The Daughter of a Magnate - Page 70/119

The porter was lighting the lamps. While they talked it had grown

quite dark. Losing time every mile of the way, the train,

frost-crusted to the eyelids, got into Sleepy Cat at half-past six

o'clock; four hours late.

The crowded yard, as they pulled through it, showed the tie-up of the

day's traffic. Long lines of freight cars filled the trackage, and

overloaded switch engines struggled with ever-growing burdens to avert

the inevitable blockade of the night. Glover's anxiety, as he left the

train at the station, was as to whether he could catch anything on the

Glen Tarn branch to take him up to the Springs that night, for there he

was resolved to get before morning if he had to take an engine for the

run.

As he started up the narrow hall leading to the telegraph office he

heard the rustle of skirts above. Someone was descending the stairway,

and with his face in the light he halted.

"Oh, Mr. Glover."

"Why--Miss Brock!" It was Gertrude.

"What in the world--" he began. His broken voice was very natural, she

thought, but there was amazement in his utterance. He noticed there

was little color in her face; the deep boa of fur nestling about her

throat might account for that.

"What a chance that I should meet you!" she exclaimed, her back hard

against the side wall, for the hall was narrow and brought them face to

face. She spoke on. "Did you get my----?"

"Did I?" he echoed slowly; "I have travelled every minute since

yesterday afternoon to get here----"

Her uneasy laugh interrupted him. "It was hardly worth while, all

that."

"--and I was just going up to find out about getting to Glen Tarn."

"Glen Tarn! I left Glen Tarn this afternoon all alone to go to

Medicine Bend--papa is there, did you know? He came yesterday with all

the directors. Our car was attached for me to the afternoon train

coming down." She was certainly wrought up, he thought. "But when we

reached here the train I should have taken for Medicine Bend had not

come----"

"It is here now."

"Thank heaven, is it?"

"I came in on it."

"Then I can start at last! I have been so nervous. Is this our train?

They said our car couldn't be attached to this train, and that I should

have to go down in one of the sleepers. I don't understand it at all.

Will you have the car sent back to Glen Tarn in the morning, Mr.

Glover? And would you get my handbag? I was nearly run over a while

ago by some engine or other. I mustn't miss this train----"

"Never fear, never fear," said Glover.

"But I cannot miss it. Be very, very sure, won't you?"