A Campfire Girl's First Council Fire - BestLightNovel.com
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CHAPTER X
OUT OF THE WOODS
The train only stopped for a moment at the little station. Seldom, indeed, did it take on any pa.s.sengers. And on that trip it was already late. Even as the two girls climbed up the steps the brakeman gave his signal, the conductor flung out his hand, and the wheels began to move.
And Farmer Weeks, jumping out of his buggy, raced after it, yelling, but in vain.
Swiftly the heavy cars gathered speed. And Bessie and Zara, frightened by their narrow escape, were still too delighted by the way in which Farmer Weeks had been baffled to worry. They felt that they were safe now.
"I suppose that old hick thought we'd stop the train for him," they heard the conductor say to the brakeman. "Well, he had another guess coming! Look at him, will you?"
"He's mad all through!" said the brakeman, laughing, "Well, he had a right to be there when the train got in. If we waited for every farmer that gets to the station late, we'd be laid off in a hurry, I'll bet."
Bessie and Zara were in the last car of the train, and they could look back as it sped away.
"See, Zara, he's standing there, waving his arms and shaking his fist at us," she said.
"He can't hurt us that way, Bessie. Well, all I hope is that we've seen the last of him. Is it true that he can't touch me except in this state?"
"That's what Wanaka said, Zara. And she must know."
Then the conductor came around.
"We didn't get our tickets, so here's the money," said Bessie. "We want to get to Pine Bridge."
"You didn't have much more time than you needed to catch this train,"
said the conductor, as he took the money. "Pine Bridge, eh? That's our first stop. You can't make any mistake."
"How soon do we cross the state line, Mr. Conductor?" asked Zara, anxiously.
The conductor looked out of the window.
"Right now," he said. "See that white house there? Well, that's almost on the line. The house is in one state, and the stable's in the other.
Why are you so interested in that?" He looked at them in sudden suspicion. "Here, was that your father who was so wild because he didn't catch the train? Were you running away from him?"
Bessie's heart sank. She wondered if the conductor, should be really be suspicious, could make them go back, or keep them from getting off the train at Pine Bridge.
"No, he wasn't any relative of ours at all," she said.
"Seems to me he was shouting about you two, though," said the conductor.
"Hey, Jim!"
He called the brakeman.
"Say, Jim, didn't it look to you like that hayseed was trying to stop these two from gettin' aboard instead of tryin' to catch the train himself?"
"Never thought of that," said Jim, scratching his head. "Guess maybe he was, though. Maybe we'd better send 'em back from Pine Bridge."
"That's what I'm thinking," said the conductor.
"We've paid our fare. You haven't any right to do that," said Bessie, stoutly, although she was frightened. "And I tell you that man isn't our father. He hasn't got anything to do with us--"
"He seemed to think so, and I believe that was why you came running that way to catch the train, without any tickets. You say he's not your father. Who is he? Do you know him at all?"
Bessie wished she could say that she did not; wished she could, truthfully, deny knowing Farmer Weeks at all. But not even to avert what looked like a serious danger would she lie.
"Yes, we know him," she said. "He's a farmer from Hedgeville. And--"
"Hedgeville, eh? What's his name?"
"Weeks--Silas Weeks."
The effect of the name was extraordinary. Conductor and brakeman doubled up with laughter, and for a moment, while the two girls stared, neither of them could speak at all. Then the conductor found his voice.
"Oh, ho-ho," he said, still laughing. "I wouldn't have missed that for a week's pay! If I could only have seen his face! Don't you worry any more! We'll not send you back to him, even if you were running from him.
Don't blame anyone for tryin' to get away from that old miser!"
"Wish he'd tried to jump aboard after we started," said Jim, the brakeman. "I'd have kicked him off, and I wouldn't have done it gently, either!"
"We know Silas Weeks," explained the conductor. "He's the worst kicker and trouble maker that ever rode on this division. Every time he's aboard my train he gives us more trouble in one trip than all the other pa.s.sengers give us in ten. He's always trying to beat his way without payin' fare, and scarcely a time goes by that he don't write to the office about Jim or me."
"Lot of good that does him," said Jim. "They don't pay any attention to him."
"No, not now. They're getting used to him, and they know what sort of a mischief maker he is. But he's a big s.h.i.+pper, an' at first they used to get after me pretty hard when he wrote one of his kicks."
"Before I came on the run, you mean?"
"Sure! He'd been at it a long time before I got you, Jim. You see, he sends so much stuff by freight they had to humor him--and they still do.
But now they just write him a letter apologizin' and don't bother me about it at all. Bet I've lost as much as a week's pay, I guess, goin'
to headquarters in workin' time to explain his kicks. He's got a swell chance of gettin' help from me!"
Then the two trainmen pa.s.sed on, but not until they had promised to see the two girls safe off the car at Pine Bridge.
"People usually get paid back when they do something mean, Zara," said Bessie. "If Farmer Weeks hadn't treated those men badly, they would probably have sent us back. But as soon as they heard who he was, you saw how they acted."
"That's right, Bessie. I bet he'd be madder than ever if he knew that.
Someone ought to tell him."
"He'd only try to make more trouble for them, and perhaps he could, too.
No, I don't want to bother about him any more, Zara. I just want to forget all about him. I wonder how long we'll have to wait at Pine Bridge."
"Miss Eleanor didn't say what she was going to do, did she?"
"No; she just said that she'd get there, and that she had decided to change all her plans on our account."
"We're making an awful lot of trouble for her, Bessie."