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Part 1 Chapter 2

Word Count: 2581    |    Released on: 11/11/2017

halted at the door to assure himself that the call was stationary. It was. Also it was slightly muffled. That meant that the train was still in the cut. As he ran to the key and sent in

re's a dozen that's hurt bad.""No use watering that mess," said Banneker. "It won't burn much further. Wind's against it. Anybody left in the other smashed cars?""Don't think so.""Got the names of the dead?""Now, how would I have the time!" demanded the conductor resentfully.Banneker turned to the far side of the track where the seven bodies lay. They were not disposed decorously. The faces were uncovered. The postures were crumpled and grotesque. A forgotten corner of a battle-field might look like that, the young agent thought, bloody and disordered and casual.Nearest him was the body of a woman badly crushed, and, crouching beside it, a man who fondled one of its hands, weeping quietly. Close by lay the corpse of a child showing no wound or mark, and next that, something so mangled that it might have been either man or woman--or neither. The other victims were humped or sprawled upon the sand in postures of exaggerated _abandon_; all but one, a blonde young girl whose upthrust arm seemed to be reaching for something just beyond her grasp.A group of the uninjured from the forward cars surrounded and enclosed a confused sound of moaning and crying. Banneker pushed briskly through the ring. About twenty wounded lay upon the ground or were propped against the rock-wall. Over them two women were expertly working, one tiny and beautiful, with jewels gleaming on her reddened hands; the other brisk, homely, with a suggestion of the professional in her precise motions. A broad, fat, white-bearded man seemed to be informally in charge. At least he was giving directions in a growling voice as he bent over the sufferers. Banneker went to him."Doctor?" he inquired.The other did not even look up. "Don't bother me," he snapped.The station-agent pushed his first-aid packet into the old man's hands."Good!" grunted the other. "Hold this fellow's head, will you? Hold it hard."Banneker's wrists were props of steel as he gripped the tossing head. The old man took a turn with a bandage and fastened it."He'll die, anyway," he said, and lifted his face.Banneker cackled like a silly girl at full sight of him. The spreading whisker on the far side of his stern face was gayly pied in blotches of red and green."Going to have hysterics?" demanded the old man, striking not so far short of the truth."No," said the agent, mastering himself. "Hey! you, trainman," he called to a hobbling, blue-coated fellow. "Bring two buckets of water from the boiler-tap, hot and clean. Clean, mind you!" The man nodded and limped away. "Anything else, Doctor?" asked the agent. "Got towels?""Yes. And I'm not a doctor--not for forty years. But I'm the nearest thing to it in this shambles. Who are you?"Banneker explained. "I'll be back in five minutes," he said and passed into the subdued and tremulous crowd.On the outskirts loitered a lank, idle young man clad beyond the glories of Messrs. Sears-Roebuck's highest-colored imaginings."Hurt?" asked Banneker."No," said the youth."Can you run three miles?""I fancy so.""Will you take an urgent message to be wired from Manzanita?""Certainly," said the youth with good-will.Tearing a leaf from his pocket-ledger, Banneker scribbled a dispatch which is still preserved in the road's archives as giving more vital information in fewer words than any other railroad document extant. He instructed the messenger where to find a substitute telegrapher."Answer?" asked the youth, unfurling his long legs."No," returned Banneker, and the courier, tossing his coat off, took the road.Banneker turned back to the improvised hospital."I'm going to move these people into the cars," he said to the man in charge. "The berths are being made up now."The other nodded. Banneker gathered helpers and superintended the transfer. One of the passengers, an elderly lady who had shown no sign of grave injury, died smiling courageously as they were lifting her.It gave Banneker a momentary shock of helpless responsibility. Why should she have been the one to die? Only five minutes before she had spoken to him in self-possessed, even tones, saying that her traveling-bag contained camphor, ammonia, and iodine if he needed them. She had seemed a reliable, helpful kind of lady, and now she was dead. It struck Banneker as improbable and, in a queer sense, discriminatory. Remembering the slight, ready smile with which she had addressed him, he felt as if he had suffered a personal loss; he would have liked to stay and work over her, trying to discover if there might not be some spark of life remaining, to be cherished back into flame, but the burly old man's decisive "Gone," settled that. Besides, there were other things, official things to be looked to.A full report would be expected of him, as to the cause of the accident. The presence of the boulder in the wreckage e

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“The lonely station of Manzanita stood out, sharp and unsightly, in the keen February sunlight. A mile away in a dip of the desert, lay the town, a sorry sprawl of frame buildings, patternless save for the one main street, which promptly lost itself at either end in a maze of cholla, prickly pear, and the lovely, golden-glowing roseo. Far as the eye could see, the waste was spangled with vivid hues, for the rare rains had come, and all the cacti were in joyous bloom, from the scarlet stain of the ocatilla to the pale, dream-flower of the yucca. Overhead the sky shone with a hard serenity, a blue, enameled dome through which the imperishable fires seemed magnified as they limned sharp shadows on the earth; but in the southwest clouds massed and lurked darkly for a sign that the storm had but called a truce.”
1 Part 1 Chapter 12 Part 1 Chapter 23 Part 1 Chapter 34 Part 1 Chapter 45 Part 1 Chapter 56 Part 1 Chapter 67 Part 1 Chapter 78 Part 1 Chapter 89 Part 1 Chapter 910 Part 1 Chapter 1011 Part 1 Chapter 1112 Part 1 Chapter 1213 Part 1 Chapter 1314 Part 1 Chapter 1415 Part 2 Chapter 116 Part 2 Chapter 217 Part 2 Chapter 318 Part 2 Chapter 419 Part 2 Chapter 520 Part 2 Chapter 621 Part 2 Chapter 722 Part 2 Chapter 823 Part 2 Chapter 924 Part 2 Chapter 1025 Part 1 Chapter 1126 Part 2 Chapter 1227 Part 2 Chapter 1328 Part 2 Chapter 1429 Part 2 Chapter 1530 Part 2 Chapter 1631 Part 3 Chapter 132 Part 3 Chapter 233 Part 3 Chapter 334 Part 3 Chapter 435 Part 3 Chapter 536 Part 3 Chapter 637 Part 3 Chapter 738 Part 3 Chapter 839 Part 3 Chapter 940 Part 3 Chapter 1041 Part 3 Chapter 1142 Part 3 Chapter 1243 Part 3 Chapter 1344 Part 3 Chapter 1445 Part 3 Chapter 1546 Part 3 Chapter 1647 Part 3 Chapter 1748 Part 3 Chapter 1849 Part 3 Chapter 1950 Part 3 Chapter 2051 Part 3 Chapter 21