“Well, that ranchman, Dennis What’s-his-name, is looking for him, and Felix can’t go home or to the usual places. I dunno why he comes back at all till this Dennis feller gits out.”
“Doesn’t make any bones about it, does he? Dennis Doane’s the name, ain’t it? Marchand spoiled his wife-run away with her up along the Wind River, eh?” asked Osterhaut.
Jowett nodded: “Yes, that’s it, and Mr. Dennis Doane ain’t careful; that’s the trouble. He’s looking for Marchand, and blabbing what he means to do when he finds him. That ain’t good for Dennis. If he kills Marchand, it’s murder, and even if the lawyers plead unwritten law, and he ain’t hung, and his wife ain’t a widow, you can’t have much married life in gaol. It don’t do you any good to be punished for punishing someone else. Jonas George Almighty—look! Look, Osterhaut!”
Jowett’s hand was pointing towards the Catholic church, from a window of which smoke was rolling. “There’s going to be something to do there. It ain’t a false alarm, Snorty.”
“Well, this engine’ll do anything you ask it,” rejoined Osterhaut. “When did you have a fire last, Billy?” he shouted to the driver of the engine, as the horses’ feet caught the dusty road of Manitou.
“Six months,” was the reply, “but she’s working smooth as music. She’s as good as anything ‘twixt here and the Atlantic.”
“It ain’t time for Winter fires. I wonder what set it going,” said Jowett, shaking his head ominously. “Something wrong with the furnace, I s’pose,” returned Osterhaut. “Probably trying the first heatup of the Fall.”
Osterhaut was right. No one had set the church on fire. The sexton had lighted the furnace for the first time to test it for the Winter’s working, but had not stayed to see the result. There was a defect in the furnace, the place had caught fire, and some of the wooden flooring had been burnt before the aged Monseigneur Lourde discovered it. It was he who had given the alarm and had rescued the silver altar-vessels from the sacristy.
Manitou offered brute force, physical energy, native athletics, muscle and brawn; but it was of no avail. Five hundred men, with five hundred buckets of water would have had no effect upon the fire at St. Michael’s Church at Manitou; willing hands and loving Christian hearts would have been helpless to save the building without the scientific aid of the Lebanon fire-brigade. Ingolby, on founding the brigade, had equipped it to the point where it could deal with any ordinary fire. The work it had to do at St. Michael’s was critical. If the church could not be saved, then the wooden houses by which it was surrounded would be swept away, and the whole town would be ablaze; for though it was Autumn, everything was dry, and the wind was sufficient to fan and spread the flames.
Lebanon took command of the whole situation, and for the first time in the history of the two towns men worked together under one control like brothers. The red-shirted river-driver from Manitou and the lawyer’s clerk from Lebanon; the Presbyterian minister and a Christian brother of the Catholic school; a Salvation Army captain and a black-headed Catholic shantyman; the President of the Order of Good Templars and a switchman member of the Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament slaved together on the hand-engine, to supplement the work of the two splendid engines of the Lebanon fire-brigade; or else they climbed the roofs of houses, side by side, to throw on the burning shingles the buckets of water handed up to them.