The Daughter of a Magnate - Page 42/119

She laughed softly. "You are fond of the mountains."

"I have little else," he repeated.

"Then they ought to be loyal to you. But the first impression--it

hardly remains, I suppose?"

"I am not sure. They don't grow any smaller; sometimes I think they

grow bigger."

"Then you are fond of them. That's constancy, and constancy is a

capital test of a charm."

"But I'm never sure whether they are, as you say, loyal to me. We had

once on this division a remarkable man named Hailey--a bridge engineer,

and a very great one. He and I stood one night on a caisson at the

Spider Water--the first caisson he put into the river--do you remember

that big river you crossed on the plains----"

"Indeed! I am not likely to forget a night I spent at the Spider

Water; continue."

"Hailey put in the bridge there. 'This old stream ought to be thankful

to you, Hailey, for a piece of work like this,' I said to him. 'No,'

he answered, quite in earnest; 'the Spider doesn't like me. It will

get me some time.' So I think about these mountains. I like them, and

I don't like them. Sometimes I think as Hailey thought of the

Spider--and the Spider did get him."

"How serious you grow!" she exclaimed, lightly.

"The truce ends to-morrow."

"And the journey ends," she remarked, encouragingly.

"What, please, does that line mean that I see so often, 'Journeys end

in lovers meeting?'"

"I haven't an idea. But, oh, these mountains!" she exclaimed, stepping

in caution to the guard-rail. "Could anything be more awful than

this?" They were crawling antlike up a mountain spur that rose dizzily

on their right; on the left they overhung a bottomless pit. Their

engines churned, panted, and struggled up the curve, and as they talked

the dense smoke from the stacks sucked far down into the gap they were

skirting.

"The roadbed is chiselled out of the granite all along here. This is

the famed Mount Pilot on the left, and this the worst spot on the

division for snow. You wouldn't think of extending our truce?"

"To-morrow we leave for the coast."

"But you could leave the truce; and I want it ever so much."

She laughed. "Why should one want a truce after the occasion for it

has passed?"

"Sometimes out here in the desert we get away from water. You don't

know, of course, what it is to want water? I lost a trail once in the

Spanish Sinks and for two days I wanted water."

"Dreadful. I have heard of such things. How did you ever find your

way again?"

He hesitated. "Sometimes instinct serves after reason fails. It

wasn't very good water when I reached it, but I did not know about that

for two weeks. It is a curious thing, too--physiologists, I am told,

have some name for the mental condition--but a man that has suffered

once for water will at times suffer intensely for it again, even though

you saturate him with water, drown him in it."