10. 0322 1/9 - 0837 1/9:
Decatur and Overland Snowplow Extra 3217
Lordston Northern Extra 451
At a minimum, it would take some welding to get the rotary snowplow going again. It might have
been possible to scrounge up a piece of metal of some kind or another somewhere on the train, but Cziller was sure
that there hadn't been any welding gear included in the tools that had been loaded on board. "We obviously can't
fix it here," he told Hottel and Anson, and DeTar, who had by now joined them.
"What do you think?" the conductor asked. "Back to Lordston, or go clear back to Putnam?"
"I don't want to go back to Putnam," Cziller replied. "You remember what that stretch from Atlanta was
like. The way it's blowing, it could be packed too tight to get through by now. Even if it isn't, it's a hell of a long
way. We'll lose hours, maybe as much as a day if we got back to Putnam. Spike, that's not all that difficult to fix, is it?"
"Don't know for sure," the mechanic replied. "Probably hanging a new weight on there ought to be
simple enough. Bringing the wheel to a balance, though . . . well, it might be fairly simple, and it might not be. My
guess is that if we got the size of metal about right and the location same as before, it ought to be pretty close.
Maybe close enough to fake it, if we can stop every now and then to take a leak."
"Harry, do you know if that little tourist outfit at Lordson has any shop facilities to speak of?"
"Don't know for sure," the engineer replied. "You'd think they would have something or other if they work
on that steamer up there, but they rebuilt it down in Camden, I know. But, they won't be open. That's a
family operation, and they probably haven't been at the shop since the storm started."
Cziller's attention was diverted by the sound of a snowmobile coming up beside the train. "Now what the
hell would anyone be out in this shit at this hour on a snowmobile for?"
The snowmobile came to a stop by the little group of men standing beside the plow. "Got trouble?" the
driver asked as he got off the machine.
Cziller walked over to him, and the other trainmen followed. "Yeah, we're trying to get up to that fire
in Warsaw, but our plow is busted." he said. "Threw a balance weight. You from Lordston?"
"Yeah," the driver said.
"Is there any place we could get some welding gear to work on it?"
"Well, the driver said, "You're welcome to run it into my shop."
"Your shop?" Cziller asked.
"Yeah, my shop," the snow machine driver said. "I'm Bill Lee. I own the Lordston Northern, along with
the bank."
Cziller ached to ask just why Lee would be out on his snowmobile on the rail grade when it was pushing
four in the morning, but decided that it wouldn't be the right time, just now. "Sounds good to me," he said,
still wondering why Lee had shown up at that precise instant.
"Look," Lee said. "It's about five miles back to Lordston. I'll run ahead of you, and make a couple of
calls, get some people out of bed."
"If it's all the same to you," Cziller said, "If you're going to run on the tracks, I'd just as soon you were
behind us. West of us, I mean."
"That's what I meant," Lee said. "Except when we get to the county road crossing, I'll go down the road
and get ahead of you."
"Let's get moving," Cziller agreed.
Lee turned to his snow machine, which was still idling, while the railroad men climbed up to the cab of
the 3217. Once in the cab, Cziller told DeTar, "I want you to be spotting out the back, even though you can't
see much. That doesn't mean trying to get your money back from the section gang."
"Hey," DeTar protested. "I may be twenty bucks down, but I know better than that."
Lee was nowhere to be found when SX 3217 pulled to a stop outside the Lordston Northern office, but
his daughter, Diane was.
Diane Lee, Bill's daughter, had a sweet smile. She was perhaps twenty-three, small and slender, with long
red hair that fell past her shoulders, and a sweet voice. Cziller hoped that his brakeman, Bruce Page, wouldn't
see her; he'd be lovesick for the rest of the trip.
"Dad headed back on down the tracks to Meeker," Diane explained. "He wants to try and catch the
9608 there."
"The 9608?" Cziller asked, puzzled. "What's that?"
"That's our steam engine. We're storing it for the winter in the Camden and Spearfish Lake's engine shed
in Camden, so we can keep the Alco here. The C&SL is trying to run a plow train north from Camden, and they
took the 9608 with them to carry relief supplies. Dad didn't want to let that trip get past him. Anyway, he told me to
do anything we could to help you out. What can we do for you?"
"Well, Miss Lee, what we need is to have someone get some welding gear and do some welding on
our plow."
She smiled again; Helen of Troy must have had such a smile, Cziller thought. "I really don't know how
to weld that well," she said. "But there's a tractor mechanic that lives right up the street that has a portable
welding rig. If your people would like to pull the Alco outside, you can run your plow into the shed while I give him a call."
"That would be a big help, Miss Lee."
"Oh, call me Diane. Tell your people that the Alco starts hard, like any Alco, so be sure to have the
APU warmed up before you even try to get it going."
Cziller agreed and started for the door, thinking that for a sweet young kid she sure seemed to know a
bit about the dirty side of railroading. That really seemed out of place, neat and delicate as she was even
after being turned out of bed on this blizzard night. But, she was the owner's daughter, after all, and she worked
around the place. She probably couldn't help bing exposed to the greasy stuff.
He went back to the way car, where DeTar had reassumed his assault on coming out even. "Anyone
here know how to run an Alco S-1?" the road foreman asked.
Bartenslager stared at his cards for a moment, then said, "I ran S-2s a while."
"Good," Cziller replied. "The little lady says to pull theirs out and leave it running, and we can work on
the plow inside."
"Might as well do it," the engineer replied. "They're dealing me nothing but shit, anyway."
Fixing the plow proved to not be as simple as Hottel had thought that it might be. It was an easy job for
Ken Sawyer, the tractor mechanic, to cut a piece of iron to replace the missing weight, but with the plow in the
shop it seemed wise to go over it a little more thoroughly. It was well that they did, for they found a crack in a
blade, down near the hub, and there were other loose pieces here and there.
"It's going to take hours to reweld everything right," the tractor mechanic told Cziller. "Then, I guarantee
you, when we get done the son of a bitch won't balance up. Your man Hottel tells me that balancing that thing is
kind of a process of guess and change, guess and change."
"Look, you guys," the road foreman replied. "The longer we screw around here, the more that little town
up there burns. Just do a quick job and we'll get out of here. We can risk a little vibration."
"We can like hell," Hottel replied. "I checked that blade before we left Putnam. It wasn't cracked then.
Just the couple minutes vibration when we pitched the balance weight must have been what cracked it. Unless we
go through this thing right, we'll never get there. We can do a quick job, but you'd better plan on being the one in
the cupola of this thing when a blade lets go."
Every instinct that Cziller had was to press on and risk more trouble from the plow, but Hottel was
speaking common sense. That got through. At least here, they had some facilities to work on the plow. If something
went wrong farther north, then any fixes would have to be made out in the weather, if they could even reach a
place where help was available at all. "All right," you guys," the disappointed man told the mechanics. "Fix it right,
but make it as quick as you can. I guess I'd better go over to the office and tell Diane . . . um, Miss Lee, that
we're probably going to be all morning."
The redhead was at work on some bookkeeping; it was a way to kill some time during these predawn
hours. "How's it going out there, Mr. Cziller?" she asked.
"Call me Steve," he replied. "It's not going well. They've discovered more trouble. If looks like we're
going to be hours, yet. I hope you won't mind our keeping you around."
"No problem," she told him. "I can sleep later. I'm just glad to help where I can."
"I'm glad you can help us. It's just hard to sit around here when we should be making miles to the north."
She stared out the window at the storm for a while. "Maybe I can help you out some more. We've got a
blade plow here, you know."
Cziller brightened. "No, I didn't know. I hadn't seen it or anything."
"It's around on the far side of the engine shed. It's not really a big plow. It's just something that Dad and
Ken Sawyer rigged up ut of an old boxcar truck and an old blade from a county plow. They had to hang a lot
of concrete on it to get it to balance out. It's not really a very good plow, but you could probably get as far
as Rochester with it if you took your time."
"I'm sorry, Diane," he replied, disappointed. "That wouldn't be much help. We'd get up to Rochester,
and then we'd need the rotary to go farther, and we'd have to come back here to get it. Then it would take us
just about as long to get back to Rochester, anyway."
"No, it wouldn't," she said. "When the mechanics get your plow fixed, we can bring it to you with our
Alco. We can turn the plow around somewhere to have it in front if we have any problems getting back here. If
the track drifts up behind you, we'd still have your rotary. We'll be able to go faster over the track that
you've cleared, so we ought to come out about right."
"Diane, your dad raised himself quite a girl," Cziller replied. "You've got a deal."
As he walked through the storm to the now-quiet equipment of SX-3217, Cziller could see the flare of an
arc welder in the LN engine shed. Through the howling of the wind, he could hear a hammer banging on the
plow, followed by cursing. Things were much quieter inside the last caboose; the storm had barely reached the
consciousness of the poker players. The first thing that Cziller heard there was, "DeTar, you're full of shit. I'm
going to raise you a dollar."
"Soon as you guys get through with that hand, deal the second shift out," Cziller said loudly. "We're going
to get on the move again."
"They got it fixed?" Bartenslager asked. He had already folded on a pair of threes.
"Not till later," Cziller replied. "The LN is loaning us their blade plow."
"That little sonuvabitch on the other side of the engine shed?" the engineer asked. "I saw it when I went
over there to take a leak."
"What did it look like?" Cziller asked.
"Couldn't see much, but there wasn't much to see. Just as a guess, I don't think it would handle much
over about three feet of snow."
"I didn't see that much of the North Central tracks," Cziller said. "But I got the impression that there
wasn't that much snow on it."
"Couple of cuts got about that bad," Anson chipped in. "But what happens when we get on the
Rochester branch? That sits north and south, and the cuts ought to be pretty full by now. Once we get back of
Rochester, there'll be too much snow for that plow everywhere."
"I've got a flush, gentlemen."
"You son of a bitch, Detar."
Cziller spoke over the noise of the poker game. "The LN is going to bring the rotary up to us when the
stupid thing is fixed. If we get to Rochester before they catch up with us, we'll just have to wait for them there.
After all, there was a train through there yesterday, so the branch shouldn't be that bad."
"Day before yesterday, now," someone pointed out.
"Day before yesterday, so what? They should have knocked down the drifts a bit. We'll never get there if
we just screw around here, so let's get a move on.
In a few minutes, the LN's little plow was hooked to the front of the 3217. Only when the Geep's
headlight fell on it did Cziller realize how little it was. The C&SL's little plow would have been a giant beside it, for it
was a V-blade plow that had once adorned the front of a county road snowplow, and it had been rather crudely
grafted nto a salvaged freight car truck. The whole thing looked even more cobbled up and homemade than did the
D&O rotary, if such a thing were possible.
Still, it was a snowplow and it would couple to the front of an engine and move snow better than the
pilot blades permanently attached to the engines. Right now, Bud Ellsberg up at Spearfish Lake would have given
a very great deal to have it. Mounted on the west end of Plow Extra One, it would have increased his stay time
in Warsaw from an hour to perhaps six, or, with the Milwaukee, would have meant that the crippled NW-2 could
get the standby train out of town, without having to have the track plowed every few hours.
With the kind of power that SX-3217 was carrying, there would be no backing up and ramming of
snowdrifts. The D&O plow extra would be able to motor right through anything that wouldn't bury the plow.
The ceaseless poker game was still going on as the train backed out onto the Lordston branch, then
changed the switches for the line to Coldwater. Cziller was in the cab of the 3127 with Bartenslager; he knew he
wouldn't be able to endure the agony of riding in back and not knowing what was going on.
It was coming up on dawn by now. SX-3217 plowed away from the direction where the sun should be
rising before long, if the sun would be seen through the storm at all this day. According to the weather report that he
had gotten second-hand from Diane Lee, that didn't seem likely.
The going was easy for the first few miles, on the ground that the rotary had covered earlier.
Bartenslager took the speed right up to the thirty mile per hour limit on the decaying old main line, and held her there until
he reached the spot where the rotary's balance weight had been thrown earlier.
The plow train roared right on past the spot with its speed hardly slackened. Bartenslager added
another couple of notches to the 3217's throttle, and both of the Geeps roared louder with the increased drag.
The speedometer stayed stuck around thirty, and snow flew impressively from the front of the plow.
"This is more like it," Cziller approved.
"Want to get this over with so I can get back to the game," the engineer replied. "I had a hot streak
going. DeTar had about cleaned out the section gang, but I was starting to take money from him."
This was by far the best that SX-3217 had done so far. Cziller was impressed with Bartenslager's firm,
but gentle throttle handling and his aggressive manner of charging the snowdrifts, and it made him want to
kick himself for not leaning harder on Desmond to find a blade plow for them.
The lights of Coldwater loomed through the snow refreshingly soon. While the switch onto the
Rochester branch was being dug out, Bartenslager got to go back to the caboose for a hand, but soon they were
heading north on the Rochester branch.
The going was harder here, as predicted. The tracks lay crosswind, and they had drifted up badly since
the passage of the freight from Rochester two days before. It was still possible to see where the bladeless
engines had gouged through the snowdrifts, but there were only occasional traces. Even out in the open, the snow
was much deeper than it had been on the Coldwater tracks, and progress was slower.
Even so, SX-3217 pushed on north at the kind of speed that the rotary had allowed before. The rotary
had chewed steadily at the snow, but here, the speed varied greatly. There'd be an easy section, and
Bartenslager would throttle down while the speed rose. Then, the snow would deepen, sometimes to the point where the
plow was almost buried. Then, the speed would fall off, in spite of increasing power. Sometimes the deep
sections would go on for hundreds of yards, and the plow and the 3217 would shake and bounce with the stresses that
the uneven snow put on them.
It was inevitable that sooner or later they would reach the limits of the plow's capability. About a quarter
of the way up the branch to Rochester, just before dawn, the inevitable happened.
It came as they neared the end of an easy section. Cziller was relaxing at the moment, but he heard
Bartenslager mutter some obscenity. He got up and looked out the cab window. In the single headlight on the front of the
Geep, the drift ahead looked worse than they had seen before.
It was too late to stop. Their speed was much too great, and the drift was rushing down on them.
Bartenslager tried the next best thing under the circumstances: he reached out for the throttle and increased power. The
two Geeps bellowed and charged the drifts harder. Their combined several hundred tons carried them a good
distance through the deep snow, but they weren't very far into it before more than the plow was pushing snow; the
white stuff spewed up over the top of the plow, then was pushed aside onto the runningboards by the nose of the 3217.
But, there was a lot of snow in that cut. Eventually, its weight overcame the combined weight and power
of SX-3217. If the snowplow extra had been four or six modern 3000 horsepower engines, dragging fifty carloads
of something heavy, the weight would easily have punched the lead engine through the drift if it didn't come
out the other side much the worse for wear. As it was, SX-3217 just sighed to a stop, engines racing and wheel
slip alarms yowling. The plow was fully out of sight, and the nose of the 3217 was buried in the drift as well.
"Sonufabitch," Bartenslager remarked conversationally.
"Well, let's back off and hit her again," Cziller replied. "Wonder if that knocked any chips off the table?"
"Probably did," the engineer said. "Right into DeTar's pocket, I'll bet." He transitioned the engine
into reverse and increased the power slowly, but nothing happened. The wheel slip alarm began making noise
again. He hit the lever to throw sand to the spinning wheels, but that didn't help much, either. "No luck," he said.
"Let's try it from the 3259," Cziller suggested. "It might be biting better. If it is, you couldn't tell it with
that thing blaring in your ear."
They clambered back across the two engines to the other cab, unused since the trip had started. Again,
the power of the two engines was increased, and again the wheel slip indicator bawled uncomfortably at Cziller.
Bartenslager tried running the engine forward, and then back again, with no more luck. Finally, he idled
the engines and turned to the road foreman. "That's all she wrote," he said. "What do we try now?"
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