Sugarloaf Ranch—December 20
When Smoke woke up he got out of bed and looked through the window. “Woowee.”
“What is it?” Sally asked groggily.
“We had some kind of snow last night. I’ll bet we had at least twelve inches.”
“Um, I’ll bet it’s pretty.”
Smoke raised the window then scooped up a little snow from the windowsill. “You want to see how pretty it is?” He dropped the snow onto Sally’s head.
“Smoke! Have you gone crazy?” Sally shouted, though her shout was ameliorated with laughter.
“Poor Duff, he must think we are having a big fight in here,” Smoke said.
“We are.”
“Then I think the least you could do is get up and see us off this morning.”
“Ahh. That was the whole idea of dropping the snow on my head, wasn’t it?”
“You don’t have to fix breakfast. We’ll get something in town. Maybe just some coffee and warm up a couple of the bear claws.”
Sally got out of bed and dressed, and soon the house was permeated by the rich aroma of coffee and warm pastries. Sally joined the men at the table. “How are you going into town? With this snow, I don’t think a buckboard would be a good idea.”
“I was thinking we might hook up the sleigh,” Smoke said.
“Yes,” Duff agreed. “That’s a good idea.”
Warmed and full of coffee and bear claws, it took only a few minutes to get the horses in harness and attached to the sleigh. Then, wrapped in buffalo robes, and taking an extra robe for Matt when they met him, the two men started into town.
The horses quickly found their footing, and the runners of the sleigh made a swishing sound as they slid quickly and easily through the snow. Reaching the depot a little before six o’clock, Smoke and Duff went inside to warm themselves as they waited for the train.
“Smoke, are you here to catch the train?” Phil Wilson, the station agent asked.
“Hi, Phil. No, I’m here to meet a friend who is going to spend Christmas with Sally and me.” Smoke introduced Duff.
“I hope it gets through.”
“Why do you say that? Have you heard something?”
“No, I haven’t heard anything. It’s just that, if it snowed so hard here, what must it have done in the pass?”
“Why don’t you send a telegram to Buena Vista and see if they have anything to report?”
“I was going to wait until six-thirty, and if the train didn’t arrive, contact them then. But there’s really no sense in waiting, is there?”
Smoke and Duff followed Phil back to the corner where the telegrapher had his office.
“Johnny, contact Buena Vista for me, would you? See if they have any information on the train.”
Johnny nodded, then reached out to the telegraph key. He clicked out the code for BV, or Buena Vista. He tried it several times, then looked up at the men gathered anxiously around his desk.
“I’m not getting a response. Their line must be out.”
“Can you go around?”
“Yes. I can go south to Del Norte, and they can go through Pueblo. Pueblo should be able to reach Buena Vista.”
Johnny keyed the instrument again, then it was answered with a series of clacks. Smiling, Johnny sent his message. “It’ll take a moment for them to forward the message on,” he said, looking up from the telegraph key. “I made some coffee if you fellas would like some.”
They were drinking coffee and talking when, a few minutes later, the telegraph instrument started clacking.
Johnny held up his finger, then hurried to the key to respond. After that, the instrument emitted a long series of clicks while Johnny listened and recorded. When it was finished, he read the message to the others. “The train left the station at Buena Vista on time last night. It has not returned to the station, and we have no further word.”
“How do you interpret that, Phil?” Smoke asked.
“If it didn’t return, then I think it is probably still en route. Even if the snow didn’t close the pass, there is no doubt it would slow it down quite a bit. I suspect they are still on the way, just that it is coming very, very slow. I wouldn’t be surprised if it didn’t get here until sometime around noon, or maybe even later than that.”
“All right. We’ll wait for it,” Smoke said.
“Where will you be if I get any further word?” Phil asked.
“We’ll be in Longmont’s Saloon.” Smoke turned at the door. “Oh, Phil, is it all right if I leave the team and sleigh here for a while?”
“Certainly it’s all right,” Phil replied. “Tell Louis I said hello.”
“Will do.”
Smoke and Duff started toward Longmont’s saloon, which was four blocks away. They passed several business establishments where the owners or employees were out front, shoveling snow off the boardwalk. As a result, less than half of their walk was actually through the snow. One large, lumbering wagon pulled by four mules was the only traffic on the street. The snow was so high it was an impediment to the wagon’s forward progress.
Longmont’s was on the opposite side of the road, so Smoke and Duff had to make their way through the knee-deep snow, too. Once they gained the walk in front of the saloon, they stomped their feet on the shoveled boardwalk to get rid of the snow clinging to their boots and the lower part of their trousers. When they had sufficiently divested themselves of the snow, Smoke pushed on the solid doors that had replaced the batwings to keep the cold out and they went inside.
Longmont’s was one of the nicest establishments of its kind. The place would have been at home in San Francisco, St. Louis, or New York. It had a long, polished mahogany bar, with a brass foot rail that Louis kept shining brightly. A cut-glass mirror hung behind the bar, and the artwork was truly art, not the garish nudes so prominent in saloons throughout the West. Longmont’s collection included originals by Winslow Homer, George Catlin, and Thomas Moran.
Louis Longmont was in the bar alone, sitting at his usual table in a corner. He was a lean, hawk-faced man, with strong, slender hands, long fingers, and carefully manicured nails. He had jet-black hair and a black pencil-thin mustache. He always wore fine suits, white shirts, and the ubiquitous ascot. He wore low-heeled boots, and a nickel-plated pistol with ivory handles hung low in a tied-down holster on his right side. If anyone thought the gun was an affectation, he would be foolish to call him on it. Louis was snake-quick and a feared, deadly gun hand when pushed.
He had bought the saloon with winnings at poker, and could make a deck of cards do almost anything, but had never cheated at cards. Possessing a phenomenal memory, he could tell you the odds of filling any type of poker hand, and was an expert at the technique of card counting.
“Smoke, good morning,” Louis called. “Ah, I see you brought Duff with you. What are you doing here so early? Not that I’m not pleased to see you, just a little surprised, is all. Especially on a day like today.”
“We’re meeting the Red Cliff Special.”
“Really? You mean even with all the snow we had last night, there will still be a morning train?”
“Yes, well, that is the question, isn’t it? We were just over at the depot and as far as we know, it is still on the way.”
“My cook’s on duty, if you’d like some breakfast,” Louis suggested.
“Well, yeah, that’s why we came in here. You didn’t think we were going to start drinking this early, did you?” Smoke teased.
“I thought you came in here out of genuine friendship, just to visit me,” Louis said, feigning hurt feelings.
Smoke laughed. “Did the cook make any biscuits this morning?”
“Of course she did. Can you really have breakfast without biscuits?”
As Smoke and Duff waited for their breakfast, they carried on a conversation with Louis Longmont.
Four blocks down the street, Bob Ward went into the depot, approached the stove, and stood there for a moment, warming himself.
“Have you come to catch the train, sir?” Phil asked.
Ward stared at him, but didn’t answer.
“Because the train hasn’t arrived, and may not arrive.”
“Why not?”
“The mountain pass is blocked with snow. It may be that the train can’t get through.”
“It
may be
that it can’t? Or it can’t?”
“I don’t know. It might get here, but if it does, it will be very late.”
Ward nodded, then walked back outside and mounted his horse. He rode down to the far end of the street, to an area known as the red light district, where the seedier saloons were, and where women were available for a price. He dismounted in front of Hannah’s—a step above the cribs and the girls in the saloons, it made no secret of being a brothel—and went inside. “Where the hell are they?” he asked a middle-aged woman sitting behind a counter.
“I beg your pardon?”
“The women. Where are they? Isn’t this a whorehouse?”
“That’s such a harsh word.” The woman smiled. “I much prefer to say that we have ladies who will cater to your pleasure.”
“Well?”
“Well, what?”
“The whores. Where are they?”
“Oh, I suspect most of them are sleeping. They do work nights, you know. And it is so cold and awful outside I’m quite sure nobody was expecting a client on a day like this.”
“I’m a client. So, roust one of ’em up.”
“Very well, sir. Which one?”
“Which one? How the hell do I know which one? I ain’t never been here before. It don’t make no never mind to me. Just choose one. Choose the one you like the best.”
Hannah laughed a deep, throaty laugh. “Well, now, honey, I like men, not women . . . so I don’t have a favorite. But they are all fine-looking ladies. I don’t think you will be disappointed no matter who I select. Come to think of it, I think I saw Midge up a few minutes ago. Just a moment, and I’ll find her for you.”
On board the Red Cliff Special
Matt slept fitfully during the remainder of the cold night, but had fallen into a more sound sleep just before dawn. The sun streaming in through the window awakened him and he sat up, rubbed his eyes, and looked around the car.
Luke Shardeen and Jenny McCoy were on the front seat, asleep and cuddled together for warmth. Becky was asleep under Matt’s coat, her head on her mother’s lap. Mrs. Daniels was asleep with her head leaning against the window. Senator Daniels was snoring in the facing seat across from them.
Since stopping in the middle of the night, it was the first opportunity Matt had to actually see anything out the window. The snow had stopped, but it was piled up on the side of the train as high as the bottom of the windows.
He decided to see for himself how badly the front of the train was snowed in. Standing up, he stretched, then opened the back door, climbed up to the top, and looked forward. What he saw wasn’t very reassuring. The front end of the train disappeared into a huge mountain of snow. They were fortunate the entire train had not been buried under the avalanche. Taking in everything around him, he realized they were totally locked in. Even if the engine had been clear, they go could not forward. And the snow was such that they could not go back down the track, either. That meant no rescue train would be able to come for them.
They were trapped at the top of the pass . . . under extraordinary circumstances.
It grew too cold for Matt to stay outside any longer. Once he was back inside the car, he saw that the coal supply for the heating stove was running low and realized that they would soon be facing a second danger. In addition to not having control of the food on board, they would soon run out of coal for the two stoves. When that happened, the temperature in the car would quickly drop below freezing.
That’s just great
, Matt thought.
It’s not enough that we have no food; we are also facing a situation where we have no heat.
Matt picked up the half-full coal scuttle sitting beside the stove at the rear of the car and carried it up to the front where he set it beside the other scuttle.
“What are you doing?” Purvis asked.
“If we try and keep both stoves going, we are going to run out of coal in no time. I think it might be best if we just keep a fire going in one.”
“Yeah,” Purvis said. “I see what you mean.”
The eight other people in the car moved to the front.
“Do you think they will send someone after us?” Millie Daniels asked after settling Becky back in her lap.
“I’m sure they will.” Bailey took out his pocket watch, opened it, and examined it. “We were due in Big Rock over an hour ago. When they learn back in Pueblo that we haven’t made it into Big Rock yet, why, they’ll send a relief train after us.”
Matt knew no train could get through, but didn’t say anything, figuring it would be best if they thought help was coming.