Philip Steele of the Royal Northwest mounted Police eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 204 pages of information about Philip Steele of the Royal Northwest mounted Police.

Philip Steele of the Royal Northwest mounted Police eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 204 pages of information about Philip Steele of the Royal Northwest mounted Police.
up to Etomami and Le Pas.  Colonel Becker and Isobel had been at those places six weeks before.  He could find no trace of their having stopped at Prince Albert.  He ran down to Winnipeg and spent several days in making inquiries which proved the hopelessness of any longer expecting to find Isobel in Canada.  He assured himself that by this time they were probably in London and he made his plans accordingly.  His discharge would come to him by the tenth of August, and he would immediately set off for England.

Upon his return to Prince Albert he was detailed to a big prairie stretch of country where there was little to do but wait.  On the first day of August he was at Hymers when the Limited plunged down the embankment into Blind Indian River.  The first word of it came over the wire from Bleak House Station a little before midnight, while he and the agent were playing cribbage.  Pink-cheeked little Gunn, agent, operator, and one-third of the total population of Hymers, had lifted a peg to make a count when his hand stopped in mid-air, and with a gasping break in his voice he sprang to his feet.

The instrument on the little table near the window was clicking frantically.  It was Billinger, at Bleak House, crying out for headquarters, clear lines, the right of way.  The Transcontinental—­engine, tender, baggage car, two coaches and a sleeper, had gone to the devil.  Those, in his excitement, where his first words.  From fifty to a hundred were dead.  Gunn almost swore Billinger’s next words to the line.  It was not an accident!  Human hands had torn up three sections of rail.  The same human hands had rolled a two-ton boulder in the right of way.  He did not know whether the express car—­or what little remained of it—­had been robbed or not.

From midnight until two o’clock the lines were hot.  A wrecking train was on its way from the east, another from division headquarters to the west.  Ceaselessly headquarters demanded new information, and bit by bit the terrible tragedy was told even as the men and women in it died and the few souls from the prairies around Bleak House Station fought to save lives.  Then a new word crept in on the wires.  It called for Philip Steele at Hymers.

It commanded him in the name of Inspector MacGregor of the Royal Mounted to reach Bleak House Station without delay.  What he was to do when he arrived at the scene of the wreck was left to his own judgment.  The wire from MacGregor aroused Philip from the stupor of horror into which he had fallen.  Gunn’s girlish face was as white as a sheet.

“I’ve got a jigger,” he said, “and you can take it.  It’s forty miles to Bleak House and you can make it in three hours.  There won’t be a train for six.”

Philip scribbled a few words for MacGregor and shoved them into Gunn’s nervous hand.  While the operator was sending them off he rolled a cigarette, lighted it, and buckled on his revolver belt.  Then Gunn hurried him through the door and they lifted the velocipede on the track.

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Philip Steele of the Royal Northwest mounted Police from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.