Part 30 (2/2)
The sound of the laboring engine jarred loudly through all the still, hot woods; the car shook and trembled under the strain on it. Molly dropped into low. A cloud of evil-smelling blue gasoline smoke rose up from the exhaust behind, but the car continued to advance. Rising steadily, coughing and choking, up the cruelly steep grades, b.u.mping heavily down over the great water-bars, smoking, rattling, quivering--the car continued to advance. A trickle of perspiration ran down Molly's cheeks. The floor was hot under their feet, the smell of hot oil pungent in their nostrils.
They were eight minutes from the main road now, and near the fire.
Over the trail hung a cloud of smoke, and, as they turned a corner and came through this, they saw that they had arrived. Sylvia drew back and crooked her arm over her eyes. She had never seen a forest fire before. She came from the plain-country, where trees are almost sacred, and her first feeling was of terror. But then she dropped her arm and looked, and looked again at the glorious, awful sight which was to furnish her with nightmares for months to come.
The fire was roaring down one side of the road towards them, and away to the right was eating its furious, sulphurous way into the heart of the forest. They stopped a hundred feet short, but the blare of heat struck on their faces like a blow. Through the dense ma.s.ses of smoke, terrifying glimpses of fierce, clean flame; a resinous dead stump burning like a torch; a great tree standing helpless like a martyr at the stake, suddenly transformed into a frenzied pillar of fire....
Along the front of this whirlpool of flame toiled, with despairing fury, four lean, powerful men. As they raised their blackened, desperate faces and saw the car there, actually there, incredibly there, black with its load of men, they gave a deep-throated shout of relief, though they did not for an instant stop the frantic plying of their picks and hoes. The nine men sprang out, their implements in their hands, and dispersed along the fighting-line.
Molly backed the car around, the rear wheels churning up the sand, and plunged down the hill into the smoke. Through the choking fumes of this, Sylvia shouted at her, ”Molly! Molly! You're _great_!” She felt that she would always hear ringing in her ears that thrilling, hoa.r.s.e shout of relief.
Molly shouted in answer, ”I could scream, I'm so happy!” And as they plunged madly down the mountain road, she said: ”Oh, Sylvia, you don't know--I never was any use before--never once--never! I got the first load of help there! How they shouted!”
At the junction of the side-road with the highway, a car was discharging a load of men with rakes and picks. ”_I_ took my car up!”
screamed Molly, leaning from the steering wheel but not slackening speed as she tore past them.
The driver of the other car, a young man with the face of a fighting Celt, flushed at the challenge and, motioning the men back into the car, started up the sandy hill. Molly laughed aloud. ”I never was so happy in my life!” she said again.
Both girls had forgotten the existence of Felix Morrison.
They pa.s.sed cars now, many of them, streaming south at breakneck speed, full to overflowing with unsmiling men in working clothes, bristling with long-handled implements. But as they fled down the street to the factory they saw, waiting still, some twenty or more men in overalls drawn up, ready, armed, resolute....
”How strong men are!” said Molly, gazing in ecstasy at this array of factory hands. ”I love them!” She added under her breath, ”But _I_ take them there!”
While the men were swarming into the car, the gray-haired manager came out to report, as though to an officer equal in command, ”I've telephoned to Ward and Howe's marble-works in Chitford,” he said.
”They've sent down fifty men from there. About seventy-five have gone from this village. I suppose all the farmers in that district are there by this time.”
”Will they ever stop it!” asked Sylvia despairingly, seeing wherever she looked nothing but that ravening, fiery leap of the flames, feeling that terrible hot breath on her cheek.
The question and accent brought the man for the first time to a realization of the girls' youth and s.e.x. He s.h.i.+fted to paternal rea.s.surance. ”Oh yes, oh yes,” he said, looking up the valley appraisingly at the great volume of the smoke, ”with a hundred and fifty men there, almost at once, they'll have it under control before long. Everything with a forest fire depends on getting help there _quickly_. Ten men there almost at once do more than fifty men an hour later. That's why your friend's promptness was so important. I guess it might have been pretty bad if they'd had to wait for help till one of them could have run to the village. A fire, a bad fire like that, gets so in an hour that you can't stop it--can't stop it till it gets out where you can plow a furrow around it. And that's a terrible place for a fire up there. Lots of slash left.”
Molly called over her shoulder to the men climbing on the car, ”All ready there?” and was off, a Valkyr with her load of heroes.
Once more the car toiled and agonized up the execrable sandy steepness of the side-road; but in the twenty minutes since they had been there the tide had turned. Sylvia was amazed at the total s.h.i.+fting of values. Instead of four solitary workers, struggling wildly against overwhelming odds, a long line of men, working with a disciplined, orderly haste, stretched away into the woods. Imperious and savage, the smoke and swift flames towered above them, leaping up into the very sky, darkening the sun. Bent over their rakes, their eyes on the ground, mere black specks against the raging glory of the fire, the line of men, with an incessant monotonous haste, drew away the dry leaves with their rakes, while others who followed them tore at the earth with picks and hoes. It was impossible to believe that such ant-labors could avail, but already, near the road, the fire had burnt itself out, baffled by its microscopic a.s.sailants. As far as the girls could see into the charred underbrush, a narrow, clean line of freshly upturned earth marked where the fiercest of all the elements had been vanquished by the humblest of all the tools of men. Bewildered, Sylvia's eyes s.h.i.+fted from the toiling men to the distance, across the blackened desolation near them, to where the fire still tossed its wicked crest of flames defiantly into the forest. She heard, but she did not believe the words of the men in the car, who cried out expertly as they ran forward, ”Oh, the worst's over. They're shutting down on it.” How could the worst be over, when there was still that whirling horror of flame and smoke beyond them?
Just after the men had gone, exultant, relieved, the girls turned their heads to the other side of the road, and there, very silent, very secret and venomous, leaped and glittered a little ring of flames. An hour before, it would have looked a pretty, harmless sight to the two who now sat, stricken by horror into a momentary frozen stillness. The flames licked at the dry leaves and playfully sprang up into a clump of tall dry gra.s.s. The fire was running swiftly towards a bunch of dead alders standing at the edge of the forest. Before it had spread an inch further, the girls were upon it, screaming for help, screaming as people in civilization seldom scream, with all their lungs. With uplifted skirts they stamped and trod out, under swift and fearless feet, the sinister, silent, yellow tongues. They s.n.a.t.c.hed branches of green leaves and beat fiercely at the enemy. It had been so small a spot compared to the great desolation across the road, they stamped out the flames so easily, that the girls expected with every breath to see the last of it. To see it escape them, to see it suddenly flare up where it had been dead, to see it appear behind them while they were still fighting it in front, was like being in a nightmare when effort is impossible. The ring widened with appalling, with unbelievable rapidity. Sylvia could not think it possible that anything outside a dream could have such devouring swiftness. She trod and s.n.a.t.c.hed and stamped and screamed, and wondered if she were indeed awake....
Yet in an instant their screams had been heard, three or four smoke-blackened fire-fighters from beyond the road ran forward with rakes, and in a twinkling the danger was past. Its disappearance was as incredible as its presence.
”Ain't that just like a fire in the woods?” said one of the men, an elderly farmer. He drew a long, tremulous breath. ”It's so tarnation _quick_! It's either all over before you can ketch your breath, or it's got beyond you for good.” It evidently did not occur to him to thank the girls for their part. They had only done what every one did in an emergency, the best they could. He looked back at the burned tract on the other side of the road and said: ”They've got the best of that all right, too. I jest heard 'em shoutin' that the men from Chitford had worked round from the upper end. So they've got a ring round it. Nothin' to do now but watch that it don't jump. My! 'Twas a close call. I've been to a lot of fires in my day, but I d'know as I ever see a _closeter_ call!”
”It can't be _over_!” cried Sylvia, looking at the lurid light across the road. ”Why, it isn't an hour since we--”
”Land! No, it ain't _over!_” he explained, scornful of her inexperience. ”They'll have to have a gang of men here watchin' it all night--and maybe all tomorrow--'less we have some rain. But it won't go no further than the fire-line, and as soon as there're men enough to draw that all around, it's _got_ to stop!” He went on to his companion, irritably, pressing his hand to his side: ”There ain't no use talkin', I got to quit fire-fightin'. My heart 'most gi'n out on me in the hottest of that. And yit I'm only sixty!”
”It ain't no job for old folks,” said the other bitterly. ”If it had ha' gone a hundred feet further that way, 'twould ha' been in where Ed Hewitt's been lumberin', and if it had got into them dry tops and brush--well, I guess 'twould ha' gone from here to Chitford village before it stopped. And 'twouldn't ha' stopped there, neither!”
The old man said reflectively: ”'Twas the first load of men did the business. 'Twas nip and tuck down to the last foot if we could stop it on that side. I tell you, ten minutes of that kind o' work takes about ten years off'n a man's life. We'd just about gi'n up when we saw 'em coming. I bet I won't be no gladder to see the pearly gates than I was to see them men with hoes.”
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