Part 15 (2/2)
As the leaders neared the corner Hiram cried: ”Haw, Jane! Haw, Buck!”
and tugged once on his jerkline. Obeying the command, the leaders, followed by the eight, brought the wagon close to the left-hand side of the street. Two quick jerks on the line, and the sharp cries, ”Gee, Buck! Gee, Jane!” turned the well-trained leaders to the right and headed them toward the entrance to the cross street. ”Haw, Steve!
Haw, Molly! Over the chain, Molly! Haw, boys, haw!”
At Hiram's command, the off pointer, Molly, had stepped daintily over the heavy chain that ran between her and her mate, and now both of them were pulling the heavy tongue at right angles to the left, the wheelers helping. As neatly as most men might have made the corner with a single buggy, the string of ten and the heavy wagon swung into the intersecting street, as narrow as the other, and not a hub touched.
Jerkline Jo's dark eyes were sparkling. ”You've got a job, Hiram,” she said. ”A jerkline driver who can make that corner without sc.r.a.ping a hub is a real jerkline driver.”
”Thank you,” replied Hiram, with a merry grin, thrilling at her use of his given name. ”And I'll say that the man that trained this team was a jerkline driver, too.”
”A man didn't train them,” Jerkline Jo informed him proudly. ”I trained them.”
”Just the same,” returned Hiram, ”I stick by what I said.”
”Now you take the line, Mr. Tweet,” instructed Jerkline Jo.
”I don't care for it,” said Tweet. ”I'm a promoter and capitalist.
I'll go to work and get a job here in this burg, Miss Jo, and pay you for my transportation down when I've earned the price. But I have a sneaking feeling that Molly wouldn't care for the cadence of my voice; and Pete he eyed me kinda suspiciously when Hiram led 'im out.
No--there's a limit. I've reached it.”
”Drive back to the stable, Hiram,” Jo ordered. ”We'll start for Julia at once.”
She turned to Tweet. ”I'm sorry,” she said. ”Why did you s.h.i.+p down here as a jerkline skinner, Mr. Tweet? You came over a rival railroad, of course, and your transportation will cost me full fare.”
”Madam,” he replied guiltily, ”I was broke, and just had to get outa Frisco. And I couldn't leave Hiram. Why, that boy would 'a' been a suicide, if it hadn't been for me. He was in love, and wouldn't work, and in another day he'd been broke--a hick from Wild-cat Hill alone and friendless and in love in big, cruel San Francisco. If it wasn't for me, you'd never got 'im.”
”That's right,” spoke up Hiram. ”He made me come.”
”Madam,” added Tweet, ”I hope you'll forgive me. I'll pay you all I owe you with interest. I'm the original go-getter from Gogettersburg, on the Grabemoff River. I'm down and out right now, but any day I'm liable to turn into a skyrocket. Madam, you trust me. I've promised Hooker to lead him to fame and fortune, and to do that I gotta stick with 'im, ain't I? Well, then, can't you find somethin' for me to do for you, so's I c'n ride with you to this new railroad? That country sounds good to me. I'll maybe go to work and get a toehold over there.
You'll never regret befriendin' me, Miss Jo.”
The girl stood, thoughtful, her feet planted against the jolting of the wagon.
”Could you help about the cooking?” she asked.
”Madam, I could--and would.”
”I like to be accommodating,” she told him. ”I know how it is. I was raised in the camps, and know all about being broke and knocking about the country. I'll take you along, and I'll take a chance on your paying me for the transportation.”
”You'll never regret it, Miss Jo. Pile whatever you want done on me.
I'm a good roustabout, willin' and cheerful, and always a kind, happy little playmate. Thank you.”
An hour later ten heavy wagons, some of them trailing because of the lack of skinners, rumbled through Palada, with an eight or ten-horse team pulling, the remainder of the horses and mules and Jerkline Jo's black saddle mare following like devoted dogs. Palada was out in a body to wave good-by and good luck to Jerkline Jo. She drove the last team, ten magnificent whites, spotless as circus horses, with thirty tiny bells jingling over their proud necks. Ahead of her in the train Hiram Hooker drove his blacks. As long as she could see anybody at Palada, Jerkline Jo stood in the front of her wagon, facing rearward, and waved her hat. There were tears in her dark eyes as she turned to her team at last, and the desert opened its arms to their coming.
Slowly the teams forged ahead into the infinite sandy waste, where whispering yuccas and th.o.r.n.y cactus grew, and jack rabbits went looping away among bronze greasewood bushes. A cloud of dust hung over the wagon trail. Ahead stretched seeming nothingness for mile after weary mile.
Jerkline Jo hoped to make twenty miles a day, loaded as the wagons were with only the blacksmith outfit. She might have made perhaps twenty-four miles under such conditions, had it not been for the counteracting softness of the teams. Loaded, they would make from ten to twelve miles daily, which seems intolerably slow in these days of speed and nerve-wracking restlessness. But with six of the teams working steadily the outfit would transport upward of thirty tons twelve miles a day, which represents an enormous amount of provisions for man and beast.
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