<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_388" id="Page_388"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>II</h2>
<h3>WE PICK UP SOME ENGINE LORE AND HEAR ABOUT THE DEATH OF GIDDINGS</h3>
<div class='cap'>THE next day, with comfortable rocking-chairs to
sit in and a row of hotel windows before us, Bullard
and I found time for engine chat, and I was well
content. First I asked him about putting his head
out of the cab window there at Greggs Hill and elsewhere.
"Was it to see better?" said I.</div>
<p>"No," said Bullard; "it was to hear better and to
smell better."</p>
<p>"Hear what? Smell what?"</p>
<p>"Hear the noises of the engine. If any little thing
was working wrong, I'd hear it. If there was any
wear on the bearings, I'd hear it. Why, if a mouse
squeaked somewhere inside of 590, I guess I'd hear it."</p>
<p>Then he went on to explain that the ordinary roar of
the engine, which drowned everything for me, was to
him an unimportant background of sound that made
little impression, and left his ears free for other sounds.</p>
<p>"I get so accustomed to listening to an engine," he
added, "that often up home, talking with my wife and
child, I find myself trying to hear sounds from the
round-house. And, after a run, I talk to people as if
they were deaf."</p>
<p>"You spoke about smelling better."</p>
<p>"That's right. I can smell a hot box in a minute,
or oil burning. All engineers can. Why, there
was—"<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_389" id="Page_389"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>This led to the story of poor Giddings, killed on 590
three years before through this very necessity of putting
his head out of the cab window. Giddings had
Bullard's place, and was one of the most trusted men
in the Burlington employ.</p>
<p>"You saw last night," said Bullard, "how the boiler
in 590 shuts off the engineer from the fireman. And
prob'ly you noticed those posts along the road that
hold the tell-tale strings. They're to warn crews on
freight-car tops when it is time to duck for bridges.
Well, Giddings was coming along one night between
Biggsville and Gladstone—that's about ten miles before
you get to the Mississippi. He was driving her
fast to make up time, sixty miles an hour easy, and he
put his head out to hear and to smell, the way I've
explained it.</p>
<p>"There must have been a post set too near the track,
and anyway 590's cab is extra wide, so the first thing
he knew—and he didn't know that—his head was
knocked clean off, or as good as that, and there was
590, her throttle wide open, tearing along, with a fireman
stoking for all he was worth and a dead engineer
hanging out the window.</p>
<p>"So they ran for eight miles, and Billy Maine—he
was firing—never suspected anything wrong—for of
course he couldn't see—until they struck the Mississippi
bridge at full speed. You remember crossing
the bridge just before we pulled in here. It's twenty-two
hundred feet long, and we always give a long
whistle before we get to it, and then slow down.
That's the law," he added, smiling, "and, besides,
there's a draw to look out for. When he heard no
whistle this time, Billy Maine jumped around quick to
where Giddings was, and then he saw he had a corpse
for a partner."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_390" id="Page_390"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus87.jpg" width-obs="414" height-obs="600" alt=""THEY STRUCK THE MISSISSIPPI BRIDGE AT FULL SPEED."" title="" /> <span class="caption">"THEY STRUCK THE MISSISSIPPI BRIDGE AT FULL SPEED."</span></div>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_391" id="Page_391"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Another question I asked was about stopping a train
at great speed for an emergency—how quickly could
they do it? "I've stopped," said Bullard, "in nine
hundred and fifty feet, pulling five cars that were making
about sixty-two miles an hour. I don't know what
I could do with this new train, only three cars, and
going eighty or ninety miles an hour. That's a hard
proposition."</p>
<p>"Would you reverse her?"</p>
<p>"No, sir. All engineers who know their business
will agree on that. I'd shut the throttle off, and put
the brakes on full. But I wouldn't reverse her. If
I did, the wheels would lock in a second, and the whole
business would skate ahead as if you'd put her on ice."</p>
<p>Then we talked about the nerve it takes to run an
engine, and how a man can lose his nerve. It's like
a lion-tamer who wakes up some morning and finds
that he's afraid. Then his time has come to quit
taming lions, for the beasts will know it if he doesn't,
and kill him. There are men who can stand these
high-speed runs for ten years, but few go beyond that
term, or past the forty-five-year point. Slow-going
passenger trains will do for them after that. Others
break down after five years. Many engineers—skilled
men, too—would rather throw up their jobs than take
the run Bullard makes. Not that they feel the danger
to be so much greater in pushing the speed up to seventy,
eighty, or ninety miles an hour, but they simply
<i>cannot</i> stand the strain of doing the thing.</p>
<p>"This doubling up is what breaks my heart," said
Bullard. "Since they've put on their new schedule
I have to divide 590 with another fellow. John Kelly
takes her on the fast run East while I wait here and
rest. And so I've lost my sweetheart, and I don't feel
near as much interest in her as I did. You see, she ain't<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_392" id="Page_392"></SPAN></span>
mine any more. And, between you and me," he added,
confidentially, "I don't think 590 likes it much herself;
you see, engines are a good deal like girls, after all."</p>
<p>The next night, in workman's garb again, I made
my way to a gloomy round-house, ready for the run
to Omaha. I was to ride the second relay, as far as
Creston, on locomotive 1201, with Jake Myers in the
cab, so I had been informed. Being hours ahead of
time, I saw something of round-house life.</p>
<p>First, I followed a gaunt, black-faced Swede, with
stubby beard, through his duties as locomotive hostler;
saw him take the tired engines in hand, as they came
in one after another from hard runs, and care for them
as stable hostlers care for horses. There were fires
to be dropped in the clinker-pit, coal and wood to be
loaded in from the chutes, water-tanks to be filled,
sand-boxes looked after, and, finally, there was the
hitching fast of the weary monsters in empty stalls,
whither they were led from the lumbering turn-table
with the last head of steam left over dead fire-boxes.
And now spoke the Swede:</p>
<p>"Dem big passenger-engines can werry easy climb
over dem blocks and go through the brick wall," and
he pointed to a great semicircle of cold engine-noses,
ranged along not two feet from the round-house wall.</p>
<p>Later on, in the dimly lighted locker-room, I listened
to round-house men swapping yarns about accidents,
and to threats of a fireman touching a certain
yardmaster set apart by general consent for a licking.</p>
<p>Finally an Irishman came in, James Byron, and for
all his good-natured face he seemed in ill humor. It
turned out that he had just received a hurry order to
take 1201 out in Myers's place.</p>
<p>"Jake is sick," he said, "and they've sent for me.
But I'm sick, too. Was in bed with the grip. Just<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_393" id="Page_393"></SPAN></span>
took ten grains of quinine. Say, I ain't any more fit
to run an engine than I am to run a Sunday-school."</p>
<p>Then he began pulling on his overalls, while the
others laughed at him, told him he was "scared" of the
fast run, and said good-by with mock seriousness.</p>
<p>But Byron showed himself a good soldier, and soon
was working over 1201 with a will, inspecting every
inch of her, torch in hand, and he assured me he would
take her through all right, grip or no grip.</p>
<p>And take her through he did. At 1.16 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> my old
friend, locomotive 590, brought the flier up from Chicago,
six minutes ahead of the schedule. Kelly had
done himself proud this time. And six minutes later,
on time to the minute, we drew out behind 1201, with
Byron handling her and seventy tons of mail following
after.</p>
<p>Our fireman was named Bellamy. He wore isinglass
goggles against the heat, and, in his way, he
was a humorist, as I discovered presently, when he
came close to me (we were running at a sixty-mile
gait), and, grinning like a Dante demon, remarked
slowly: "Say—if—we—go—in—the—ditch—will—you—come—along?"</p>
<p>The first feature of this run was some trouble with
a feed-pipe from the tank, which brought us to a sudden
standstill in the open night with a great hissing of
steam.</p>
<p>"What is it?" I asked of Bellamy, while Byron,
grumbling maledictions, hammered under the truck.</p>
<p>"Check-valve stuck; water can't get into the boiler."</p>
<p>"How did he know it?"</p>
<p>"Water-gage."</p>
<p>"What if he hadn't noticed it?"</p>
<p>Bellamy smiled in half contempt. "Say, if he hadn't
noticed it for fifteen minutes, we'd have been sailing<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_394" id="Page_394"></SPAN></span>
over them trees about this time—in pieces. She'd
have bust her boiler."</p>
<p>Five minutes lost here, and we were off again, running
presently into a thick fog, then into rain, and,
finally, into a snow-storm. Never shall I forget the
illusion, due to our great speed, that the flakes were
rushing at us horizontally, shooting upward in sharp
curves over the engine's headlight. And, as we swept
on, the shadow of 1201 advanced beside us on the
stretch of white snow as smoothly and silently as the
tail of an eclipse. The engine itself was a noisy, hurrying
affair, but the engine's shadow was as calm and
quiet as a cloud. And I recall that the swiftness of
our rush this night caused in me neither fear nor any
particular emotion, although this was practically the
same experience that had stirred me so the night before
on 590. And I realized that riding on a swift locomotive
may become a matter of course like other strange
things.</p>
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