A switchman came up, and one of the men, a lank American whom we should recognise by the sound of his voice (having heard it before), asked whither the train was bound and when it would first stop in its flight.
"At the Poo quarries, seventeen kilometers down the line. They cut out a few empties there. She goes on to the division point after that."
"Any trains up from that direction this morning?" demanded "Newport."
"Not till this afternoon. Most of the crews are in the city for the--" But the switchman had no listeners beyond that statement.
And so it was that the news spread over town at five o'clock that Truxton King was where he could do no harm. It was well known that the train would make forty miles an hour down the steep grade into the lower valley.
Up into the city strolled Sir Vagabond, his fiddle in his hand, his heart again as light as a feather. Some day--ah, some day! he would see her again on the road. It was always the way. Then he would tell her how unhappy he had been--for a minute. She was so pretty, so very pretty! He sighed profoundly. We see no more of him.
When Truxton King first awoke to the fact that they were no longer lying motionless in the dreary yards, he leaped to his feet with a startled shout of alarm. Loraine sat up, blinking her eyes in half-conscious wonder. It was broad daylight, of course; the train was rattling through the long cut just below the city walls. With frantic energy he pulled open the door. For a minute he stared at the scudding walls of stone so close at hand, uncomprehendingly. Then the truth burst upon him with the force of a mighty blow. He staggered back, his jaw dropping, his eyes glaring.
"What the dev--Great God, Loraine! We're going! We're moving!" he cried hoarsely.
"I know it," she gasped, her body rocking violently with the swaying of the wild, top-heavy little car.
"Great Scott! How we're pounding it! Fifty miles an hour. Where are we?" he cried, aghast. He could scarcely keep his feet, so terrific was the speed and so sickening the motion.
She got to her feet and lurched to his side. "Don't fall out!" she almost shrieked. He drew back with her. Together they swayed like reeds in a windstorm, staring dizzily at the wall before them.
Suddenly the train shot out into the open, farm-spattered valley. Truxton fell back dumbfounded.
"The country!" he exclaimed. "We've been carried away. I--I can't believe my senses. Could we have slept--what a fool, what an idiot! God in heaven! The Prince! He is lost!" He was beside himself with anguish and despair, raging like a madman, cursing himself for a fool, a dog, a murderer!