“Go back half a mile and stand by to signal Number 40. We’ve a twenty minute leeway, thank goodness. I’ll have Joe Mead signal with the whistle if we finish up before then.”
The brakeman hurried down the tracks. Joe Mead and the conductors, now aided by every employee on the train, started hunting the corpse. They looked up and down both sides of the train while the conductor’s face expressed more and more doubt.
“Don’t ask me if I’m sure I saw him,” Mead said curtly. “I’ve got good eyes. He was there and he couldn’t have jumped. Never!”
“All right, Joe,” the conductor said, “but the body didn’t just vanish. Even if it did, there’d be blood stains. This baby you pilot doesn’t tickle people she hits.” Another man, waving a flashlight, approached. He was burly, wore an old straw hat and overalls.
“I’m the signalman at the crossing,” he explained. “What’s the matter?”
Joe Mead whirled toward him. “The man I hit stood just behind the crossing and your shack. You must have seen him.
“What man?” the signalman asked. “I didn’t see anybody, and I watched you roll through here. It’s the only excitement I ever get in this forsaken spot.”
“You—saw nobody? No one at all?” Joe Mead passed a hand across his eyes. “I don’t understand it. I feel all right. I know what I saw, especially since the man looked so much like Midford.”
The fireman nudged the conductor and motioned him away. He dropped his voice to a whisper.
“Pop was talking funny just before it happened. Said he had a premonition or something. Maybe the poor guy has gone crazy.”
“Crazy or not,” the conductor snapped, “we’ve got to roll out of here. Watch him. If he acts funny again, pull the brake. Get aboard and signal the brakeman to come back. We can still get away before Number 40 shows up.”
Joe Mead got under way in quick time, but he kept shaking his head from side to side. He couldn’t understand it. The man had been there, right in the middle of the tracks and yet there’d been no corpse, no blood—nothing. Joe Mead began wondering if he was going crazy, as the fireman and conductor suspected.
Five hours later Joe Mead stumbled into his little house not too far from the roundhouse. He liked to hear the engines hiss steam, clang their bells, and hoot whistles. Someone was seated on the tiny porch. Joe Mead drew back in sudden alarm, and then he peered through the darkness.
“Why it’s Steve Abbott. I’m glad to see you, Steve. How is the detective business or—wait, I get it. They’ve put you on my neck.”
“That’s right, Pop,” Steve said. “Let’s go inside. More doggone mosquitoes around here than you could take care of with ten gallons of citronella. Unlock the door. I’m not going to clamp handcuffs on you, Pop. I’m just here to help you, and at nobody’s orders either.” Mead opened the door, turned on lights and sank into an easy chair. He put a pipe between his teeth and forgot to load it.
“Steve—I’ve just been through the mill. I don’t blame the boys for reporting me. That’s their business and maybe they’re right, too. What happens when an old-timer like me sees a man, dead for five years, standing in the middle of the track? Knows the man must have been hit, but there isn’t a trace of a body or a drop of blood.”
“They put ‘em away,” Steve Abbott grinned. “Come on, Pop, brace up. If you say that’s what you saw, then I know it’s the truth. You don’t imagine things. But I listened in at a meeting and well, frankly, they’re thinking of putting you on the shelf—unless we can prove there was a trick of some kind.”
Joe Mead nodded slowly. “I suspected that. All right, but how can we prove something that maybe never existed? I did see that man, or whatever it was. I—Steve—are there such things as ghosts? I was thinking of Midford just before it happened.”
Steve Abbott shrugged. “Who am I to say there are no ghosts? I don’t believe in ‘em, but they scare the devil out of me anyhow. Pop, you’re upset, so in order to straighten you out, I’ll promise this. Tomorrow night I’m going down to the stretch where you saw the ghost. I’ll stay there as long as necessary, search every inch of the track. There must be something.” Mead reached into his pocket.
“Steve, I found this about where I saw the man or—ghost. It must be one of our signal flares except it’s made of metal instead of cardboard. Of course the thing may have been there for days, but I picked it up anyhow.”
Steve took the metal cylinder and sniffed of it. “This wasn’t hanging around for days, Pop. You can still smell the burned chemicals. I’ll take it along. Meantime, go easy no matter what the big boys say to you. Don’t feel bad if they refuse to let you work tomorrow. When I get through, I’ll either prove you did see something or—”
“Or I’m crazy and not fit to be an engineer,” Joe Mead put in wryly. “Good, Steve. That’s the way I want it. A man who sees images on the track isn’t safe to handle a train.”
“I’ll be back in the morning,” Steve said. “Things to do tonight. Get some rest, Pop.” Steve went out slowly. He spent several hours checking on men who had reason to dislike Pop. There were several. They were jealous that he piloted Number 74, a crack train. Steve hardly believed any of them could be capable of a trick against Pop, but he had to make sure. When he finished, he knew none could possibly be guilty.
There were questions he wanted to ask Pop, but Steve decided the old man needed a night of complete rest. It was nine in the morning when he approached the little bungalow again. Nobody answered his knocks. Steve frowned and went around to the back door where he drew the same result.
He checked a wave of sudden panic, went to the garage behind the house and got a steel tire tool. With this he forced a cellar window, let himself through it, and was soon on the first floor. He called Pop’s name without result and then started searching the rooms.
He half-sensed what he’d find. Pop Mead’s body dangled from a rope tied to a hook in one of the big closets. He’d been dead for hours. Steve sat down slowly. Poor Pop had firmly believed he’d gone mad and taken the easy way out. Then Steve jumped up. Pop wouldn’t have done such a thing. Not Pop Mead. He stepped into the closet, looked around, groaned. He knew what the police would decide.
If this was murder, Pop’s hands would have been tied. There’d have been signs of violence, clues, furniture disarranged. Steve searched the body. Then his face became very grim. He searched the whole house next, before calling the police.
The medical examiner made a quick decision—suicide under emotional stress. Steve agreed with him outwardly. To himself he had other ideas. Until mid-afternoon he worked furiously in the railroad company’s offices, studying schedules and employment records.
Steve Abbott, a railroad detective, didn’t know too much about homicide. He was no city cop with laboratories at his command, or hundreds of men to help check details. He was virtually alone. Because if he vouchsafed an opinion, he’d have been promptly put in the same class with Pop Mead.
But Steve Abbott was sure of one thing. Pop Mead had seen a man standing in the middle of the tracks. A man who let himself be run down. No matter that there were no traces of the death. That would somehow be explained when the case was finished.
Back in his apartment, Steve changed to some old clothes—really old clothes. He wanted to look like a tramp. He’d often put on a disguise of this kind. It served well when he made investigations along the railroad’s right of way, especially in the isolated regions where gentlemen of the road were no rarity.
He boarded a fast freight and got off two miles north of the spot where Pop Mead had seen his phenomenon. It was dark by the time he got there and Steve carefully checked both his flashlight and his gun, well concealed beneath his clothes.
Then he walked casually up the tracks. First of all, he wanted to examine the signalman, on duty at the seldom used crossing. Most
of these fellows, he knew, were odd ducks, especially when they were assigned for months to some isolated spot like this.
He saw the little gatehouse, with a light in its single window. Steve moved up to it carefully. In about ten minutes a fast freight was due to come through. The signalman would get his lantern, take up a position at the intersection, and be ready to flag any cars or teams that might come through. The lantern, Steve saw, was placed on the tiny platform behind the shack.
He eased himself to the ground about a dozen feet away. He pulled his battered hat well down and feigned sleep. He heard the freight in the distance, heard the signalman grunt as he got out of his chair, and a few seconds later, someone shook him.
Steve opened his eyes sleepily and blinked in the rays of the lantern. Then he gave a nervous jump as if he expected the signalman to take definite, harsh action.
“What are you doing here?” The signalman peered at him.
“Just takin’ a nap,” Steve answered. “Can’t a guy lie down where he wants to?”
“Sure,” the signalman agreed. “Stay there all night if you want, but I’ll fix up a spot inside. You look hungry. Wait’ll I highball this freight through. Then I’ll fix something.”
“Gosh—thanks,” Steve replied. “I expected to be booted out. You’re a pretty swell guy.”
“Call it lonesomeness,” the signalman shrugged. “I’m so lonesome I’d even talk to a bum. Hang around. I’ll be right back.”
Steve Abbott entered the shack and sat down. He would have liked to search the place, but it was impossible. The signalman could easily see him moving about through the window.
The freight roared through, cars loaded down with armaments from middle west factories and destined for the Big Battle. They were vitally needed, and that freight was really laying on the steam.
The signalman returned after the freight rolled away into the night. He set the lantern down on the platform, stepped into the shack, and closed the door. He put his back against it.
“Okay, bum,” he snapped, and his attitude had changed radically “How long were you out there and how come you picked my shack to sleep near?”
Steve sensed what was coming. “Why—I just happened by. I was tired—”
“You’re a liar,” the signalman snarled. “Talk or, so help me, I’ll make that pan of yours uglier than it is now.”
Steve knew just what was expected of him. Gentlemen of the road didn’t fight. They take the easiest way out. He began sidling toward the door.
“I’ll go. I didn’t mean nothing. Honest—you got no right to muss me up. I haven’t hurt you.”
The signalman stepped away from the door and opened it. “Scram,” he barked.
Steve moved cautiously. He sensed a trick, but he had to play dumb. No matter what happened, this man must not suspect that he was anything but a tramp. As Steve started bolting through the door, the signalman moved too. He intercepted the railroad detective by shoving a massive arm in front of the door.
Before Steve could do anything about it, the signalman smashed at him with his other fist. Steve took the blow and reeled backwards. For a second his fighting instinct and temper rose to the boiling point. The signalman moved in fast then. He drove Steve back against the wall, hit him unmercifully and as a last gesture, seized him by both shoulders and hurled him through the door. Steve landed with a painful thump, got up, and began running.
“Come back and I’ll break your dirty neck,” the signalman called after him. “No bums allowed on this right of way, so remember that.”
Steve disappeared into the darkness, but he didn’t go far. Now he was certain the signalman had reasons why he didn’t want an intruder around. That meant Steve wouldn’t leave for any reason whatsoever. He took refuge behind a bush and crouched close to the ground. His whole body ached from those blows and the fall. One thing he was well aware of—the signalman knew every trick of fighting and he’d be a mean opponent in any mixup.
Steve felt blood on his hand. He reached for his flashlight to see how bad the wound was. The flash was gone. He broke out in a cold sweat. Without question it had fallen out of his pocket during the fracas. If the signalman found it, he’d suspect his visitor wasn’t a bum. Tramps don’t carry flashlights which can be sold for two bits at any hock shop.
Steve crossed the tracks. He rolled up a sleeve and pulled down his luminous wrist watch, purposely hidden until now. In twenty minutes Pop Mead’s old train would roll through. Things should happen then if Steve’s hunch was right.
Then Steve suddenly gasped.
There was someone in the middle of the track! There was someone who was illuminated by a strange light that seemed to form a halo around him. The figure stood there, perfectly immobile. The man wore a peaked cap, a handkerchief wound around his neck, and overalls and jumper. Steve’s eyes grew wide and round.
It was Pop Mead, standing in the middle of the track just as the ghost of Midford had been there. The ghost which only Pop had seen.
For a moment Steve Abbott almost thought Pop looked as he did when he’d seen him last, strangled by a rope affixed to a hook in his clothes closet. Then he noticed there was half a smile on Pop’s face as if he was enjoying his part in this grim, grisly business.
Steve drew his gun and noticed that his hand shook badly. The ghost stood there, daring him to come closer. There was a certain wavering quality to the spectre. Then Steve really got a shock. Right through the spectre he could see one or two stars. The image was transparent!
Steve gathered all his courage, shook off a feeling that made him inclined to run, and slowly advanced toward the spectre. He could see Pop’s features very plainly now. He seemed much bigger than in life. In fact, he was about eight or nine feet tall, which lent additional horror to the scene.
Steve gave vent to a shout, more to bolster his own nerve than anything else. Then he charged straight at the ghost. He was within a dozen yards of it when the image vanished. It was cut off from his vision as sharply as a broken movie film suddenly leaves the screen.
Steve stood there, puzzled and scared. The gun hung limply in his hand. Darkness closed around him like a tight shroud and he shivered. Then he heard a sudden rush of footsteps, and a shadowy form came lunging at him. Steve did his best to lift the gun into position for firing, but he was too late. The attacker hit him below the knees, and Steve went sprawling along the right of way.
He arose to his knees. The figure let loose another attack. This one with his feet. A shoe clipped Steve alongside the face, and he fell flat again. When his wits stopped gyrating, someone grabbed him by the collar, and he was hoisted up. His own gun was buried in his midriff, and behind it was the scowling face of the signalman.
“Since when do bums carry flashlights and expensive guns?” the signalman growled. “You’re a Federal detective. Some kind of a detective anyhow. Well, I gave you a chance to get out of here, but you didn’t take it so now you’ll get the whole works.”
“What made that ghost of Pop Mead appear?” Steve asked gently.
The signalman laughed. “You would like to know that. Maybe I’ll tell you, but not right away. Yes, I will tell you. I wasn’t joking when I said I was lonesome. I’d even talk to a man I intend to kill during the next fifteen minutes. Turn around and start walking toward the shack. Easy now—I know all about guns.”
Steve obeyed the order because anything short of that would have been suicide. He entered the shack and was promptly ordered into a corner. He stood there, hands shoulder high.
“So you want to know about the ghost,” the signalman smirked. “Do you think it will scare the engineer of Number 74 enough so he’ll make a quick stop.”
“Pop saw Midford’s image and he stopped,” Steve answered. “Certainly the train will be brought to a halt.”
“Good. Thanks
for telling me. I figured you were some kind of a cop when I found the flashlight. So I turned on the ghost. If anything would draw you into the open, that would. It’s perfectly simple. All you do is create a screen of a certain kind of heavy smoke. Stuff that will stay put even if there is a mild wind. Then you throw the image of the ghost upon that screen and—there you have it.”
“Do you murder men with as much efficiency?” Steve asked.
The signalman’s eyes narrowed. “You’re referring to Pop. That was a good job. I’ve been trained in the art of murder, my friend. Trained well too. You merely hold a man firmly, get the rope around his neck and then affix the other end to a hook. You grasp the man’s legs and put all your weight against them. He can’t reach you and he strangles quickly. There are no marks. No need to tie the hands and make it look like murder. I knew they’d put it down as suicide.”
“What’s your game?” Steve asked. “Or wait—I ought to know. You intend to stop Number 74. Following her up, with only a couple of minutes leeway, is another train. A freight, crammed with ammunition, tanks, plane parts, and soldiers. I’ll bet there’s a photo of Hitler in this shack.”
“I am not foolish enough to keep such a thing,” the signalman growled. “Anyhow, the freight won’t see Number 74 stalled on the track until it’s too late. There won’t be time to send the brakeman back to signal. Wait—you will see the best wreck ever staged in this country.”
“So you intend to keep me alive that long,” Steve grunted. “Suppose I don’t want to stay alive? Suppose I’d rather be shot now?”
“You will live long enough,” the signalman promised. “I shall see to that. I want a witness to my handiwork, even if he will die two minutes after it happens. Stand where you are. Take one step forward and I’ll cripple you.”
The Walt Whitman MEGAPACK ™ Page 22