The Affair at Grover Station
I heard this story sitting on the rear platform of an accommodation freight that
crawled along through the brown, sun-dried wilderness between Grover Station and Cheyenne.
The narrator was "Terrapin" Rodgers, who had been a classmate of mine at
Princeton, and who was then cashier in the B railroad office at
Cheyenne. Rodgers was an Albany boy, but after his father failed in business, his uncle
got "Terrapin" a position on a western railroad, and he left college and
disappeared completely from our little world, and it was not until I was sent West, by the
University with a party of geologists who were digging for fossils in the region about
Sterling, Colorado, that I saw him again. On this particular occasion Rodgers had been
down at Sterling to spend Sunday with me, and I accompanied him when he returned to
Cheyenne.
When the train pulled out of Grover Station, we were sitting smoking on the rear
platform, watching the pale yellow disk of the moon that was just rising and that drenched
the naked, gray plains in a soft lemon-colored light. The telegraph poles scored the sky
like a musical staff as they flashed by, and the stars, seen between the wires, looked
like the notes of some erratic symphony. The stillness of the night and the loneliness and
barrenness of the plains were conducive to an uncanny train of thought. We had just left
Grover Station behind us, and the murder of the station agent at Grover, which had
occurred the previous winter, was still the subject of much conjecturing and theorizing
all along that line of railroad. Rodgers had been an intimate friend of the murdered
agent, and it was said that he knew more about the affair than any other living man, but
with that peculiar reticence which at college had won him the sobriquet
"Terrapin," he had kept what he knew to himself, and even the most accomplished
reporter on the New York Journal, who had traveled halfway across the continent for the
express purpose of pumping Rodgers, had given him up as impossible. But I had known
Rodgers a long time, and since I had been grubbing in the chalk about Sterling, we had
fallen into a habit of exchanging confidences, for it is good to see an old face in a
strange land. So, as the little red station house at Grover faded into the distance, I
asked him point blank what he knew about the murder of Lawrence O'Toole. Rodgers took a
long pull at his black briar pipe as he answered me.
"Well, yes, I could tell you something about it, but the question is how much
you'd believe, and whether you could restrain yourself from reporting it to the Society
for Psychical Research. I never told the story but once, and then it was to the Division
Superintendent, and when I finished the old gentleman asked if I were a drinking man, and
remarking that a fertile imagination was not a desirable quality in a railroad employee,
said it would be just as well if the story went no further. You see it's a grewsome tale,
and someway we don't like to be reminded that there are more things in heaven and earth
than our systems of philosophy can grapple with. However, I should rather like to tell the
story to a man who would look at it objectively and leave it in the domain of pure
incident where it belongs. It would unburden my mind, and I'd like to get a scientific
man's opinion on the yarn. But I suppose I'd better begin at the beginning, with the dance
which preceded the tragedy, just as such things follow each other in a play. I notice that
Destiny, who is a good deal of an artist in her way, frequently falls back upon that
elementary principle of contrast to make things interesting for us.
"It was the thirty-first of December, the morning of the incoming Governor's
inaugural ball, and I got down to the office early, for I had a heavy day's work ahead of
me, and I was going to the dance and wanted to close up by six o'clock. I had scarcely
unlocked the door when I heard someone calling Cheyenne on the wire, and hurried over to
the instrument to see what was wanted. It was Lawrence O'Toole, at Grover, and he said he
was coming up for the ball on the extra, due in Cheyenne at nine o'clock that night. He
wanted me to go up to see Miss Masterson and ask her if she could go with him. He had had
some trouble in getting leave of absence, as the last regular train for Cheyenne then left
Grover at 5:45 in the afternoon, and as there was an eastbound going through Grover at
7:30. The dispatcher didn't want him away, in case there should be orders for the 7:30
train. So Larry had made no arrangement with Miss Masterson, as he was uncertain about
getting up until he was notified about the extra.
"I telephoned Miss Masterson and delivered Larry's message. She replied that she
had made an arrangement to go to the dance with Mr. Freymark, but added laughingly that no
other arrangement held when Larry could come.
"About noon Freymark dropped in at the office, and I suspected he'd got his time
from Miss Masterson. While he was hanging around, Larry called me up to tell me that
Helen's flowers would be up from Denver on the Union Pacific passenger at five, and he
asked me to have them sent up to her promptly and to call for her that evening in case the
extra should be late. Freymark, of course, listened to the message, and when the sounder
stopped, he smiled in a slow, disagreeable way, and saying, Thank you. That's all I
wanted to know,' left the office.
"Lawrence O'Toole had been my predecessor in the cashier's office at Cheyenne, and
he needs a little explanation now that he is under ground, though when he was in the world
of living men, he explained himself better than any man I have ever met, East or West.
I've knocked about a good deal since I cut loose from Princeton, and I've found that there
are a great many good fellows in the world, but I've not found many better than Larry. I
think I can say, without stretching a point, that he was the most popular man on the
Division. He had a faculty of making everyone like him that amounted to a sort of genius.
When he first went to working on the road, he was the agent's assistant down at Sterling,
a mere kid fresh from Ireland, without a dollar in his pocket, and no sort of backing in
the world but his quick wit and handsome face. It was a face that served him as a sight
draft, good in all banks.
"Freymark was cashier at the Cheyenne office then, but he had been up to some
dirty work with the company, and when it fell in the line of Larry's duty to expose him,
he did so without hesitating. Eventually Freymark was discharged, and Larry was made
cashier in his place. There was, after that, naturally, little love lost between them, and
to make matters worse, Helen Masterson took a fancy to Larry, and Freymark had begun to
consider himself pretty solid in that direction. I doubt whether Miss Masterson ever
really liked the blackguard, but he was a queer fish, and she was a queer girl and she
found him interesting.
"Old John J. Masterson, her father, had been United States Senator from Wyoming,
and Helen had been educated at Wellesley and had lived in Washington a good deal. She
found Cheyenne dull and had got into the Washington way of tolerating anything but
stupidity, and Freymark certainly was not stupid. He passed as an Alsatian Jew, but he had
lived a good deal in Paris and had been pretty much all over the world, and spoke the more
general European languages fluently. He was a wiry, sallow, unwholesome looking man,
slight and meagerly built, and he looked as though he had been dried through and through
by the blistering heat of the tropics. His movements were as lithe and agile as those of a
cat, and invested with a certain unusual, stealthy grace. His eyes were small and black as
bright jet beads; his hair very thick and coarse and straight, black with a sort of purple
luster to it, and he always wore it correctly parted in the middle and brushed smoothly
about his ears. He had a pair of the most impudent red lips that closed over white,
regular teeth. His hands, of which he took the greatest care, were the yellow, wrinkled
hands of an old man, and shrivelled at the finger-tips, though I don't think he could have
been much over thirty. The long and short of it is that the fellow was uncanny. You
somehow felt that there was that in his present, or in his past, or in his destiny which
isolated him from other men. He dressed in excellent taste, was always accommodating, with
the most polished manners and an address extravagantly deferential. He went into cattle
after he lost his job with the company, and had an interest in a ranch ten miles out,
though he spent most of his time in Cheyenne at the Capitol card rooms. He had an
insatiable passion for gambling, and he was one of the few men who make it pay.
"About a week before the dance, Larry's cousin, Harry Burns, who was a reporter on
the London Times, stopped in Cheyenne on his way to 'Frisco, and Larry came up to meet
him. We took Burns up to the club, and I noticed that he acted rather queerly when
Freymark came in. Burns went down to Grover to spend a day with Larry, and on Saturday
Larry wired me to come down and spend Sunday with him, as he had important news for me.
"I went, and the gist of his information was that Freymark, then going by another
name, had figured in a particularly ugly London scandal that happened to be in Burns's
beat, and his record had been exposed. He was, indeed, from Paris, but there was not a
drop of Jewish blood in his veins, and he dated from farther back than Israel. His father
was a French soldier who, during his service in the East, had bought a Chinese slave girl,
had become attached to her, and married her, and after her death had brought her child
back to Europe with him. He had entered the civil service and held several subordinate
offices in the capital, where his son was educated. The boy, socially ambitious and
extremely sensitive about his Asiatic blood, after having been blackballed at a club, had
left and lived by an exceedingly questionable traffic in London, assuming a Jewish
patronymic to account for his oriental complexion and traits of feature. That explained
everything. That explained why Freymark's hands were those of a centenarian. In his veins
crept the sluggish amphibious blood of a race that was already old when Jacob tended the
flocks of Laban upon the hills of Padan-Aram, a race that was in its mort cloth before
Europes swaddling clothes were made.
"Of course, the question at once came up as to what ought to be done with Burns's
information. Cheyenne clubs are not exclusive, but a Chinaman who had been engaged in
Freymark's peculiarly unsavory traffic would be disbarred in almost any region outside of
Whitechapel. One thing was sure: Miss Masterson must be informed of the matter at once.
"'On second thought,' said Larry, 'I guess I'd better tell her myself. It will
have to be done easy like, not to hurt her self-respect too much. Like as not I'll go off
my head the first time I see him and call him rat-eater to his face.'
"Well, to get back to the day of the dance, I was wondering whether Larry would
stay over to tell Miss Masterson about it the next day, for of course he couldn't spring
such a thing on a girl at a party.
"That evening I dressed early and went down to the station at nine to meet Larry.
The extra came in, but no Larry. I saw Connelly, the conductor, and asked him if he had
seen anything of O'Toole, but he said he hadn't, that the station at Grover was open when
he came through, but that he found no train orders and couldn't raise anyone, so supposed
O'Toole had come up on 153. I went back to the office and called Grover, but got no
answer. Then I sat down at the instrument and called for fifteen minutes straight. I
wanted to go then and hunt up the conductor of 153, the passenger that went through Grover
at 5:30 in the afternoon, and ask him what he knew about Larry, but it was then 9:45 and I
knew Miss Masterson would be waiting, so I jumped into the carriage and told the driver to
make up time. On my way to the Mastersons' I did some tall thinking. I could find no
explanation for O'Toole's nonappearance, but the business of the moment was to invent one
for Miss Masterson that would neither alarm nor offend her. I couldn't exactly tell her he
wasn't coming, for he might show up yet, so I decided to say the extra was late, and I
didn't know when it would be in.
"Miss Masterson had been an exceptionally beautiful girl to begin with, and life
had done a great deal for her. Fond as I was of Larry, I used to wonder whether a girl who
had led such a full and independent existence would ever find the courage to face life
with a railroad man who was so near the bottom of a ladder that is so long and steep.
"She came down the stairs in one of her Paris gowns that are as meat and drink to
Cheyenne society reporters, with her arms full of American Beauty roses and her eyes and
cheeks glowing. I noticed the roses then, though I didn't know that they were the boy's
last message to the woman he loved. She paused halfway down the stairs and looked at me,
and then over my head into the drawing room, and then her eyes questioned mine. I bungled
at my explanation and she thanked me for coming, but she couldn't hide her disappointment,
and scarcely glanced at herself in the mirror as I put her wrap about her shoulders.
"It was not a cheerful ride down to the Capitol. Miss Masterson did her duty by me
bravely, but I found it difficult to be even decently attentive to what she was saying.
Once arrived at Representative Hall, where the dance was held, the strain was relieved,
for the fellows all pounced down on her for dances, and there were friends of hers there
from Helena and Laramie, and my responsibility was practically at an end. Don't expect me
to tell you what a Wyoming inaugural ball is like. I'm not good at that sort of thing, and
this dance is merely incidental to my story. Dance followed dance, and still no Larry. The
dances I had with Miss Masterson were torture. She began to question and cross-question
me, and when I got tangled up in my lies, she became indignant. Freymark was late in
arriving. It must have been after midnight when he appeared, correct and smiling, having
driven in from his ranch. He was effusively gay and insisted upon shaking hands with me,
though I never willingly touched those clammy hands of his. He was constantly dangling
about Miss Masterson, who made rather a point of being gracious to him. I couldn't much
blame her under the circumstances, but it irritated me, and I'm not ashamed to say that I
rather spied on them. When they were on the balcony I heard him say:
"'You see I've forgiven this morning entirely.'
"She answered him rather coolly:
"'Ah, but you are constitutionally forgiving. However, I'll be fair and forgive
too. It's more comfortable.'
"Then he said in a slow insinuating tone, and I could fairly see him thrust out
those impudent red lips of his as he said it: If I can teach you to forgive, I
wonder whether I could not also teach you to forget? I almost think I could. At any rate I
shall make you remember this night.
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"As they came in, I saw him slip one of Larry's red roses into his pocket.
"It was not until near the end of the dance that the clock of destiny sounded the
first stroke of the tragedy. I remember how gay the scene was, so gay that I had almost
forgotten my anxiety in the music, flowers and laughter. The orchestra was playing a
waltz, drawing the strains out long and sweet like the notes of a flute, and Freymark was
dancing with Helen. I was not dancing myself then, and suddenly I noticed some confusion
among the waiters who stood watching by one of the doors, and Larrys black dog,
Duke, all foam at the mouth, shot in the side and bleeding, dashed in through the door and
eluding the caterer's men, ran half the length of the hall and threw himself at Freymark's
feet, uttering a howl piteous enough to herald any sort of calamity. Freymark, who had not
seen him before, turned with an exclamation of rage and a face absolutely livid and kicked
the wounded brute halfway across the slippery floor. There was something fiendishly brutal
and horrible in the episode, it was the breaking out of the barbarian blood through his
mask of European civilization, a jet of black mud that spurted up from some nameless pest
hole of filthy heathen cities. The music stopped, people began moving about in a confused
mass, and I saw Helen's eyes seeking mine appealingly. I hurried to her, and by the time I
reached her Freymark had disappeared.
"'Get the carriage and take care of Duke,' she said, and her voice trembled like
that of one shivering with cold.
"When we were in the carriage she spread one of the robes on her knee, and I
lifted the dog up to her, and she took him in her arms, comforting him.
"Where is Larry, and what does all this mean?' she asked. 'You cant
put me off any longer, for I danced with a man who came up on the extra.'
"Then I made a clean breast of it, and told her what I knew, which was little
enough.
"'Do you think he is ill?' she asked.
"I replied, 'I don't know what to think. I'm all at sea.' For since the appearance
of the dog, I was genuinely alarmed.
"She was silent for a long time, but when the rays of the electric street lights
flashed at intervals into the carriage, I could see that she was leaning back with her
eyes closed and the dog's nose against her throat. At last she said with a note of
entreaty in her voice, Can't you think of anything? I saw that she was
thoroughly frightened and told her that it would probably all end in a joke, and that I
would telephone her as soon as I heard from Larry, and would more than likely have
something amusing to tell her.
"It was snowing hard when we reached the Senator's, and when we got out of the
carriage she gave Duke tenderly over to me and I remember how she dragged on my arm and
how played out and exhausted she seemed.
"You really must not worry at all,' I said. 'You know how uncertain railroad
men are. It's sure to be better at the next inaugural ball; we'll all be dancing together
then.'
"The next inaugural ball,' she said as we went up the steps, putting out her
hand to catch the snow-flakes. 'That seems a long way off.'
"I got down to the office late next morning, and before I had time to try Grover,
the dispatcher at Holyoke called me up to ask whether Larry were still in Cheyenne. He
couldn't raise Grover, he said, and he wanted to give Larry train orders for 151, the
eastbound passenger. When he heard what I had to say, he told me I had better go down to
Grover on 151 myself, as the storm threatened to tie up all the trains and we might look
for trouble.
"I had the veterinary surgeon fix up Duke's side, and I put him in the express
car, and boarded 151 with a mighty cold, uncomfortable sensation in the region of my
diaphragm.
"It had snowed all night long, and the storm had developed into a blizzard, and
the passenger had difficulty in making any headway at all.
"When we got into Grover I thought it was the most desolate spot I had ever looked
on, and as the train pulled out, leaving me there, I felt like sending a message of
farewell to the world. You know what Grover is, a red box of a station, section house
barricaded by coal sheds and a little group of dwellings at the end of everything, with
the desert running out on every side to the sky line. The houses and station were covered
with a coating of snow that clung to them like wet plaster, and the siding was one deep
snow drift, banked against the station door. The plain was a wide, white ocean of
swirling, drifting snow, that beat and broke like the thrash of the waves in the merciless
wind that swept, with nothing to break it, from the Rockies to the Missouri.
"When I opened the station door, the snow fell in upon the floor, and Duke sat
down by the empty, fireless stove and began to howl and whine in a heartbreaking fashion.
Larry's sleeping room upstairs was empty. Downstairs, everything was in order, and all the
station work had been done up. Apparently the last thing Larry had done was to bill out a
car of wool from the Oasis sheep ranch for Dewey, Gould & Co., Boston. The car had
gone out on 153, the eastbound that left Grover at seven o'clock the night before, so he
must have been there at that time. I copied the bill in the copy book, and went over to
the section house to make inquiries.
"The section boss was getting ready to go out to look after his track. He said he
had seen O'Toole at 5:30, when the westbound passenger went through, and, not having seen
him since, supposed he was still in Cheyenne. I went over to Larry's boarding house, and
the woman said he must be in Cheyenne, as he had eaten his supper at five o'clock the
night before, so that he would have time to get his station work done and dress. The
little girl, she said, had gone over at five to tell him that supper was ready. I
questioned the child carefully. She said there was another man, a stranger, in the station
with Larry when she went in and that though she didn't hear anything they said, and Larry
was sitting with his chair tilted back and his feet on the stove, she somehow had thought
they were quarreling. The stranger, she said, was standing; he had a fur coat on and his
eyes snapped like he was mad, and she was afraid of him. I asked her if she could recall
anything else about him, and she said, 'Yes, he had very red lips.' When I heard that, my
heart grew cold as a snow lump, and when I went out the wind seemed to go clear through
me. It was evident enough that Freymark had gone down there to make trouble, had quarreled
with Larry and had boarded either the 5:30 passenger or the extra, and got the conductor
to let him off at his ranch, and accounted for his late appearance at the dance.
"It was five o'clock then, but the 5:30 train was two hours late, so there was
nothing to do but sit down and wait for the conductor, who had gone out on the seven
o'clock eastbound the night before, and who must have seen Larry when he picked up the car
of wool. It was growing dark by that time. The sky was a dull lead color, and the snow had
drifted about the little town until it was almost buried, and was still coming down so
fast that you could scarcely see your hand before you.
"I was never so glad to hear anything as that whistle, when old 153 came lumbering
and groaning in through the snow. I ran out on the platform to meet her, and her headlight
looked like the face of an old friend. I caught the conductor's arm the minute he stepped
off the train, but he wouldn't talk until he got in by the fire. He said he hadn't seen
OToole at all the night before, but he had found the bill for the wool car on the
table, with a note from Larry asking him to take the car out on the Q.T., and he had
concluded that Larry had gone up to Cheyenne on the 5:30. I wired the Cheyenne office and
managed to catch the express clerk who had gone through on the extra the night before. He
wired me saying that he had not seen Larry board the extra, but that his dog had crept
into his usual place in the express car, and he had supposed Larry was in the coach. He
had seen Freymark get on at Grover, and the train had slowed up a trifle at his ranch to
let him off, for Freymark stood in with some of the boys and sent his cattle shipments our
way.
"When the night fairly closed down on me, I began to wonder how a gay, expensive
fellow like O'Toole had ever stood six months at Grover. The snow had let up by that time,
and the stars were beginning to glitter cold and bright through the hurrying clouds. I put
on my ulster and went outside. I began a minute tour of inspection, I went through empty
freight cars run down by the siding, searched the coal houses and primitive cellar,
examining them carefully, and calling O'Toole's name. Duke at my heels dragged himself
painfully about, but seemed as much at sea as I, and betrayed the nervous suspense and
altertness of a bird dog that has lost his game.
'I went back to the office and took the big station lamp upstairs to make a more
careful examination of Larry's sleeping room. The suit of clothes that he usually wore at
his work was hanging on the wall. His shaving things were lying about, and I recognized
the silver-backed military hair brushes that Miss Masterson had given him at Christmas
time, lying on his chiffonier. The upper drawer was open and a pair of white kid gloves
was lying on the corner. A white string tie hung across his pipe rack, it was crumpled and
had evidently proved unsatisfactory when he tied it. On the chiffonier lay several clean
handkerchiefs with holes in them, where he had unfolded them and thrown them by in a hasty
search for a whole one. A black silk muffler hung on the chair back, and a top hat was set
awry on the head of a plaster cast of Parnell, Larry's hero. His dress suit was missing,
so there was no doubt that he had dressed for the party. His overcoat lay on his trunk and
his dancing shoes were on the floor, at the foot of the bed beside his everyday ones. I
knew that his pumps were a little tight, he had joked about them when I was down the
Sunday before the dance, but he had only one pair, and he couldn't have got another in
Grover if he had tried himself. That set me to thinking. He was a dainty fellow about his
shoes and I knew his collection pretty well. I went to his closet and found them all
there. Even granting him a prejudice against overcoats, I couldn't conceive of his going
out in that stinging weather without shoes. I noticed that a surgeon's case, such as are
carried on passenger trains, and which Larry had once appropriated in Cheyenne, was open,
and that the roll of medicated cotton had been pulled out and recently used. Each
discovery I made served only to add to my perplexity. Granted that Freymark had been
there, and granted that he had played the boy an ugly trick, he could not have spirited
him away without the knowledge of the train crew.
"Duke, old doggy,' I said to the poor spaniel who was sniffing and whining
about the bed, 'you haven't done your duty. You must have seen what went on between your
master and that clam-blooded Asiatic, and you ought to be able to give me a tip of some
sort.'
"I decided to go to bed and make a fresh start on the ugly business in the
morning. The bed looked as though someone had been lying on it, so I started to beat it up
a little before I got in. I took off the pillow and as I pulled up the mattress, on the
edge of the ticking at the head of the bed, I saw a dark red stain about the size of my
hand. I felt the cold sweat come out on me, and my hands were dangerously unsteady, as I
carried the lamp over and set it down on the chair by the bed. But Duke was too quick for
me, he had seen that stain and leaping on the bed began sniffling it, and whining like a
dog that is being whipped to death. I bent down and felt it with my fingers. It was dry
but the color and stiffness were unmistakably those of coagulated blood. I caught up my
coat and vest and ran downstairs with Duke yelping at my heels. My first impulse was to go
and call someone, but from the platform not a single light was visible, and I knew the
section men had been in bed for hours. I remembered then, that Larry was often annoyed by
hemorrhages at the nose in that high altitude, but even that did not altogether quiet my
nerves, and I realized that sleeping in that bed was quite out of the question.
"Larry always kept a supply of brandy and soda on hand, so I made myself a stiff
drink and filled the stove and locked the door, turned down the lamp and lay down on the
operator's table. I had often slept there when I was night operator. At first it was
impossible to sleep, for Duke kept starting up and limping to the door and scratching at
it, yelping nervously. He kept this up until I was thoroughly unstrung, and though I'm
ordinarily cool enough, there wasn't money enough in Wyoming to have bribed me to open
that door. I felt cold all over every time I went near it, and I even drew the big rusty
bolt that was never used, and it seemed to me that it groaned heavily as I drew it, or
perhaps it was the wind outside that groaned. As for Duke, I threatened to put him out,
and boxed his ears until I hurt his feelings, and he lay down in front of the door with
his muzzle between his paws and his eyes shining like live coals and riveted on the crack
under the door. The situation was grewsome enough, but the liquor had made me drowsy and
at last I fell asleep.
"It must have been about three o'clock in the morning that I was awakened by the
crying of the dog, a whimper low, continuous and pitiful, and indescribably human. While I
was blinking my eyes in an effort to get thoroughly awake, I heard another sound, the
grating sound of chalk on a wooden blackboard, or of a soft pencil on a slate. I turned my
head to the right, and saw a man standing with his back to me, chalking something on the
bulletin board. At a glance I recognized the broad, high shoulders and the handsome head
of my friend. Yet there was that about the figure which kept me from calling his name or
from moving a muscle where I lay. He finished his writing and dropped the chalk, and I
distinctly heard its click as it fell. He made a gesture as though he were dusting his
fingers, and then turned facing me, holding his left hand in front of his mouth. I saw him
clearly in the soft light of the station lamp. He wore his dress clothes, and began moving
toward the door silently as a shadow in his black stocking feet. There was about his
movements an indescribable stiffness, as though his limbs had been frozen. His face was
chalky white, his hair seemed damp and was plastered down close about his temples. His
eyes were colorless jellies, dull as lead, and staring straight before him. When he
reached the door, he lowered the hand he held before his mouth to lift the latch. His face
was turned squarely toward me, and the lower jaw had fallen and was set rigidly upon his
collar, the mouth was wide open and was stuffed full of white cotton! Then I knew
it was a dead man's face I looked upon.
"The door opened, and that stiff black figure in stockings walked as noiselessly
as a cat out into the night. I think I went quite mad then. I dimly remember that I rushed
out upon the siding and ran up and down screaming, 'Larry, Larry!' until the wind seemed
to echo my call. The stars were out in myriads, and the snow glistened in their light, but
I could see nothing but the wide, white plain, not even a dark shadow anywhere. When at
last I found myself back in the station, I saw Duke lying before the door and dropped on
my knees beside him, calling him by name. But Duke was past calling back. Master and dog
had gone together, and I dragged him into the corner and covered his face, for his eyes
were colorless and soft, like the eyes of that horrible face, once so beloved.
"The blackboard? O, I didn't forget that. I had chalked the time of the
accommodation on it the night before, from sheer force of habit, for it isnt
customary to mark the time of trains in unimportant stations like Grover. My writing had
been rubbed out by a moist hand, for I could see the finger marks clearly, and in place of
it was written in blue chalk simply,
"I sat there drinking brandy and muttering to myself before that blackboard until
those blue letters danced up and down, like magic lantern pictures when you jiggle the
slides. I drank until the sweat poured off me like rain and my teeth chattered, and I
turned sick at the stomach. At last an idea flashed upon me. I snatched the waybill off
the hook. The car of wool that had left Grover for Boston the night before was numbered
26387.
"I must have got through the rest of the night somehow, for when the sun came up
red and angry over the white plains, the section boss found me sitting by the stove, the
lamp burning full blaze, the brandy bottle empty beside me, and with but one idea in my
head, that box car 26387 must be stopped and opened as soon as possible, and that somehow
it would explain.
"I figured that we could easily catch it in Omaha, and wired the freight agent
there to go through it carefully and report anything unusual. That night I got a wire from
the agent stating that the body of a man had been found under a woolsack at one end of the
car with a fan and an invitation to the inaugural ball at Cheyenne in the pocket of his
dress coat. I wired him not to disturb the body until I arrived, and started for Omaha.
Before I left Grover the Cheyenne office wired me that Freymark had left the town, going
west over the Union Pacific. The company detectives never found him.
"The matter was clear enough then. Being a railroad man, he had hidden the body
and sealed up the car and billed it out, leaving a note for the conductor. Since he was of
a race without conscience or sensibilities, and since his past was more infamous than his
birth, he had boarded the extra and had gone to the ball and danced with Miss Masterson
with blood undried upon his hands.
"When the I saw Larry O'Toole again, he was lying stiff and stark in the
undertakers rooms in Omaha. He was clad in his dress clothes, with black stockings
on his feet, as I had seen him forty-eight hours before. Helen Masterson's fan was in his
pocket. His mouth was wide open and stuffed full of white cotton.
"He had been shot in the mouth, the bullet lodging between the third and fourth
vertebrae. The hemorrhage had been very slight and had been checked by the cotton. The
quarrel had taken place about five in the afternoon. After supper Larry had dressed, all
but his shoes, and had lain down to snatch a wink of sleep, trusting to the whistle of the
extra to waken him. Freymark had gone back and shot him while he was asleep, afterward
placing his body in the wool car, which, but for my telegram, would not have been opened
for weeks.
"That's the whole story. There is nothing more to tell except one detail that I
did not mention to the superintendent. When I said goodbye to the boy before the
undertaker and coroner took charge of the body, I lifted his right hand to take off a ring
that Miss Masterson had given him and the ends of the fingers were covered with blue
chalk."
First published in The Library, I (June 16, 23, 1900), 3-4; 14-15.
Reproduced from Virginia Faulkner, ed, Willa Cather's Collected Short Fiction
1892-1912.
Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1970, 339-52.
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