Read One of My Sons Page 26


  XXIV

  AN OLD CATASTROPHE IS RECALLED

  This idea as advanced by Hope was fantastical to a degree; yet it madeits impression upon me and was still in my mind when I opened theevening paper for the latest news concerning the Gillespie murder. Thefirst paragraph I encountered proved that I had not warned her an hourtoo soon of Leighton Gillespie's position.

  "Fresh disclosures in the Gillespie Poisoning Case. Leighton Gillespie, long regarded as the most respectable and hitherto best-esteemed son of the murdered man, discovered to have been for years the owner, and at times the occupant, of a little house in one of the Oranges, where, unknown to the world at large----"

  Here followed some open allusions to Mille-fleurs.

  Other statements were added to this, among them a _resume_ of thefacts advanced to me the evening before by Rosenthal. At the end werethese lines:

  "The District Attorney has the whole matter in charge, and the public is promised some decided action to-morrow."

  I folded the paper, put it in my pocket, and went directly to Dr.Bennett's office.

  I had not seen the good physician since the inquest, and naturally thesight of his face recalled the strange and moving incidents which hadfirst brought us together. But I made no allusion to these pastexperiences, and his first remark was wholly professional.

  "I hope it is not as a patient I see you, Mr. Outhwaite?"

  With a shake of the head I took out the newspaper I had been carefulto bring with me, and pointed out the paragraph concerning Leightonand Mille-fleurs.

  "Is this news to you?" I asked. "I make the inquiry solely in theinterests of Miss Meredith, who has hitherto had unbounded confidencein this cousin."

  He glanced at the lines, frowned, and then with a pained look,replied:

  "I do not believe this of Leighton. He of all Mr. Gillespie's sons isthe furthest removed from the suspicion connecting them with the crimewhich has wrecked their good name. He is incapable of any seriouswrong-doing; incapable even of what these lines suggest. I have knownhim from his birth."

  I would gladly have left this kind-hearted physician in undisturbedpossession of this confidence, but the situation was too serious totrifle with.

  "He enjoys a good name," I allowed, "and has even been known to exerthimself in many acts of benevolence towards the unfortunate and thesuffering. But some natures, and they are frequently those from whichmost is to be expected, have a reverse side, which will not bear thescrutiny either of their friends or the world at large. LeightonGillespie has one of these natures. This story of the little house istrue."

  The doctor, who was evidently heart and soul with this family, showeda distress at this avowal which spoke well for the hold which thisespecial member of it had upon his affections.

  Seeing that, while not ready to question my word, he was anxious toknow the sources of my information, I was about to enter upon thenecessary explanations, when he forestalled me by saying:

  "There have always been unexplained traits in this man. He standsalone among the other members of the family. He has neither the socialqualities of George nor the luxurious tastes of Alfred. Nor is he likehis father. I, who knew his mother well, have no difficulty inattributing to their correct source the religious tendencies whichform so distinct a part of his character. But the melancholy whichpervades his life is not an inheritance, but the result of nervousshock incident upon an extreme grief in early life, and while I do notprofess to understand him or the many peculiarities to which hisfather rightfully raised objection, I am positive that he will neverbe found guilty of a depraved act. I am ready to stake my reputationon it."

  "You should talk with Miss Meredith," I suggested. "She believes, orendeavours to believe, in him also. But even she finds herself forcedto accept the truth of this report. The facts favouring it are toounmistakable. I can myself supply evidence enough to make his guilt inthis regard quite sure."

  And, without preamble, I entered upon a detailed account of thediscoveries made by me at Mother Merry's. They were, as you well know,convincing in their nature, and allowed but two conclusions to bedrawn. Either Leighton Gillespie was a monster of hypocrisy or he wasthe victim of the mental derangement so fondly suggested by Hope.

  This last explanation I left to the perspicacity of the trainedphysician. Would he seize upon it as she did? Or would he fail to seein these results any symptoms of the strange mental malady alluded toby Hope? I watched him anxiously. Evidently no such explanation waslikely to suggest itself to him unaided. Indeed, his next words provedhow far any such conclusion was from his mind.

  "You overwhelm me," said he. "It was hard enough to look upon Georgeor Alfred as capable of a crime so despicable, but Leighton!--I shallhave to readjust all my memories and all my fancied relations withthis family if _he_ is to be looked upon with suspicion. Then there isClaire!"

  "Pardon me," I ventured, in vague apology for an interruption whichseemed out of place from a stranger. "Have you looked upon Leighton asa well man? You speak of a great grief----"

  "The loss of his wife."

  "I supposed so. Now, could this grief have disturbed the even balanceof his mind so as to make these abnormal developments possible? Did heshow the inconsistencies you mention prior to the event you speak of?It might be well to inquire."

  "Insanity?" he intimated. "Will that be the plea?"

  "Do you think it can be advanced? He has not yet been arrested or evenopenly accused, but I am confident he will be, and soon, and it iswell for his friends to be prepared."

  "That is a question I cannot answer without serious thought," rejoinedthe doctor, restlessly pacing the room. "Intimately as I have beenassociated with him I have never for a moment felt myself called uponto doubt his perfect sanity. Does Miss Meredith regard hiseccentricities in this light?"

  "Miss Meredith's inherent belief in the goodness of this favouritecousin leads her to give him the benefit of her doubts. She regardshim as a man cursed by recurrent aberrations of mind; in other words,a victim of double consciousness."

  "Hope does? What does she know about the nice distinctions governingthis peculiar condition? She must have brought all her imagination tobear on the subject, to find such an excuse for his contradictoryactions. This argues a great partiality for him on her part. She mustbe in love with Leighton."

  I was silent.

  The doctor's amazement was very genuine.

  "Well, I never suspected her of any such preference. I have had anidea at times that she favoured Alfred rather than George, but I neverthought of her being caught by Leighton's melancholy countenance andeccentric ways. Well! women are an incomprehensible lot! The onlywidower amongst the three! The only one not likely to be affected byher partiality. But that's neither here nor there. It's her theory weare interested in. A strange one! A very strange one!"

  Suddenly he grew thoughtful. "But not an impossible one," was hisfinal comment. "The shock he sustained might account for almostanything. Such restrained natures have great depths and are subject togreat reactions! I must study the case; I can give no offhand opinionupon it. The contradictions observable in his conduct are not normaland certainly show disease. What was the question you asked me?" hesuddenly inquired. "Whether he showed his present peculiarities priorto the death of his wife? I don't think he did; really, I don't thinkhe did. He was reserved in his ways, unhappy, out of tune with hisfather because that father failed to appreciate the daughter-in-law hehad foisted upon him, but he showed these feelings naturally and notat all as he showed them later. Have you heard the current gossipconcerning his marriage?"

  "Not at all, save that it was an unfortunate one and created, as yousay, a certain barrier between him and his father."

  "Yes, it was an unfortunate one; the whole thing was unfortunate. Somuch so that his friends felt a decided relief when young Mrs.Gillespie died. But her husband regarded this loss as an irreparableone; he was wrapped up in her when she was alive, and, as you now cal
lto mind, has never been the same man since her death. Perhaps it wasbecause he had no outlet for his grief. His father would not hear hername mentioned, and little Claire was too young to even remember hermother. Fortunately, perhaps."

  The last words were said in his throat, and opened up a wide abyss ofpossibilities into which I had not the curiosity to penetrate. I onlyfelt impelled to ask:

  "Was her death attended with any unusual circumstance that you speakof his sorrow as a shock?"

  For reply he went to his desk, and after some fumbling brought outseveral slips of paper, from among which he chose one which he passedover to me.

  "I have kept this account of a very tragic occurrence, for reasons youwill appreciate on reading it."

  I took the slip and perused it. With no apology for its length, Iintroduce it here. As you will see, it is an engineer's account of theextraordinary accident which took place on the B., F. and D. road somehalf-dozen years ago. It begins abruptly, the extract having beenclosely clipped from the columns of the paper containing it:

  Big Hill is only twelve miles long and has a grade averaging 140 feet to the mile, and the principal part of the grade is in spots. Six loaded cars made a train up this hill, and the train of six cars was hauled and pushed up the grade by two engines. My engine was stationed permanently on the hill, and its duty was to couple to the back end of one of these trains and help it up the grade.

  At the top of the hill was a side-track called Acton, but no telegraph operator was stationed there. At the foot of the grade was Buckley, a telegraph office in the centre of a big side-track system used for breaking up trains before sending them up the grade in sections. Eight miles below Buckley was an abandoned mining town named Campton. Here was a set of side-tracks and switches and a dozen unoccupied miners' shanties, while the disused telegraph office was occupied by a one-legged pensioner of the company--a flagman--and his nineteen-year-old daughter. Twelve miles further down the line was Mountain Springs, now one of the foremost summer resorts in the mountains, and even twenty years ago much frequented by Eastern health-seekers. I explain this so that you will readily understand what happened.

  We had run No. 17 up the hill and were ordered on to the side-track at Acton to get out of the way of No. 11, the through train from the South that was coming North as a double-header, and with a third big engine pushing her. No. 11 was a regular, but was making this trip as an excursion train, and was made up of eight coaches, crowded with people from Mountain Springs.

  As the freight we were shoving came to a stand-still, my fireman leaped to the ground and uncoupled the engine from the last car, and I backed down over the switch and then ran ahead on the side-track. While this was being done, a brakeman had cut the train in front of the last two cars, and the regular engine in front had started ahead with the other cars towards the north switch to back the four cars in on the spur.

  As I shut off steam and centred the reverse lever I saw that the two cars were moving slowly down the hill, and I watched them only long enough to see the rear brakeman clamber up the side-ladder and seize the brake-wheel. Then I tried the water in the boiler, started the injector, and again glanced at the cars. Evidently the brake on the first car was out of order, as the cars were moving more rapidly, and the brakeman was hastening towards the brake on the second car. He grasped it and swung around, and nearly fell to the ground. The brake-chain was broken, and there was nothing to hold the cars.

  In an instant the picture of an awful horror flashed before my eyes. No. 11, crowded with passengers, was coming, and those cars, running at terrific speed, would crash into the train, carrying death and destruction to scores, if not hundreds. The scene at the moment the realisation of the impending disaster came over me is before me now as plainly as on that day, nearly five years ago,--the moving cars, the brakeman stumbling towards the side-ladder to descend, the fireman, who was more than a little deaf, walking away without seeing or hearing what had occurred, and, in his place, a man (I had almost said a gentleman) standing by the switch-staff and gazing towards the cars with eyes that reflected the horror in my own; while thirty miles below, on the line of the twisted, winding track, a faint blur of smoke that told me No. 11 had left Mountain Springs.

  Before the moving cars crossed the switch we all knew what must be done. The man, who for all his good clothes, must have been some fireman off duty, had thrown the switch, and then, seeing that my own man was too far off to meet this emergency, had swung himself on to the foot-board back of the tank; and old 105 was in pursuit of the runaways.

  The brakeman remained to close the switch and the stranger was bracing himself to couple the engine to the swift-moving cars when we should approach them.

  No steam is ever used going down that hill; at the top of the incline the throttle-valve is closed and the speed of the train is controlled by the air-brake. But, as the stranger who had boarded the engine took his stand on the foot-board, I opened the throttle wide to give her a start, then put on the air until I had her under control, and then away we went. The runaway cars were fully one hundred yards ahead as we crossed the switch, and were moving apparently at the rate of eight or ten miles an hour with rapidly increasing momentum. In sixty seconds old 105 was running fifty miles an hour, and in thirty seconds more we were close to the cars. I heard the voice of the man in front shouting something, and knowing that it was to slow down in order to approach the cars without a crash, I applied the air. A slight jolt told me that the engine and car had come together, and after waiting an instant to give my unknown assistant time to drop the pin in place, I pulled the air-valve to lessen the speed. As the engine slowed under the pressure of the brake, I saw the cars glide away from us. He had missed the coupling. Again engine and cars came together and again I applied the air, with the same result.

  We were running now at a speed of sixty or seventy miles an hour, and when you consider that the track on the hill is the crookedest ever surveyed by an engineer, cut up by deep ravines and canyons, and leading along high precipices, you can appreciate the danger of the run. Down the hill we thundered, swinging through deep cuts and around sharp curves, the engine swaying and swinging on her springs as if struggling in an effort to dash herself into one of the gorges lining the track. The engine was surrounded by rolling clouds of dust, through which at times I caught glimpses of the cars pitching and tossing like some dismantled vessel in a storm at sea. I knew the cars might jump the track at any moment and ditch the locomotive, sending the fireman and myself to quick death; but we must take the chances so long as there was a possibility of stopping the runaways.

  Again and again we tried to make the coupling, but failed each time. I did not know, until all was over, the difficulties which the stranger was experiencing. The drawhead in the car was the old-fashioned single-link bumper,--a man-killer we call it now,--and was so loose in its socket that it had to be raised six or eight inches and held in position while the link was being put in place. This required two hands, and as he could not maintain his position on the swaying foot-board without using one hand to cling to the handrail, he could not get the link in place and drop the pin through it.

  By this time we were within three miles of Buckley. As the locomotive and fleeting cars dashed across a trestle one hundred feet high, I caught a glimpse of the little telegraph shanty down in the valley, surrounded by a network of rails. I opened the whistle and kept it shrieking until we were within two hundred yards of Buckley, but no one appeared on the station platform; and as we flashed past the telegra
ph office the white face of the operator, his eyes wide open with alarm and horror, appeared at the window for the fraction of an instant.

  As we dashed past the telegraph office the long arm of the signal-board pointed down, and I thanked God that the next block was still open, and that we had another chance for life. We had eight miles of clear track and might yet prevent a disaster. The only hope, however, was in catching the runaway cars, as there was no telegraph office at Campton and No. 11 had left Mountain Springs and was booming towards us as fast as three big engines could send her, and without a stop ahead.

  We crossed the half-mile of side-tracks at Buckley so fast that there was an unbroken rattle of clanking rails, and swung around the point of the mountain and down the winding track towards Campton. Over swaying bridges, through cuts, old 105 jolted us along at the rate of seventy or eighty miles an hour. In two minutes after crossing the yards at Buckley we were within sight of Campton, nestling below us in the valley. The man on the foot-board had been silent seemingly for hours, and whether he was still at his post or had fallen on the rails and been ground to pieces, I did not know. I realised now that there was no longer a possibility of stopping the cars by coupling to them, and what my hope was, if I had any at all, I do not know; there was only a mad determination to follow those runaway cars to the end and die with the rest.

  As the roofs of Campton came into view the whistle began to sound again. Three miles below lay the half-deserted mining camp; now I could see the rough board station, the red and white switch targets, and the dark spots on the mountain-side that marked the abandoned test-shafts. Then I distinguished a form on the station platform, a slender form in dark calico and wearing a sun-bonnet. The woman's back was towards me, but I knew her to be Nettie Bascom, the daughter of the one-legged flagman. It was ten seconds, perhaps, before the girl heard the whistle; then she turned slowly, looking an instant towards us, and, with a quick spring, was at a switch-stand and had thrown the lever, and the white of the target turned to red and we were safe. But not so the passenger train. The cars had passed over the switch before it could be turned, and in another moment the sound of its bounding wheels, our own cries, and all the other noises of the dreadful moment, were drowned by an explosion that lifted old 105 off the rails and laid everyone within sight insensible on the road. Those cars which we had chased unavailingly for thirty miles or more were laden with dynamite, and when they crashed into that train----

  Do you ask about the man who shared my peril, and all to so little purpose? I can tell you nothing about him. Whether my former conclusion was correct and he had been shaken from his narrow hold into some ditch or gully, or whether he was hurled to destruction at the time of the explosion, I cannot say. I only know that I never saw him again alive or dead.

  Below was added a line by the editor:

  This is an offhand relation of the catastrophe in which Mrs. Leighton Gillespie lost her life. She will be remembered by New York aristocracy as the brilliant, if eccentric, daughter-in-law of Archibald Gillespie, the multi-millionaire.

  I returned the slip to Dr. Bennett. The excitement of that wild ridewas upon me, and I seemed to have been present at the catastrophe itwas intended to avert.

  "Mountain Springs is in the West, I judge. How came the Gillespiesthere, and why was she the sole sufferer? Was he not on the train withher?"

  "That is one of the peculiar features of the affair. He was not on thetrain, but he turned up at the wreck. Those who saw him there say thathe worked like a giant, nay, like a Titan, amongst those ghastlyruins. Finally he found her. She was quite dead. After that he workedno more. It is a story of unmitigated horror, and the agonies of thatawful finding might well leave an indelible impression on his brain."

  "I am glad you recognise this possibility. The effect of such a scene,even where no personal interests are involved, often leaves a man'snerves in a shaken condition for years. Besides--forgive me if I pressmy theory beyond all reason--another possibility has been suggested tome by this engineer's tale. I will not broach it just yet, but inquirefirst how Leighton Gillespie was able to reach the scene of the wreckso quickly. Did he hasten down from the Springs, which seem to havebeen some miles away, or was he in the vicinity of the accident whenit occurred?"

  "That is a question I have never heard answered. But I long agoconcluded that he was not far from the place where the collisionoccurred, for he was seen there as soon as the smoke lifted. Why, whatnow? You seem moved--excited. Has any new idea been suggested to you?"

  I exerted myself to speak calmly, but did not succeed.

  "Yes," I cried, "a strange, a thrilling idea. What if the man whoshared this engineer's awful ride was Leighton Gillespie, and what ifhe knew through all that headlong rush, that the wife he so much lovedwas in the train he was risking his life to save from destruction?"