The U. P. Trail. Zane Grey

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The U. P. Trail - Zane Grey

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I hope you will accomplish something big without living out all the wildness.”

      “You think I might lose my head?” queried Neale.

      “You are excitable and quick-tempered. Do you drink?”

      “Yes—a little,” answered the young man. “But I don’t care for liquor.”

      “Don’t drink, Neale,” said the chief, earnestly. “Of course it doesn’t matter now, for we’re only a few men out here in the wilds. But when our work is done over the divide, we must go back along the line. You know ground has been broken and rails laid west of Omaha. The work’s begun. I hear that Omaha is a beehive. Thousands of idle men are flocking West. The work will be military. We must have the army to protect us, and we will hire all the soldiers who apply. But there will be hordes of others—the dregs of the war and all the bad characters of the frontier. They will flock to the construction camp. Millions of dollars will go along with the building. Gold! … Where it’s all coming from I have no idea. The Government backs us with the army—that’s all. But the gold will be forthcoming. I have that faith. … And think, lad, what it will mean in a year or two. Ten thousand soldiers in one camp out here in these wild hills. And thousands of others—honest merchants and dishonest merchants, whisky men, gamblers, desperadoes, bandits, and bad women. Niggers, Greasers, Indians, all together moving from camp to camp, where there can be no law.”

      “It will be great!” exclaimed Neale, with shining eyes.

      “It will be terrible,” muttered the elder man, gravely. Then, as he got up and bade his young assistant good night, the somberness had returned to his eyes and the weight to his shoulders. He did not underestimate his responsibility nor the nature of his task, and he felt the coming of nameless and unknown events beyond all divining.

      Henney was Neale’s next visitor. The old engineer appeared elated, but for the moment he apparently forgot everything else in his solicitude for the young man’s welfare.

      Presently, after he had been reassured, the smile came back to his face.

      “The chief has promoted you,” he said.

      “What!” exclaimed Neale, starting up.

      “It’s a fact. He just talked it over with Baxter and me. This last job of yours pleased him mightily … and so you go up.”

      “Go up! … To what?” queried Neale, eagerly.

      “Well, that’s why he consulted us, I guess,” laughed Henney. “You see, we sort of had to make something to promote you to, for the present.”

      “Oh, I see! I was wondering what job there could be,” replied Neale, and he laughed, too. “What did the chief say?”

      “He said a lot. Figured you’d land at the top if the U. P. is ever built. … Chief engineer! … Superintendent of maintenance of way!”

      “Good Lord!” breathed Neale. “You’re not in earnest?”

      “Wal, I shore am, as your cowboy pard says,” returned Henney. And then he spoke with real earnestness. “Listen, Neale. Here’s the matter in a nutshell. You will be called upon to run these particular and difficult surveys, just as yesterday. But no more of the routine for you. Added to that, you will be sent forward and back, inspecting, figuring. You can make your headquarters with us or in the construction camps, as suits your convenience. All this, of course, presently, when we get farther on. So you will be in a way free—your own boss a good deal of the time. And fitting yourself for that ‘maintenance of way’ job. In fact, the chief said that—he called you Maintenance-of-Way Neale. Well, I congratulate you. And my advice is keep on as you’ve begun—go straight—look out for your wildness and temper. … That’s all. Good night.”

      Then he went out, leaving Neale speechless.

      Neale had many callers that night, and the last was Larry Red King. The cowboy stooped to enter the tent.

      “Wal, how aboot you-all?” he drawled.

      “Not so good, Red,” replied Neale. “My head’s hot and I’ve got a lot of pain. I think I’m going to be a little flighty. Would you mind getting your blankets and staying with me tonight?”

      “I reckon I’d be glad,” answered King. He put a hand on Neale’s face. “You shore have fever.” He left the tent, to return presently with a roll of blankets and a canteen. Then he awkwardly began to bathe Neale’s face with cold water. There was a flickering camp-fire outside that threw shadows on the wall of the tent. By its light Neale saw that King’s left hand was bandaged and that he used it clumsily.

      “What’s wrong with your hand?” he queried.

      “I reckon nawthin’.”

      “Why is it bound up, then?”

      “Wal, some one sent thet fool army doctor to me an’ he said I had two busted bones in it.”

      “He did! I had no idea you were hurt. You never said a word. And you carried me and my instrument all day—with a broken hand!”

      “Wal, I ain’t so shore it’s broke.”

      Neale swore at his friend and then he fell asleep. King watched beside him, ever and anon rewetting the hot brow.

      The camp-fire died out, and at length the quietness of late night set in. The wind mourned and lulled by intervals; a horse thudded his hoofs now and then; there were the soft, steady footsteps of the sentry on guard, and the wild cry of a night bird.

       Table of Contents

      Neale had not been wrong when he told the engineers that once they had a line surveyed across the gorge and faced the steep slopes of the other side their troubles would be magnified.

      They found themselves deeper in the Wyoming hills, a range of mountains that had given General Lodge great difficulty upon former exploring trips, and over which a pass had not yet been discovered.

      The old St. Vrain and Laramie Trail wound along the base of these slopes and through the valleys. But that trail was not possible for a railroad. A pass must be found—a pass that would give a grade of ninety feet to the mile. These mountains had short slopes, and they were high.

      It turned out that the line as already surveyed through ravines and across the gorge had to be abandoned. The line would have to go over the hills. To that end the camp was moved east again to the first slopes of the Wyoming hills; from there the engineers began to climb. They reached the base of the mountains, where they appeared to be halted for good and all.

      The second line, so far as it went, overlooked the Laramie Trail, which fact was proof that the old trail-finders had as keen eyes as engineers.

      With a large band of hostile Sioux watching their movements the engineer corps found it necessary to have the troops close at hand all the time. The surveyors climbed the ridges while the soldiers kept them in sight from below. Day after day this futile search for a pass went on. Many of the ridges

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