insisted, for the thought that he had done it for her sake was very sweet to her and would persist. "Cooped up in the caboose, we did not know the train was running away until it was too late for us to jump, while Bryce Cardigan, riding out on the logs, must have known it almost immediately. He would have had time to jump before the runaway gathered too much headway--and he would have jumped, Uncle Seth, for his father's sake."
"Well, he certainly didn't stay for mine, s.h.i.+rley."
She dried her moist eyes and blushed furiously. "Uncle Seth," she pleaded, taking him lovingly by the arm, "let's be friends with Bryce Cardigan; let's get together and agree on an equitable contract for freighting his logs over our road."
"You are now," he replied severely, "mixing sentiment and business; if you persist, the result will be chaos. Cardigan has in a large measure squared himself for his ruffianly conduct earlier in the day, and I'll forgive him and treat him with courtesy hereafter; but I want you to understand, s.h.i.+rley, that such treatment by me does not const.i.tute a license for that fellow to crawl up in my lap and be petted. He is practically a pauper now, which makes him a poor business risk, and you'll please me greatly by leaving him severely alone--by making him keep his distance."
"I'll not do that," she answered with a quiet finality that caused her uncle to favour her with a quick, searching glance.
He need not have worried, however, for Bryce Cardigan was too well aware of his own financial condition to risk the humiliation of asking s.h.i.+rley Sumner to share it with him. Moreover, he had embarked upon a war--a war which he meant to fight to a finish.
CHAPTER XVIII
George Sea Otter, summoned by telephone, came out to Freshwater, the station nearest the wreck, and transported his battered young master back to Sequoia. Here Bryce sought the doctor in the Cardigan Redwood Lumber Company's little hospital and had his wrecked nose reorganized and his cuts bandaged. It was characteristic of his father's son that when this detail had been attended to, he should go to the office and work until the six o'clock whistle blew.
Old Cardigan was waiting for him at the gate when he reached home.
George Sea Otter had already given the old man a more or less garbled account of the runaway log-train, and Cardigan eagerly awaited his son's arrival in order to ascertain the details of this new disaster which had come upon them. For disaster it was, in truth. The loss of the logs was trifling--perhaps three or four thousand dollars; the destruction of the rolling-stock was the crowning misfortune. Both Cardigans knew that Pennington would eagerly seize upon this point to stint his compet.i.tor still further on logging-equipment, that there would be delays--purposeful but apparently unavoidable--before this lost rolling-stock would be replaced. And in the interim the Cardigan mill, unable to get a sufficient supply of logs to fill orders in hand, would be forced to close down. Full well Pennington knew that anything which, tends to bring about a shortage of raw material for any manufacturing plant will result inevitably in the loss of customers.
"Well, son," said John Cardigan mildly as Bryce unlatched the gate, "another b.u.mp, eh?"
"Yes, sir--right on the nose."
"I meant another b.u.mp to your heritage, my son."
"I'm worrying more about my nose, partner. In fact, I'm not worrying about my heritage at all. I've come to a decision on that point: We're going to fight and fight to the last; we're going down fighting. And by the way, I started the fight this afternoon. I whaled the wadding out of that bucko woods-boss of Pennington's, and as a special compliment to you, John Cardigan, I did an almighty fine job of cleaning. Even went so far as to muss the Colonel up a little."
"Wow, wow, Bryce! Bully for you! I wanted that man Rondeau taken apart. He has terrorized our woods-men for a long time. He's king of the mad-train, you know."
Bryce was relieved. His father did not know, then, of the act of vandalism in the Valley of the Giants. This fact strengthened Bryce's resolve not to tell him--also to get the fallen monarch sawed up and the stump blasted out before an operation should restore his father's sight and reveal to him the crowning cruelty of his enemy.
Arm in arm they walked up the garden path together.
Just as they entered the house, the telephone in the hall tinkled, and Bryce answered.
"Mr. Cardigan," came s.h.i.+rley Sumner's voice over the wire.
"Bryce," he corrected her.
She ignored the correction,
"I--I don't know what to say to you," she faltered.
"There is no necessity for saying anything, s.h.i.+rley."