Part 2 (1/2)

Many railroad projects have been launched, some of them unique, but never before was enterprise conceived in just the spirit that gave the Poquette Carry Railway to the transportation world. There have been railroads that ”began somewhere and ended in a sheep pasture.” The Poquette Carry Road, known to the legislature of its state as ”The Rainy-Day Railroad,” is even more indifferently located, for it twists for six miles, from water to water, through as tangled and lonely a wilderness as ever owl hooted in.

Yet it has two of the country's railroad kings behind it and at its inception some very wrathful lumber kings were ahead of it, and the final and decisive battle that was fought was between the champions of the respective sides--an old man and a young one.

The old man had all the opinionated conservatism of one who despises new methods and modern progress as ”hifalutin and new-fangled notions.”

The young man, fresh from a school of technology and just completing an apprentices.h.i.+p under the engineers of a big railroad system, had not an old-fas.h.i.+oned idea.

The old man came roaring from the deep woods, choleric, impatient of opposition, and flaming with the rage of a tyrant who is bearded in his own stronghold for the first time. The young man advanced from the city to meet him with the coolness of one who has been taught to restrain his emotions, and armed with determination to win the battle that would make or break him, so far as his employers were concerned.

Jerrard was the avant-courier of this novel railroad. Jerrard had been traffic-manager of the great P. K. & R. system for many years, and when he grew bilious and ”blue” and very disagreeable, the doctor told him to go back into the woods so far that he would not think about tariff or rebates or compet.i.tion for two months.

Jerrard chose Kennegamon Lake. A New England general pa.s.senger-agent whom he had met at a convention told him about that wilderness gem, and lauded it with a certain attractiveness of detail that made Jerrard anxious to test the veracity of New England railroad men, whose ”fis.h.i.+n'-story” folders he had always doubted with professional scepticism.

The journey by rail was a long one, and it afforded leisure for so much cogitation that when Jerrard napped he dreamed that the ends of his nerves were nailed to his desk back in the P. K. & R. general offices, and that as he proceeded he was unreeling them as a spider spins its thread.

When he left the train at Sunkhaze station he was still worrying as to whether the a.s.sistant traffic-manager would be able to beat the O. & O.

road on the grain contract. In thinking it over about a month later it occurred to him that he had dropped all outside affairs right there on that station platform.

In the first place the mosquitoes and black flies were waiting. He had never seen or felt black flies before. He would have scouted the idea that there were insects no bigger than pinheads that in five minutes would have his face streaming with blood.

”They do just love the taste of city sports,” said the guide. ”We old sanups ain't much of a delicacy 'long side of such as you. Here, let me put this on.” He daubed the white face of the city man with an evil-smelling compound of tar and oil.

Jerrard's mind was rapidly freeing itself from transportation worries.

Then came the long paddle across Spinnaker Lake, with only the unfamiliar insecurity of a canoe beneath him, and after that the six-mile Poquette carry.

By this time Jerrard had forgotten the P. K. & R. entirely.

The canoe and duffel went across the carry slung upon a set of wheels.

Jerrard rode in the low-backed middle seat of a muddy buck-board.

The wheels ran against boulders, grated off with indignant ”chuckering”

of axle-boxes, hobbled over stumps and plowed through ”honey-pots” of mud.

”For goodness' sake,” gasped Jerrard, holding desperately to the seat, ”why don't you get into the road?”

The driver, a French-Canadian turned and displayed an appreciative grin.

”Eet ban de ro'd vat you saw de re,” he explained, pointing his whip to the thoroughfare they were pursuing.

”This a road?” demanded Jerrard, with indignation.

”Oui, eet ban a tote-road.”

”I never heard of this kind before,” e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Jerrard, between b.u.mps, ”but the name 'road' ought not to be disgraced in any such fas.h.i.+on. How much of it is there?”

”Sax mal'.”

”Six miles! All like this?”

”Aw-w-w some pretty well, some as much bad.”