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"Yes," said Nulty. "Now you run for the doctor--and you run like h.e.l.l.
If he ain't at home--find him. Tell him to come to Nulty--_quick_.
Understand?"
The Polack nodded his head excitedly.
"Doctor--Nultee," he e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed brightly.
"Yes," said Nulty. "Go on, now--run!" And he gave the Polack an initial start with a vigorous push that nearly toppled the man forward on his nose.
Nulty stooped down, picked up P. Walton in his arms as though the latter were a baby, and started toward his own home a block away.
"My G.o.d," he muttered, "a railroad man down there in a state like this--he'd have a long chance, he would! Poor devil, guess he won't last out many more of these. Blast it all, now if the wife was home she'd know what to do--blamed if I know!"
For all that, however, Nulty did pretty well. He put P. Walton to bed, and started feeding him cracked ice even before the doctor came--after that Nulty went on feeding cracked ice.
Along toward midnight, Gleason, the yard-master, burst hurriedly into the house.
"Say, Nulty, you there!" he bawled. "That blasted train robber's got away, and--oh!" He had stepped from the hall over the threshold of the bedroom door, only to halt abruptly as his eyes fell upon the bed.
"Anything I can do--Nulty?" he asked in a booming whisper, that he tried to make soft.
Nulty, sitting in a chair by the bed, shook his head--and Gleason tiptoed in squeaky boots out of the house.
P. Walton, who had been lying with closed eyes, opened them, and looked at Nulty.
"What did he say?" he inquired.
"Says the fellow we got to-day has got away," said Nulty shortly.
"Shut up--the doctor says you're not to talk."
P. Walton's bright eyes made a circuit of the room, came back, and rested again on Nulty.
"Would you know him again if you saw him?" he demanded.
"Would I know him!" exclaimed Nulty. "It's not likely I wouldn't, is it? I was dead-heading him down from Gopher b.u.t.te, wasn't I?"
"I think," said P. Walton slowly, "if it were me I'd be scared stiff that he got away--afraid he'd be trying to revenge that other fellow, you know. You want to look out for him."
"I'd ask nothing better than to meet him again," said Nulty grimly.
"Now, shut up--you're not to talk."
P. Walton was pretty sick. Nulty sat up all that night with him, laid off from his run the next day, and sat up with P. Walton again the next night. Then, having sent for Mrs. Nulty, who was visiting relatives down the line, Mrs. Nulty took a hand in the nursing. Mrs. Nulty was a little, sweet-faced woman, with gray Irish eyes and no style about her--Nulty's pay-check didn't reach that far--but she knew how to nurse; and if her hands were red and the knuckles a little swollen from the washtub, she could use them with a touch that was full enough of tender sympathy to discount anything a manicure might have reason to find fault with on professional grounds. She didn't rate Nulty for turning her home into a hospital, and crowding her train-sheet of work, already pretty full, past all endurance--Mrs. Nulty, G.o.d bless her, wasn't that kind of a woman! She looked at her husband with a sort of happy pride in her eyes; looked at P. Walton, and said, "Poor man," as her eyes filled--and went to work. But for all that, it was touch and go with P. Walton--P. Walton was a pretty sick man.
It's queer the way trouble of that sort acts--down and out one day with every signal in every block set dead against you; and the next day a clear track, with rights through b.u.t.toned in your reefer, a wide-flung throttle, and the sweep of the wind through the cab gla.s.s whipping your face till you could yell with the mad joy of living. It's queer!
Five days saw P. Walton back at the office, as good, apparently, as ever he was--but Mrs. Nulty didn't stop nursing. Nulty came down sick in place of P. Walton and took to bed--"to give her a chance to keep her hand in," Nulty said. Nulty came down, not from overdoing it on P.
Walton's account--a few nights sitting up wasn't enough to lay a man like Nulty low--Nulty came down with a touch of just plain mountain fever.
It wasn't serious, or anything like that; but it put a stop order, temporarily at least, on the arrangements Nulty had cussed P. Walton into agreeing to. P. Walton was to come and board with the Nultys at the same figure he was paying Ivan Peloff until he got a raise and could pay more. And so, while Nulty was running hot and cold with mountain fever, P. Walton, with Mrs. Nulty in mind, kept his reservations on down in the Polack quarters, until such time as Nulty should get better--and went back to work at the office.
On the first night of his convalescence, P. Walton had a visitor--in the person of Larry, the brains and leader of the gang. Larry did not come inside the shack--he waited outside in the dark until P. Walton went out to him.
"Hullo, Dook!" said Larry. "Tough luck, eh? Been sick? Gee, I'm glad to see you! All to the mustard again? Couldn't get into town before, but a fellow uptown said you'd been bad."
"h.e.l.lo, Larry," returned P. Walton, and he shook the other's hand cordially. "Glad to see you, too. Yes; I guess I'm all right--till next time."
"Sure, you are!" said Larry heartily. "Anything good doing?"
"Well," said P. Walton, "I don't know whether you'd call it good or not, but there was a new order went into effect yesterday to remain in force until further notice--owing to the heavy pa.s.senger traffic. They are taking the mail and express cars off the regular afternoon east-bound trains, and running them as a through extra on fast time.
They figure to land the mails East quicker, and ease up on the equipment of the regular trains so as to keep them a little nearer schedule. So now the express stuff comes along on Extra No. 34, due Spider Cut at eight-seventeen p. m., which is her last stop before Big Cloud."
"Say," said Larry dubiously, "'taint going to be possible to board a train like that casual-like, is it?" Then, brightening suddenly: "But say, when you get to thinking about it, it don't size up so bad, neither. I got the lay, Dook--I got it for fair--listen! Instead of a train-load of pa.s.sengers to handle there won't be no one after the ditching but what's left of the train crew and the mail clerks; a couple of us can stand the stamp lickers up easy, while the two others pinches the swag. We'll stop her, all right! We ditch the train--see?
There's a peach of a place for it about seven miles up the line from here. We tap the wires, Big Tom's some cheese at that, and then cuts them as soon as we know the train has pa.s.sed Spider Cut, and is wafting its way toward us. Say, it's good, Dook, it's like a Christmas present--I was near forgetting the registered mail."
P. Walton laughed--and coughed.
"I guess it's all right, Larry," he said. "According to a letter I saw in the office this afternoon, there's a big s.h.i.+pment of banknotes that some bank is remitting, and that will be on board night after next."
"Say that again," said Larry, sucking in his breath quickly. "I ain't deaf, but I'd like to hear it just once more."
"I was thinking," said P. Walton, more to himself than to his companion, "that I'd like to get down to Northern Australia--up Queensland way. They say it's good for what ails me--bakes it out of one."
"Dook," said Larry, shoving out his hand, "you can buy your ticket the day after the night after next--you'll get yours, and don't you forget it, I'll see to that. We'll move camp to-morrow down handy to the place I told you about, and get things ready. And say, Dook, is that cuss Nulty on the new run?"
"I don't know anything about Nulty," said P. Walton.
"Well, I hope he is," said Larry, with a fervent oath. "We're going to cut the heart out of him for what he did to Spud. The Butcher was for coming into town and putting a bullet through him anyway, but I'm not for throwing the game. It won't hurt Spud's memory any to wait a bit, and we won't lose any enthusiasm by the delay, you can bet your life on that! And now I guess I'll mosey along. The less I'm seen around here the better. Well, so long, Dook--I got it straight, eh? Night after to-morrow, train pa.s.ses Spider Cut eight-seventeen--that right?"
"Eight-seventeen--night after to-morrow--yes," said P. Walton. "Good luck to you, Larry."
"Same to you, Dook," said Larry--and slipped away in the shadows.
P. Walton went uptown to sit for an hour or two with Nulty--turn about being no more than fair play. Also on the following night he did the same--and on this latter occasion he took the opportunity, when Mrs.
Nulty wasn't around to hear and worry about it, to turn the conversation on the hold-up, after leading up to it casually.
"When you get out and back on your run again, Nulty, I'd keep a sharp look-out for that fellow whose pal you shot," he said.
"You can trust me for that," said Nulty anxiously. "I'll bet he wouldn't get away a second time!"
"Unless he saw you first," amended P. Walton evenly. "There's probably more where those two came from--a gang of them, I dare say. They'll have it in for you, Nulty."
"Don't you worry none about me," said Nulty, and his jaw shot out.
"I'm able to take care of myself."
"Oh, well," said P. Walton, "I'm just warning you, that's all. Anyway, there isn't any immediate need for worry. I guess you're safe enough--so long as you stay in bed."
The next day P. Walton worked a.s.siduously at the office. If excitement or nervousness in regard to the events of the night that was to come was in any wise his portion, he did not show it. There was not a quiver in the steel-plate hand in which he wrote the super's letters, not even an inadvertent blur on the tissue pages of the book in which he copied them. Only, perhaps, he worked a little more slowly--his work wasn't done when the shop whistle blew and he came back to the office after supper. It was close on ten minutes after eight when he finally finished, and went into the despatcher's room with the sheaf of official telegrams to go East during the night at odd moments when the wires were light.
"Here's the super's stuff," he said, laying the papers on the despatcher's desk.