The U. P. Trail eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 500 pages of information about The U. P. Trail.

The U. P. Trail eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 500 pages of information about The U. P. Trail.

It lay in the heart of barrenness, alkali, and desolation, on the face of the windy desert, alive with dust-devils, sweeping along, yellow and funnel-shaped—­a huge blocked-out town, and set where no town could ever live.  Benton was prey for sun, wind, dust, drought, and the wind was terribly and insupportably cold.  No sage, no cedars, no grass, not even a cactus-bush, nothing green or living to relieve the eye, which swept across the gray and the white, through the dust, to the distant bare and desolate hills of drab.

The hell that was reported to abide at Benton was in harmony with its setting.

The immense train clattered and jolted to a stop.  A roar of wind, a cloud of powdery dust, a discordant and unceasing din of voices, came through the open windows of the car.  The heterogeneous mass of humanity with which Neale had traveled jostled out, struggling with packs and bags.

Neale, carrying his bag, stepped off into half a foot of dust.  He saw a disintegrated crowd of travelers that had just arrived, and of travelers ready to depart—­soldiers, Indians, Mexicans, Negroes, loafers, merchants, tradesmen, laborers, an ever-changing and ever-remarkable spectacle of humanity.  He saw stage-coaches with hawkers bawling for passengers bound to Salt Lake, Ogden, Montana, Idaho; he saw a wide white street—­white with dust where it was not thronged with moving men and women, and lined by tents and canvas houses and clapboard structures, together with the strangest conglomeration of painted and printed signs that ever advertised anything in the world.

A woman, well clad, young, not uncomely, but with hungry eyes like those of a hawk, accosted Neale.  He drew away.  In the din he had not heard what she said.  A boy likewise spoke to him; a greaser tried to take his luggage; a man jostling him felt of his pocket; and as Neale walked on he was leered at, importuned, jolted, accosted, and all but mobbed.

So this was Benton.

A pistol-shot pierced the din.  Some one shouted.  A wave of the crowd indicated commotion somewhere; and then the action and noise went on precisely as before.  Neale crossed five intersecting streets; evidently the wide street he was on must be the main one.

In that walk of five blocks he saw thousands of persons, but they were not the soldiers who protected the line, nor the laborers who made the road.  These were the travelers, the business people, the stragglers, the nondescripts, the parasites, the criminals, the desperadoes, and the idlers—­all who must by hook or crook live off the builders.

Neale was conscious of a sudden exhilaration.  The spirit was still in him.  After all, his defeated ambition counted for nothing in the great sum of this work.  How many had failed!  He thought of the nameless graves already dotting the slopes along the line and already forgotten.  It would be something to live through the heyday of Benton.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The U. P. Trail from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.