<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_406" id="Page_406"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>IV</h2>
<h3>WE HEAR SOME THRILLING STORIES AT A ROUNDHOUSE AND REACH THE END OF THE BOOK</h3>
<div class='cap'>IT was in the round-house at Forty-fifth Street, a
place of drip and steam and oil smears, that I listened
to Bronson and Lewis, two good men at the
throttle, as they held forth on the subject of killing
people with an engine.</div>
<p>"After all, it's an easy death," said Bronson.</p>
<p>"I know," said Lewis; "but I don't like it, just the
same—I mean killing 'em."</p>
<p>"Last one I killed," observed Bronson, "was a
woman, wife of a congressman, they said, all done up
in furs. 'Member her?"</p>
<p>"Up by New Rochelle?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir, there at the platform end, where they've
made a path over the tracks. Too lazy to follow the
road, those folks are. Take a short cut and get killed.
Well, this congressman's wife, she sauntered across
just as I came through with the express. Never turned
her head. Never heard the whistle. Queer about
women, ain't it?"</p>
<p>Lewis nodded.</p>
<p>"Had four minutes to make up, and we were going
good—fifty-five an hour easy. Slammed the brakes
on, but—pshaw! Congressman's wife she stopped the
last second, and that settled it. If she'd taken one
more step I'd have scraped by her, but she stopped.
Had to kill her. What's a man to do?"<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_407" id="Page_407"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Why did she stop?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Oh, some idea. Prob'ly forgot where she was.
Nice lady. Makes a man sick."</p>
<p>"Tell ye what I think," said Lewis. "I think there's
women start across a track to take a chance. If they
get hit it's all right, and if they don't it's all right.
Same as girls pull leaves off a flower to see if some
fellow loves 'em. There was—"</p>
<p>"She didn't do that," put in Bronson.</p>
<p>"I don't say she did, but some might. There was
a woman up at Larchmont walked across in front of
me the other day. Had a baby, too, in her arms.
Now, why should a woman start over four tracks just
as I was coming, and walk slow, if she didn't want to
take a chance? Mind you, I was on the far side, and
she had to cross three tracks before she got to mine.
And all the time I had the whistle wide open. Why, a
dog would have heard that whistle and got out o' the
way."</p>
<p>"Did you—" I began.</p>
<p>"Hit her? I didn't know at the time, it was such
a close call. Thought I had, but I found out afterward
she got past—by the skin of her teeth. Bet you
she'd had some trouble. Thought she might as well
quit the game and take the baby along. Then, mebbe,
she was glad when she got across safe."</p>
<p>"Can't tell," reflected Bronson.</p>
<p>"I b'lieve there's such a thing as people getting
drawn to a train. I don't mean by the suction, but
drawn by the idea of its going so blamed fast and being
so strong, especially people sick or down on their luck.
Now, last year I was coming through Rye one morning,
and as I struck the bridge after that reverse curve
I saw two young fellows running along the No. 3 track
away from me. I was on No. 1 track, so they were all<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_408" id="Page_408"></SPAN></span>
right, but as I came up they both swung over to No. 1,
and I cut 'em all to bits. Turned out they were a
couple of lads that had tramped it down from Boston,
goin' to enlist. They were weak and hungry, and I
think they just gave up to the train because they
couldn't help it."</p>
<p>"Might be," said Bronson.</p>
<p>"Tell ye who was the nerviest man I ever killed,"
went on Lewis. "Fellow in West Haven. Say, but
we were coming that night! Northampton express,
ye know, and a down grade over the salt meadows.
First thing I knew a man was standing at the side of
the track, fairly close, but not where he'd get hit. I
thought he was some friend of mine in West Haven
trying to make me whistle. But when I got near him,
say a hundred feet away, he stepped out between the
rails and stood there a few seconds with his arms
lifted and a smile on his face—quite a pretty smile.
Then, just as I was on him he turned and knelt between
the rails. I got the brakes on quick as I could, emergency
and everything, but I couldn't stop her in less
than a length and a half, and—well, I guess you don't
want to know what that engine looked like when I went
over her."</p>
<p>"I know," said Bronson, "they scatter something
terrible. Say, I've noticed that sort of pleasant look in
their faces, too. Once I was waiting on a siding, and
a man came up and spoke to me very polite, and wanted
to know if I'd please give him a drink of water. I
told him the water in my tank was too warm to drink,
but I let him have my cup and showed him where there
was a spring right near. He thanked me and walked
over to it, and I watched him bend down and take two
good drinks, then he brought the cup back and thanked
me again.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_409" id="Page_409"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus90.jpg" width-obs="388" height-obs="500" alt=""DRAWN BY THE IDEA OF ITS GOING SO BLAMED FAST AND BEING SO STRONG."" title="" /> <span class="caption">"DRAWN BY THE IDEA OF ITS GOING SO BLAMED FAST AND BEING SO STRONG."</span></div>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_410" id="Page_410"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"'Any train along here soon?' he asked.</p>
<p>"'Which way?' said I.</p>
<p>"'Don't matter which way,' said he.</p>
<p>"'There's an up train due now,' said I; 'she's the
one I'm waiting for.'</p>
<p>"'Is she a fast train?' he asked.</p>
<p>"'Fair,' said I; ''bout fifty an hour along here.'</p>
<p>"'That's good,' said he, and I wondered what he
meant. He seemed like a nice man.</p>
<p>"Pretty soon along came the up train, and I saw him
run down the track to meet her. Then he stopped,
faced sideways, and let himself fall square across the
rails. Say, I was mighty glad I'd fixed it so he had
that drink of water. That was his last drink."</p>
<p>"Queer how they like to be hit by a fast express,"
reflected Lewis, "when a slow freight would do just
as well. Now, that man at West Haven, the one who
took it kneeling down, he'd waited around the tracks
all day—the section-gang saw him—and he wasn't
doing a thing but picking out a train fast enough for
him. He'd stand ready for one, but when she'd turn
out to be an accommodation or something slow he'd
step away. Didn't propose to shake hands with anything
under fifty an hour. Mine was the first one
suited him."</p>
<p>"Do you ever think of their faces?" I asked; "ever
see them at night—the way they looked when you
struck them!"</p>
<p>"No," said Bronson; "can't say I ever do."</p>
<p>Neither did Lewis. And I judge that engine-drivers
are not deeply affected by these sad occurrences.
Which is fortunate, for few escape them. Indeed, in
going about from engine to engine I found the following
dialogue repeated over and over again:</p>
<p>"Ever in a collision?"<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_411" id="Page_411"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"No, sir."</p>
<p>"Ever go off the track?"</p>
<p>"No, sir."</p>
<p>"Ever kill anybody?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes. Why, only last week I struck a—" Then
would follow a story of sudden death. And they all
spoke in a kindly but matter-of-fact way, as if these
swift executions were part of their business. And I
have it from a veteran that any engine-driver would
sooner hit a man than a hog, for a hog is very apt to
wreck the train; a hog is worse than a horse, whereas
a man makes no trouble; he simply gets killed.</p>
<p>Near the roaring round-house at Mott Haven is
another interesting place—the "Young Men's Christian
Association Car," which is not a car at all, but a
dingy shed built of four cars, and serving as lunch-room,
wash-room, reading-room, and sleeping-room
for men of the trains. This is a homely refuge spot,
where any morning we may meet engineers resting
after a hard night's run or making ready to go out
again. Let us drop in and join one of the groups.</p>
<p>Here is a man telling about the mad run "Big Arthur"
made the other night down from Albany. We
get just the tail of the story: "So the superintendent
he ripped around about how they were twenty-seven
minutes late, and Big Arthur he sat in the cab and
never said a word. 'Now,' says the superintendent,
rather sarcastic, 'I suppose you know this is the Empire
State Express you're running?' 'Yep,' says Big Arthur.
'Well, do you know what time she's supposed
to pull into the Grand Central?' 'Yep,' says Big Arthur
again, and that's all he did say; but, holy smoke!
how they went! Had those porters on the private car
scared green! A hundred miles an hour some o' the
way, and they came in on time to the dot. Oh, you<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_412" id="Page_412"></SPAN></span>
can't beat these new engines with the fire-box over the
trailer; but say, wasn't that great when Big Arthur
snapped out 'Yep' to the old man?"</p>
<p>I asked if I might see Big Arthur, and one of the
engineers said he'd be along pretty soon, and in the
meantime he told me about the individuality of locomotives:
how one is good-tempered and willing, while
another is cranky; how the same locomotive will act
differently at different times, just as people have
whims, and how some locomotives are fated to ill luck,
so that nobody wants to drive them.</p>
<p>"Take these ten new engines the company's just
put on. They're the finest and strongest made, a
whole lot better than the ones we've thought were wonders
on the Empire State. They're beauties, and all
exactly alike, measurements all the same; but every
one of 'em has its own points, good and bad. One
will go faster than another with just the same steam.
One will pull a heavier load with less coal. And very
likely there'll be some kind of a hoodoo on one of 'em.
Takes time, though, to find out these things. It's
like getting acquainted with a man."</p>
<p>Other men came in now, and the talk changed to
accidents. I asked if an engineer plans ahead what
he will do in a collision. It seemed reasonable that a
man always under such menace would have settled his
mind on some prospective action. But they laughed
at the idea, and declared that an engineer can no more
tell how he will act in an emergency than the ordinary
citizen can say what he would do in a fire, or how he
would meet a burglar. One engineer would jump, another
would stick to his throttle, and the chances of
being killed were as good one way as the other.</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus91.jpg" width-obs="343" height-obs="475" alt=""CONVICTS HAD REVOLVERS ALL RIGHT THAT TRIP AND DENNY THREW UP HIS HANDS."" title="" /> <span class="caption">"CONVICTS HAD REVOLVERS ALL RIGHT THAT TRIP AND DENNY THREW UP HIS HANDS."</span></div>
<p>The mention of a burglar led one of the new-comers
to tell of William Powell's adventure with some Sing<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_413" id="Page_413"></SPAN></span>
Sing convicts. Powell was the oldest engineer on the
New York Central. He died a year ago, and this
thing happened back in the seventies. It seems there
was a trestle over the track about half a mile below
the Sing Sing station, and on this trestle some convicts
working in the quarry used to run little cars loaded
with stone and dump them into the larger cars underneath.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_414" id="Page_414"></SPAN></span>
Of course, they worked under the surveillance
of well-armed guards.</p>
<p>On one occasion, however, four or five convicts out-witted
the guards by dropping from the trestle upon the
tender of a moving locomotive, and the first thing the
engineer knew he was set upon by a band of desperate
men, who covered him and his fireman with revolvers.
At the same moment half a dozen shots rang out, and
bullets came crashing through the cab sides from the
guards firing at random after the fleeing engine. Altogether
it was quite the reverse of pleasant for William
Powell.</p>
<p>"Out you go now, quick!" said the convicts; "we'll
run this engine ourselves."</p>
<p>The engine was No. 105, Powell's pride and pet, and
he could not bear to have unregenerate hands laid
upon her, so he spoke up very politely: "Let me run
her for you, gentlemen; I'll go wherever you say."</p>
<p>They agreed to this, and some distance down the
line left the engine and departed into the woods.</p>
<p>"And the joke of it was," concluded the narrator,
"that the revolvers those convicts had were made of
wood painted black, and couldn't shoot any more
than the end of a broom! It was a big bluff, but it
worked."</p>
<p>"Wasn't any bluff when Denny Cassin got held up
at Sing Sing," said another engineer. "Convicts had
revolvers all right that trip, and Denny threw up his
hands same as any man would. That was twenty
years ago, on old engine 89. It was right at the Sing
Sing station, and three of 'em jumped into the cab
all of a sudden and told Denny to open her up, and you
bet he did. Then they told him to jump, and he
jumped; but first he managed to fix her tank-valves so
she'd pump herself full of water and stop before she'd<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_415" id="Page_415"></SPAN></span>
gone far. That was Denny's great scheme, and he
walked along laughing to think how mad those convicts
would be in a few minutes.</p>
<p>"It turned out, though, that Denny spoiled a nice
trap they'd laid up at Tarrytown to catch those fellows
when they got there. You see, the telegraph operator
wired up the line that a runaway locomotive
was coming with three escaped convicts on her, and
the train despatcher at Tarrytown just set the switch so
the locomotive would sail plump over a twelve-foot
stone embankment down into the Hudson River.
That's what would have happened to those convicts if
Denny had left his tank-valves alone, but, of course,
89 got water-logged long before she reached Tarrytown;
she just kicked out her cylinder-ends a few miles
up the track and stopped. Then the convicts climbed
down and skipped away. Two of 'em got caught afterward,
but there was one they never caught."</p>
<p>Presently somebody reported that Big Arthur was
out in the round-house, getting 2994 ready to take out
the Empire State. It was clear enough that Big Arthur
was an important figure in the eyes of these begrimed
men, and, setting forth across the yards, I
came upon him presently, torch in hand, looking over
his deep, purring locomotive against the dangers of
the run. Another engineer by the fire-box was discussing
a theory of some of the boys, that a man can
run his locomotive by his sense of time as well as by
a watch.</p>
<p>"Denny Cassin says he'd agree to take the Empire
State from Albany to New York and keep her right on
the dot all the way, and bring her in on the minute,
just by <i>feeling</i>. What d' ye think of that?"</p>
<p>"That's possible," said Big Arthur. "A man can
feel how fast he's going. He's <i>got</i> to judge big speed<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_416" id="Page_416"></SPAN></span>
by feeling, for there ain't any speed-recorder that's
much good, say above ninety miles an hour."</p>
<p>At the first opportunity I explained to Big Arthur
and his friend that I would very much like to draw
upon their experience for some thrilling incidents in
engine-driving.</p>
<p>"Tell him about the time you went in the river,"
suggested Big Arthur.</p>
<p>"That was 'way back in '69," said the other, "when I
was firing for 'Boney' Cassin, the brother of Denny. It
was in winter, a bitter cold day, and the Hudson was
so gorged with ice that part of the jam had squeezed
over the bank and torn away our tracks. So pretty
soon, when we came along with twenty-three cars of a
train of merchandise, why in we went, and the old engine
'Troy' just skated ahead on her side into the river,
smash through the ice, down to the bottom, and pulled
thirteen cars after her.</p>
<p>"You couldn't see a piece of that engine above
water as big as your hand, and how I got out alive is
more than I know. Guess I must have jumped. Anyhow,
there I was on the broken floe, and I could hear
the old Troy grinding away in the river, churning up
water and ice like a crazy sea-serpent. She struggled
for nearly a minute before her steam was cold and her
strength gone. Then she lay still, dead.</p>
<p>"I looked around for Boney; and at first I didn't
see him. I thought he'd gone down sure, and so he
had; but just as I was looking I saw a big black thing
heave up through the ice, and I heard a queer cry.
Well, that was Providence, sure! It seems the engine
had ripped her cab clean off as she tore through the
ice, and here was the cab coming up bottom side first,
with Boney inside hanging on to a brace and almost
dead. I hauled him out, and then we scrambled ashore
over the wrecked cars. They were full of flour, and<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_417" id="Page_417"></SPAN></span>
the barrels were all busted open, so by the time we
reached the bank we looked like a twin Santa Claus
made of paste, and three quarters drowned at that."</p>
<p>"But Boney stuck to his throttle," I remarked.</p>
<p>"Yes," said the other, "he stuck to his throttle. The
boys generally do."</p>
<p>After this I asked Big Arthur for a story, but he
assured me he couldn't think of anything special.</p>
<p>"Tell about that woman on Eleventh Avenue," said
his friend.</p>
<p>"Yes," said I, "tell about her."</p>
<p>"Oh," said Big Arthur, "that wasn't much. I was
pulling a freight train down Eleventh Avenue one day,
going slow through the city, and at Thirty-fifth Street
a woman turned down the track ahead of me. I whistled,
but she never heard me. She was going marketing,
and couldn't think of anything else. I saw I'd
strike her sure—there wasn't time to stop—so I ran
along the boiler-side to the pilot, and got there just as
we were on her. Another second and she'd have been
under the wheels. I braced myself and made a jump
at the woman, and struck her back of the neck with a
shove that sent her sprawling off the track, with me
after her. You see, I had to jump hard or I'd have
stayed on the track myself and gone under the engine."</p>
<p>"Did it end in a romance?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Romance nothing!" exclaimed Big Arthur. "That
woman got up so mad—why, she called me names and
clawed the skin off my face until—well, I couldn't
get shaved for three weeks afterward. In about a
minute, though, she cooled off, and somebody told her
I'd saved her life—which I had—and then, sir, blamed
if she didn't go down on her knees and try to kiss my
feet, and pray I'd forgive her. Say, that's the only
time I ever got prayed to."</p>
<p>Here Big Arthur's fireman whispered something to<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_418" id="Page_418"></SPAN></span>
him, and the engineer nodded. "That's so, that's a
good story," and then he told how an old lady of seventy-five
saved a New York Central express some years
ago at Underhill Cut, about a mile south of Garrisons.</p>
<p>"She's a relative of my fireman, so I know the
thing's true; besides that, the company gave her three
hundred dollars. You see, it all happened one winter
night, and this Mrs. Groves—that's her name—was
the only person near enough to do anything. She
lived in a little house beside Underhill Cut, and about
four o'clock in the morning she heard a frightful crash,
and there was a freight train wrecked right in the
cut, and cars piled up three or four deep over the
tracks! She knew the express might come along any
minute, and of course it was a case of everybody
killed if they ever struck that smash-up. So what does
she do, this little old lady, but grab up a red petticoat
and a kerosene lamp, and run out as fast as she
could in her bare feet,—yes, sir, and nothing on but her
night-gown,—right through the snow. That's the
kind of a woman <i>she</i> was.</p>
<p>"Well, she went down the track until she heard the
express coming, and then she took her red petticoat
and held it up in front of the lamp so as to make a red
light. And, what's more, it worked! The engineer
saw the danger signal, slammed on his brakes, and
stopped the train a few car-lengths from the wreck.
Yes, sir, only a few car-lengths!"</p>
<p>Big Arthur nodded thoughtfully, and climbed into
the cab. It was time to go.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>In ending this chapter now, and with it the present
series, I venture the opinion that the men who follow
these Careers of Danger and Daring—the divers, steeple-climbers,
and the rest—are very little different from<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_419" id="Page_419"></SPAN></span>
their fellow-men, except as they have developed certain
faculties by their exercise, and established in themselves
the <i>habit of courage</i>. They were not born with any
longing to do these daring acts, nor with any particular
aptitude for them. They have been guided nearly always
by the drift of life and by opportunities that presented.
As to fear, they have the same capacity for it
that we all have, and are serene in their peril only
because they feel themselves, by their patience and
skill, well armed against it. The steeple-climber
would be afraid to go down in a diving-suit, the lion-tamer
would be afraid to go up in a balloon, the pilot
would be afraid to swing on the flying-bars, and so on.</p>
<p>I will even go further, and say that the average good
citizen who is sound of body has as great capacity for
courage as any of these men. He could develop it if
he cared to; he would develop it if he had to. That is
the main point, after all: these men <i>must</i> be brave, they
<i>must</i> conquer their fear, and the only trouble with the
average man is that nothing ever occurs to show him
and those who know him what fine things he could do
if the pressure were put upon him. Yet any day the
test may come to any one of us—pain to bear, losses
to bear, bereavement to bear. And then the <i>great</i> test.</p>
<p>Well, perhaps these humble heroes whose lives we
have glanced at may give us a bit of their spirit for our
own lives, the brave and patient spirit that will keep
us unflinchingly at the hard thing, whatever it be,
until we have conquered it. And perhaps we too may
feel impelled to cultivate the habit of courage. That
would be a fine inspiration indeed, and I can only hope
that my readers may feel it.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />