Glover, Young, and Dancing consulted a moment. The thing was not

impossible; the superintendent was bleeding to death.

Spectators across the gap saw movements they could not quite

comprehend. Safety lines were overhauled for the last time, the picks

put in the keeping of Morris Blood, who lay flat on the ledge. Glover

and Bill Dancing, facing outward, planted themselves side by side

against the rocky wall. Smith Young, facing inward, flattened himself

in Glover's arms, passed across him and, pushing his safety-girdle well

up under his arms, stood a moment between the two big men. Glover and

Dancing, getting their hands through the belt from either side, gripped

him, and Young uncoiled from his right hand a rope noosed like a

lariat. Steadied by his companions and swinging his arms in a cautious

segment on the wall, he tried to hitch the noose over the trunk of the

pine.

With the utmost skill and patience, he coaxed the loop up again and

again into the air overhead, but the brush of the short branches

against the rock defeated every attempt to get a hold.

He rested, passed the rope into his other hand, and with the same

collected persistence endeavored to throw it over from the left.

Sweat beaded Bucks' forehead as he looked. Gertrude's father, the man

of sixty millions, with nerves bedded in ice, crushed an unlighted

cigar between his teeth, and tried to steady the glass that shook in

his hand. Gertrude, resting one hand on a bowlder against which she

steadied herself, neither spoke nor moved. The roadmaster could not

land his line.

The two men released him and, with arms spread wide, he slipped over to

where Morris Blood lay, took from him the two picks, and cautiously

rejoined his comrades. Two of the men reversing their positions, faced

the rock wall. They fixed a pick into a cranny between their heads,

crouched together, and the third, planting his feet first on their

knees and then their shoulders, was raised slowly above them.

The glasses turned from afar caught a sheen of sunshine that spread for

an instant across the face of the mountain and sharply outlined the

flattened form high on the arête. The figure seemed brought by the

dazzling light startlingly near, and those looking could distinguish in

his hand a pick, which, with his right arm extended, he slowly swung up

and up the face of the rock until he should swing it high to hook

through the roots of the pine.

Gertrude asked Bucks who it was that spread himself above his comrades,

and he answered, Dancing; but it was Glover.

Deliberately his extended arm rose and fell in the arc he was

following, higher and higher, till the pick swung above his head and

lodged where he sent it among the pine-tree roots. At the very moment,

one of the men supporting him moved--the pick had dislodged a heavy

chip of granite; in falling it struck his crouching supporter on the

head. The man steadied himself instantly, but the single instant cost

the balance of the upmost figure. With a suppressed struggle,

heartbreaking half a mile away, the man above strove to right himself.

Like light his second hand reached for the pick handle; he could not

recover it. The pyramid wavered and Glover, helpless, spread his hands

wide.




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