Part 13 (1/2)

Gun ran himself as he did his engine, exercised the same care of himself, and always talked engine about his own anatomy, clothes, food and drink.

His hat was always referred to as his ”dome-casing;” his Brotherhood pin was his ”number-plate;” his coat was ”the jacket;” his legs the ”drivers;” his hands ”the pins;” arms were ”side-rods;” stomach ”fire-box;” and his mouth ”the pop.”

He invariably referred to a missing suspender-b.u.t.ton as a broken ”spring-hanger;” to a limp as a ”flat-wheel;” he ”fired up” when eating; he ”took water,” the same as the engine; and ”oiled round,” when he tasted whisky.

Gun knew all the slang and shop-talk of the road, and used it--was even accused of inventing much of it--but his engine talk was unique and inimitable.

We roomed together a whole winter; and often, after I had gone to bed, Gun would come in, and as he peeled off his clothes he would deliver himself something as follows:

”Say, John, you don't know who I met on the up trip? Well, sir, Dock Taggert. I was sailin' along up the main line near Bob's, and who should I see but Dock backed in on the sidin'--seemed kinder dilapidated, like he was runnin' on one side. I jest slammed on the wind and went over and shook. Dock looks pretty tough, John--must have been out surfacing track, ain't been wiped in Lord knows when, oiled a good deal, but nary a wipe, jacket rusted and streaked, tire double f.l.a.n.g.ed, valves blowin', packing down, don't seem to steam, maybe's had poor coal, or is all limed up. He's got to go through the back shop 'efore the old man'll ever let him into the roundhouse. I set his packin' out and put him in a stall at the Gray's corral; hope he'll brace up. Dock's a mighty good workin' sc.r.a.p, if you could only get him to carryin' his water right; if he'd come down to three gauges he'd be a dandy, but this tryin' to run first section with a flutter in the stack all the time is no good--he must 'a flagged in.”

Which, being translated into English, would carry the information that Gun had seen one of the old ex-engineers at Bob Slattery's saloon, had stopped and greeted him. Dock looked as if he had tramped, had drank, was dirty, coat had holes, soles of his boots badly worn, wheezing, seemed hungry and lifeless, been eating poor food, and was in a general run-down condition. Gun had ”set out his packing” by feeding him and put him in a bed at the Grand Central Hotel--nicknamed the ”Grayback's Corral.” Gun thought he would have to reform, before the M. M. put him into active service. He was a good engineer, but drank too much, and lastly, he was in so bad a condition he could not get himself into headquarters unless someone helped him by ”flagging” for him.

Gun was a bachelor; he came to us from the Pacific side, and told me once that he first went west on account of a woman, but--begging Mr.

Kipling's pardon--that's another story.

”I don't think I'd care to double-crew my mill,” Gun would say when the conversation turned to matrimony. ”I've been raised to keep your own engine and take care of it, and pull what you could. In double-heading there's always a row as to who ought to go ahead and enjoy the scenery or stay behind and eat cinders.”

I knew from the first that Gun had a story to tell, if he'd only give it up, and I fear I often led up to it, with the hope that he would tell it to me--but he never did.

My big friend sent a sum of money away every month, I supposed to some relative, until one day I picked up from the floor a folded paper dirty from having been carried long in Gun's pocket, and found a receipt. It read:

”MISSION, SAN ANTONIO, Jan. 1, 1878.

”Received of O. Gunderson, for Mabel Rogers, $40.00.

”SISTER THERESA.”

Ah, a little girl in the story! I thought; it's a sad story, then.

There's nothing so pure and beautiful and sweet and joyous as a little girl, yet when a little girl has a story it's almost always a sad story.

I gave Gun the paper; he thanked me; said he must look out better for those receipts, and added that he was educating a bit of a girl out on the coast.

”Yours, Gun?” I asked kindly.

”No, John; she ain't; I'd give $5,000 if she was.”

He looked at me straight, with that clear, blue eye, and I knew he told me the truth.

”How old is she?” I asked.

”I don't know; 'bout five or six.”

”Ever seen her?”

”No.”

”Where did you get her?”

”Ain't had her.”