THE BIG TRAIN
The moon had acted as a stimulant to my thoughts, and the contented munching sound as the "string" of horses consumed their hay was not sedative enough to calm my utter wide-awake-ness.
"Why have you put bars across the door of that stall?" I asked Blister Jones, trying to rouse him from his placid mood. He pulled a straw from the bale upon which we sat, before replying.
"The Big Train's in there," he said quietly.
"No; is that a fact?" I cried, as I jumped to my feet and walked to the door across which were the heavy wooden bars that had attracted my attention. Peering through these I could see nothing, nor was there any sound toward which I might have strained my eyes.
"I guess he's not at home," I said. "I can't see him."
"Stick around that door 'n' you'll see him all right!" Blister assured me. Scarcely had he finished when the straw rustled and a huge head shot forward into the planes of moonlight that slanted between the bars into the black mystery of the stall.
Never had I seen anything so malevolent as this head. Its eyes were green flame, holding the hate of hell in their depths. The mouth was open, and the great white teeth closed with a snap on one of the bars and shook it in its socket.
So this was the noted man-killer, nicknamed because of his size and his astonishing ability to carry weight—The Big Train! His fame had been borne by leaded column beyond the racing, and to the more general public; for on several occasions he had succeeded in furnishing the yellow newspapers with gory copy.
He had begun his career as a man-killer in his three-year-old form. An unscrupulous owner had directed the jockey to carry an electric battery during an important race. Under the current The Big Train had run like a wild thing, and despite a staggering load placed on him by the handicapper, had won by many lengths.
After the race the stallion had reached back, and getting the jockey's leg between his teeth, had torn him from the saddle. Then before a screaming, horror-stricken grand-stand he had stamped the boy into a red waste.
This was his first and last public atrocity. He had killed men since, but always when they were alone with him. No one had seen him at his murders. He would have been destroyed when his racing days were over, but he possessed the ability to transmit a large measure of his stamina and speed to his offspring, and was greatly in demand as a sire.
I stood before The Big Train's stall, fascinated by his wicked attempts to get at me until Blister's attention was attracted by the thud of the stallion's hoofs against the lower door.
"Come on back here 'n' set down 'n' let that hoss get his rest,' he ordered. I obeyed.
"Why on earth did you take him?" I asked, when once more seated on the bale of straw.
"Well, ole Prindle says he'd give fifty bucks a week to the guy who'll handle him 'n' I needs the money … fur certain reasons."
"Fur certain reasons" was added diffidently, I thought. This was an altogether new quality in Blister. And I remembered the pretty, spoiled-looking, young girl I had seen with him quite often of late. She was rosy, pouty, slim, enticing and thoroughly aware of how desirable she appeared. Blister had told me she was his landlady's daughter, and I knew she lived but a block from the race track. I thought of the head I had seen, and felt certain that fifty thousand a week would not tempt me into an intimate relationship with its owner.
"I can't tell you how sorry I am you've taken him—it's a fearful risk," I said.
"Get out!" said Blister. "He won't even muss my hair. I never go in to him alone 'n' he don't like company fur his little stunts. He's a regular family hoss in a crowd."
Two stable-boys now climbed the track fence and came toward us rather hastily.
"Been on a vacation?" was Blister's greeting to them.
"Playin' seven-up 'n' tried to finish the game," one of them explained as they started with buckets for the pump.
"That's good. It don't matter whether these hosses get watered, just so you swipes enjoy yourselves," Blister commented.
I watched languidly while the buckets were filled and brought to the horses, until this process reached the barred stall. Then I became interested. One of the boys approached the stall with a bucket in one hand and a pitchfork held near the pronged end in the other. He swung open the lower door and whacked the fork handle back and forth inside, yelling harsh commands in the meantime. He succeeded in getting the bucket where the horse could drink, but the pitchfork was seized and twisted and the boy had difficulty in wrenching it away. It was all he could do to regain possession of it.
"Little pink toes is feelin' like his ole sweet self again," said Blister. "I been worried about him—he's seemed so pie-faced here lately."
"Don't worry none about him," said the boy who had watered The Big Train. "Mama's lamb ain't forgot his cute ways." Then he addressed the other boy. "Say, Chic, you snored somethin' fierce last night! Why don't you sleep in here with Bright Eyes, so's not to disturb me?"
"Would, only I might thrash around in my sleep 'n' hurt him," promptly replied the other boy.
Two figures had come from the street, through the gate and strolled down the line of stalls. One of them was feminine, and in white, and as they drew nearer, "Good evening, Mister Jones," floated to us in an assured though girlish voice.
It was the landlady's daughter, attended by a cavalier in the person of a stolid young man of German extraction, as I thought at first glance, and this was confirmed by Blister's, "Let me make you acquainted with Miss Malloy," and "Shake hands with Mister Shultz."
Then began the by no means unskilful playing of one lover against the other. She sat, a queen—the bale of straw a throne—and dispensed royal favors impartially; a dimple melting to a smile, a frown changed by feminine magic into a delicious pout.
In the moonlight she was exceedingly lovely. She seemed unapproachable, elusive, mysterious, and yet her art touched the material. She contrived to bring out how successful Mister Shultz was in the bakery business, and in the next breath told nonchalantly of the vast sums acquired by a race-horse trainer.
She appealed to Blister to corroborate this.
"Isn't that so, Mister Jones? Didn't you tell me you get fifty dollars a week for training one horse?"
Blister was not above impressing his rival, it seemed. He nodded to this deceptive question. And since he had nine horses in his "string," the worthy German's eyes bulged.
At last I rose to go and our little circle broke up. The girl, with a coquettish good night to me, moved away from us and stood with her back to the stalls, her face lifted to the moon.
"Good night, ole Four Eyes!" said Blister, and gave my hand a friendly pressure, just as a rattling sound attracted my eyes to the barred stall.
The lower door was swinging open. A powerful neck had tossed the bars from their sockets. This was the rattle I had heard, as Death came out of that stall, huge and terrible, to rear above the unconscious white figure in the moonlight.
My look of horror swung Blister about. I saw him dive headlong, and the white figure was knocked to safety as the man-killer's forefeet struck Blister down.
The rest was a dream … I found myself beating with futile fists the giant body that rose and fell as it stamped upon that other body beneath. I knew, but dimly, that the night was pierced by shriek on shriek. And still I felt the rise and fall of the beast. How long it lasted I do not know. … . .
A helmeted figure swept me aside, I saw a gleam in the moonlight—a flash, and felt that a shot was fired, although I can not remember hearing it. The Big Train ceased to rise and fall. He swayed, staggered and crumpled to the ground.
"An ambulance—quick!" I said to the heaven-sent policeman; and saw him start for the gate on a lumbering trot. Then I stooped to the figure, lying with its head in what the moonlight had changed to a pool of ink.
Suddenly I felt a woman's soft form beneath my hands. It was in white and it covered that other dreadful figure with its own … and moaned.
"This won't do," I said to the girl. "Let me see how badly he's hurt."
She took Blister's head in her arms.
"Go 'way from here! He's dead," she said. "He saved me … he's mine! Go 'way from here!"
A crowd was forming. I sent a stableboy for a blanket, put it under Blister's head, despite the girl's protests, and pulled her roughly to her feet.
"Go over to that bale and sit down!" I ordered, giving her a shake; and to my surprise she obeyed. "Sit with her!" I said to the German, and I heard her repeat, "Go 'way from here!" as he approached.…
The ambulance clanged through the gate. The young surgeon put his ear to Blister's heart, picked the limp body up unaided and placed it in the somber-looking vehicle.
"Beat it, Max!" he said to the driver.
"What hospital?" I called after him.
"Saint Luke's!" he shouted, as they gathered speed.
"You had better take her home now," I suggested to Mr. Shultz. "I am going to the hospital."
"So am I," said the girl. "Tell mother," she directed at the German, as she started for the gate.
"You'd better not go," I remonstrated. "I'll let you know everything as soon as I hear."
She paid not the slightest attention. When we reached the street she stopped on the wrong corner waiting for a car that would have taken her away from, instead of toward, the hospital.
"You can't go down-town like this!" I said, making a last effort. "Look at your dress!" and I pointed to the front of her gown—a bright crimson under the electric light.
She looked down at herself and shuddered.
"I'll go if it's the last thing I do," she said. "You can save your breath."
The car was all but empty. The girl sat staring, dry-eyed, straight before her. A dirty old woman, seeing the set face and blood-stained dress, leaned eagerly across the aisle.
"Has the young lady been hurt?" she wheezed.
"None of your business," said Miss Malloy. And the old woman subsided at this shaft of plain truth.
Our ride was half completed when my companion began to speak, in a broken monotone. She addressed no one in particular. If was as though conscience spoke through unconscious lips.
"And I've been foolin' with him just like all the rest—I thought it was smart! I never knew, for sure, till back there, and now he'll never know … he'll not hear me when I tell it to him." Suddenly the monotone grew shrill. "He'll never hear nothing of what Eve found out!"
"Quiet! Quiet!" I said, and took her hand. "He's only hurt. The doctors will bring him around all right."
"No," she said. "I've been foolin' with him. I've been wicked and mean, and it's been sent to punish me."
A house surgeon and the engulfing odor of iodoform met us at the door of the emergency ward, whither we were led by a nurse.
"We can't tell anything before tomorrow," answered the surgeon to my question. "The pulse is fairly strong, and that means hope."
"I must see him," the girl stated.
"Sorry," said the surgeon, shaking his head. "No visitors allowed in this ward at night."
Two eyes, big and dark and beseeching, were raised to his. They shone from the white face and plead with him.
"Oh, doctor … please!" was all she said, but the eyes won her battle.
The nurse joined forces with the eyes. She looked past the surgeon.
"Very few in here to-night, Doctor Brandt," she urged.
"I wonder what would become of hospital rules if we left it to you nurses!" he protested, as he stepped aside and gently drew the girl within.
Down the dim aisle between the snowy beds we went, until the surgeon stopped at one, beside which sat a nurse, her fingers on the wrist of the bandaged occupant.
One bloodless hand picked feebly at the covering. The girl took this in both her own and pressed it to her cheek. Then stooping even lower, she cooed to the head on the pillow.
"The Big Train's pulled in …" muttered a far voice from between the bandages.
"Railroad man—isn't he?" inquired the surgeon of me.
"No. A horseman," I replied.
"He talks about trains. Was it a railroad accident?"
"He was injured by a horse called The Big Train," I explained.
"Oh—that one," he said, enlightened.
"Why don't they shoot him?"
"They did," I said.
"Good!" exclaimed the surgeon. "That is fine!"
After taking the girl to her home, I sent telegrams to "Mr. Van," as I had heard Blister call him—one to Morrisville, New Jersey, and one to the Union Club, New York. Judge and Mrs. Dillon were abroad.
When I had telephoned to the hospital the next morning, I went to the office and found a message on my desk. It read:
"Have everything possible done. Send all bills to me. He must come here to convalesce."
It was headed Morrisville, and was signed, "W. D. Van Voast."
That same day Blister was taken to a big, airy, private room with two nurses in attendance.
For a time it seemed hopeless. And then the fates decided to spare that valiant whimsical spirit and Death drew slowly back. The stallion had been unshod, and to this and the semi-darkness Blister owed his life.
I had met the girl frequently at the hospital and at last they told us we could see Blister for a moment the next day. Ten o'clock was the time set and as we sat in the visitor's room together, waiting, she seemed worried.
"You should be more cheerful," I said. "The danger is past, or we would not be allowed to see him."
"It isn't that," she replied. "I used to like horses. Now every horse I see scares me to death." Then she hesitated and looked at me timidly.
"Well," I encouraged, "that's natural, what of it?"
"I've been thinking—" she said slowly, "every girl should like what her husb—" she stopped and blushed till she looked like a rose in confusion.
"Oh, I see what you mean," I said in a matter-of-fact tone. "Since you care for Blister, you feel that you should also be interested in his profession."
"That's it! You say things just right!" she exclaimed gratefully.
"You will get over this dread of horses," I assured her. "Because there are murderers in the world you do not fear all men. Occasionally there are bad horses, just as there are bad people. You shouldn't judge all the splendid faithful creatures who spend their lives serving us, by one vicious brute."
"Oh, I know that!" she said. "And I'll try as hard as ever I can to get over it."
"This is quite a little woman … she has developed," I thought.
An unknown Blister with strange cavernous eyes, lay in the room to which we were presently taken. I stood at the foot of the bed, directly in his line of vision, but he did not seem to recognize me. He looked through and beyond me. At last—
"Hello, Four Eyes!" came feebly from him. Slowly he became conscious of the girl's face, looking down into his own. "You here, too?" he questioned.
"Yes, dear," she said tremblingly.
The sight of the poor sick face was too much for her and she knelt hastily to hide the tears. Then the round curve of her young bosom was indented by his wasted shoulder as she bent and kissed him on the mouth.
A woeful scar across his cheek reddened against the white skin. A flash of the old Blister appeared in the hollow eyes.
"There's class to that!" he said.