he gallery, or pounding
the leg through the bottom of a steamer, it'll be the kind of luck I
don't have." He paused and looked at the window, where the rain was
streaking the glass. "I've been thinking about my vacation. I've about
decided to go to the St. Lawrence. Maybe there are places I'd like
better, but when a fellow hasn't had a month off in five years, he
doesn't feel like experiments."
It was the personal tone again, coming into their talk in spite of the
excitement of the day and the many things that might have been said.
Hilda looked down at the ledger, and fingered the pages. Bannon smiled.
"If I were you," he said, "I'd shut that up and fire it under the table.
This light isn't good enough to work by, anyway."
She slowly closed the book, saying:--
"I never worked before on Christmas."
"It's a mistake. I don't believe in it, but somehow it's when my hardest
work always comes. One Christmas, when I was on the Grand Trunk, there
was a big wreck at a junction about sixty miles down the road."
She saw the memory coming into his eyes, and she leaned back against the
desk, playing with her pen, and now and then looking up.
"I was chief wrecker, and I had an old Scotch engineer that you couldn't
move with a jack. We'd rubbed up together three or four times before I'd
had him a month, and I was getting tired of it. We'd got about halfway
to the junction that night, and I felt the brakes go on hard, and before
I could get through the train and over the tender, we'd stopped dead.
The Scotchman was down by the drivers fussing around with a lantern. I
hollered out:--
"'What's the matter there?'
"'She's a bit 'ot,' said he.
"You'd have thought he was running a huckleberry train from the time he
took. I ordered him into the cab, and he just waved his hand and said:--
"'Wait a bit, wait a bit. She'll be cool directly.'"
Bannon chuckled at the recollection.
"What did you do?" Hilda asked.
"Jumped for the lever, and hollered for him to get aboard."
"Did he come?"
"No, he couldn't think that fast. He just stood still, looking at me,
while I threw her open, and you could see his lantern for a mile
back--he never moved. He had a good six-mile walk back to the last
station."
There was a long silence. Bannon got up and walked slowly up and down
the enclosure with his hands deep in his pockets.
"I wish this would let up," he said, after a time, pausing in his walk,
and looking again at the
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