Empire Builders eBook

Francis Lynde Stetson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 322 pages of information about Empire Builders.

Empire Builders eBook

Francis Lynde Stetson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 322 pages of information about Empire Builders.

“If I hadn’t known you for a pretty good mountaineer, Kenneth, you would have missed this,” he said, making his guest free of the limited hospitality of the caboose-hotel.  “Are you good for a two-hundred-and-eighty-mile cayuse ride, there and back, on the same trail we tramped over a year ago last spring?”

“I’m good for everything on the bill of fare,” was the heartening reply.  “How are things going?”

Ford’s rejoinder began with a non-committal shrug.  “We’re building a railroad, after a fashion.”

“After a good fashion, I hope?”

Another shrug.

“We’re doing as well as we can with the help we have.  But about this right-of-way tangle—­” and he plunged his guest into a discussion of the Copah situation which ran on unbroken until bedtime.

They took the westward trail together in the morning, mounted upon wiry little mountain-bred ponies furnished by one Pacheco, the half-breed Mexican who had once earned an easy double-eagle by spying upon two men who were out hunting with an engineer’s transit.  For seven weeks Frisbie had been pushing things, and the grade from Saint’s Rest to the summit of the pass was already a practicable wagon road, deserted by the leveling squads and ready for the ties and the steel.

From the summit of the pass westward, down the mountain and through the high-lying upper valley of the Pannikin, the grade work was in full swing.  The horse trail, sometimes a rough cart-road, but oftener a mere bridle-path, followed the railroad in its loopings and doublings; and on the mountain sections where the work was heaviest the two riders were never out of sight of the heavily manned grading gangs.

“To a man up a tree you appear to be doing a whole lot, and doing it quickly, Ford,” commented the lawyer, when they had passed camp after camp of the workers.  Then he added:  “You are not having any trouble with the MacMorroghs, are you?”

“Not what the legal department would call trouble,” answered Ford evasively; and for ten other miles the narrowness of the bridle-path discouraged conversation.

Farther down in the valley of the Pannikin the activities were less thickly sown.  On many sections the work was light; no more than the throwing up of an embankment in the park-like intervales, with now and then a rock-or earth-cutting through some jutting spur of the inclosing mountains.  Here the men were bunched on the rock work and the fills, though the camp sites were commonly in the park-like interspaces where wood and water, the two sole commodities for which the contractors could make no deductions on the pay-roll, lay conveniently at the doors of the rude sleeping shacks.

Since he was not required to talk, Kenneth had time to be curiously observant of many things in passing.  Each camp was the fellow of its neighbor; a chaotic collection of hastily built bunk shanties, a mess tent for those who, shunning the pay-devouring Scylla of the contractors’ “commissary,” fell into the Charybdis of the common table, and always, Kenneth remarked, the camp groggery, with its slab-built bar, its array of ready-filled pocket bottles, and its sad-faced, slouch-hatted, pistol-carrying keeper.

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Project Gutenberg
Empire Builders from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.