Rival Pitchers of Oakdale

By Morgan Scott

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Title: Rival Pitchers of Oakdale


Author: Morgan Scott



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RIVAL PITCHERS OF OAKDALE

by

MORGAN SCOTT

Author of "Ben Stone at Oakdale,"
"Boys of Oakdale Academy," Etc.

With Four Original Illustrations by Elizabeth Colborne







[Frontispiece: PHIL SENDS THE FIRST BALL.]



New York
Hurst & Company
Publishers

Copyright, 1911,
by
Hurst & Company




CONTENTS


CHAPTER

      I.  THE BOY WHO WANTED TO PITCH
     II.  BASEBALL PRACTICE
    III.  TWO OF A KIND
     IV.  LEN ROBERTS OF BARVILLE
      V.  HOOKER'S MOTORCYCLE
     VI.  A DEAD SURE THING
    VII.  RACKLIFF FISHES FOR SUCKERS
   VIII.  READY FOR THE GAME
     IX.  THE FIRST INNING
      X.  THE CRUCIAL MOMENT
     XI.  A CHANGE OF PITCHERS
    XII.  WON IN THE NINTH
   XIII.  RACKLIFF'S TREACHERY
    XIV.  JEALOUSY
     XV.  PLAIN TALK FROM ELIOT
    XVI.  DREAD
   XVII.  THE BOY ON THE BENCH
  XVIII.  A LOST OPPORTUNITY
    XIX.  POISON SPLEEN
     XX.  FELLOWS WHO MADE MISTAKES
    XXI.  A PERSISTENT RASCAL
   XXII.  SELF-RESTRAINT OR COWARDICE
  XXIII.  HOOKER BREAKS WITH RACKLIFF
   XXIV.  ONCE MORE
    XXV.  THE WYNDHAM PITCHER
   XXVI.  THE PLUNGE FROM THE BRIDGE
  XXVII.  A REBELLIOUS CONSCIENCE
 XXVIII.  WHEN THE SIGNALS WERE CHANGED
   XXIX.  PHIL GETS HIS EYES OPEN
    XXX.  THE GREATEST VICTORY




ILLUSTRATIONS


Phil sends the first ball . . . . . . . . . . . . _Frontispiece_

Ere the horsehide was brought down between Rod's shoulder-blades,
  his hand had found the plate

"Several prominent members of the great Oakdale baseball team,
  I observe," said Rackliff

The local crowd "rooted" hard




RIVAL PITCHERS OF OAKDALE


CHAPTER I.

THE BOY WHO WANTED TO PITCH.

During the noon intermission of a sunny April day a small group of boys
assembled near the steps of Oakdale Academy to talk baseball; for the
opening of the season was at hand, and the germ of the game had already
begun to make itself felt in their blood.  Roger Eliot, the grave,
reliable, steady-headed captain of the nine, who had scored such a
pronounced success as captain of the eleven the previous autumn, was
the central figure of that gathering.  Chipper Cooper, Ben Stone,
Sleuth Piper, Chub Tuttle, Sile Crane and Roy Hooker formed the
remainder of the assemblage.

"The field will be good and dry to-night, fellows," said Roger, "and we
ought to get in some much-needed practice for that game with Barville.
I want every fellow to come out, sure."

"Ho!" gurgled Chub Tuttle, cracking a peanut and dexterously nipping
the double kernel into his mouth.  "We'll be there, though I don't
believe we need much practice to beat that Barville bunch.  We ate 'em
up last year."

"We!" said Sleuth Piper reprovingly.  "If my memory serves me, you
warmed the bench in both those games."

"That wasn't my fault," retorted Tuttle cheerfully.  "I was ready and
prepared to play.  I was on hand to step in as a pinch hitter, or to
fill any sort of a gap at a moment's notice."

"A pinch hitter!" whooped little Chipper Cooper.  "Now, you would have
cut a lot of ice as a pindi hitter, wouldn't you?  You never made a hit
in a game in all your life, Chub, and you know you were subbing simply
because Roy got on his ear and wouldn't play.  We had to have some one
for a spare man."

"I would have played," cut in Hooker sharply, somewhat resentfully, "if
I'd been given a square deal.  I wanted a chance to try my hand at some
of the pitching; but, after that first game, Ames, the biggest mule who
ever captained a team, wouldn't give me another show.  I wasn't going
to play right field or sit around on the bench as a spare man."

Hooker had a thin, sharp face, with eyes set a trifle too close
together, and an undershot jaw, which gave him a somewhat pugnacious
appearance.  He was a chap who thought very well indeed of himself and
his accomplishments, and held a somewhat slighting estimation of
others.  In connection with baseball, he had always entertained an
overweening ambition to become a pitcher, although little qualified for
such a position, either by temperament or acquired skill.  True, he
could throw the curves, and had some speed, but at his best he could
not find the plate more than once out of six times, and, when disturbed
or rattled, he was even worse.  Like many another fellow, he
erroneously believed that the ability to throw a curved ball was a
pitcher's chief accomplishment.

"It was lucky Springer developed so well as a twirler last year,"
observed Eliot.

"Lucky!" sneered Hooker.  "Why, I don't recollect that he did anything
worth bragging about.  He lost both those games against Wyndham."

"We had to depend on him alone," said Roger; "and he was doing too much
pitching.  It's a wonder he didn't ruin his arm."

"You've got to have some one beside Springer this year, that's sure,"
said Hooker.  "He can't pitch much more than half the games scheduled."

"Phil's tryin' to coach Rod Grant to pitch," put in Sile Crane.  "I see
them at it last night, out behind Springer's barn."

Roy Hooker laughed disdainfully.  "Oh, that's amusing!" he cried.
"That Texan has never had any experience, but, just because he and Phil
have become chummy, Springer's going to make a pitcher out of him.
He'll never succeed in a thousand years."

"Here they come now," said Ben Stone, as two boys turned in at the gate
of the yard; "and Phil has got the catching mitt with him.  I'll bet
they've been practicing this noon."

"Jinks! but they're getting thick, them two," chuckled Chub Tuttle.

"As thick as merlasses in Jinuary," drawled Sile Crane whimsically.

"Being thick as molasses, they're naturally sweet on each other,"
chirped Cooper.

"Hi!  Hi!" cried Tuttle.  "There you go!  Have a peanut for that."

"No, nut for me; I shell nut take it," declined Chipper.

"It's a real case of Damon and Pythias," remarked Stone, watching the
two lads coming up the walk.

"Or David and Jonathan," said Eliot.

Phil Springer, the taller of the pair, with light hair, blue eyes, and
long arms, looked at a distance the better qualified to toe the slab in
a baseball game; but Rodney Grant was a natural athlete, whose early
life on his father's Texas ranch had given him abounding health,
strength, vitality, and developed in him qualities of resourcefulness
and determination.  Grant had come to Oakdale late the previous autumn,
and was living with his aunt, an odd, seclusive spinster, by the name
of Priscilla Kent.

Two girls, sauntering down the path with their arms about each other,
met the approaching boys, and paused a moment to chat with them.

"Phil's sister is struck on our gay cowboy," observed Cooper, grinning.

"I rather guess Lela Barker is some smit on him, too," put in Sile
Crane.  "That's sorter natteral, seein' as how he rescued her from
drowndin' when she was carried over the dam on a big ice-cake in the
Jinuary freshet.  That sartainly made him the hero of Oakdale, and us
fellers who'd been sayin' he was a fake had to pull in our horns."

"The real hero of that occasion," declared Hooker maliciously, "was a
certain cheap chap by the name of Bunk Lander, who plunged into the
rapids below the dam, with a rope tied round his waist, and saved them
both."

"I wouldn't sneer about Lander, if I were you, Roy," said Eliot in
grave reproof.  "I wouldn't call him cheap, for he's shown himself to
be a pretty decent fellow; and Stickney, whose store he once pilfered,
has given him a job on his new delivery wagon.  There's evidently more
manhood and decency in Lander than any of us ever dreamed--except
Grant, who took up with him at the very beginning."

"And a fine pair people around here thought they were," flung back
Hooker exasperatedly.  "Why, even you, yourself, didn't have much of
anything to say for Rod Grant at one time."

"I was mistaken in my estimation of him," confessed Roger
unhesitatingly.  "I believe Stone was about the only person who really
sized Grant up right."

"And now, since he's become popular, this hero from Texas chooses
Springer for his chum instead of Stone," said Roy.

"He has a right to choose whoever he pleases," said Ben, flushing a
trifle.  "We are still good friends.  If he happens to find Springer
more congenial than I, as a chum, I'm not going to show any spleen
about it."

"It's my opinion," persisted Hooker, "that he has an object in his
friendliness with Phil Springer.  He's got the idea into his head that
he can pitch, and he's using Phil to learn what he can.  Well, we'll
see how much he does at it--we'll see."

The girls having passed on, the two boys now approached the group near
the steps.  Springer was beaming as he came up.

"Say, Captain Eliot," he cried, "the old broncho bub-buster has got
onto the drop.  He threw it first-rate to-day noon.  I'll make a change
pitcher out of him yet."

"Oh, I'm destined to become another Mathewson, I opine," said Rodney
Grant laughingly; "but if I do turn out to be a phenom, I'll owe it to
my mentor, Mr. Philip Springer."

"The team is coming out for practice tonight," said Eliot, "and we'll
give you a chance to pitch for the batters.  We've got to work up a
little teamwork before that game Saturday."

The second bell clanged, and, still talking baseball, the boys moved
slowly and reluctantly toward the cool, dark doorway of the academy.
Roy Hooker lingered behind, a pouting, dissatisfied expression upon his
face.

"So they're bound to crowd me out again, are they?" he muttered.
"Well, we'll see what comes of it.  If I get a chance, I'll cook that
cowboy for butting in."




CHAPTER II.

BASEBALL PRACTICE.

With the close of the afternoon session, many of the boys, palpitantly
eager to get out onto the field, went racing and shouting, down through
the yard and across the gymnasium, where their baseball suits were
kept.  Eliot followed more sedately, yet with quickened step, for he
was not less eager than his more exuberant teammates.  Berlin Barker,
slender, cold, and sometimes disposed to be haughty and overbearing,
joined him on his way.

"We'll soon be at it again," said Barker.  "The season opens Saturday,
and I have a feeling it's going to be a hot one.  It wouldn't surprise
me if we had to play a stiff game in order to take a fall out of
Barville.  You know, they developed a strong pitcher in that man
Sanger, the last of the season.  Why, he actually held Wyndham down to
three hits in that last game, and Barville would have won only for the
blow-up in the eighth inning."

Roger nodded.  "Lee Sanger certainly did good work for Barville after
he hit his pace; but Springer ought to be in good shape for the
opening, not having been compelled to pitch his wing stiff, the way he
did last year."

"Confidentially, Roger," said Berlin, "I've never regarded Springer as
anything great.  I wouldn't say this to any one else, for we are good
friends; but I fancy you know his weak points.  He's not a stayer; he
never was, and he never will be.  With the game coming his way, he's
pretty good--especially so, as long as he can keep the bases clean; but
one or two hits at a critical moment puts him up in the air, and he's
liable to lose his head.  Only for the way you steady him down behind
the pan, he'd never show up half as well as he does."

Now, this was a truth which no one knew better than Eliot himself,
although he had never whispered it to a living soul.  Springer owed his
success mainly to the heady work, good back-stopping, clever coaching
and steadying influence of Eliot, who did nearly all the thinking for
Phil while the latter was on the slab.  This, however, is often the
case with many pitchers who are more than passably successful; to the
outsider, to the watcher from the stand or the bleachers, the pitcher
frequently seems to be the man who is pitting his brains and skill
against the brains and skill of the opposing batters and delivering the
goods, when the actual fact remains that it is the man at the
"receiving end" who is doing nine-tenths of the thinking, and without
whose discernment, sagacity, skill and directing ability, the twirler
would make a pitiful show of himself.  There are pitchers who recognize
this fact and have the generosity to acknowledge it; but in most cases,
especially with youngsters, no matter how much he may owe to the
catcher, the slab-man takes all the credit, and fancies he deserves it.

"Oh, Springer's all right," declared Roger loyally; "but, of course, he
needs some one to do part of the work, so that he won't use himself up,
and I have hopes that he'll succeed in coaching Grant into a good
second string man.  He's enthusiastic, you know; says Grant is coming."

"Queer how chummy those fellows have become," laughed Barker shortly.
"I don't know whether Rod Grant can make a pitcher of himself or not,
but I was thinking that Hooker might pan out fairly well if only Phil
would take the same interest and pains with him as he's taking with
Rod."

"Perhaps so," said the captain of the nine; "but I have my doubts.  Roy
is too egotistical to listen to advice and coaching, and he entertains
the mistaken idea that curves and speed are all a pitcher needs.  He
hasn't any control."

"But he might acquire it."

"He might, if he only had the patience to try for it and work hard, but
you know he's no worker."

They had reached the gymnasium, and the discussion was dropped as they
entered and joined the boys in the dressing room, who were hurriedly
getting into their baseball togs.  Hooker was there with the others,
for he had a suit of his own, which was one of the best of the
discarded uniforms given up at the opening of the previous season when
the team had purchased new suits.  There was a great deal of joshing
and laughter, in which Roy took no part; for he was a fellow who found
little amusement in the usual babble and jests of his schoolmates, and
nothing aroused his resentment quicker than to be made the butt of a
harmless joke.  He had once choked Cooper purple in the face in
retaliation for a jest put upon him by the audacious, rattle-brained
little chap; but later Chipper had accepted Roy's apologies and
protestations of regret, practically forgetting the unpleasant
incident, which, however, Roy never did.

"Ah-ha!" cried Sile Crane, bringing forth and flourishing a long,
burnt, battered bat.  "Here's Old Buster, the sack cleaner.  Haowdy do,
my friend?  I'm sartainly glad to shake ye again."

"Up to date," said Cooper, tying his shoes, "I've never seen you do any
great shakes with Old Buster."

"Oh, ain't ye?" snapped Sile resentfully.  "Mebbe yeou've forgot that
three-sacker I got with this club in the Clearport game."

"Um-mum," mumbled Chipper.  "Now you mention it, I do have a faint
recollection of that marvelous accident.  You were trying to dodge the
ball, weren't you, Sile?  You just shut your blinkers and ducked, and
Pitkins' inshoot carromed off the bat over into right field and got
lost in the grass.  If we all hadn't yelled for you to run, you'd be
standing there now, wondering what had happened."

"Yeou're another," flung back Crane.  "I made a clean three-sacker, and
yeou know it."

"Well, anyhow, you got anchored on third and failed to come home when I
bunted on a signal for the squeeze.  The Clearporters had barrels of
fun with you over that.  I remember Barney Carney asking you if you'd
brought your bed."

"Oh, rats!" rasped Crane, striding toward the open gym door and
carrying his pet bat.  "Some parts of your memory ought to be
amputated."

"What a cutting thing to say!" grinned Cooper, rising to follow.

The field, surrounded by a high board fence, was located near the
gymnasium, and in a few minutes all the boys were on it and ready for
business.  Announcing that they would begin with a little plain
fielding practice, Eliot assigned them to their positions.

"Do you care to go into right, Roy?" he asked, turning to Hooker as the
last one.

"Not I," was the instant answer.  "That's not my position.  I'm no
outfielder.  Right field, indeed!"

"Oh, very well," said Roger.  "Tuttle, go ahead out."

"Sure," said Chub agreeably, waddling promptly away to fill the
position assigned him.

"Springer will bat to the outfield and Grant to the in," directed the
captain.  "After we warm up a little, we'll try some regular batting
and base running, using the old system of signals."

Hooker, who had a ball of his own, turned away, and found Fred Sage,
whose sole interest in the line of sports lay in football, and who,
therefore, had taken no part in baseball after making a decided failure
on one occasion when, the team being short, he had allowed himself to
be coaxed into a uniform.

"There's an extra mitt on the bench, Fred," said Roy.  "If you'll catch
me, I'll work a few kinks out of my arm."

"Can't you find somebody else?" asked Sage reluctantly.  "I came out to
look on."

"Oh, come ahead," urged Hooker.  "Get your blood to circulating.  Who
would ever think you were the quarter back of the great Oakdale eleven?
Here's the mitt, take it."

"Come over by the fence," requested Fred.  "I'll let that do most of
the backstopping."

Over by the fence they went, and Hooker began limbering up, calling the
curves he would use before throwing them.  He had them all; but, as
usual, he was wild as a hawk, and Sage would have been forced to do
some tall jumping and reaching had he attempted to catch the ball more
than half the time.

"You've got some great benders, Roy, if you could ever put them over,"
commented Fred.

"I can put them over when I want to," was the retort.  "It's only a
chump pitcher who keeps the ball over the pan all the time."

Satisfied after a time, he decided to stop, not a little to the relief
and satisfaction of Sage.  Eliot was just announcing that the team
would begin regular batting and base-running practice, and immediately
Roy asked the privilege of pitching.

"All right," agreed Roger, "but remember this is to be batting
practice, and not a work-out for pitchers.  Start it off, Springer, and
run out your hit.  You'll follow him. Grant.  Come in from the field,
Stone and Tuttle.  Let some of the youngsters chase the balls out
there.  We've got to have four batters working."

Chub and Ben came trotting in as Springer took his place at the plate.
The captain requested two younger boys to back him up and return the
balls he chose to let pass, and then Hooker toed the slab, resolved to
show these fellows what he could do.  He put all his speed into the
first ball pitched, a sharp shoot, which caught Springer on the hip, in
spite of Phil's effort to dodge it.

"Say, what are you tut-trying to do?" spluttered the batter, as he
hobbled in a circle around the plate.

"That one slipped," said Hooker.  "I got more of a twist on it than I
intended."

Phil picked up the bat, which he had dropped, and resumed his position.
Three times Roy pitched wildly, and then when he finally got the ball
over, Springer met it for a clean single, and trotted to first.

"Now play the game, fellows," called Eliot, from behind the pan.

Hooker's small eyes glittered as Rodney Grant stepped to the plate.
Like a flash he pitched, again using an in-shoot.

Grant stepped back, held his bat loosely and bunted.  As bat and ball
met, the Texan's fingers seemed to release the club, and it fell to the
ground almost as soon as the ball.  Like a jack-rabbit he was off,
shooting down the line toward first, while Springer, who had known by
the signal just what was coming, romped easily to second.

Hooker had not intended for Grant to bunt that ball, having tried to
send it high and close; and now in his haste to secure the sphere, he
stumbled over it, and ere he could recover and throw, the speedy boy
from the Lone Star State was so near first that Eliot shouted, "Hold
it!"

His face flushed, his under jaw outshot a bit further than usual, Roy
returned to the box, ignoring Chipper Cooper, who was cackling with
apparent great delight.

Tuttle waddled toward the pan, bat in hand.

"I'll strike him out easy enough," thought Roy.  Instead of that, he
pitched four wide ones, all of which were declared balls by Sage, who
had been requested to umpire; and Chub jogged to first, complaining
that Hooker had been afraid to let him hit.

Then came Stone, who let a wide one pass, but reached a bit for the
next, caught it about six inches from the end of his bat, and laced it
fairly over the centerfield fence, a feat rarely performed on those
grounds.

"My arm isn't in shape yet," said Hooker, trying to remain deaf to the
laughter of the boys, as the runners trotted over the sacks and came
home.  "I won't pitch any more to-day, Eliot."




CHAPTER III.

TWO OF A KIND.

Sitting alone on the bleachers, Roy Hooker sourly watched the
continuation of practice.  He saw Springer take a turn at pitching, to
be followed finally by Rodney Grant, who laughingly warned the boys
that he intended to strike them all out.

Rodney Grant was a somewhat peculiar character, who, coming unannounced
to Oakdale, had at first been greatly misunderstood by the boys there,
not a few of whom had fancied him an impostor and a fake Texan, mainly
because of his quiet manners and conventional appearance; for these
unsophisticated New England lads had been led, through the reading of a
certain brand of Western literature, to believe that all Texans, and
especially those who dwelt upon ranches, must be of the "wild and
woolly" variety.  Perceiving this at last, Rod had proceeded to amuse
himself not a little by assuming a false air of bravado, and spinning
some highly preposterous yarns of his hair-lifting adventures upon the
plains; a course which, however, adopted too late to be effective,
simply confirmed the doubters--who could not realize that they were
being joshed--in their belief that the fellow was an out-and-out fraud.

Adding to Grant's unpopularity, and the growing disdain in which he was
held, although plainly a strong, healthy, athletic chap, he not only
refused to come out for football, but displayed an aversion for violent
physical contention of any sort, especially fighting; which caused him
to be branded as a coward.  But the time came when, unable longer to
endure the insults heaped upon him, the restraint of the young Texan
snapped like a bowstring, and the boys of Oakdale found that a sleeping
lion had suddenly awakened.  Then it came to be known that Grant had
inherited a most unfortunate family failing, a terrible temper, which,
when uncontrolled, was liable to lead him into extreme acts of
violence; and it was this temper he feared, instead of the fellows he
had shunned whenever they sought to provoke him.  Even now, although
baseball was a gentle game in comparison with football, he was not
absolutely sure he could always deport himself as a gentleman and a
sportsman while playing it.

When the boys of the academy and the citizens of the town had joined in
praise of Grant's courageous efforts in the work of rescuing Lela
Barker from drowning, Hooker, who never had words of eulogy for anyone
save himself, remained silent.  Not that he had not come, like others,
suddenly to regard the young Texan with respect; but for one of his
envious nature respect does not always mean liking, no throb of which
was awakened in his bosom.  Indeed, he secretly disliked Rodney Grant
more than ever, and, now that Springer had taken Grant in hand to make
a pitcher of him, Roy's spleen was embittering his very soul.

Elbows on his knees, projecting chin on his clenched fists, he sullenly
watched Rod pitch for the first time to batters.  Several times he made
in his throat a faint sound like a muttered growl of satisfaction, as
he saw those batters hitting the ball to all parts of the field, and
finally he triumphantly whispered:

"Well, I don't see that he's doing anything.  They're pounding him all
over the lot."

But, at the suggestion of Eliot, Rodney Grant was simply putting the
ball over, now and then using speed, of which he apparently had enough,
and occasionally mixing in a curve.  Behind the pan Eliot would hold up
his big mitt first on one corner then the other, now high, now low, and
almost invariably the ball came whistling straight into the pocket of
that mitt, which caused Roger to nod his head and brought to his face a
faint touch of that rare smile seldom seen there.

"Good control, Rod, old man," he praised.  "That's one of the most
essential qualities a pitcher can have."

"Bah!" muttered the envious lad on the bleachers.  "What's that amount
to, if a fellow hasn't the curves at his command?"

Presently, with Barker stepping out to hit, Eliot called Grant, met him
ten feet in front of the plate, and they exchanged a few words in low
tones, after which Roger returned to his position and gave the regular
finger signals that he would use in a game.

Barker slashed at a high one close across his shoulders and missed.  He
let two wide ones pass, and fouled when a bender cut a corner.

"Two strikes!" cried Sage, who was still umpiring.  "Look out or he'll
strike you out, Berlin."

With a faint smile, the batter shrugged his shoulders, and then he did
his best to meet the next pitched ball, which seemed to be the kind he
especially relished.  To his surprise, he missed it widely, for the
ball took a sharp drop at the proper moment to deceive him.

"You're out," laughed Sage.  "He did get you."

"He did for a fact," agreed Berlin.  "That was a dandy drop, Grant.  I
wasn't looking for it."

Rodney put the next one straight over, and Berlin hit to Cooper at
short.

Jack Nelson followed, and he was likewise surprised to be struck out,
Grant using his drop twice in the performance.

"Hi there, you!" shouted Nelson.  "What did you put on the old ball,
anyhow?  Pitch?  Well, I wouldn't be surprised if you could, some."

"You bet he will," called Phil Springer delightedly.  "I'll have him
delivering the goods before the season is half over."

"Bah!" again muttered Hooker.  "You're a fool, Springer."

Later he saw Eliot and Barker talking together not far from the bench,
and near them stood Herbert Rackliff, a city boy who had entered
Oakdale Academy at the opening of the spring term.

Rackliff was a chap whose clothes were the envy of almost every lad in
town, being tailor-made, of the latest cut and the finest fabric.  His
ties and his socks, a generous portion of the latter displayed by the
up-rolled bottoms of his trousers, were always of a vivid hue and
usually of silk.  His highly-polished russet shoes were scarcely
browner than the tips of two fingers of his right hand, which outside
of school hours were constantly dallying with a cigarette.  He had
rings and scarf pins, and a gold watch with a handsome seal fob.  His
face was pale and a trifle hollow-cheeked, his chest flat, and his
muscles, lacking exercise, sadly undeveloped.  For Rackliff took no
part in outdoor sports of any sort, protesting that too much exertion
gave him palpitation of the heart.

Hooker was still sitting hunched on the bleachers, when Rackliff,
having lighted a fresh cigarette, came sauntering languidly toward him.

"Hello, Roy, old sport," saluted the city youth.  "You look lonesome."

"I'm not," retorted Hooker shortly.

"Well, you're not practicing, and you must be tired of watching the
animals perform.  I came over to kill a little time, but it's grown
monotonous for me, and I'm going to beat it."

"I think I'll get out myself," said Hooker, descending from the
bleachers.

Rackliff accompanied him to the gymnasium, where Roy hastened to strip
off his baseball togs and get into his regular clothes.

"What made you quit pitching so soon?" questioned the city lad,
lingering near.  "You don't mind being hit a little in batting
practice, do you?"

"That wasn't it," fibbed Hooker.  "Didn't you hear those chumps cackle
with glee?  That's what made me sore.  Then what's the use for me to
try to pitch if Eliot isn't going to give me any sort of a show?"

"No use at all," said Rackliff cheerfully.  "I've noticed that on all
these athletic teams there's more or less partiality shown."

"That's it," cried Roy savagely.  "It's partiality.  Eliot doesn't like
me, and he isn't going to let me do any pitching.  Wants to bury me out
in right garden, the rottenest position on the team.  A fellow never
has much of any chance out there."

"Oh, probably he knew you wouldn't accept the position, anyhow," said
Herbert.  "He had to make a bluff at giving you something."

"I'll show him he can't impose on me."

"They're going to boost this individual from the alfalfa regions, it
seems.  He's surely become the real warm baby around here.  I heard
Barker confidentially admitting to your captain----"

"Not _my_ captain," objected Roy.

"I heard Barker confidentially admitting to Eliot," pursued Rackliff
serenely, "that he was greatly surprised in the showing Grant had made
and was not at all sure but the fellow would eventually become a better
pitcher than Springer."

"Say, that would make Springer feel good, the blooming chump!" cried
Roy, rising to his feet.  "He's coaching Grant, so the cowboy can act
as second pitcher and help him out; but, if he realized he might be
training a fellow to push him out of his place as the star twirler of
the team, I guess he'd quit in a hurry."

"Very likely he might," nodded Herbert.  "No chap with real sense is
going to be dunce enough to teach some one to rise above him."

"That will make trouble between them yet, see if it doesn't,"
prophesied Hooker in sudden satisfaction.  "They're mighty thick now,
but there'll be an end to that if Phil Springer ever realizes what may
happen."

"Somebody might carelessly drop a hint to him," smiled Rackliff.

Suddenly Roy's small, keen eyes were fixed inquiringly on his companion.

"I don't see why you take so much interest," he wondered.  "You must
have a reason."

Herbert shrugged his shoulders.  "Perhaps so," he admitted.  "Are you
ready?  Let's get a move on before the bunch comes over."

They left the gymnasium, and walked down the street together.  Hooker
had conceived a sudden, singular interest in Rackliff.

"I always wondered how you happened to come to school here at Oakdale,"
he confessed.

"Have a cigarette," invited Herbert, extending an open, gold-mounted
morocco case.

"Don't like 'em, thank you," declined Roy.

The other boy lighted a fresh one from the stub of the last.

"So you've been speculating as to the cause of my choosing this serene,
rural seat of knowledge, have you?  Well, I'll own up that it wasn't my
choice.  I'm not very eager about burying myself alive, and if ever
there was a cemetery, it's the town of Oakdale.  My pater was the
guilty party."

"Oh, your father sent you here?"

"Correct.  I would have chosen Wyndham, but Newbert's old man sent him
down there, and my governor thought we should be kept apart in future."

"Newbert?  Who's Newbert?"

"You'll hear from him later, I fancy.  _He's_ a chap who can really
pitch baseball.  He's my partner in crime."

"Your what?"

"My chum.  We hit it off together pretty well for the last year or so;
for Dade--that's his name--is a corker.  Never mind the details, and
the facts concerning the precise nature of our little difficulty
wouldn't interest you; but we got into a high old scrape, and were both
expelled from school.  When I found Dade's old man was going to send
him to Wyndham, I put it up to my sire to let me go there also, but he
got wise and chose this corner of the map for mine.  You know, he came
from here originally."

"I didn't know it."

"Yes, moved out of this tomb nearly thirty years ago.  But he knew what
it was like, and I presume he fancied I'd be good and safe down here,
where there's absolutely nothing doing.  Hence, here I am.  Pity my
woes."

"Oh, well, perhaps you might stir up something around here, if you
tried hard enough," said Hooker.  "If you took an interest in
baseball----"

"What good would that do me, with your dearly-beloved friend, Roger
Eliot, choosing his favorites for the team?  Besides, I don't think I'd
care to play if I could with a bunch that had a cow-puncher for a slab
artist."

"You've got a grudge against Grant.  You don't like him."

"Great discernment," laughed Rackliff, with a hollow cough that sent
little puffs of smoke belching from his lips.  "Confidentially, I'll
own up that I'm not stuck on him."

"I'm with you.  I don't go around blowing about it, but I haven't any
use for that specimen from the cow country."

"He seems to be very popular, especially with the girls," murmured
Rackliff.  "Now there's only one girl in this town that strikes me as
something outside the milkmaid class.  Lela Barker is it--in italics.
Still, I'm going to admit that I don't think her taste and discernment
is all it should be.  Of course, she's naturally grateful to Grant for
that bath he took on her account, but that's no reason why she should
hand me the frosty."

"Oh, I begin to see," muttered Hooker, grinning a bit for the first
time.  "Jealous."

"Don't make me laugh; I might crack my face.  Jealous of a cattle
puncher!  Excuse me!  All the same, it's a bit provoking to see people
slobbering over him, especially the girls, the same as if he's made of
the stuff found in heroes of fiction."

"I think," said Hooker, "there's a bond of sympathy between us."




CHAPTER IV.

LEN ROBERTS OF BARVILLE.

In front of the post office stood a boy with a faded pea-green cap,
hung rakishly over one ear.  He had a crooked nose, which looked as if
some one had given it a violent twist to one side, and, perceiving
Hooker approaching, he smiled a crooked smile, that gave his features
the odd appearance of struggling desperately to pull his proboscis back
into place.

"Hello!" muttered Roy in surprise.  "As I live, there's Len Roberts, of
Barville!  What's he doing here?"

"Hi, there, Hooky!" called Roberts from the right-hand corner of his
mouth.  "How they coming?  Ain't seen you since the last time.  Any fun
'round this metropolitan burg?"

"Howdy, Len," answered Roy.  "What brought you over here, anyhow?"

"The old man's nag and buggy.  He came over to buy a horse from Abe
Tuttle, and I asked him to fetch me along to lead or ride the critter
back.  He'n Tuttle are dickering now.  Thought perhaps I might see
somebody I knew if I hung 'round here."

"My friend, Herbert Rackliff, from Boston," said Hooker, introducing
his companion.  "That hub of the universe and seat of knowledge became
too slow for him, so he migrated down here to Oakdale to acquire
learning at our academic institution."

"Glad to meet you," said Roberts, still speaking out of one side of his
mouth, in a way that somehow gave the impression that he did not wish
the other side of his face to know what he was saying.  "From
Boston--and come to attend school in Oakdale.  Jingoes!"

Rackliff smiled wryly, as his hand was given a squeeze by the wearer of
the green cap.  "Don't wonder you're surprised," he murmured.  "Awful,
isn't it?  But then, I'm not to blame.  Just been explaining to Roy,
that my governor is responsible for the fearful crime."

"Sent you down here, did he?  Well, what did you do to lead him to
perpetrate such an outrage?"

"Got caught having a little fun, that's all.  Expelled."

"Some fathers never can seem to understand that boys must have
amusement.  How's baseball coming, Hooky?"

"Oh, after the same old style," growled Hooker.  "Roger Eliot is
running the whole shooting match."

"He seems to be the high mogul in this town," chuckled Roberts.

"He makes me sick!" snapped Roy.  "I don't care whether I play baseball
or not, but I'd like to see Oakdale have a captain who'd give every
fellow a square and fair show."

"Hasn't Eliot given you a square deal?"

"Not by a long shot.  The bunch is practicing on the field now.  He
wanted to pack me away into right garden, but I never was built to be a
nonentity in the outfield."

"I thought likely perhaps you'd do part of the pitching this year.
Seems to me they must need you."

"Oh, they'll need somebody, all right; but Springer's trying to coach
up our cattle puncher, Grant, to do part of the twirling.  You don't
know Grant.  He's a new man; came in last fall.  He's from Texas."

"Can he pitch?"

"Pitch!  Just about as much as an old woman."

"Well, I don't mind telling you that Oakdale is certainly going to need
a good man on the slab when she runs up against Barville this year.
Needn't think you'll have the same sort of a snap you had last season.
Lucky for you Lee Sanger hadn't developed when you played us.  Gee! but
he did come toward the end of the season.  Look how he held Wyndham
down; and he'd won that game, too, with proper support.  He'll be
better this year."

"I hope Barville beats the everlasting stuffing out of Oakdale."

"Do you really?" chuckled Roberts.  "How's your friend feel about it?
Does he play?"

"Nit," said Rackliff.  "Draw poker is about the only kind of a game I
ever take a hand in."

"Oh, Herbert knows they've given me a rotten deal," said Hooker
quickly.  "He's got his opinion about it.  Honestly and truly, we'd
both like to see Barville win."

"If that is the case," whispered Roberts, with a secretively friendly
and confidential air, "you're just about dead sure to have your desire
gratified.  We'll have the finest high school battery ever seen in
these parts.  Got a new catcher, you know."

"No.  I didn't know."

"Yep.  He's a corker.  Knows the game from A to Z, and he's coaching
Sanger.  You should see them work together.  By the way, he comes from
a town near Boston.  Part of the city, isn't it--Roxbury?  He knows
more baseball than any fellow in these parts."

"What's his name?" asked Rackliff, lighting a fresh cigarette.

"Copley."

"What?" exclaimed Herbert, nearly dropping his cigarette.  "Not Newt
Copley?"

"That's him."

"Great scott!  Say, he is a catcher.  He's the trickiest man who ever
went behind a bat.  I know, for I've seen him play.  He knows me, too.
Say, isn't it odd that I should have a chum pitching for Wyndham this
year and an acquaintance catching for Barville?"

The face of Len Roberts wore a look of satisfaction.

"Of course, we haven't seen Cop in a real game yet, but he brought his
credentials with him, and they were sufficient to satisfy everybody
that he was the real thing.  Glad to meet somebody who knows about him.
With Sanger handing 'em up, and Cop doing the receiving, you can bet
Barville is going to take a fall out of Oakdale."

"I'd like to bet on it," said Herbert, with a touch of eagerness; "but
I don't suppose I could find anybody down around here with sporting
blood enough to risk any real money on the game.  Say, do me a favor;
tell Newt Copley that Herbert Rackliff is here in this town.  He'll
remember the fellow they called 'the plunger,' and 'the dead-game
sport.'  Even if I don't play baseball, I've sometimes made a few easy
dollars betting on the games."

"And you'd bet against Oakdale?"

"Sure thing, if I felt certain she would lose."

"I'm afraid," grinned Roberts, "that neither you nor Hooker is very
loyal to his school."

"Loyal!" snarled Roy.  "Why should we be?"

"When it comes to wagering money," observed Rackliff wisely, "the
fellow who bets on sympathy or loyalty is a chump.  I always back my
judgment and try to use some common sense about it.  I hope you don't
think for a fleeting moment that I contemplate finishing my preparatory
school education in this stagnant hole.  Not for little Herbert.  I'd
get paresis here in less than a year.  I'm pretty sure the governor
simply chucked me down here for a term, as sort of a warning.  I'll go
back for good when the term's over."

"Well, now if you fellows really want to see Oakdale surprised, and
enjoy the pleasure of witnessing Barville hand 'em a good trimming,
perhaps you won't say anything about our new catcher."

"Not a word," promised Hooker.

"Not a whisper," assured Rackliff.  "And perhaps I'll catch a sucker or
two if I fish around for them.  Really, the prospect is inviting, for
it seems to promise a break in the deadly monotony."

"Here come some of the fellows now," said Hooker, as two or three boys
were seen coming down Lake Street.  "Practice is over.  Let's sift
along, Rack.  I don't care to see them.  So long, Len.  Good luck to
you."

"So long, fellows," said the boy from Barville, as they turned up Main
Street.  "You'll have a chance to be happy Saturday.  Bet all you can
on it, Rackliff, old fel."




CHAPTER V.

HOOKER'S MOTORCYCLE.

Thus began the friendship between Roy Hooker and Herbert Rackliff.
Henceforth they were seen together a great deal.  They came out to
watch the nine practice, but Hooker no longer wore his baseball suit,
and he sat on the bleachers with Herbert, the two talking together in
guarded tones.  No one paid much attention to them, for most of the
boys held very decided opinions, which were far from favorable, of a
chap who would show the disposition Hooker had so plainly betrayed; and
Rackliff had never revealed an inclination to seek popularity among his
schoolmates.

Roy was the owner of a second-hand motorcycle, which his father had
given him at Christmas time, a present that had filled him with keen
delight and intense satisfaction, in the knowledge that it would cause
him to be envied by less fortunate lads.  It was necessary, however, to
tinker a great deal over the machine to keep it in running order, and
the joshing flung at him by the Oakdale lads whenever he had a
breakdown had been anything but balm to his irritable nature.

"Confound the thing!" he cried, after fussing with it a long time one
night, while Rackliff, his creased trousers carefully pulled up to
prevent bagging at the knees, sat on a box near by, in the open door of
the carriage house, smoking cigarettes.  "I don't believe it's any
good.  The old man got soaked."

"It seems harder work to keep the thing going than to pump an ordinary
bike," said Herbert, "and that's too strenuous for me--though I learned
to ride one once."

"Oh, regular bicycles are back numbers now.  I could have a ripping lot
of fun if I could make this machine go.  Never saw anything so
contrary.  Sometimes it starts off and behaves fine for a little while,
and I think it's all right.  Just when I get to thinking that, it kicks
up and leaves me a mile or two away from home, and I have to push or
pedal it back.  That's what makes me sore.  If I try to sneak in by
some back way somebody is sure to see me and give me the ha-ha."

"Like automobiles," observed Herbert, after letting a little smoke
drift through his nose, "they're all right when they go, and a perfect
nuisance when they don't.  Now look at yourself, Roy, old fellow.  Your
hands are covered with grease, and you've got a black streak across
your nose, and you're all fretted up."

"Drat the old thing!" snarled Hooker, giving the rear tire a kick.
"It's just simply contrary, that's all.  There's only one person in
town who knows anything about gas engines, and he's Urian Eliot's
chauffeur.  I suppose I could get him to tinker this contraption up if
I only was chummy with Roger."

"Anyway," said Herbert, "I should think it would shake one up fearfully
riding over these rough country roads.  We have some roads around
Boston."

"Oh, a fellow can pick his way along pretty well after our roads get
settled.  Of course, they're no macadamized boulevards.  It's lots of
sport, and one can get around almost anywhere he wants to go.  As long
as I'm not going to be on the baseball team, I might use it to run over
to Barville or Wyndham or Clearport to see the games."

"So you're going to chase the games up, are you?" laughed Rackliff.  "I
thought perhaps you'd be so sore you'd keep away from them."

"What, and lose the chance of seeing Oakdale beaten?  Why, I wouldn't
miss that first game with Barville for anything."

"But you don't have to go out of this town to see that game.  Give it
to me straight, Roy, is that fellow Sanger really much of a pitcher?
Of course, I know Roberts would blow about him, but what do you think?"

"He was green the first of last season, and with a poor catcher to hold
him he didn't show up very strong; but it's a fact that Wyndham, the
fastest team in these parts, only got three clean hits off him the last
game he pitched."

"Well, he'll have a catcher that can hold him this year," declared the
city lad.  "Newt Copley is a bird.  He can throw to bases, too; it's
rank suicide for runners to try to steal on him.  Then you should see
him work a batter.  Gets right under the man's club and talks to him in
a low tone, telling him how rotten he is and all that, until he has the
fellow swinging like a gate at every old thing that comes over.  And
the way he can touch a bat with his mitt and deflect it on the third
strike without being detected by the umpire is wonderful.  He's great
for kicking up a rumpus in a game; but he enjoys it, for he'd rather
fight than eat."

"He hadn't better try anything like that on Rod Grant."

"Oh, I don't know," murmured Rackliff.  "Copley's a scrapper, and he
can handle his dukes.  He has science, and it's my opinion he'd eat
your cowboy alive."

Hooker shook his head.  "You never saw Grant when his blood was up.  I
have, and he's a perfect fury.  They say his old man was a great
fighter, and that he's been all shot and cut to pieces.  _I_ wouldn't
buck up against the Texan for anything."

With which confession Hooker resumed his tinkering on the motorcycle.
After a while, with the switch on, he bestrode the thing and started to
pump it down the slight in-line toward the street.

Suddenly, to Roy's delight, the motor began to fire, and, with a shout
of satisfaction, he turned up the street and disappeared from view.

In something like five minutes Rackliff, smoking his tenth cigarette
since seating himself on the box, heard the repeated explosions of the
motorcycle, and Roy, his face beaming with satisfaction, reappeared,
came triumphantly up the rise and leaped off.

"She goes like a bird," he cried.

"What did you do to it?" asked Herbert.

"I wish I knew.  I just tinkered with the wires a bit.  That was the
last thing I did, but I'd been at everything else I could think of, so
I don't know what it was that sent her off.  If she'll only keep going,
I don't care, either.  Never knew the thing to run better.  Say,
Herbert, it's fine.  Don't you want to try it?"

"Oh, I don't believe I do.  I'd break my neck."

"Paugh!  'Tain't no trick at all.  I can show you how to start her and
stop her, and, if you can ride an ordinary bicycle, you'll find it a
cinch to ride this.  Come on.  Afraid?"

"Oh, no," said Rackliff, rising and snapping aside the butt of his
cigarette, "but I should hate to get very far away and have it stop on
me."

"You don't have to go very far; just try her through Middle Street, up
Main, back along High, and down Willow, and here you are."

Herbert looked dubious, but finally, after his companion had chaffed
him a while, he agreed to make the venture.  Roy gave full and complete
directions about the manipulation of the motorcycle, and Rackliff, a
trifle pale, finally mounted it and started down the incline.

"Turn the handles from you," shouted Roy.  "Give her a little gas.
There she goes.  Now you're off."

"Now I'm on," muttered Herbert, as the engine began popping away
beneath him; "but I may be off directly."

Turning into the street, he barely escaped the gutter at the far side,
and away he went, watched by Hooker, who had run out to the sidewalk.
Remembering instructions, and following them faithfully, Rackliff
speeded up the engine or slowed it down, as he desired, and soon his
confidence rose.  One of the street crossings gave him a bump that
nearly threw him off, but he was prepared for the next, and took it
easily.  In a brief time he had covered the course laid out for him by
his friend, and found himself back at Hooker's home, where he promptly
shut off the gas, switched the spark, and, a little flushed, swung
himself to the ground ere the machine fully stopped.

"Say, it is rather nifty," he beamed.  "It's got ordinary hiking beaten
to death.  Don't know but I'd like to have one of the things myself.
Never supposed I could ride one, but it isn't such a trick, after all."

"Of course, it isn't," agreed Hooker, "and I suppose after I get onto
the knack of it I won't have any trouble keeping her running."

"If you don't mind, I think I'll practice on it a little now and then.
Perhaps I might induce the governor to give me one, by way of atonement
for his heartless treatment in sending me down here to school."

"Why, yes, you can practice up on mine," consented Roy slowly, a sudden
troubled look coming to his face; "but I suppose if you got one it
would be new and up to date, and make me feel ashamed of mine."

"Oh, come off," smiled Herbert soothingly.  "If I had one we could pike
around to the baseball games together, and we might be able to pick up
a little easy money by betting on them--if we ever found anybody who
had the nerve to bet with us.  I kept myself supplied with pocket money
in that fashion last year.  Occasionally made a little something
playing poker, but the games were always so small a fellow couldn't do
much at them."

"Didn't you ever lose?"

"Well, not very often.  I didn't bet to lose."

"I know, but how could you be sure of winning?"

Rackliff winked languidly and wisely.  "As I told that chap from
Barville, the fellow who bets on sympathy or loyalty is a chump.  I
always investigate matters pretty thoroughly, and then pick the side I
believe has every prospect of winning.  Sometimes it's possible to help
one team or another along on the quiet.  I'd like to know what Newt
Copley thinks of the Barville nine.  I'd depend on his judgment.  I've
got a tenner I'd like to set to work to double itself."

"You always have plenty of money," said Roy enviously.  "I never had
ten whole dollars at one time in my life."

"My poor, poverty-stricken comrade!" murmured Herbert, preparing to
light a fresh cigarette.  "I sympathize with you.  Follow my lead, and
you'll wear diamonds."




CHAPTER VI.

A DEAD SURE THING.

Thereafter Rackliff took great interest in Hooker's motorcycle--more
interest than the languid, indifferent fellow had seemed to show over
anything else except his cigarettes.  Even one rather severe fall from
the machine, which sadly soiled his elegant and immaculate clothes, did
not deter him from continuing to practice upon it whenever it was not
being used by its owner and he could find the opportunity.  To the
satisfaction of both lads, the machine behaved very well indeed, and
Roy decided that, without knowing how he did it, he had fortunately
succeeded in curing its "balkiness."

It was Roy, taking an early morning spin on the machine, who saw Phil
Springer wearing the big catching mitt and coaching Rodney Grant to
pitch in Springer's dooryard.

"You poor lobster!" muttered Hooker contemptuously, as he chugged past.
"If Grant really should pan out to be the better man, you'd feel like
kicking yourself.  I'd like to tell you what I think of you."

That night after supper, as usual, Rackliff strolled over to Hooker's
home, but he strolled with steps somewhat quickened by the prospect of
taking a turn on his friend's motorcycle.

At first Roy was not to be found, and his mother said she did not know
where he had gone.  The motorcycle was standing in the carriage house,
causing Rackliff to wonder a little.

"Queer," muttered Herbert, rubbing his chin with his cigarette-stained
fingers.  "When the old lady said he wasn't around I thought sure he
must be off with this machine."

To his ears came the sound of a dull thump, repeated at quite regular
intervals.  At first he thought it must be the horse stamping in the
near-by stable, but the regular repetition of that thumping sound
convinced him that such could not be the case and led him to
investigate.  Within the stable he was surprised to hear the sound
coming like a blow upon the back of the building, round which he
finally sauntered.

There was Hooker, coat and cap off, sleeves rolled up, face flushed a
little, throwing a baseball at the rear wall of the building,
recovering it when it rebounded, taking his place at a fixed distance,
and throwing again.

Unperceived, so intent was Hooker, Herbert stood and watched for
several minutes.  Finally he spoke up interrogatingly:

"What are you trying to do, anyhow, old man?  What in the name of
mystery do you mean by sneaking out here and trying to wallop your arm
off all by your lonesome?"

At the sound of the city boy's voice Roy had given a start and turned,
ball in hand.  He frowned a bit, then followed it with a rather
shame-faced grin, as he wiped the perspiration from his forehead with
the back of his hand.

"Just amusing myself a little," he answered.

"Queer sort of amusement.  Might satisfy a kid who couldn't find
anything else to do.  I thought likely you'd be using your motorcycle;
and, everything considered, I didn't suppose you'd care a rap about
fingering a baseball."

"If you could catch me," returned Roy, "I'd have you put on my glove
and see if I couldn't get 'em over a piece of plank the size of the
home plate; but you can't catch, and so I'm trying to see how often I
can hit that white shingle yonder.  I actually hit it twice in
succession a few minutes ago."

"Huh!" grunted Herbert.  "What's the good of that?"

"I'm trying to get control, you know.  They say that's what I lack.
Even Eliot has acknowledged that I might pitch some if I wasn't so
wild."

Herbert burst into soft, half-mocking laughter.  "'Hope springs eternal
in the human breast'," he quoted.  "Nevertheless, good, plain, common
sense should teach you that you're wasting your time.  You're not
wanted as a pitcher, and so you won't get a chance to do any twirling."

"You never can tell what may happen," returned Roy.  "I never thought
Springer was so much, and I haven't any great confidence in Grant.
What if they should both get theirs?  Eliot might be forced to give me
a show, and if that happens I'll deliver the goods----"

Rackliff snapped his yellow fingers.  "You've got the baseball bug
bad," he said.  "It's a disease.  I suppose it has to have its run with
the fellows who become infected.  All right, waste your time; but while
you're doing it, if you don't mind, I'd like to take a spin on your
motorcycle.  There is some fun in that, I own up."

"Well, don't be gone long," said Roy.  "I guess I'll get enough of this
in ten or fifteen minutes more, and I want to ride some myself
to-night."

Trundling out the machine, Rackliff heard the ball thudding again
against the back of the stable.

Friday afternoon Herbert did not appear at school.  Hooker looked for
him in vain and wondered why he had remained away.  Alone he watched
the boys practice a while when school was over, Grant doing his full
share of pitching to the batters.  Despite prejudice and envy, Roy
could see that Springer's pupil was gaining confidence and beginning to
carry himself with the air of a real pitcher.

"But he hasn't had any experience," muttered the jealous and
unfortunate lad.  "Wait till he gets into a game and they begin to bump
him.  That temper of his will make him lose his head."  Which was
evidence enough that Roy little understood Rodney Grant, who invariably
became all the more resolute and determined by opposition, and stood in
no danger of giving way to his fiery temper, except when met by buffets
of physical force in the form of personal violence.

Reaching home, Hooker went out behind the stable and plugged away at
the white shingle until supper time, fancying he was gaining some skill
in accuracy, although it seemed almost impossible to score a hit or
come near it when he used a curve.

Supper over, he looked for Rackliff to appear.  "He'll be around pretty
soon, so I'll just take a short ride and come back."

In the carriage house he stopped, his undershot jaw drooping; for the
motorcycle was missing from the stand on which it was always kept, when
not in use.  "What the dickens----" he cried, and stopped short.

After looking all around to make sure the machine was not there, he
rushed into the house and questioned his mother.

"It _must_ be there, Roy," she said.  "I'm sure nobody has touched it.
I would have heard them."

"But it isn't there," he shouted.  "Somebody has stolen it."  Then he
caught his breath, struck by a sudden thought.  "Has Herbert Rackliff
been around here to-day?" he asked.

"I haven't seen him, but I hope you don't think your friend would take
your motorcycle without----"

He did not wait to hear any more.  Rushing out of the house, he had
reached the sidewalk when, to his unspeakable relief, round the corner
from Willow Street came Rackliff, somewhat dust-covered and perspiring,
trundling the motorcycle.  Hooker glared at him.

"What do you mean by taking my machine without asking?" he rasped.
"Where have you been with it?"

"My dear old pal," said Herbert soothingly, "do give me time to get my
breath, and then I'll seek to conciliate you with a full explanation.
I've had to push this confounded thing for at least five miles, and I'm
pretty near pegged out.  It stopped on me on my way home."

"Five miles?" snapped Roy, taking the machine from the limp and weary
city boy.  "Where in blazes have you been with it?"

But not until he had seated himself to rest in the carriage house, and
lighted a cigarette, did Rackliff offer any further explanation.
Finally, with a little cough and a tired sigh, he smiled on the still
frowning and outraged owner of the machine.

"You didn't see me around school this afternoon, did you?" he asked.

"No.  I wondered where you were."

"I was out laying my pipes."

"Doing what?"

"Making sure that you and I could form a little pool and seek a few
wagers on the game to-morrow, with the dead certainty of winning.  I've
been over to Barville to see Newt Copley."

"Oh!" muttered Hooker.  "And you put my machine on the blink!"

"It simply quit on me, that's all.  I didn't do a thing to it--on my
word, I didn't.  There's nothing broken, old man.  I'm certain you'll
be able to tinker it up again all right.  You can bet your life I'd
never made that trip if I'd dreamed it would be necessary for me to
push the old thing so far.  Still, I'm mighty glad I went.  Say, Roy,
Copley is dead sure Barville will have more than an even show with
Oakdale to-morrow, and you know what I think of his judgment.  Now, if
you've got any money, or can raise any, just bet it on Barville and
make a killing."

"But I wouldn't want to be seen betting against my own school team."

"Ho! ho!" laughed Herbert derisively.  "Then let me have your cash, and
I'll place it for you.  I haven't any scruples."

"But you may be mistaken.  Even Copley may be, for he hasn't seen
Oakdale play."

"He says Sanger is a wiz.  Look here, Roy, do you know Eliot's finger
signals to the pitcher?"

"Why, yes."

"Uses the old finger system, doesn't he?"

"Yes."

"One finger held straight, a straight ball.  Two fingers close
together, an outcurve; spread apart, one on the inside corner.  One
finger crooked like a fish-hook, a drop."

"You've got 'em correct, but what's that got to do with----"

"Oh, I just wanted to know," chuckled Rackliff.  "Get your loose change
together and let me handle it.  If I don't double it for you to-morrow
I'll agree to stand any loss you may sustain.  You won't be even taking
a chance.  What do you say?"

"Well, if you're as confident as that," answered Roy, "I'm certainly
going to raise a little money somehow to bet on that game."




CHAPTER VII.

RACKLIFF FISHES FOR SUCKERS.

Saturday came, warm and balmy with springtime odors.  Roy Hooker,
standing at the street corner near his home, seemed to be listening to
a robin calling joyously from the topmost branches of the elm that rose
above his head; but, truth to tell, the boy's ears were deaf to the
notes of the bird, and his eyes were being turned alternately along
Middle Street or down Willow.  He was waiting for some one, and
presently that person appeared, leisurely approaching, with now and
then a thin wisp of smoke drifting over his shoulder.  It was Rackliff,
dressed with his usual care, but looking, if possible, a little paler
and more languid than ever.

"I thought it was about time for you to show up," said Roy a trifle
fretfully.  "You said you'd be around by nine; it's twenty minutes
after by the clock in the Methodist steeple."

"It is said," returned Herbert, "that the early bird catches the worm;
and, as we're all worms of the earth, I don't believe in taking any
chances with the bird.  Didn't sleep very well last night.  Fancy that
jaunt to Barville was too much for me; though, to tell the truth, I'm a
rotten poor sleeper anyhow.  I wake up at the slightest noise in the
night, and, having some nerves of my own, usually get a case of heart
palpitation, which is deucedly unpleasant.  Then perhaps I won't go to
sleep again for two hours or more.  I envy any fellow who snoozes like
a log."  He concluded with a short, hollow laugh.

"The trouble with you is," said Roy, "that you smoke too much."

"Tell it to Johnson," scoffed Herbert.  "I've always been that way;
smoking doesn't have anything to do with it.  Besides, if it did I
couldn't leave off.  I've got the habit for fair."

"I wouldn't like to say that; I'd hate to own up to it."

"Oh, it's nothing.  Cigarettes never killed any one yet, old women and
moralizers to the contrary, notwithstanding.  Well, chum, how are you
fixed?  Did you make a raise so that you can bet a little cold cash on
the great contest to-day?  You said you thought you'd have some money
this----"

"'Sh!" hissed Roy, glancing around apprehensively toward the house.
"Don't talk about that here."

"Eh?  Why not?"

"I don't want my folks to find out anything about it," whispered
Hooker.  "Come on, let's walk up the street."

At the corner above they turned into High Street, coming finally to the
white Methodist church.

"Let's stroll around behind the church, where no one will see us,"
proposed Hooker.

"Like a pair of plotters on foul intentions bent," laughed Herbert.
"To watch you manoeuvre, one might get the fancy that you were involved
in some desperate and terrible piece of work."

"Now, look here, Herb," said Roy, facing his companion behind the
church, "you're situated differently from me, and you can't seem to
understand my position.  You don't belong in Oakdale, and you don't
care a rap what the fellows around here think of you or say about you."

"Not a rap," nodded Rackliff.

"That's just it.  Now this is my home, and I've got to be careful about
some things.  I don't want to get everybody down on me."

"I haven't observed," said Rackliff unfeelingly, "that you're
particularly popular with the fellows of this benighted burg."

"I'll make myself a blame sight more unpopular if they ever get onto it
that I bet against my own school team.  You can do it, for you say you
don't expect to stay here more than one term, anyhow.  Then if my folks
should know, they'd raise the merry dickens."

"And that would break the monotony of a severely humdrum existence.
I've had more than one stormy session with the head of my family.  How
much money did you scrape together?"

"I haven't counted it yet," answered Roy, thrusting his hand into his
pocket and looking around, as if apprehensive that they were being
watched.  "I say, Herb, are you really dead sure that Barville will win
this afternoon?"

Rackliff sighed.  "As sure as one can be of anything in this old world.
Hook, you've got cold feet."

"Well, I wouldn't want to lose this money.  I can't afford to lose it.
I can't lose it."

"You won't, old chap--you won't.  I'm getting you in on this out of
pure friendliness, nothing else; and you must remember what I agreed to
do yesterday--if you lose, I'll stand for the loss."

"That's generous; that's all right.  Perhaps you can't get any bets,
anyhow.  The fellows around here aren't given to betting real money on
baseball."  Roy produced a closely folded little wad of bills and some
loose change.  "Here's all I have," he went on.  "I'm going to let you
take it and bet it on Barville, if you can."  There was a two dollar
bill, two ones, and eighty-five cents in change.

"Fifteen cents more would make an even five," said Herbert.  "Can't you
dig that much up?"

"This is all I have," repeated Hooker, "every last red cent.  I'll have
to pay admission to the game, too, as long as I'm not on the nine.  I
must keep a quarter for that."

"And that leaves it forty cents shy of a fiver.  Well, if necessary,
I'll make that up.  I'm going to risk ten of my own money."

"Risk it?" muttered Hooker, again troubled by qualms.

"Oh, you know what I mean.  There's no risk; that's simply a sporting
term.  A fellow with sporting blood likes to pretend he's taking a
chance, whether he is or not.  Where did you get----"  He stopped
short, suddenly fancying it best not to inquire into the source of his
companion's money, and in the momentary silence that followed a slow
flush mounted to Roy's temples.

"The team practices a little at ten o'clock," said Rackliff, glancing
at his handsome watch.  "It's getting near that time.  Come on over to
the field and watch me throw out a bait for suckers."

"I don't think I will," said Hooker.  "I believe I'd better keep away,
and there won't be any talk made."

"Suit yourself," coughed Herbert, lighting another cigarette.  "I've
got to get busy if I'm going to hook anything."

Half an hour later Rackliff strolled onto the field and took up a
position near one of the players' benches, where he watched the Oakdale
nine at practice.  At times he smiled with a supercilious air of
amusement, and especially was this noticeable when Eliot complimented
the players or some one made some sort of a fumble or fluke.

Practice was brought to a close with each member of the team taking a
turn at the bat, base running being cut out, however.  Grant did the
pitching, for Springer was "saving his arm."

Chipper Cooper hit the ball handsomely three times in succession, and
relinquished the bat with a whoop of satisfaction.

"Got my eye with me to-day," he cried.  "We've all got 'em peeled;
everybody has.  Sanger'll have his troubles.  We'll win like a breeze,
fellows."

"How very confident you are," said Rackliff, moving slowly forward.
"You all seem to think this game is going to be a cinch for Oakdale,
but I've got an idea that you'll sing a different tune to-night."

"Oh, you have!" cried Chipper, turning on him.  "Listen to Solomon, the
wise man, fellers."

"I have a fancy that Barville is going to win," stated Herbert, not a
whit abashed.  "In fact, I believe it so much that I'm willing to make
a little bet on it."

"Bet you a pint of peanuts," gurgled Chub Tuttle.

"Don't ruin yourself by such recklessness.  I've got some real money."

"Dinged if he ain't a sport!" sneered Site Crane.  "He wants to bet
real money on the game."

"How does it happen you have the impression that Barville will beat us,
Rackliff?" inquired Roger Eliot mildly.

"Well, now, I don't mind answering that," beamed Herbert.  "Barville
has got a surprise for you.  I'm not supposed to mention it, but I
can't keep it any longer.  They've got a new catcher, a friend of mine,
and----"

"I suppose you think he can play the whole game," scoffed Phil
Springer.  "A friend of yours, eh?  Well, if he knows as much about
baseball as you do, he'll be of great assistance to Barville!"

"I'm backing my knowledge with cash, if I can find anybody who has sand
enough to bet with me," said Herbert.

"I'll bet you a dollar," shouted Phil.

"Only a dollar?  Dear me!  Can't you do any better than that?  I've got
fifteen long green chromos that I'd like to wager on Barville."

For a few moments this seemed to stagger the group that had gathered
about him.  Fifteen dollars was a lot of money, and it seemed doubtful
if any other individual in the crowd, with the possible exception of
Eliot, could raise as much--and Eliot would not bet.

"Wish I had fifteen dollars," muttered Crane.  "I'd go him.  It would
be jest like findin' money."

Two or three of the boys drew aside and whispered together.  Springer
was one of these, and in a moment he called some others from the
gathering near Herbert.  There was more whispering and not a little
nodding of heads, and then of a sudden Phil turned and walked back
toward the city youth.

"Rackliff," he said, "if you really mean business, if you've got
fifteen dollars you want to bet on Barville, meet me at the post office
at noon, and I'll have the money to go you."

"Excellent," murmured Herbert, breathing forth a little thin blue
smoke.  "I'll be there with my money.  Don't forget the appointment,
Springer."




CHAPTER VIII.

READY FOR THE GAME.

Never before had the Barville baseball team brought such a crowd of
supporters into Oakdale.  They came, boys and girls, wearing their
school colors, bearing banners, and bringing tin horns and cowbells.
The manner in which they swept into Oakdale and hurried, eager and
laughing, toward the athletic field, plainly betokened their high
confidence in the outcome of the contest.  Even a few older persons
came over from Barville on one pretext or another, and found it
convenient to spend a portion of the afternoon watching the baseball
game.

"Jinks!" chuckled Chipper Cooper, as he watched the visitors pour in
and fill up the generous section of bleachers reserved for them.  "They
certainly act as if they thought they were going to have a snap to-day.
Barville must be depopulated.  Never fancied so many people lived over
there."

"Beyond question," said Roger Eliot quietly, "they believe their team
has at least an even chance for the game; otherwise, not half so many
would have made the journey to watch it."

"It must be on account of their new ketcher," muttered Sile Crane.  "I
cal'late they think he's the whole cheese; but mebbe they'll find aout
he ain't only a small slice of the rind.  What's he look like, anyhaow?"

"There he is," said Roger, as the visiting team came trotting onto the
field, led by Lee Sanger, its pitcher and captain, "that stocky,
red-headed chap.  See him?"

"My!" grinned Cooper.  "He's a bird.  Looks like he could eat hardware
without getting indigestion."

The Barville crowd gave their players a rousing cheer, although they
did not yet venture to blow the horns or jangle the cowbells.  Those
noise-producing implements were held in reserve, with apparent perfect
assurance that an especially effective occasion for their use must
arise during the game.

Captain Eliot shook hands cordially with Sanger, and suggested that he
should at once take the field for practice.

"Hello, Roger!" called Bob Larkins, the Barville first baseman.  "Great
day for the game.  We're going to make you fellows go some.  You won't
have the same sort of a cinch you had last year."

"I hope not," answered Eliot pleasantly.  "There's a big crowd out
to-day, and I'd like to see you fellows make the game interesting."

"Oh, don't you worry, it will be interesting enough," prophesied
Larkins, getting his mitt and turning to jog down toward first.

At Eliot's elbow Phil Springer remarked, with a short laugh, in which
there seemed to be a trace of nervousness: "They certainly have got
their pucker up.  They're boiling over with confidence."

"And it's a mistake to boil over with anything--confidence, doubt or
fear," said Roger.  "When the kettle boils aver, the soup gets
scorched.  Come, Phil, shake the kinks out of your arm with me, while
they're taking their turn on the field."

His calm, unruffled manner seemed instantly to dissipate the
nervousness which Phil had felt a touch of.

The practice of the visiting team was closely watched by nearly all the
spectators, and it became apparent that the Barville boys had profited
by the coaching of some one who had found it possible to train them
with good effect.  They were swift, sure and snappy in their work,
displaying little of the hesitation and uncertainty usually revealed by
an ordinary country school team, even in practice.  Copley, the stocky,
red-headed catcher from Roxbury, received the balls when they were
returned from the infield and the out, catching the most of them
one-handedly with the big mitt, although he seemed to do this without
flourish or any attempt at grand-standing.  Now and then he grinned and
nodded over some especially fine catch in the outfield or clever stop
of a grounder or liner by an infielder; nevertheless, he let Sanger,
who was batting, do all the talking to the players.

Roy Hooker, wearing the crimson colors of his school, sat on the
bleachers at the edge of the group of Oakdale Academy students,
endeavoring to mask his feelings behind a pretext of loyal interest in
the home nine; but, nevertheless, in spite of his inwardly reiterated
assertion that he had been used "rotten," he was annoyed by a
constantly recurring sense of treachery to his own team.  The skill
displayed in practice by the visitors in a measure set at rest the
doubts he had continued to entertain concerning Rackliff's wisdom in
backing Barville.

"I'll win some money to-day, all right," he thought; "but, really, I'd
rather be wearing an Oakdale suit, even if we lose."

As the Barville nine came in from the field and Oakdale went out, Roy
saw Herbert Rackliff saunter forth and speak to Newt Copley, who shook
hands with him.  Then Herbert drew Copley aside and began talking to
him in very low tones, and with unusual animation.  Still watching,
Hooker beheld Copley nodding his head, and even at that distance Roy
could see that he was grinning.

"Hey, old Rack!" Chipper Cooper shouted from the field.  "Brace him
up--that's right.  Tell him he's got to win or you're financially
ruined."

Herbert pretended that he did not hear, and, after a final word with
Copley, slowly sauntered back into the crowd.  He was not wearing the
Oakdale colors.

"I'm glad nobody knows that part of the money he put up was furnished
by me," thought Hooker.  "He's got an awful crust.  I couldn't do a
thing like that, and be so cheeky and unconcerned.  Gee! but he'll get
the fellows down on him."

And now, as the time for the game to begin was at hand, the umpire,
supplied with two new balls in their boxes, called the captains of both
teams and consulted with them for a moment or two.  Directly Eliot
sought the body protector and mask, and Bert Dingley, standing at the
end of the bench on which the visitors had seated themselves, began
swinging two bats.  There was a rustling stir among the spectators as
they settled themselves down to watch the opening of the contest.  The
Oakdale players took their positions on the field, Rodney Grant going
into right, while Chub Tuttle remained on the bench as spare man.  Phil
Springer had peeled off his sweater and was pulling on his light
left-hand glove as he walked toward the pitcher's position.

"Ladies and gentlemen," called the youthful umpire, facing the crowd,
"this is the opening game of the high school league, Barville against
Oakdale.  Battery for Oakdale, Springer and Eliot.  Play ball!"

With that command, he tossed a clean, new baseball to Phil, who caught
it with his gloved hand, glanced at it perfunctorily, gave it an
unnecessary wipe against his hip, made sure his teammates were ready,
and placed his left foot on the slab.




CHAPTER IX.

THE FIRST INNING.

A white streak went shooting through the air; something whizzed high
and close past Dingley, who dodged a bit.

"Ball one!" called the umpire.

"Spare him, Phil--don't hit him!" cried Chipper Cooper, moving about
nervously.

"There's speed!" came from Sile Crane.  "He can't see that kind."

"Get 'em over--please get 'em over, if you can!" entreated Bob Larkins,
who had taken a position on the coaching line, near first base.

"All right, Phil," said Roger Eliot quietly and reassuringly, returning
the ball.  "You've got powder behind them."

Springer's nervousness had returned with redoubled force.  He seemed to
feel something quivering somewhere within himself, and, having
forgotten to get a chew of gum, he suddenly realized that his mouth was
dry as a chip.  When Roger called for an out, he bent the ball so wide
of the plate that Eliot scarcely succeeded in stopping it.

"Oh--dear--me!" whooped Larkins.  "He can't find the pan.  Take a
ramble, Ding; wait and he'll walk you."

To Springer's relief, Eliot did not seem disturbed.  Roger signalled
next for a straight one, and held up his mitt behind the inside corner
of the plate.  Doing his best to be steady, Phil responded by sending
one over that corner; and Dingley, waiting, heard the umpire call a
strike.

"Oh, yes, he'll walk him--not," laughed Cooper.  "Let him wait.  He'll
have a chance to ramble to the bench in a minute."

Phil saw Eliot smile a bit through the meshes of the catching mask, and
then, nodding at the signal for a drop, he started the ball high, but
gave it the proper twist to bring it shooting down across the batter's
shoulders.

"Two strikes!" declared the umpire, at which Dingley shook his head
protestingly.

"My eye!  He is a good waiter," yelled Cooper gayly.  "He's worked in a
restaurant some time.  You've got him now, Phil."

Trying to "pull" Dingley, Phil again used a curve that was too wide,
and the third ball was called.

The batter gripped his club and stood ready, determination in his
manner.  The infielders crouched on their toes, and the outfielders
were prepared to run in any direction.  Springer leaned forward to get
the signal, then swung into an elaborate delivery which he had
practiced.  Another drop was tried, but this time Dingley hit it.  Up
into the air popped the ball, and Cooper, yelling "I'll take it!" raced
over behind second, to smother it surely when it came down.

Something like a sigh of relief escaped Springer's lips when he saw the
ball held by the lively little shortstop, and in a measure his
confidence was restored..

"They can't hit that kind out of the infield, Spring, old dandy,"
laughed Cooper.  "You've got an elegant collection up your sleeve
to-day."

The home crowd cheered, and Barville sent out Pratt, the second batter.

"Here's the next victim," cried Jack Nelson, from his position near
second.  "He'll be easy, too."

Pratt was clever at sacrificing, but without a runner ahead of him it
was up to him to try for a hit, and he fouled the first two balls.

"Now, you've got him sure, Phil," said Cooper.  "He's a regular
hen-roost robber; he loves fouls.  Don't let him get away, for if he
does he'll crow."

As two strikes and no balls had been called, Pratt apparently expected
Springer to waste the next one, and in that he made his mistake; for
Phil, growing steadier, put over a sizzler on the inside corner.

"You're out!" shouted the umpire, and Pratt turned sadly and
disgustedly toward the bench.

"Wonder what that Barville bunch is going to do with those horns and
cowbells," cried Cooper, as the Oakdale cheer died away.

Whiting, the next batter, poked a hot one directly at Chipper, who
plunged forward to get it on the first bound and made a miserable
fumble.  Chasing the ball, the little fellow snapped it up and threw
wild to Crane.

Whiting improved his chance to take second, where he laughingly came to
anchor, chaffing Cooper, who was making some very uncomplimentary
remarks about himself.

"Here we go!  Here we go!" roared Larkins.  "Now we score.  On your
toes, Whiting!  Here's the boy to drive you home."

Springer shivered suddenly as he saw the stocky, red-headed catcher of
the visiting team step into the batter's box.  Something told Phil that
Copley would hit the ball, and in keen apprehension he pitched the
first two so wide of the plate that Eliot was forced to stretch himself
to get them.  Copley hunched his shoulders and grinned tauntingly at
the nervous fellow on the slab.

"Aw, put one over," he urged.  "Lost your nerve?  Going to walk me?
You don't dare----"

Apparently, he had relaxed and was holding his bat carelessly, so Phil
tried to push over a swift, straight one.  With a smash Copley landed
on the horsehide, driving it toward right field.

"Ah!" gasped the spectators.

"Go!" yelled Larkins.  "Score on it, Whiting!  It's a two-bagger!"

Out there in right garden Rodney Grant was sprinting after that ball
almost as it left Copley's bat.  There seemed scarcely a chance for
Grant to reach the whistling sphere, but he covered ground with amazing
speed and leaped into the air, thrusting out his bare right hand.  The
ball smacked into that unprotected hand and stuck there, as Grant
dropped back to the turf.

A few too eager enthusiasts on the Barville bleachers had started to
blow horns and ring bells when they beheld Copley's drive shooting
safely, to all appearances, into that unoccupied portion of the field;
now, of a sudden, these sounds were drowned by the great yell--almost a
roar--of joyous relief and exultation which burst from the Oakdale
sympathizers.  On those seats boys wearing the crimson colors jumped up
and down, shrieking wildly, while they pounded other boys, similarly
decorated, over their heads and shoulders; girls likewise screamed,
waving frantically the bright banners, on each of which was emblazoned
a large white letter O.

At the smash of bat and ball Phil Springer's teeth had snapped
together, as if to guard his heart from leaping from his mouth; and
despairingly he had whirled around to watch the course of the ball,
perceiving out of the corner of his eye Whiting, with a long start off
second, fairly tearing up the ground as he flew toward third on his way
to the plate.

Phil likewise saw Rod Grant stretching himself to get that whistling
white sphere, and even as a voice within the pitcher's brain seemed to
cry, "He can't touch it!" the Texan made that amazing leap into the air
and held the ball.

"Mercy!" gasped Phil.  "What a catch!"

He waited for Grant, who came loping in from the field, his face
flushed, his eyes full of laughter.

"Oh, you dandy!" cried Phil, giving his chum a resounding open-handed
slap on the shoulder.

"That was reaching for it some."

"I sure didn't think I could touch it," confessed Rod; "but I was bound
to try my handsomest for it."  Which was characteristic of the young
Texan.

"They're cheering for you," said Phil.  Then jovially he reached and
lifted Rod's cap with one hand, at the same time using the other hand
to give his companion's head a push, thus forcing him to bow.

Newt Copley surveyed Oakdale's right fielder disgustedly.  "That was a
fearful blind stab," he said sourly.  "Didn't know you had it, did you?"

"Not till I looked to see," acknowledged Rod pleasantly.

Eliot gave the boy from Texas a look of approval.  "That's the way to
get after them," he said.  "That's playing baseball and supporting a
pitcher."

"I was pretty rotten, wasn't I?" said Phil with a touch of dejection.

"Far from it," returned the captain, "you were pretty good.  Copley was
the only man who really made a bid for a hit."

"Sure," chipped in Cooper.  "I was the real, rank thing, and if they'd
scored I'd been responsible for it.  I should have nipped Whiting
without a struggle."

Phil suddenly felt better, as it was true that none of the first four
men to face him, the pick of the enemy's batters, had hit safely; for
which, cutting out Grant's performance, he was immediately inclined to
take the credit, due quite as much, however, to Eliot as to him.

Sanger warmed up a bit by whipping a few to Larkins at first, while
Copley was buckling on the body protector and adjusting the mask.
Oakdale had put her second baseman, Jack Nelson, at the head of the
batting order, and Jack did not delay the game by loafing on his way
into the batter's box.

"Get the first one, Sang!" barked Copley, squatting behind the plate
and giving a signal.  "He looks like a mark.  Keep him off the pan, Mr.
Umpire; make him stay in his box."  Then, under his breath, speaking
just loud enough for Nelson to hear, he added: "Not that it makes any
difference, for you couldn't hit a balloon."

"Couldn't I!" muttered Jack, strangely annoyed, for there was something
indescribably irritating about the manner in which the red-headed
catcher had sneered those words.

This irritation grew when Sanger warped over two zig-zags, and Nelson
missed them both.  Copley made no further remark, but his husky
chucklings over the batter's failures, sent the blood to Nelson's head
and assisted him in finally misjudging a high one on the inside corner.

"You're out!" pronounced the umpire.

"That's the pitching, cap!" laughed Larkins.  "They had their fun with
you last year; now it's your turn."

Berlin Barker, regarded as an excellent batsman, was almost as easy for
Sanger.  True, Barker did foul the ball once, but that was the only
time he touched it, and he likewise returned to the bench in a much
disturbed frame of mind.

"Mr. Umpire," called Eliot, "will you keep that catcher from talking to
the batters?"

"Go on!" growled Copley.  "Who's talking to them?  I can talk to the
pitcher if I choose, and I've got a right to have a little conversation
with myself."

"Don't pay any attention to him, Springer," warned Roger; "that's his
trick."

Phil also missed the first ball delivered by Sanger.

"This fellow thinks he can pitch," cried Copley.  "He's had a dream."

"There he goes, Mr. Umpire," cried Roger.  "He's talking to the batter
again."

"Oh, say, forget it!" scoffed the red-headed backstop.  "I'm talking
about our pitcher.  He can't pitch a little bit--oh, no!  He just
dreamed he could, that's all.  Put another one right over the pan, cap;
there's no danger."

But Sanger, taking Copley's signal, bent one wide, and Phil fouled it
off into the first base bleachers, where it was deftly caught by a
spectator.

"He's in a hole," said Copley.  "I wonder how these people ever got a
hit off you, Sang."

The batter tried to steady himself.  Two "teasers" he disdained, and
then bit at a drop and was out, Sanger having fanned the first three
men to face him; which seemed to justify the Barville spectators in
breaking forth with their horns and bells at last, and they did so
tumultuously.




CHAPTER X.

THE CRUCIAL MOMENT.

On the bleachers Roy Hooker breathed easier.  "Len Roberts certainly
told the truth," he thought.  "Sanger is a crackerjack pitcher."

"What did you say?" asked a fellow at Roy's elbow.

"I?" gasped Hooker, startled.  "I didn't say anything."

"I thought you did.  I thought I heard you mutter something about
Sanger.  That fellow has developed, hasn't he?  But we'll get onto him
yet.  When these strike-out twirlers go to pieces, they're liable to
blow up completely.  The boys will pound him before the game is over."

"I hope they do," fabricated Roy.

"If Springer only keeps steady," continued his seatmate, "it will be
all right; but I'm just a little bit afraid of Phil, for he lacks the
heart to stand punishment.  If they get to hitting him--well, Eliot
will have to try Grant."

"Grant's no pitcher," said Roy.

"I don't know about that.  He hasn't had any experience, that's true;
but Springer himself has said that Rod's got the makings of one.
Wasn't that a corking catch he made?"

"It was lucky for Springer."

Larkins was now up, and he proceeded to wallop the second ball pitched
to him, driving it humming down the third-base line for two sacks,
which caused the horns and cowbells to break into a tumultuous uproar.
Sanger followed, and he straightened out a bender into a whistling line
drive to the left of Chipper Cooper; whereupon Cooper made up for his
error in the first inning by forking the sphere with his gloved hand
and snapping it to Nelson, who leaped on to second and caught Larkins
lunging hopelessly back for the sack.

The horns and cowbells were suddenly silent, while the sympathizers
with the crimson frantically cheered this beautiful double play.

"Great, Chipper--simply great!" cried Springer as soon as he could get
his breath.

"Oh, pretty good, pretty good," returned the little fellow, with mock
modesty.  "A trifling improvement on my last performance, I'll admit."

Tom Cline likewise hit the ball hard, but he lifted it into the waiting
hands of Ben Stone, who scarcely moved a step from his position in
center field.

"Some people have great luck," cried Newt Copley, with his eyes on the
Oakdale pitcher, who was walking toward the bench.  "Wait till the
streak breaks, and then we'll see the airship go up."

Ben Stone got the first clean hit off Sanger, driving the ball zipping
through the infield.  Eliot, who followed, signaled that he would bunt,
and Stone was well on his way toward second when the Oakdale captain
lay a dead one down a few feet in front of the pan.  Roger came near
turning his attempted sacrifice into a hit, but Sanger managed to get
the ball and whip it to first in time to catch the runner by a margin
of the closest sort.

"That's playing the game, all right," cried Nelson from the coaching
line.  "Here's where we score."

"In your mind," derided Copley.

Sile Crane, trying hard to bring Stone home, made four fouls in
succession, and then struck out.

"Two men, cap," grinned Copley.  "Old Stoney will expire at the second
station.  Here's the cowboy; take his pelt, hide, horns and hoofs."

When Sanger had fooled Grant twice, it began to look as if he really
would succeed in "taking his pelt"; but, declining to reach for the
decoys, Rod finally met the ball on the trade mark, lining it over the
center fielder's head, after which he made third before he was stopped
by the wild gestures and cries of the delighted coacher, Nelson.

Roy Hooker swallowed a lump in his throat.  "Why, they're hitting
Sanger!" he muttered huskily.

"Hitting him!" shouted the overjoyed fellow at Roy's elbow.  "They're
hammering him for fair.  Told you they might do it."

"But he'll brace up," said Roy.  "He's got to brace up."

"Let's hope he won't till the fellows put this game on ice.  Here's
Cooper.  He's not a strong batter, but----  Oh, gee! look a' that!
Look a' that!  A Texas leaguer!  That scores Grant!"

Indeed, Chipper had bumped a Texas leaguer over the head of the second
baseman, who made a desperate but futile effort to reach the ball; and
Oakdale had every reason to cheer as Rodney Grant easily scampered home
from third.

Sanger really seemed to be off his feet, and Sleuth Piper, trying for a
hit, drove two fouls into the crowd on the bleachers.

"Straighten 'em out a little, Pipe," pleaded Cooper, returning for the
second time to first.  "You've got my tongue hanging out now."

Copley, squatting, signaled for a straight ball.  Sanger, apprehensive
and nervous, shook his head.  Copley promptly repeated the signal, and
insisted on it.  Finally Sanger obeyed, putting one straight over.

Sleuth swung at that straight one, his heart full of confidence, but he
missed it cleanly.  In a moment he was raging at the catcher, who had
promptly snapped off his mask and tossed it aside.

"Somebody will break your head if you try that again," snarled Piper.

"What's the matter with you?" flung back Copley belligerently.  "You've
got bats in your belfry."

"You'll have a bat across your belfry if you repeat that trick,"
threatened Sleuth stiffly.  "That's all I've got to say.  Don't you
touch my bat again when I'm hitting."

Copley laughed derisively at the excited words of the slim, angry,
pale-faced fellow; and the umpire, not having seen the catcher's
prestigious interference, was unable to penalize the offender.

His anxiety somewhat relieved by this termination of the home team's
batting streak, Roy Hooker looked around for Rackliff, and discovered
Herbert coolly sauntering down beside the ropes toward first base.  As
if he felt the attraction of Roy's glance, the city youth turned his
head and smiled in an undisturbed manner, which was doubtless intended
to convey his unshaken confidence in the ultimate outcome of the game,
and really did much to soothe and reassure his agitated friend.

As Oakdale took the field, Copley was seen speaking hurriedly to Len
Roberts, who was to lead off at bat in the third.  Roberts, listening,
nodded, and his face was contorted by that crooked grin which always
seemed trying to pull his crooked nose back into its proper place.
Then, as he stepped into the box, he shot a glance toward the standees
back of first, who had pushed out close to the ropes, among whom
Herbert Rackliff was carelessly lighting a cigarette.

"Never mind, Barville," called Herbert in a low, yet singularly
distinct, tone of voice, while Eliot was signaling to Springer.  "The
game is young, and I'll bet you'll win.  That's _straight_."

Eliot's past experience with the visitors had taught him that Roberts
rarely sought for a hit unless forced to do so, being the kind of a
batter who preferred to wait and walk whenever he could; therefore the
Oakdale captain signed for Springer to put the first ball over.

Barely had Sile Crane flung over his shoulder the words, "Aw, go lay
down!"--directed toward Rackliff--when, to the surprise of very many
beside Eliot, Roberts landed hard on Springer's straight one, driving
it toward center field.  Fortunately, Stone had little trouble in
reaching the ball and catching it.

"Hard luck, Len," sounded the voice of Rackliff, as Oakdale's burst of
applause died down.  "Hit 'em where they ain't; that's the way.  Here
comes the huckleberry now," he added, as Berry, the visitors'
shortstop, took the place of Roberts.  "He'll hit it _out_."

"This Berry will be picked in a moment," cried Cooper instantly.  "He's
ripe.  Get him, Springer."

Crack!--Berry planted the willow against Phil's outcurve, and again the
ball sailed toward the outfield, this time going toward right.  Again
the fielder had no trouble in reaching it ere it fell to the ground,
and Grant scooped and held it while running lightly forward.

"He hit it out, sure enough," chortled Cooper.  "Rack, you're
ruined--financially busted wide open."

Still Herbert seemed unruffled, continuing to smile.  "If I lose," he
said, "I can stand it."

"But _I_ can't," muttered Roy Hooker beneath his breath.

Springer, knowing Dingley, Barville's leading batter, who was again up,
was dangerous, tried two wide ones to start with; but the fellow did
not even wiggle his bat at them.

"Get _into_ it!" called Rackliff suddenly, as Phil swung into his
delivery for the third ball.

Dingley seemed to fall back from the plate a little, and again bat and
ball met squarely, an inshoot being sent humming over the head of
Cooper, who made a ludicrously ineffective jump for it, the ball
passing at least ten feet above his outstretched hand.  But Piper,
leaping forward and speeding up surprisingly, made a forward lunge at
the last moment, and performed a shoestring catch that brought the
entire Oakdale crowd to its feet with a shout of wonderment and delight.

Eliot calmly removed the catching mask and swung the body protector
over his head.  "Royal support, Phil," he observed, as Springer trotted
happily toward the bench.

"The greatest ever," returned Phil.  "If they can only keep it up----"

"You'll do your part, all right," assured Roger.  "Every fellow can't
hit you the way those three did.  Now, boys, we'll lead off with the
head of the list.  Let's get after Sanger again."

But apparently Sanger had recovered his best form during the brief rest
on the bench, for again he fanned Nelson and Barker; and, although
Springer hit the ball, it was an easy roller to the Barville twirler
himself, who confidently and deliberately tossed Phil out at first.

In the meantime, one or two indignant Oakdaleites had gone at Herbert
Rackliff and driven him away from the ropes back of first base, Herbert
resenting their remarks concerning his loyalty, and rather warmly
asserting that he had a right to bet his money according to the
dictates of his judgment.

In the fourth Springer's work justified the confidence Eliot had
expressed, for he followed Sanger's example by striking out Pratt and
Whiting and forcing the dangerous Copley to hit weakly to the infield.

"Another goose egg for them," exulted Chipper Cooper.  "It begins to
look like a shut-out.  These two tallies of ours may be a-plenty."

"You don't want to get any such an idea into your head," returned Eliot
promptly.  "Two runs are mighty few; we must have more.  Here's Old
Stone, who started us going before."

Stone started it again with a cracking two-bagger, and, when Eliot
poked a daisy cutter into right, Ben scored on it.

The efforts of the coachers to put Sanger off his feet, however, were
fruitless, Crane fanning, Grant expiring on a foul which Copley took
thirty feet behind the pan, and Cooper perishing in an effort to beat a
slow grounder to first.

With the beginning of the fifth Rackliff again called encouragement to
the batters, having strolled back to the ropes a little further down
beyond first base.  He urged them to "get into it," "hit it out," "drop
on it," "give it a rise," and, as if braced by his cries, they began
slaughtering Springer mercilessly.  Sanger singled; Cline poked one
past Cooper; and Roberts, once more surprising everybody by smashing
the first ball, doubled and brought both runners home.

And now once more Springer's nerves were a-quiver in every part of his
body.  In his disturbed state he actually swallowed the chew of gum he
had procured.  Rattled, he hit Berry in the ribs, and handed Dingley a
pass, filling the bases.

"It's all off!  It's all over but the shouting!" yelled Sanger, dancing
and waving his arms on the coaching line near third.  "Got him going,
fellows!  Don't let up!  Here's where we win the game!"




CHAPTER XI.

A CHANGE OF PITCHERS.

The green banners were fluttering like leaves in a furious tempest;
horns, cowbells and human voices sent a wild uproar across the diamond;
Springer, white as a sheet, his confidence totally shattered, was all
to the bad.  Another clean hit would almost certainly permit two
Barville runners to score and put the visitors one tally in the lead.

And not a man was out!

Knowing something must be done at once or the game would doubtless be
lost in that inning, Eliot threw the ball to Barker, so that Berlin
might hold the man on third, and, calling Phil, stepped forward and met
him in front of the pan.

"Play ball! play ball!" yelled Sanger.  "Don't delay the game!"  And,
"Play ball! play ball!" howled the Barville spectators.

Coolly, calmly, soothingly, the Oakdale captain spoke in a low tone to
the unnerved pitcher.  "Brace up, Phil, old fellow," he urged.  "Take
your time; stop pitching as fast as you can soak the ball over.  You're
not using your head.  If you'll steady down we can pull out of this
hole.  Now, go slow, and don't mind the racket."  For a moment his
right hand touched Springer's left shoulder with a steadying pressure.

"I'll try," promised Phil huskily.  "I'll do my best, captain."

While the visitors still howled, "Play ball," Roger stood on the plate
and fussed with the strap of his catching mask, which did not need any
attention whatever to begin with, but somehow became strangely tangled
in the wire meshes.  From his appearance one might have fancied Eliot
stone deaf to that babel of sounds, and he seemed utterly blind when
Larkins rushed out from the bench before him, flourishing his arms, and
demanding that he should get back into his position and let the game
proceed.

Such a show of outward calm should have done much to restore the
equanimity of the pitcher; but, though Springer tried hard to get a
steadying grip on himself, his fear of what might happen if Pratt hit
him led him to pitch himself into a still worse predicament; and he
handed up three balls, one after another, in an effort to fool the
Barville boy.  The shouts of the coachers, urging Pratt to "take a
walk" and asserting that it was "a dead sure thing," added in the
completion of Phil's undoing; for, even though he did his best to put a
straight one over, the ball was outside, and Pratt capered exultantly
to first, while Roberts, grinning all over one side of his face, jogged
home.

"Take him out!"  Some one in the Oakdale crowd uttered the cry, and
immediately a dozen others took it up.  "Take him out!  Take him out!"
they adjured.

These appeals were unnecessary, for already Eliot had decided that Phil
could not continue, and was beckoning for Grant to come in, a signal
which Rodney did not at first seem to comprehend.  Presently the Texan
started slowly in from the field, and Springer, at the umpire's call of
"time," turned, his head drooping, toward the bench.

"Hadn't you better take right, Phil?" suggested Eliot.

The heartsick fellow shook his head.  "I wouldn't be any good out
there--now," he muttered.

So Tuttle was sent into right, while Grant limbered up his arm a bit by
throwing a few to Sile Crane.

"Here's something still easier, fellows," called Newt Copley.  "Perhaps
he can throw a lasso, but he can't pitch baseball.  Keep it up.  Don't
stop."

"Play!" ordered the umpire.

Rod Grant toed the pitcher's slab for the first time in a real game of
baseball, wondering a bit if he was destined to receive a continuation
of the unkind treatment that had put "the blanket" on his predecessor.

In the meantime, Herbert Rackliff had been collared by Bunk Lander, a
big, husky village boy, whose face was ablaze with wrath and whose
manner betrayed an almost irresistible yearning to punch the city youth.

"You keep your trap closed," rasped Lander, "or I'll knock your block
off!  If you utter another peep during this game, I'll button up both
your blinkers so tight it'll take a doctor to pry 'em open.  Get that?"

"Take your hands off me!" cried Herbert indignantly.  "How dare you!"

"How dast I!" snarled Lander.  "I'll show you how I dast if you wag
your jaw any more."

"I've got a right to talk; everybody else does."

"You double-faced, sneaking son of a sea-cook!" blazed Lander.  "You
bet against your own school team, did ye?  If you belonged in Barville
you might howl your head off; but as long's you camp around these
diggin's you won't do no rooting for them fellers.  I'm going to keep
right on your co't-tail the rest of the time, and the first yip you
make I'll hand ye a bunch of fives straight from the shoulder.  Now,
don't make no further gab to me unless you're thirsting to wear a mark
of my esteem for the next few days."

Even as Lander uttered these words Grant pitched the first ball, and
Whiting hit it--hit it humming straight into the hands of Chipper
Cooper, who snapped it to third for a double play, before Berry could
get back to the sack.

What a howl of joyous relief went up from the Oakdale crowd!  They
cheered Chipper madly, and the little fellow, crimson-faced and happy,
grinned as he gave a tug at his cap visor.

But now came the great Copley, the most formidable Barvilleite, and
there were still two runners waiting impatiently on the sacks, ready to
make the best of any kind of a hit.

"Don't worry about this chap, Grant," called Eliot quietly.  "He's just
as easy as anybody.  You'll get him."

At this Copley laughed sneeringly, but he missed the first ball Rod
delivered to him, which happened to be one of the new pitcher's
wonderful drops.  The uproar coming from the Barville bleachers seemed
to have no effect on Grant, something which Eliot observed with
satisfaction and rising hope.  Rod pitched two balls which Copley
disdained, and then he fooled the fellow once more with a drop.

"Two strikes!" shouted the umpire.

"You've got him, Roddy--you've got him cold!" cried Cooper suddenly.
"Don't forget we're all behind you.  Take his scalp, you old Injun
hunter of the Staked Plains."

High and close to Copley's chin the ball whistled into Eliot's mitt.
For a moment there seemed some doubt as to its nature, but the umpire
pronounced it a "ball."

"Close, Grant--close," said Eliot.  "You should have had him.  Never
mind, you'll get him next time."

There was a hush.  Involuntarily, the Barville crowd ceased its uproar.
Grant, taking Roger's signal, nodded and twisted the ball into the
locking grip of two fingers and a thumb.  His arm swung back and
whipped forward, a white streak shooting with a twisting motion from
those fingers.  It seemed like another swift one, shoulder high, and,
with confidence strong in his heart, the red-headed batter sought to
meet it.

For the third time the ball took a most amazing shoot toward the
ground, and again Copley did not even graze it.  The umpire shouted,
"You're out!" but the roar from Oakdale's side of the field drowned his
voice.




CHAPTER XII.

WON IN THE NINTH.

The cheer captain was leading them with wildly waving arms.  "Grant!"
they thundered.  "Rah! rah! rah!  Grant!  Grant!  Grant!"

"That sure was some lucky," said Rod, walking toward the bench.

"Lucky!" rejoiced Cooper, jogging at his side.  "It was ball playing!
It was pitching!"

"You pulled me through by that catch and double play," said the young
Texan modestly.  "That put me on my pins.  I'm sorry Phil got his."

Springer looked disconsolate enough as Rod took a seat beside him on
the bench.  "Don't worry, old partner," begged Rodney.  "It happens to
every pitcher sometimes.  The best of them get it occasionally.
Perhaps I won't last."

"If you don't," returned Springer, "the game is a goner.  There's no
one else to put in.  I gave it away when I lost my control.  Queer I
couldn't get the ball over."

"I saw that we couldn't keep you in any longer, Phil," said Eliot.  "I
had to take you out."

"Oh, that's all right," muttered the unhappy fellow.  "That's baseball."

With the score tied, Barville showed a disposition to fight grimly for
the game.  Piper fell a victim to the wiles of Sanger; Nelson's
scorching grounder was scooped by Roberts; and away out in left garden
Dingley made a brilliant running catch of Barker's splendid long drive.
The sixth inning opened with the two teams on even terms and Grant
pitching for Oakdale.

Rodney's most effective ball was his drop, but Eliot, knowing it would
be poor judgment if the pitcher should use that particular ball too
often, called for it only in emergencies.  The emergency rose when,
with only one man out, Sanger singled and stole second, Nelson dropping
Roger's throw.  With Sanger playing well off the sack, there was a
chance for him to score if Cline banged out a long safety, so Eliot,
consulting hastily with Grant, urged Rod to use the drop every time he
put the ball over.  Cline finally managed to hit one of those drops,
but he simply rolled a weak grounder into the diamond, and gave up the
ghost on his way to first, Sanger taking third on the throw.

Ready to bat, Len Roberts' gaze wandered toward the spectators back of
the ropes near first base; but, if he hoped to receive any
encouragement from Herbert Rackliff, he was disappointed, as Bunk
Lander, true to his promise, was keeping within arms' length of the
irritated and uneasy city youth.  Rackliff, having surveyed Bunk's
stocky figure from head to foot and taken a good look at the fellow's
grim, homely mug, smoked cigarettes and uttered no sound save an
occasional suppressed cough.

It would be hard to describe the feelings of Roy Hooker.  He had been
elated by Springer's misfortune and the success of Barville in tying
the score, but the failure of the visitors to get a lead left him still
worried and anxious.  Especially was this true as he watched Rodney
Grant pitch with surprising steadiness and hold the crimson players
down.

"But he can't keep it up," thought Roy; "it's impossible.  They'll fall
on him the way they did on Springer."

Roberts, who had hitherto batted with an air of confidence, now fell
into his old trick of waiting, the result being that two strikes were
called on him before he removed the bat from his shoulder.  Then he bit
at a wide one, and was out.

Tuttle, hitting in Springer's place, was a snap for Sanger, who
polished him off with three high, swift, straight ones.  For the third
time in the game, Stone showed his mettle and went to first on a
safety.  As one man was out, Eliot, thinking to test Copley's throwing,
signaled for Ben to steal.  There was nothing the matter with Copley's
wing, for he nailed Stone fully five feet from the second sack.

Roger batted a sizzler to the left of Sanger, who shot out his gloved
hand and deflected the ball straight into the waiting fingers of
Larkins at first.

Grant pitched fairly well in the seventh, but it needed the errorless
support he received to prevent the enemy from scoring, Barville pushing
a runner round to third before being forced to give up.

Sanger, working hard, disposed of Crane on strikes, forced Grant to pop
to the infield, and led Cooper into lifting an easy foul for Copley.
The red-headed catcher continued to talk to the batters, but, warned by
Eliot, they made no retort, and, seemingly, did not hear him.  Since
the affair with Piper he had not, however, again offered to deflect a
bat.

It was a great game to watch, a game in which those high school boys,
keyed to a keen tension, were really outdoing themselves, performing
more than once feats which would have been creditable to professionals.
It was the kind of baseball that makes the blood tingle, the heart
throb, and leaves many an enthusiastic spectator husky from howling.
The strain was so great that it seemed an assured thing that something
must give way.  Oakdale had saved herself temporarily by changing
pitchers, but shortly after the opening of the eighth inning it began
to look as if the fatal downfall of the home team had simply been
delayed.

Larkins led off by batting a dust scorcher against Cooper's shins, and
once more Chipper marred his record by booting the ball and throwing
wild to first when he finally got hold of it.  This let the runner romp
easily to second.

Copley was seen to whisper something in Sanger's ear as the Barville
captain rose from the bench, bat in hand.  Then Lee walked into the box
and bunted beautifully along the line toward first.  He was thrown out
by Grant, but his purpose had been accomplished, and Larkins was on
third, with only one man down.

Fearing an attempted squeeze play, Eliot signaled for Rod to keep the
ball high and close on Cline.  Roger had made no mistake in judgment,
and, despite the Texan's effort to baffle the hitter, Cline managed to
bump a roller into the diamond.  Cooper, charging in, scooped the
sphere and snapped it underhand to Eliot; for Larkins, having started
to dig gravel with the first motion of Grant's arm, was doing his
utmost to score.

"Slide!" shrieked the coachers.

Larkins obeyed, and there might have been some dispute over the
umpire's decision had not the ball slipped out of Roger's fingers just
as he poked it onto the prostrate fellow.

"Safe!" announced the umpire, with a downward motion of his outspread
hand.

The coachers capered wildly, while Copley, leaping forward, met
Larkins, who had risen, and ostentatiously assisted in brushing some of
the dirt from his clothes.  The Barville crowd behaved like a bunch
from a lunatic asylum.  Roy Hooker told himself that Grant must surely
go to pieces now.  "If Eliot had given me a show," he whispered to
himself, "I might go in there now and stop the slaughter."

Apparently the Texan was confused, seeing which, Cline attempted to
purloin the sack behind his back, only to be caught easily when Rod
turned and snapped the ball to Nelson.

This cheered the sympathizers with the home team, who were heartened
still more as, a few moments later, the amazingly calm Texan took the
crooked-nosed Roberts in hand and struck him out.

"Now, let's play ball and hold this lead, fellows," shouted Copley.
"It's easy enough.  We've got the game nailed."

Sanger had no trouble in fanning Piper, and again Oakdale's hope ebbed,
as Nelson, who had not made a safety for the day, was sent by the whiff
route to join Sleuth on the mourners' bench.

With two gone, Berlin Barker got his first hit.  There rose a groan,
however, when it was seen that roly-poly Chub Tuttle was the next
sticker.  Tuttle justified the hopeless ones by popping a dinky little
fly into Sanger's hands.

"It's all off!  It's all over!" crowed Copley, tossing the catching
mask spinning aside.  "You've only got to get three more, cap.  The way
you're pitching, it'll be like picking ripe fruit."

"But let's get some more tallies if we can," urged Sanger.

This, however, was not possible; for Grant gave his prettiest
exhibition in the ninth, striking out three fellows in succession with
that perplexing drop, which apparently he had mastered.

"This is our last chance, boys," said Eliot, as the locals gathered at
the bench.  "One run is a small margin, and no game is lost until it's
won."

Ben Stone, his face as grim as that of a graven image, stood forth and
waited.  Two balls he ignored, one of which was called a strike; and
then, seeming to get one to his liking, he planted the club against the
leather with a sharp, snapping swing.  As in practice on the day Hooker
had pitched to him, Stone laced the ball straight over the center-field
fence for a home run, and pandemonium broke loose and continued while
he jogged slowly over the bases.

The score was again tied.

Roy Hooker had not been fully at ease, and his face turned almost ashen
as he saw the ball disappearing beyond the fence.  He took no part in
the crazy demonstration of his schoolmates, declining even when some
one caught him by the shoulders and shouted in his ear, asking why he
did not cheer.

At the bench Stone was surrounded and congratulated by his delighted
teammates.  Even the disconsolate Springer aroused himself enough to
speak a word of praise.

"We want another one--only one more," said Eliot, as he found a bat and
turned toward the plate.

Without seeking to "kill" Sanger's speed, Roger did his best to poke
out a safety, and would have succeeded only for a surprising one-handed
stop by Roberts, who got the ball to first for an unquestioned put-out.

"It's only a matter of an extra inning," cried Copley.  "They've had
all their luck; it's over."

Crane, following Eliot, made the mistake of trying for a long hit, and
Sanger fanned him.

Grant came up with two men out.

"Here's the great cowboy twirler, cap," sneered Copley.  "Put the iron
to him.  Burn your brand deep."

"Get a hit, Grant--do get a hit!" came the entreaty from the Oakdale
crowd.

"If you do," muttered Copley, close under the bat, "I'll swallow the
ball."

A moment later Rod swung at a corner cutter, whirled all the way round,
and sprang at Copley, a look of such blazing wrath in his eyes that the
red-headed catcher retreated with ludicrous haste.

"You onery, sheep-herding skunk!" rasped the Texan.  "If you touch my
bat again, I'll grease the ground with you!  They'll sure carry you
home on a stretcher, and you can bet your life on that!"

Again the umpire had not seen the interference, so cleverly had Copley
perpetrated the trick.  Eliot dashed at Grant and seized him, shouting
for the Oakdale crowd to keep back; for at least twenty indignant
persons were moving toward the diamond.  There was a temporary delay,
during which Roger spoke earnestly into Grant's ear.

"Don't lose your head now, old fellow," pleaded the Oakdale captain.
"That's what he wants you to do.  He thinks you can't hit the ball if
you're mad."

"I reckon you're right," said Rodney, getting a grip on himself; "but
he'll sure have a broken head if he does it again."

Having seen that look of rage in the Texan's eyes, Newt Copley was not
at all disposed to repeat the trick with him.  Apparently Grant's
nerves had been somewhat unstrung, for when the game was again resumed
he missed one of Sanger's shoots by something like a foot, and the
second strike was called by the umpire.  Then Rod smiled; it was barely
a faint flicker, but Sanger saw it and wondered.  His wonderment turned
to dismay when the Texan skillfully poked a safety through the infield
and went romping to first, cheered by the crowd.

"Never mind, cap," encouraged Copley; "the weak ones follow.  You won't
have any trouble with this undersized accident."  A remark which
inflamed Cooper, in spite of Chipper's pretense that he did not hear it.

On the very first ball handed up to the Oakdale shortstop, Grant,
having got a start, raced down the line to second, slid spikes first,
and was declared safe, Copley failing to get the ball to Roberts in
time for a put-out.

But the Texan did not stop there.  With Sanger's next movement of his
regular delivery, Rodney, having got a lead behind the pitcher's back,
went darting toward third.  Copley, who had complained that Roberts was
slow about tagging the runner, uttered a yell, took the ball as it came
high above Cooper's shoulders, and lost no time in throwing to third.

Pratt had not anticipated an immediate second effort to steal by the
runner, and he was a trifle slow about covering the sack.  As a result,
he was forced to reach for the ball with his bare right hand, and he
dropped it.

The home crowd was on its feet now, shouting wildly as the umpire's
downward gesture with both hands proclaimed the daring Texan safe at
third.

Copley snarled at Pratt, and Sanger plainly showed that the performance
of Grant had put him on the anxious seat.

The cheering now was incessant from both sides of the field, and this
was not calculated to soothe the nerves of the worried pitcher.
Nevertheless, had not Berry lost his head and forgotten that two were
out, the game would have gone into extra innings.  Cooper finally drove
one toward the Barville shortstop, and Berry, leaping forward to catch
the ball, saw Grant dashing toward the plate.  Berry should have thrown
to first, but, with his mind temporarily fogged, his only thought was
to stop that run, and he hurled the ball to the plate.  Copley was not
prepared for this manoeuvre, and he leaped to get the whistling sphere,
which, however, came high and wide, forcing him to reach for it.

The umpire had barely time to run forward a short distance ere he
stopped and crouched as Grant flung himself headlong in a slide.
Getting the ball, Copley swung back to tag the runner, but ere the
horsehide was brought down between Rod's shoulder-blades, his hand had
found the plate.

[Illustration: Ere the horsehide was brought down between Rod's
shoulder-blades, his hand had found the plate.]

"Safe!" shouted the umpire.

And the game was won by the pitcher who had taken Springer's place in
the fifth inning.




CHAPTER XIII.

RACKLIFF'S TREACHERY.

Like one stunned Roy Hooker passed out through the gate and turned down
the street, dully conscious of the continued rejoicing uproar behind
him.  Alternately buoyed by hope and weighted by fear, he had passed
the most trying hour of his life, and now in his bosom he carried a
heart that seemed sick and faint and scarcely able to pump the blood
through his veins.

"I was a fool to listen to Rackliff," he muttered; and over and over he
kept repeating, "I was a fool, a fool!"

Suddenly apprehensive lest he should be overtaken by some one who might
observe his all-too-evident wretchedness, he quickened his steps and
made straight for his home.  He did not enter the house, and as he
slipped through the yard he cast sidelong glances toward the windows,
hoping his mother might not be looking out.  In the carriage house he
sat down on the box beside his motorcycle.

"I was a fool--an awful fool!" he kept repeating.

Presently, his mind running over the game, feature by feature, he began
to realize that he had not felt as much elation as he would have
supposed might come to him on witnessing Springer's misfortune in the
fifth inning.  He had imagined it would afford him unreserved
exultation to see Phil batted out of the box, but his rejoicing had
been most remarkably alloyed by an emotion of another sort, which even
now he could not understand.  And, as he sat there, slowly but surely
he began to perceive the real reason for Springer's failure.

"It was lack of control," he finally exclaimed.  "That's just it.  He
was pitching all right until they broke his nerve by three hits in
succession.  After that he couldn't find the pan to save his life.  If
he'd been able to put the ball where he wished and steady down a
little, he might have stopped that batting rally and had the
satisfaction of pitching the game through to a successful finish.  Now,
Rod Grant gets all the glory."

He was still sitting there, obsessed by his dismal meditations, when a
shadow appeared in the doorway, and he looked up to see Rackliff, the
stub of a cigarette in his fingers, gazing at him.  For a full minute,
perhaps, neither boy spoke; and then Herbert, tossing the smoking stub
over his shoulder, sunk his hands deep in his pockets and uttered two
words:

"Hard luck."

"Rotten," said Roy.  "But you certainly were all to the punk in your
judgment about that game."

"Oh, I don't know," objected Herbert, leaning against the side of the
doorway and crossing his tan-shod feet.  "Barville should have won."

"How do you make that out?"

"They batted Springer out, didn't they?  They sent him to the stable,
all right."

"He lost his control, and Eliot had to take him out."

"Well, if you hadn't been mistaken in your judgment, that would have
settled the game."

"If _I_ hadn't been mistaken!" cried Roy resentfully.

"Precisely."

"Why, I don't see----"

"Don't you?  Then you should consult an oculist.  You said Springer was
the only pitcher the team had; you insisted that Grant couldn't pitch a
winning game."

"Well, I know," faltered Roy; "but I----"

"You were mistaken--sadly mistaken.  It's been an expensive blunder in
judgment for both of us."

A flush rose into Hooker's pale cheeks, and he stood up.  "Now, look
here, Mr. Rackliff," he said harshly, "don't you try to shoulder it all
on to me.  I won't stand for that.  You professed to be dead sure that
under any circumstances Barville could down Oakdale.  As to the matter
of expense, it may have been expensive for you', but, according to our
distinctly understood agreement, I don't lose anything."

Herbert lifted his eyebrows slightly, producing his cigarette case and
fumbling in it vainly, as it was empty.

"Agreement?" he said.  "What agreement?"

Hooker choked.  "You know; don't pretend that you don't know.  I hope
you're not going back on your word.  If you do----"  He stopped, unable
to continue.

"Oh, yes," said Herbert slowly, "I think I know what you mean.  Of
course I'm not going back on my word to a pal."

"Then give me the money I let you have to bet on Barville."

"Why, that money's gone.  We lost it."

"Yes, but you pledged yourself to make good any loss I might sustain.
There are reasons why I must have that money back--right away, too."

"I'm sorry," murmured Herbert, regretfully returning the empty
cigarette case to his pocket; "but I'm afraid you'll have to wait a
while.  I went broke myself--haven't got a whole dollar left in the
exchequer."

"But I've _got_ to have it," insisted Roy huskily.  "I depended on
getting it back to-night."

Herbert laughed and snapped his yellow fingers.  "When a thing is
impossible, it can't be done, old fellow.  You don't need money in this
dead hole, anyhow.  Why, a profligate couldn't spend ten dollars a week
here, if he tried.  You'll simply have to wait until my old man coughs
up another consignment of the needful."

Roy sat down again, his face wearing such a look of dismay that Herbert
was both puzzled and amused.

"To see you now," observed the city youth, "any one might fancy you a
bank cashier who had speculated disastrously with the funds of the
institution.  Four dollars and sixty-five cents--that was the amount of
your loss; and you look as if you had dropped a thousand."

"I want to tell you something," said Hooker suddenly; but again he
stopped short and seemed to find it impossible to proceed.

"I'm listening," encouraged Rackliff.  "Let it come.  Great Scott!  I'd
like to have a cigarette."

But Roy, after remaining silent a few moments longer, slowly shook his
head.  "I won't tell you," he muttered; "I can't.  But look here, Rack,
you've got to get that money for me as soon as you can.  I need it--if
you only knew how I need it!"

"I'll drop my old pater a line to-night, informing him that I'm
financially ruined.  Gee! that makes me think of that little runt,
Cooper!  He certainly irritated me some by his insolent yapping."

"You came pretty near getting into trouble trying to coach Barville.
You certainly had your nerve with you.  I'd never had the crust to try
that."

Herbert frowned.  "It would have been all right, only for that big
stiff, Bunk Lander.  He threatened to punch me up, and I knew he was
just the sort of a brainless fellow to do it.  Only for his
interference, Barville would have taken the game, and we'd be on Easy
Street to-night."

"Eh?" exclaimed Roy, puzzled again.  "I don't think I quite get you.  I
don't see how Lander's interference with you had anything to do with
the result of the game."

The city youth coughed and shrugged his shoulders, a singularly crafty
smile playing over his face.

"Of course, you don't see," he nodded.  "I'll admit that I was somewhat
too hasty.  I should have waited a while longer before I attempted to
put in my oar.  That was where _I_ blundered; but I didn't quite reckon
on Lander."

"You've got me guessing.  I wish you'd explain."

"I will.  Did you think I took that journey to Barville on your old
motorcycle merely for recreation?"

"Not exactly; I had an idea you went over there to talk with Copley and
Roberts for the purpose of finding out how strong the Barville nine
really was."

"Well, that was a part of the reason, but not the whole of it.  I had
something else on my mind.  In case I became satisfied that the two
teams were pretty evenly matched, I had a little plan through which I
felt confident I could make it a dead sure thing for Barville.  I was
not off my base, either, and it would have worked out charmingly if
that big duffer, Lander, hadn't dipped in and messed it for us."

"I'm still in the dark."

"Don't you remember that when I got back I asked you about Eliot's
signals to the pitcher?"

"Yes."

"I thought I knew them, but I wanted to be dead sure; for I'd made
arrangements with Copley to tip off certain Barville batters who could
be trusted to the kind of balls that would be pitched.  This was to be
done in case the necessity arose, which it did when Oakdale took the
lead and Springer seemed to be going well, with every prospect of
holding them down.  Then I proceeded to get down close to the ropes
back of first base, where, by watching, I could come pretty near
catching Eliot's signs.  Sometimes I couldn't see them distinctly, but
almost always I could.  I was tipping off the Barville batters when
they proceeded to fall on Springer and pound him beautifully.  They did
so because they knew just the kind of a ball he was going to pitch."

"Great Caesar!" muttered Roy, who was again standing.  "You did that?
How----"

"Oh, I'm surprised at your dullness," laughed Rackliff.  "You heard me
coaching.  You heard me calling out for the batters to 'get into it,'
'hit it out,' 'drop on it,' 'give it a rise,' and so forth."

"Yes."

"Yes; well, there you are.  When I said 'get into it,' it meant that
Springer would pitch an in-shoot.  'Hit it out,' meant that he would
use an outcurve, and----"

"Holy smoke!" gasped Hooker.  "It's a wonder nobody got on.  Do you
suppose Lander----"

"Nit.  That big bonehead didn't tumble.  He was simply sore because I
was a student at Oakdale and seemed to be rooting for Barville.  All
the same, he stuck to me like a leech, and I had to quit or get into a
nasty fight with him.  I couldn't afford to have my face beaten up,
even to win ten dollars.  By Jove!  I've simply got to have a whiff."

In silence Hooker watched the shifty, scheming, treacherous city youth
turn and search on the drive outside the door, recover the cigarette
stub he had tossed away, relight it, and inhale the smoke with a relish
that told of a habit fixed beyond breaking.  Thus watching and thinking
of the fellow's qualmless treachery to his own school team, Roy felt
the first sensation of revulsion toward Rackliff.




CHAPTER XIV.

JEALOUSY.

At the close of the game there was another boy on the field who was
quite as glum and downcast as Hooker himself.  This was Phil Springer,
who remained seated on the bench while his team-mates and a portion of
the enthusiastic crowd swarmed, cheering, around Grant and lifted him
to their shoulders.

Presently he realized that this behavior on his part must attract
attention the moment the excitement relaxed, and he got up with the
intention of hurrying at once to the gymnasium.  Barely had he started,
however, when something brought him to a halt, and beneath his breath
he muttered:

"That won't do.  They'd notice that, too, and sus-say I was jealous."

He was jealous--bitterly so; but he forced himself to join the cheering
crowd and to make a half-hearted pretense of rejoicing.  All the while
he was thinking that Grant owed everything to him, and that perhaps he
had been foolish in training a fellow to fill his shoes in such an
emergency.  For Phil had long entertained the ambition of becoming the
first pitcher on the academy nine, and this year he had been fully
confident until the present hour that the goal he sought was his beyond
dispute.

The victors did not forget to cheer courteously for the vanquished, and
Barville returned the compliment with a cheer for Oakdale.

So many persons wished to shake hands with Rodney Grant that he
laughingly protested, saying they would put his "wing out of
commission."  Suddenly perceiving Phil, the Texan pushed aside those
between them, sprang forward and placed a hand on Springer's shoulder,
crying:

"Here's my mentor.  Only for him, I'd never been able to do it.  I owe
what little I know about pitching to Springer.  Let's give him a cheer,
fellows."

They did so, but that cheer lacked the spontaneous enthusiasm and
genuine admiration which had been thrown into the cheering for Grant,
something which Springer did not fail to note.

"Oh, thanks," said Phil, weakly returning the warm grasp of Rod's
strong hand.  "I didn't do anything--except blow up."

Under cover of the chatter, joking and laughter, while they were
changing their clothes in the dressing room of the gymnasium, Grant,
observing the dejection Springer could not hide to save himself, again
uttered some friendly words of encouragement.

"Don't you feel so bad about it, old partner," he said.  "The best
professional pitchers in the business get their bumps sometimes, and I
might have got mine, all right, if I'd started the game on the slab, as
you did.  You'll make up for that next time."

"You're very kind, Grant," was Springer's only response.

Phil got away from the others as soon as he could, and hurried home to
brood over it.  It had been a hard blow, and he had stood up poorly
beneath it.  Thinking the matter over in solitude, he was forced into a
realization of the fact that he lacked, in a great measure, the
confidence and steadiness characteristic of Rodney Grant, and he could
not put aside the conviction that it was Grant, the fellow he had
coached, who was destined to become the star pitcher of the nine.  In
spite of himself, this thought, aided by other unpleasant
contemplations, awoke in his heart a sensation of envious resentment
toward Rodney.  He was sorry now that he had ever spent his time
teaching the Texan to pitch, and it occurred to him that the same
amount of coaching and encouragement bestowed upon Hooker would not
have resulted in the training of a man to outdo him upon the slab and
push him into the background.

That evening he was missing from the group of boys who gathered in the
village to talk over the game, and at school the following Monday he
kept away from Grant as much as it was possible for him to do so.  When
practice time came after school was over, he put on his suit and
appeared upon the field, but soon complained that he was not feeling
well, and departed.

The following morning, shortly after breakfast, Phil saw Rod turning
into the dooryard of his home.  Instantly Springer sought his hat,
slipped hastily through the house and got out, unperceived, by the back
door.  When he arrived at school, a few minutes before time for the
morning session to begin, Grant was waiting for him.

"What became of you after breakfast, partner?" questioned Rod.  "I
piked over to your ranch looking for you, but you had disappeared.
Your mother said you were around a few moments before, and she thought
you must be somewhere about; all the same, I couldn't find hide or hair
of you."

"I--I took a walk," faltered Phil, flushing.  "I've got a bub-bad
cold."  In evidence of which, he coughed in a shamefully unnatural
manner.

"Got a cold, eh?" said Rodney sympathetically.  "You caught it sitting
on the bench during the last four innings of that game, I reckon.  I
remember now that you didn't even put on your sweater."

"Yes, I guess that's when I got it," agreed Phil.

"Well, you've got to shake it in time for the game with Clearport.
That's when you'll even things up."

All that day Springer sought to avoid talking baseball with any of the
fellows, for invariably they spoke of Grant's surprisingly successful
performance; and when they did so something like a sickening poison
seemed to bubble within the jealous youth, who told himself that he
could not long continue to join in this praise, but must soon betray
himself by bursting forth into a tirade against the Texan.  In a
measure he did relieve his feelings by expressing his opinion of
Herbert Rackliff, who was brazenly seeking to ignore the open disdain
of his schoolmates.  He did not come out for practice that night, and
Grant explained to the others that Phil was knocked out by a cold,
whereupon Cooper chucklingly remarked that he thought it was Barville
that had knocked Springer out.

Shortly before dark, Phil, chancing to take a cross cut from Middle
Street to High Street, observed Roy Hooker pelting away with a baseball
at the white shingle on the barn.  Drawing near, Phil asked Roy what he
was doing, and the latter, startled and perspiring, looked round.

"Oh, is it you?" said Roy.  "I thought perhaps it was Rackliff.  I'm
practicing a little by my lonesome."

"That's a hard way to practice," said Springer.  "You can't get much
good out of that."

"Oh, I don't know.  I'm getting so I can hit that shingle once in a
while, and use a curve, too.  I couldn't seem to hit it with a straight
ball when I began."

"You haven't given up the idea of pitching?"

"Not quite.  After watching your performance Saturday--seeing you soak
a batter in the ribs, and then hand out free passes enough to force a
run--I came to realize what control means.  I'm trying to get it."

Phil felt his face burn.  "Control is necessary," he admitted; "but it
isn't everything.  When I put the ball over, they pup-pounded it."

"But they wouldn't if it hadn't been for----"  Choking, as he realized
what he had so nearly said, Hooker bit his tongue.  Then he hastened to
make an observation that snapped Springer's self-restraint.  "They
didn't seem to pound Grant much, and he appeared able to put the ball
just about where he wanted to."

"Grant!" snarled Phil furiously.  "That's all I've heard since the
game!  Grant, Grant, Grant!  It makes me tired!"

"Oh, ho!" muttered Roy.  "It does, does it?  Well, say, didn't you
realize what you were doing while you were coaching that fellow?  I
knew what would happen.  I knew the time would come when you'd be
mighty sore with yourself.  I'm going to talk plain to you.  This
fellow Grant is practically an outsider; he doesn't belong in Oakdale.
He's a presuming cub, too--always pushing himself forward.  Here I am,
an Oakdale boy, but you pick up with Rod Grant and coach him to pitch
so he can step into a game when you're batted out and show you up.  You
won't be in it hereafter; he'll be the whole show."

"Oh, I don't know," returned Springer sourly.  "He may get his some
time."

"He may, and then again he may not; you can't be sure of it.  If you'd
only spent your time with me, I would have been willing to act as
second string pitcher, and you would not have been crowded out.  You
put your foot in it, all right, old man."

"I suppose I did.  But let's not talk about it.  You weren't at school
to-day."

"No."

"How did that happen?"

"Working."

"Working?  How careless!  I didn't know you ever did such a thing."

"Well," said Roy slowly, "this was a case of necessity, you see."

"Oh, you needed the money, eh?"

"No; it wasn't that, though I earned a dollar and a quarter helping
shingle John Holbrook's barn.  You see--my mother, she--she lost some
money recently."

"Lost it?"

"Yes; lost it, or--or something," Roy replied stumblingly.  "It wasn't
much, but it was all she had.  She'd saved up a little at a time to buy
material for a new dress."

"How did she happen to lul-lose it?"

"I can't tell.  She doesn't quite know herself.  She put it in a drawer
in the house, and when she went to look for it, it was gone."

"That sounds like a robbery instead of a loss."

"But it couldn't be a robbery," protested Hooker quickly and earnestly.
"Nobody would come into the house and take money out of that
drawer--nobody around here.  You never hear of such a thing happening
around this town.  Perhaps mother mislaid it somewhere.  Anyhow, it's
gone, and I'm going to try to earn enough to replace it."

"Well, say, Hooker," exclaimed Phil, "you're all right!  I didn't
suppose you'd stoop to work, even under such circumstances.  Do you
know, lots of times we're liable to misjudge some one until something
happens to show us just the sort of a person he is."

"Yes; I suppose that's right," said Roy.  But he did not look Phil in
the eyes.




CHAPTER XV.

PLAIN TALK FROM ELIOT.

"How's your cold, Phil?"

It was Eliot who asked the question, and Springer, pausing with one
foot on the academy steps, replied:

"Oh, it's some bub-better, I think."

"Glad to hear it," said Roger, slipping his arm through Springer's.
"Come on, let's walk over yonder to the fence.  I want to have a little
chin with you.  It will be ten minutes yet before school begins."

Together they walked to the fence at the back of the yard, pausing
beneath one of the tall old trees which was putting forth tender green
leaves.  Leaning against the fence, the captain of the nine faced his
companion.

"As a rule," he began, "you've been a great enthusiast over baseball,
and I didn't think you'd let a slight cold keep you away from practice.
Exercise is one of the best remedies for a cold, if a person takes care
of himself when he's through exercising."

"I know that," said Phil, poking his toe into an ant's nest and
declining to meet Roger's steady, level gaze; "but, really, I--I was
feeling pretty rotten, you know, and I didn't have mum-much heart for
practice."

"Yes," said the captain, "I'm afraid that was the principal
trouble--you didn't have much heart for it.  You lost heart in the
game, and you haven't braced up yet.  I hardly thought it of you, Phil;
I didn't expect you to play the baby."

"The baby!" exclaimed Springer resentfully.

"Yes; that's just what you've been doing.  I made up my mind to speak
plainly to you, and I'm going to do so--for your own good.  You've been
sulking, old fellow.  It doesn't pay, Phil; you're hurting yourself far
more than any one else."

"I don't think you've got any right to call it sulking," objected
Springer in a low tone.  "I own up that I did feel bad about the way
things went in that gug-game; but I caught a cold, and I decided to
take care of myself in order to get back into my best condition."

"Is that the reason why you've been giving Rod Grant the cold shoulder?"

"I haven't been giving him----  What has he said to you, Eliot?  Has he
been tut-tut-talking about me?"

"Not a word."

"Then why should you say I'd given him the cold shoulder?"

"It was apparent to the dullest, Phil.  For some time before that game
you and Grant were very chummy; you were nearly always together, so
that everybody noticed it.  Since the game you've not been together at
all, and I, myself, have plainly observed your efforts to avoid him.
Now, old man, there can only be one explanation for such conduct:
you're sore--sore because he succeeded in holding Barville down after
you had failed."

Weakly Springer sought to protest against this, but stopped in the
midst of it, fully comprehending how feeble his words were.

"It's folly, Springer," said Eliot, "sheer childish folly.  We were all
sorry to see you get your bumps and lose control, and I don't believe
any one was any sorrier than Grant himself; for, somehow, I've come
firmly to believe that he's on the square.  He was reluctant about
going on to the slab when I called him."

"Perhaps that was because he was afraid he'd get his, too," muttered
Springer.

"Now, that isn't generous, and you know it.  If the score had been
heavy against us at the time, some fellows might have fancied Grant's
reluctance was prompted by fear and a disinclination to shoulder
another man's load in the first game he pitched.  I've not sized it up
as anything of the sort.  You and he were close friends, and, knowing
how you must feel to be batted out, he was loath to go in.  You must
realize it was a mighty lucky thing for us that we had a pitcher to
take your place.  Barville had you going, Phil, and you couldn't seem
to steady down.  Even old stagers get into that condition sometimes
when pitching, and it's not an infrequent occurrence that a slabman who
is not thought so good steps in and stops the slaughter."

"Every-bub-body seems to think Grant is pretty good," mumbled Springer.

"He certainly did amazingly well, for which he generously gave you all
the credit."

"I suppose he'll be the whole shooting match, now."

"Those words betray you, my boy.  You've been trapped by the green-eyed
monster.  Come, come, Phil, you're too manly for that."  He put out a
hand and rested it on Springer's shoulder.

The color mounted into Phil's cheeks and slowly receded, leaving him
pale, and still with downcast eyes.  Eliot went on, steadily and
earnestly:

"We need two pitchers--we must have them if we hope to make a decent
showing in the series.  By and by we'll have to play two games a week,
and some of those games come so close together that one pitcher alone,
unless he has an arm of iron, can't do all the flinging.  You've been
wonderfully successful in coaching Grant, and all the time you were
training him to relieve you in a measure when the hardest work should
come.  Nobody wants to rob you of any credit; every one says you've
done a mighty good turn with him.  But if you continue to sulk, as you
have for the past few days, you'll lose the sympathy of your teammates;
but you won't hurt Grant--otherwise than his feelings."

"I don't believe it would hurt his feelings a great deal."

Roger was vexed, but he continued to maintain his calm manner.  "You
ought to know him better than any one else around here; you ought to
know whether he's at all sensitive or not.  I'll tell you honestly, if
I were in his place to-day, I'd feel it.  Now, I'm your friend, old
fellow, and I want you to listen to me and take my advice.  Forget it.
Get out for practice, treat Grant the same as before, and make up your
mind you'll do your level best to redeem yourself in the next game you
pitch.  You'll have plenty of chances to show the stuff you're made of."

"I don't suppose the fellows have much confidence in me now."

"Nonsense!  Unless they're chumps, they know every pitcher has his off
days.  There'll be a practice game to-night; we'll play against a
picked up scrub team.  Now, I want to see you at the field in a suit
and ready to do your part."

"All right," agreed Phil.

But later, conscience-stricken and ashamed, he could not bring himself
to seek Rodney Grant and own up manfully to his silly behavior.  And
Grant, having begun to feel piqued, made no further advances.

At noon that day Roy Hooker returned to school, bringing a written
excuse from his mother.  Having a chance to speak privately with
Springer, he said:

"I hear Eliot has expressed his estimation of you and Rod Grant."

Phil started.  "You can near lots of things," he retorted sharply.

"The fellows have been talking about it," returned Roy.  "They say
Eliot has said Grant will make a better pitcher than you, because you
lack heart."

It was a blow below the belt, and, in spite of himself, Phil could not
help showing the effect.

"He's welcome to th-think what he chooses," he exclaimed hotly; "it
doesn't disturb me."

Nevertheless, he was so much disturbed that, in spite of his promise to
Roger, he was not with the team when it took the field that night for
the practice game.  For he himself had vainly sought to put aside the
depressing and unnerving conviction that in steadiness, stamina and
self-confidence, Rodney Grant was his superior; something he had
determined never to breathe to any one else, but which the keen
judgment of the team captain had found out.

Nevertheless, when he reached home by a roundabout course, and found it
impossible to dismiss thoughts of the boys engaged in that practice
game, he eventually decided that he was a fool.  Having reached this
conclusion, he set off in great haste for the gymnasium, running the
greater part of the distance.

Drawing near the gym, he could hear the boys engaged in the game beyond
the high board fence.  It did not take him long to shed his outer
clothes and get into a baseball suit.

The game was in the second inning, with the regular team at bat and
Hooker pitching for the scrub, which was made up partly of grammar
school boys.  Everybody seemed to be watching Roy, and Phil walked on
to the field and toward one of the benches without attracting attention.

"Look at Hook!" whooped Chipper Cooper.  "He's actually trying to
strike Roger out!"

Eliot was at bat, and the umpire had just called the second strike on
him.  There were no runners on the sacks.

"He struck aout Tut in t'other innin'," drawled Sile Crane.  "I guess
that's got him puffed up some."

Apparently not at all discomposed by these remarks, Hooker continued
steadily about his business, and presently, rousing a shout of
surprise, he succeeded in fanning the captain of the nine.  Roger
stepped back from the plate, after striking out, and stood there gazing
at Roy, with one of his strange, rare smiles.

Crane followed.  "Dinged if I wouldn't like ter see him fan me!" he
said.

A moment later Hooker pulled him handsomely on a wide one, and the
first strike was called, Cooper being again awakened to a wondering,
whooping state of merriment.

"Look out! look out!" shouted the little fellow.  "He'll get you if you
don't.  Who said Hooky couldn't pitch?  There's more pitch in him than
you can find in a big chew of spruce gum."

Crane, setting his teeth, made two fouls, and then sent Chipper into
real convulsions by whiffing at a high one which Roy whistled across
his shoulders with surprising accuracy.

"You wanted to see it," yelled Cooper.  "You got a look, all right.
Oh, say!  Where did this new Christy Mathewson come from, anyhow?  Look
out for him, Roddy, or he'll add you to his list.  List' to my warning."

Rodney Grant did not strike out, but, nevertheless, he failed to meet
one of Hooker's shoots squarely, and the grammar school shortstop
gathered in an easy grounder and threw to first for the third put-out.

Roger Eliot lingered to speak a word to Hooker, and Springer, still
unnoticed, plainly heard what he said.

"Perhaps we've made a mistake in sizing you up, Roy, old fellow.  It's
your work alone that has prevented us from scoring in either of these
innings.  You've always had speed and curves, but now you seem able to
get the pill over.  Keep it up, old fellow, and you'll make a pitcher
yet, We may need you before the season ends."




CHAPTER XVI.

DREAD.

"There's Phil," cried Grant, spying him.  "I'll take the field.  Let
him pitch."

Eliot turned, saw Springer, and looked relieved.

"Wondered where you were," he said pleasantly.  "I see you're ready for
business.  This is a five-inning game, and Grant has pitched two
innings already; you can hand 'em up the last three."

"But I haven't warmed up any," said Phil.  "I couldn't get around any
sooner."

"There's no hurry," returned Roger.  "You can have plenty of time to
limber your wing; the scrub won't object to that."

"But I don't want to butt in and take Grant's place."

"Shucks!" cried Rod genially.  "Who's butting in, anyhow?  What are you
talking about, partner?  I want to get some field practice anyhow, and
perhaps I will if you're kind enough to let the scrub hit you once in a
while.  They're putting up a right smart sort of a game, but Hooker's
mainly responsible, as he hasn't been letting us rap him to any great
extent.  No scores yet on either side."

"Come on, Phil," called Eliot decisively, as he slipped his left hand
into the big catching mitt, "get out there and wiggle your flinger.
Tuttle, maybe they'll let you play with the scrub, so Grant can occupy
the right-hand pasture."

This arrangement was quickly made, the captain of the scrub team having
filled his outfield positions with youngsters who were even weaker than
Tuttle.  Springer accepted the ball tossed to him, and walked out to
the pitcher's box, where he began warming up by throwing to Eliot,
while the scrub batters waited around their bench.  He was not in the
most agreeable frame of mind, but he had no fear of the scrub players.
In a few moments he announced that he was ready, and began work with
the determination of striking out the first fellow who faced him.
Ordinarily, this would not have been such a difficult thing to do, but,
through some unusual freak of chance, the batter, swinging blindly,
succeeded in hitting out a most annoying little Texas leaguer that
sailed just beyond the eagerly reaching fingers of Jack Nelson.

"Come, Spring, old wiz," cried the thoughtless Cooper, "you've got to
do better than that.  If you don't, we'll have to put Grant back on the
slab to avert the disgrace of being beaten by this bunch of kid
pick-ups."

A sudden gust of anger caused Springer to glare, speechless, at the
annoying shortstop; and he was so much disturbed that, in spite of all
he could do, the next batter, "waiting it out," was rewarded for his
patience by a pass.  Within a few moments both these runners advanced
on a long fly to the outfield, dropped by Stone after a hard run.

Springer forced a laugh.  "Can't expect to hold the kids dud-down with
that sort of support," he cried.

He did strike the following hitter out; and then came Hooker, who found
a bender and straightened it for a sizzling two-bagger that sent in
both runners.

Springer longed to quit at this juncture, but, being ashamed to do so,
he relaxed his efforts and pitched indifferently, permitting the two
following scrubmen to hit the ball.  It chanced, however, that neither
of these fellows hit safely, both perishing in a desperate sprint for
the initial sack.

Rodney Grant, jogging in from the field, seated himself beside Springer
on the bench.

"You were a little out of form that inning, son," he said; "but you'll
be all right next trip, I opine."

Without replying, Springer got up and began pawing over the bats, as if
searching among them for some special favorite.

Hooker again pitched very well, indeed, but poor support gave the
regulars a score, and they would have obtained more had not Roy risen
to the occasion, with one down and the bases full, and struck two
hitters out.

Although Phil showed some improvement in the fourth inning, and the
scrub team did not succeed in securing another tally, he felt all the
while that his teammates were watching him closely and comparing or
contrasting his work with that of Hooker; nor did he forget that in the
first two innings Grant had performed more successfully.

To the surprise of many, fumbles and bad throws behind Hooker in the
fourth did not seem to discourage him, and he persisted in pitching as
if the game was one of some importance and he had resolved to do his
part, no matter what happened.  The errors gave the regular team three
runs and the lead, and it was Hooker's work alone that kept them from
obtaining several more.

In the fifth and last, Phil whipped the ball over spitefully, and only
one batter hit it safely.  Nevertheless, with the contest ended and the
fellows trooping toward the gymnasium, he noticed that no one had any
word of praise for him, while several expressed their surprise over the
showing Hooker had made.  Even Grant, whose friendly advance had been
met with churlish spleen, commended Hooker.  Phil felt as if the very
ground was slipping from beneath his feet, and it made him sore and
sick at heart.  He paid little attention to the talk of the fellows
while dressing, until of a sudden the words of Nelson caught his ear.

"Of course, you fellows have heard all about that Clearport-Wyndham
game?  I had a talk to-day with a fellow who saw the whole of it.
Cracky!  Clearport did come near pulling it out of the fire--actually
batted out a lead of one run in the first of the ninth.  If Wyndham
hadn't come back in her half and made two tallies, she'd been stung."

"I hear," said Berlin Barker, "that Clearport pounded Wyndham's
wonderful new twirler off the slab."

"That's right," said Nelson.  "They got at Newbert in the seventh and
gave him fits.  The score was eight to two in favor of Wyndham when the
'Porters began connecting with Newbert's twists, and they hammered in
three earned runs before the shift was made.  Twitt Crowell was sent in
to save the day, but if he hadn't had luck, they'd kept right on.  It
was his backing that checked the stampede."

"The Clearporters always have been heavy batters," said Eliot.  "If
they could play the rest of the game the way they bat, they'd be almost
sure to win the championship."

"The fellow we put up against them for Saturday will have to have his
nerve with him," grinned Cooper.  "If he weakens, they'll murder him."

"Crowell got through the eighth all right," continued Nelson; "but in
the first of the ninth the 'Porters found him and bingled out four
runs.  It looked as if they had the game tucked away; but Wyndham rose
to the emergency in the last half and got two, which let them out with
a victory."

"If Clearport can play like that away from home," observed Sleuth
Piper, "my deduction is that she will be a terror to beat on her own
field."

Springer, dressed, stowed his playing clothes in a locker and walked
out of the gymnasium unnoticed.  This was the first time he had heard
the particulars concerning that game, although on Saturday the
surprising information had been telephoned to Oakdale that Wyndham had
been barely able to squeeze out a precarious victory on her own
grounds.  As Eliot had stated, the Clearporters were batters to be
feared, and Phil was now in no condition to be unruffled by this menace
to his prowess.

Once more Springer sulked; not until Friday night did he again show
himself for practice.  Eliot, thoroughly disgusted, and realizing that
it was the worst sort of policy to coax such a fellow, let him alone.
He was given a chance to warm up and do a little pitching to the
batters, but, following Eliot's example, no one tried to coddle him.

"Everybody be on time for the train to-morrow," urged Roger, as they
were dressing.  "Trains won't wait for people who are late."

But even when he went to bed that night Springer was undecided as to
whether he would be on hand or not.  Had he been urged, it is doubtful
if he would have appeared; but, perceiving, in spite of his dudgeon,
that he could gain nothing by remaining away, he arrived at the station
just in time to board the train with his comrades.

The day was disagreeable, rain threatening, and, deep in his heart,
Springer hoped it would pour all the afternoon.  The menacing storm
holding off, however, at the appointed hour the two teams were on the
field ready for the clash.

Phil, still agitated by poorly hidden alarm, could not fail to observe
the all too evident confidence of the Clearport players.  The local
crowd was likewise confident, something indicated by their
encouragement of and cheering for their players.

"If I'm batted out to-day it's my finish," thought the unhappy Oakdale
pitcher.

"Cheer up," said a Clearporter, trotting past him.  "We won't do a
thing to you.  If you're sick and need some medicine, we'll hand you
some of the same kind we gave Newbert and Crowell."

"Aw, go on!" growled Phil.  "You're nothing but a lot of wind-bags."

While the locals were practicing Eliot called Grant and Springer aside,
giving each a ball.

"Warm up, both of you," he directed.  "I'll catch you."

So these rivals, who had only a short time before been friends, stood
off at the proper distance and pitched alternately to Eliot.  Grant was
steady and serene, with good control and in command of some curves, of
which the drop taught him by Springer led Roger to nod his head
approvingly; seeing which, Phil, who had not been right to start with,
grew very wild indeed.

Practice over, the Clearport captain trotted up to Roger, saying:

"We're all ready.  We'll take the field.  Let's get to playing before
it begins raining."

Phil sat down on the bench, throwing his sweater over his arm for
protection.  The umpire called, "Play," and Nelson, cheered by the
little crowd from Oakdale, stepped out with his bat.

The Oakdale captain found a place at Springer's side.  "Phil," he said
in a low tone, "I want you to be ready to go in any time.  I've decided
to start the game with Grant, but we may need you any moment."




CHAPTER XVII.

THE BOY ON THE BENCH.

For a moment Phil was dazed; then a sudden feeling of relief flashed
over him.  He would not have to face those dangerous Clearport batters
unless Grant should be knocked out, in which case, no matter what
happened after he went in, all the blame could be thrust upon Rodney.

But this feeling of satisfaction lasted only a few seconds; gradually
resentment and wrath crowded it out, and he sat there eaten by the
bitterest emotion.  Not for a moment had he dreamed Eliot would think
of starting the game with the Texan on the slab, for this day he, Phil,
was to be given the opportunity to redeem himself.  It was an outrage,
an injustice of such magnitude that his soul flamed with wrath.  What
if Grant were to succeed in holding the Clearporters down?  In that
case, of course, Eliot would permit him to pitch the game through to
the finish, leaving on the bench the lad who had expected to do the
twirling.  And that would mean further glory for the chap Springer had
thoughtlessly coached for the position of second pitcher; would mean
that, if he pitched at all in future games, Phil himself would be the
second string man.

Feeling that he could not contain himself, he was turning to Eliot
when, to his amazement, he saw the fellows rising from the bench and
starting toward the field; for while he had been thus bitterly absorbed
the first three Oakdalers had faced Oakes, the Clearport pitcher, and
not one of them had reached first base.  Phil could scarcely believe it
possible that the riotous condition of his mind had prevented him from
realizing that the game was in progress, but such had been the case.

And now, hot and cold by turns, he saw Rod Grant fling aside his
brand-new crimson sweater and jog forth, smiling, to pit his skill and
brains against the local sluggers.

"I hate him!" hissed the miserable lad beneath his breath.  "I hope
they pound him to death right off the reel."

A few moments later his heart gave a tremendous leap of joy, and he
almost shouted with satisfaction when Boothby led off by smashing the
first ball Grant handed up.  It was a terrific long line drive to
center field, but Stone took the ball on the run, and the Clearport
sympathizers groaned and cried, "Hard luck!"

"It _was_ hard luck for Boothby," muttered Springer.  "If he'd placed
that drive farther to the left it would have been good for three
sus-sacks.  It was a fearful slam.  Oh, they'll hand it to Mr. Grant,
all right!"

The next batter, Long, likewise hit the ball, driving it buzzing along
the ground, and again the crowd groaned; for Nelson made a
hair-raising, one-hand, diving jab and got the sphere.  He nearly
sprawled at full length upon the ground in doing this, but finally
regained his equilibrium in time to toss the ball to Crane for the
second put-out.

"Right fine work, Jack," praised Grant.  "That was just about as fancy
as anything I ever saw."

"It was a fuf-fine thing for you, all right," whispered Springer to
himself.  "Robbed Long of a hit.  Oh, they're going to hand you yours!"

"You're playing ball to-day, fellows," smiled Eliot, readjusting the
catching mask.  "That's the stuff!"

Barney Carney, Clearport's lively young Irishman, danced forth with a
bat.

"Just be after letting me put me shillaly against one of them," he
chuckled.  "Ye'll find it over in the woods yonder."

After making three fouls, he hit the ball, hoisting it so high into the
air that it seemed to dwindle to a quarter of its usual size.  Cooper,
coming into the diamond, gave no heed to the shouting of the crowd.
"I'll take it!" he yelled, as the ball fell swiftly.  And take it he
did, freezing to the horsehide with a grip like grim death.

"You're wearing horseshoes all over you to-day, Mr. Grant," growled the
watching lad on the bench.  "But there'll come a change; this can't
keep up."

It was impossible for him to wear a pleasant face as his teammates
gathered about him, even though he tried, in a measure, to hide his
chagrin.  Silently he watched Stone lead off with a safety, and saw
Eliot unhesitatingly sacrifice Ben to second.  Nor did he move a muscle
when Sile Crane slashed one into right field and Stone won the approval
of his comrades and awakened the enthusiasm of the little crowd of
Oakdale rooters by making a marvelous sprint over third and a slide to
the plate that brought him to the rubber ahead of the ball.

Oakes, taking a brace, disposed of Cooper and Piper in double-quick
time; and the visitors were forced to remain content with a single
tally in the second.

Clearport again came to bat in a business-like manner, and in almost
every detail the home team duplicated the performance of Oakdale.
Butters, picking out a bender to his fancy, straightened it for a
single.

"Good bub-boy!" mumbled Springer.

Stoker bunted, letting Butters down to second while he was being thrown
out at first.  Merwin got a Texas leaguer, on which Butters took a
chance--foolishly, it seemed--and was saved by a wild throw to the pan
that let him slide under the catcher.

"Now, Mr. Grant is getting his mum-medicine," grinned Springer joyfully.

But Grant, resorting to his wonderful drop, struck out both Ramsdell
and Oakes.  "That's the form, Grant!" approved Eliot; and Springer
chewed his tongue with envy.

The third inning gave neither side the advantage, but Grant seemed to
be swinging into shape; for, of the four hitters to face him, he
retired three with an ease that made them look foolish.

Rain was now threatening any moment, and it seemed hardly probable that
the downpour would hold off long enough for the game to be played
through.  "We must get into it as soon as we can, fellows," said
Captain Eliot; "for if it does rain after the fifth inning, we should
have the lead.  Come on; take that pitcher's measure."

Whether or not his words had an effect, they proceeded to go after
Oakes in a manner that might have discouraged any pitcher.  Eliot,
himself, started it with a screaming two-bagger, scoring on Crane's
single.  Sile took second on the throw to the plate, and stole third a
moment later, romping to the pan after Cooper's fly to the outfield was
caught.

With the sacks clean, Oakes' comrades were hopeful that he would check
the enemy.  It was not his fault that Piper reached first, as Hutt, at
third, fumbled the grounder batted at him and followed this with a
wretched throw.  This seemed to put the home pitcher off his feet, for
he passed Tuttle, to the great joy of the visitors.

"Great Caesar!" muttered Springer.  "If they get a big lead, Grant may
pitch it through and win.  Why doesn't Merwin take Oakes out?"

But Oakes remained on the slab, and Nelson, seeking to drive the ball
through an infield opening, batted straight at Carney, who winged the
sphere across for a put-out.

"Only one more," said Merwin encouragingly.  "Get Barker, Oakesie."

"If you don't get him, your goose is cooked--and mine, too!" whispered
Springer.

Barker stood second on the list because he was a good waiter, but could
hit well if necessary, and was, perhaps, the best bunter and sacrifice
batter Oakdale had.  With two down, he surprised the Clearporters by
dropping a soggy one in front of the pan and beating it to first.

The corners were filled, and, "Here's Grant!" was the cry.  Phil
Springer's teeth chattered and his eyes almost glared as the Texan,
with whom he had been on such friendly terms only a short time before,
stepped out to face Oakes.

"If he'll only strike out!" thought Phil.

When Rod had swung at two balls, and missed both, it began to seem that
he was destined to strike out.  A few seconds later, however, he caught
the ball fairly on the trade mark and drove it over the head of Carney,
who made an amusingly ineffective leap for it.

Three runners chased one another over the pan, and Grant arrived at
third base before the ball was returned to the diamond.

Springer was ill; at that moment, he thought, he would have given
almost anything to be far from that field.  It was all Grant, Grant,
and never had he heard a more hateful sound than the shrill and frantic
cheering of the small Oakdale crowd.

"Keep it up! keep it going!" entreated Eliot, as Stone went to bat.

Ben did his best, and he did pound out a long fly, but Boothby, in
left, pulled it down after a hard run.

"The game is as gug-good as settled," muttered Springer, when his
elated teammates had galloped off to the field and left him alone.
"Unless rain stops it, Oakdale is the winner."

The Clearporters seemed to realize this, for they resorted to many
obvious expedients to delay the game, casting imploring eyes toward the
threatening heavens.  The storm, however, perversely held off, and the
locals found Grant too much for them in the last of the fourth.

"We're five runs to the good, fellows," said Eliot, as the Oakdale
players gathered at the bench.  "It's going to rain soon, and this
inning must be played through complete.  Let every man who goes to bat
now strike out."

They followed instructions, Roger setting the example.  Crane and
Cooper made a pretense of trying to hit, but they did not even foul the
ball.

A few straggling drops of rain, falling in the last of the inning,
encouraged Clearport to dally until Eliot demanded of the umpire that
he compel them to play or give the game to Oakdale by forfeit, and at
last Grant struck out the third man.

While the boys were rejoicing in a victory they considered as
positively assured, Phil Springer slipped away and left the field.




CHAPTER XVIII.

A LOST OPPORTUNITY.

But the game was not to end there, for, although it continued to
sprinkle slightly at intervals, not enough rain fell to lead the umpire
into calling time.  The playing continued, with both teams fighting
hard and wasting no opportunities after the conclusion of the fifth
inning.

Unaware of this, Springer, who had noted that by hurrying he might
possibly be able to catch the mid-afternoon train for the west, ran all
the way to the hotel, where a room had been provided for the use of the
visitors in changing their clothes, tore off his baseball suit, yanked
on his regular garments, and arrived, panting, at the station just in
time to swing onto the last car as the train was pulling out.

By this foolish action Phil lost a golden opportunity to put himself
"right" with his teammates.

For in the eighth inning, with the score 7 to 2 in favor of the
visitors, Clearport seemed at last to take Rodney Grant's measure, and,
aided by errors on the part of Oakdale, they went after him with a
fierceness that threatened to drive him off the slab.  Eliot, becoming
alarmed, looked round for Springer, desiring him to warm up and make
ready.

All along the Oakdale captain had supposed Phil to be somewhere near at
hand, but now not a trace of him was to be discovered.  Making an
excuse to do something to the catching mask, Eliot ran to the bench and
called Bunk Lander, who was watching the game from a position near by.

"Lander," said Roger swiftly, as he fussed with the mask, "where is
Springer?  We need him--bad."

"I gotter idea," said Bunk, "that he's skipped.  Saw him go out through
the gate in a mighty hurry at the end of the fifth."

"Skipped!" muttered Roger, paying no heed to the demands of the
Clearport crowd that he should play ball.  "It can't be possible that
he----  Say, Lander, find Roy Hooker, quick.  Tell him I want him on
the bench.  If he's loyal to his school he'll come.  I'll set him to
warming up, anyhow."

Bunk went searching for Hooker, and discovered him at the far end of
the right-field bleachers, talking with Herbert Rackliff.

"Hey, you, Hook!" called Lander.  "Roge Eliot wants you to warm up, for
it looks like they're going to knock Grant into a cocked hat.  They got
him goin' somethin' fierce.  You gotter save this game for us--if you
can."

Hooker's face flushed and he caught his breath.  Was it possible he was
to have an opportunity to pitch in that game?  Eagerly he started, but
Rackliff's stained fingers gripped his coatsleeve.

"Are you going to be an easy mark?" asked Herbert scornfully.  "Are you
going to let them run you in after a game is lost by another pitcher?
Have you forgotten the sort of rotten, shabby treatment you've had to
stand by this very bunch that wants to put you up for sacrifice now?"

Roy hesitated.

"Look here, you pale-faced, sneaky, cigarette-suckin' pup," rasped Bunk
furiously, "you take your claws off his arm and let him alone, or I'll
grasp the occasion to hand you the dose of medicine I come so nigh
givin' ye at the game last Satterday.  Mebbe he can save this game, and
it's up to him to try, anyhow.  I s'pose you've bet some more money
ag'inst your own school team, and want to see it beat.  Somebody's
goin' to give you all that's coming some day pretty soon.  Come on
quick, Hook."

Roy did not permit Herbert to detain him longer, but he heard and
understood some words which were hastily whispered into his ear by the
fellow as he was starting away.

Meanwhile Grant had pulled himself together at last, despite the
howling of the Clearport crowd, and, with the bases full and the enemy
only one tally behind, he struck out two men, bringing the rally to an
end.

Rod's face wore an unusually serious expression as he walked to the
bench, at one end of which Eliot stood unbuckling the body-protector.

"That sure was a right rotten exhibition of pitching," said the Texan
humbly.  "Why didn't you yank me out, captain?"

"Because," answered Roger, "there was no one else to put in."

"Why, Phil----"

"Has disappeared; can't find hide nor hair of him.  I sent for Roy
Hooker as a last resort and--here he is!"

Roy came up, his face flushed.  Eliot spoke to him quietly in a low
tone:

"Springer has deserted us," he said.  "If I'd had you on the bench and
ready, I'd surely sent you onto the firing line to relieve Grant.  Get
somebody to catch you and limber your arm up.  I may let you finish the
game."

So Hooker peeled off and went at it warming up while Oakdale made a
desperate but futile effort to gather some more tallies.  While his
players were striving to solve Oakes' delivery Captain Eliot had a
brief talk with Grant.

"You were not wholly to blame for that streak, Rod," said Roger.
"Those two bad errors helped things along; they sort of got your goat.
You ended strong by mowing down Butters and Stoker, and I think perhaps
you can go back and finish it out."

"But you sent for Hooker.  He's warming up now."

"I sent for Hooker as a last resort when you were performing at your
worst.  Just then I'd tried almost anybody in your place, hoping that
the change might put an end to the slaughter; but now, unless you have
lost your nerve----"

Rodney gave Roger a resentful look.  "I reckon I've still got my nerve
with me," he said warmly.

"Then I'm going to let you try to hold them.  If they get another run
the game will be tied, and two more runs gives them the victory.
You've got to hold them right where they are."

"I certain will do my level best to hold them."

And so it happened that Hooker did not get the chance to pitch in that
game, after all.  Eliot explained to him that Grant was willing to try
to pitch it through, but added that he should bench Rod instantly in
case he betrayed any bad symptoms.  The Texan, however, was cool as a
cucumber and steady as a mountain, not even seeming to hear the howling
of the crowd, which resumed its uproar in an effort to put him off his
feet again.  Captain Merwin was the first victim, retiring by the
strike-out route; and then Ramsdell hit weakly on the ground, being
thrown out long ere he could sprint to first; the game ending 7 to 6 in
Oakdale's favor when Eliot pulled down a high foul from Oakes' bat.

"I'm much obliged to you, Hooker, old chap," said Eliot cordially,
after the cheering was over and the boys had started from the field.
"It was fine and loyal of you to answer my call promptly, as you did;
but as long as Rod still had his nerve I thought it best to let him try
to finish it out.  Come along with us.  We've got to have two pitchers,
and if Springer has taken a huff you'll likely get chances enough to do
some twirling."

Although disappointed because he had not been permitted to pitch in the
final inning of the present game, the prospect of possible
opportunities in the future cheered Hooker, and he marched from the
field with the other players, feeling almost as if he was one of them.

Roy was standing on the steps of the hotel, waiting for the boys to
dress, when Herbert Rackliff approached at a languid saunter, smoking,
as usual, and looking rather dejected and cast down.

"I say, Hook," said Herbert, "lend me the price of a ticket back to
Oakdale, will you.  I've gone clean broke over here, thanks to the
rotten luck.  You know I told you at the field that I'd bet my last red
on Clearport.  Why didn't Eliot put you in to pitch?  If he had, you
could have saved my money for me without----"

"Look here, Rack," interrupted Roy hotly, "if that's the kind of a chap
you think I am you've got me sized up wrong.  I know I gave you money
once to bet against Oakdale, but I'd never throw a game for you or
anybody else."

"Oh, well," sneered Herbert, "it isn't likely you'll have a chance.  I
notice Eliot didn't let you pitch, after all.  He doesn't take any
stock in you.  Now don't get hot with me, for we're friends.  If I'd
bought a return ticket I'd be all right, but----"

"I'm going back on the train with the team," said Hooker.  "Came over
on my motorcycle.  I'll let you have that.  It will take you home all
right."

Rackliff looked still more weary.  "I detest the thing," he said.
"Come, old chap----"

"I've got only money enough for my own fare," said Roy.  "You'll find
riding my motorcycle better than walking."

"That's right," sighed Herbert resignedly.  "I'll take it."




CHAPTER XIX.

POISON SPLEEN.

Phil Springer returned to Oakdale in a wretched frame of mind.  Barely
had the train carried him out of Clearport before he began to regret
his hasty action in running away, but it was then too late to turn back.

"I suppose some of the fellows will think it rotten of me to sneak," he
muttered, "but the game was practically over, and there was no reason
why I shouldn't get back home as soon as I could.  Why should I hang
round just for the pleasure of making the return trip with the rest of
the bub-bunch and being forced to listen to their praise of Rod Grant
for his fine work!  They'll slobber over him, all right.  He's the star
now, and I--I who taught him everything he knows about pitching--I am
the second string man!  I won't be that!  I won't be anything!  I'm
done!"

He was not a little surprised as he stepped off the train to find it
was not raining, although the sky was still heavy and threatening, as
if the downpour might come at any moment.

"It certainly is coming down in Clearport, just the same.  It had begun
before I hiked.  Hiked!  I hate that word; Grant uses it.  Clearport is
nineteen miles away, and it frequently rains there when it doesn't
here."

He hurried over the bridge and up through the village toward his home.

"Hi, there, Phil!" cried a voice as he was passing the postoffice, and
a wondering looking youngster came running out.  "What are you doing
here--at this hour?  Saw you start for Clearport with the team, and----"

"Game's over," cut in Springer.  "Rain sus-stopped it."

"Rain?  Why----"

"Yes; it's raining over at the Port."

"Rotten!  How many innings----"

"Five; just finished the fif-fifth when the clouds started to leak."

"Oh, then it counts as a game," palpitated the interested boy.  "How
did the score stand?  Who was ahead?"

"Oakdale, six to one," answered Springer over his shoulder as he
hurried on up the street.

"Hooray!" came the elated shout of the rejoicing lad.  "Then you
trimmed 'em!  Jinks! that's fine.  But, say--say, who pitched?"

Springer quickened his stride, seemingly deaf of a sudden.  He had felt
the question coming, and he had no heart to answer it.  It would be
asked by every fellow in Oakdale who had not attended the game, and, on
learning the truth, they would join in one grand chorus of acclamation
and praise for the Texan.  For the time being Grant would be the king
pin of the town.

Reaching home, Phil slipped in quietly without being seen by his mother
and tiptoed up to his room, where, in sour meditation, he spent the
intervening time until supper was ready.  In a vague way he realized
that he had, by deserting the team, betrayed himself to all his
comrades as a fellow swayed by petty jealousy; but this thought, which
seemed trying to force itself humiliatingly upon him, he beat back and
thrust aside, persisting in dwelling on the notion that he had been
most shabbily treated by Captain Eliot.

"He led me to believe he meant to give me a chance to-day, and then he
let me warm the bench while Grant went out to win all the glory.  It
wasn't a square deal.  I'll show him he can't treat me that way!  I'll
never pitch again as long as he is captain."

This resolution, however, gave him anything but a feeling of
satisfaction; it was poor retaliation, indeed, for him, who loved the
game so dearly and had looked forward so confidently to this season
when he would be the star pitcher of the nine, to "get square" with
Eliot by refusing to play at all.  It would have seemed somewhat better
had he felt certain that his withdrawal must seriously cripple the
nine, but, judging by recent events, it appeared that Oakdale could get
along very well without him--might, indeed, succeed fully as well as it
could with him on the team.

Grant was to blame for it all.  No, not Grant; he himself was to blame.
Had he not been such a blind fool he might have foreseen what would
happen, for had not Rodney Grant displayed beyond doubt since appearing
in Oakdale the natural qualifications of mind and body which would make
him a leader at anything he might undertake with unbridled vim and
enthusiasm?  The fellow who had been so completely misjudged by almost
everyone during his early days at the academy, had demonstrated later
that he was a thoroughbred, with nerve, brains, courage and the will to
step into the front ranks wherever he might be.  His one great fault, a
fiery and unreasoning temper, he was fighting hard to master, and in
this, as in other things, he had already shown that he was destined to
succeed.

"I was a Jack!" growled Phil, walking the floor of his room and
savagely kicking an inoffensive chair out of his way.  "I should have
known.  If I had taken Hooker in hand and coached him, instead of
Grant----  But I never did like Roy very much, and somehow Rod Grant
got on my sus-soft side."

His mother, hearing him prowling around, called up the stairs and was
somewhat surprised to find him home.

At supper he tried to hide the disturbed state of his mind, but his
father, who seldom took any interest at all in such matters
unexpectedly attempted to joke him a bit.

"Got beat to-day, I see," said Mr. Springer.  "Did you up pretty bad,
didn't they?"

"How did you get that idea?" asked Phil evasively.

"Oh, I can tell by the way you act.  You're broke up, though you're
making a bluff not to show it.  Let's see, played Clearport, didn't ye?
I s'pose they give you an awful hammering?  Oakdale'll have to get
another pitcher after this."

"They didn't beat us; we won."

"Whew!  Is that a fact?  Well, what's the matter with you, then?  I
thought by your looks that you'd been done up brown.  What went wrong
with the game, anyhow?  Didn't you get good backing up?"

"I didn't pitch."

"So _that's_ it, eh?  How did it happen?  The way you've been blowing
around the house every time you could get anybody to listen, I thought
you were the whole thing in that particular department."

Phil's cheeks burned and his hands shook nervously, although he fought
hard to appear unconcerned and indifferent.  In replying the slight
impediment in his speech became more pronounced.

"The gug-game only went fuf-five innings; it commenced to rur-rain
then, so they didn't finish it out.  You see I--I cuc-can't do all the
pitching, and Eliot put in Grant for the first pup-part of this game."
He was intensely annoyed because of his unusual halting and stammering
over this explanation.

"Humph!  Rained, eh?  That was odd; just began to rain here about half
an hour ago."

"It began to pour at Clearport right in the middle of the game,"
declared Phil.  "I was just ready to relieve Grant, for he--he was sort
of--sort of sus-showing signs of weakening.  Eliot had sus-started me
to warming up, but it--it began to rain, and that sus-settled it."

His wounded pride, his wretched jealousy of Grant, had led him into the
telling of an untruth, and he left the table feeling very contemptible
indeed.  Certainly it was not a malicious falsehood that was liable to
do any one particular harm, but it was a falsehood just the same, and
he was ashamed.

His room was like a cage, and he found he could not read or study.
What were they saying about the game in town?  What were they saying
about the pitching of Rodney Grant?  Despite the rain, some of the
fellows would gather after supper at the postoffice or Stickney's store
to talk it over.  This talk after a victorious game had ever held a
keen delight for Phil, and it was rarely that he missed being on hand
to take part in it.

"I must get out!" he cried suddenly.  "I'll just wander down street;
maybe I'll meet some fellow who won't be all done up in Grant."

Putting on an old raincoat and securing an umbrella, he left the house
and started down the street.  At the first corner he paused, for if he
continued straight down Main Street he would have to pass Roger Eliot's
home, and surely he had no desire by any chance to run upon Roger.  A
drizzling rain was falling, and twilight was coming on.  Turning, he
cut through Cedar Street and down Willow to avoid passing Urian Eliot's
fine house.

On his way he passed a house no less pretentious than that of the
Eliots; it was the home of Lemuel Hayden, whose only son, Bernard, had
been compelled to leave Oakdale because of his jealous efforts and
lying and plotting to injure Ben Stone, whom he bitterly hated.  The
boys of the town had talked that matter over many times, and it was
universally conceded that Bernard's unrestrained hatred of Stone and
plotting for the boy's injury had led him at last into a pit of his own
digging and brought upon him nothing more than just retribution.

A strange and most unpleasant thought struck in upon Springer; in
almost every particular, save a deliberate underhand effort to injure
Grant, he was not a whit better than Bern Hayden, who now had not a
single boy friend left in Oakdale.

That thought staggered Phil a bit.  Why, in a vague way he had
contemplated seeking some surreptitious method of accomplishing the
overthrow of Grant!

"Oh, I guess I'm rotten!" he growled.  "But it's dirty luck that's made
me so!"




CHAPTER XX.

FELLOWS WHO MADE MISTAKES.

Roy Hooker lived one block further down the street.  The popping
explosions of an approaching motorcycle greeted Phil's ears as he
walked on, and up the street came a chap astride such a machine, the
lamp of which had not yet been lighted.  The motorcycle swerved into
Hooker's yard and nearly ran Springer down.

"Hey!" cried Phil, dodging.  "What are you trying to do, Hooker?"

But it was not Hooker who shut off the motor and tumbled off the
machine as it slackened speed.  It was Herbert Rackliff, soaked,
mud-bespattered, limp and in a temper.

"Why in the dickens don't you get out of a fellow's way?" snapped
Herbert, supporting the machine and glaring round at Phil.  He bore
little resemblance to the usual dapper, immaculate, self-possessed
young fellow from the city whose tailored clothes and swagger manners
had aroused the envy and admiration of a number of country lads
thereabouts.

"Oh, is it you?" said Springer.  "I thought it was Hooker.  What are
you doing out in this rain with his machine?"

"Just getting back from Clearport," answered Herbert, with a sour
laugh.  "If I owned this old mess of junk I'd pay somebody to take it
away.  She stopped twice on me and skidded me into the ditch once.
Came mighty near leaving her there and hoofing it."

In truth, Rackliff was a sight, and Springer restrained a laugh with
some difficulty as he observed:

"It must have taken you a deuce of a while to get back on that thing,
for the game was over by three o'clock."

"Half past three," corrected Herbert, turning to trundle the motorcycle
toward the carriage house, the door of which, seen through the
twilight, was standing open.

"I caught the three-twelve train from Clearport," said Phil,
unconsciously starting to follow Rackliff.

"Huh!" grunted the other.  "Know you did, but you didn't wait to see
the finish.  If you had----"

By this time Springer was at the speaker's side and had seized his
mud-spattered, rain-soaked sleeve.

"What are you talking about?" he cried.  "Rain stopped the game right
after the fifth.  Saw I had barely time to get into my togs and catch
that three-twelve, so I hustled."

Rackliff started to laugh, but finished with a hollow cough.  "Bet I've
caught a rotten cold," he gasped.  "The game went for the full nine
innings.  Didn't begin to rain until I was pretty near halfway home."

Phil was struck dumb for the moment, and before he could recover
Hooker, having heard their voices, came running out to the carriage
house, calling to Rackliff.  Springer followed the drenched and
complaining city youth into the shelter of the building, where Roy
recognized him and seemed to betray embarrassment.

"Take your old machine," said Rackliff, "and I hope it may be my
everlasting finish if I ever ride another rod on it.  Look at me!  I'm
a complete wreck, and all because you were too blamed stingy to lend me
the price of carfare from Clearport.  This suit is ruined, and I'm
soaked to the bone.  You ought to use an axe on the thing next time it
gets out of order, Hooker."

"And these are the thanks I get for furnishing some means of
transportation," said Roy resentfully.  "Well, I don't know that I
should expect anything else."

Herbert, producing his cigarette case, gave a little half-muttered sigh
of relief when he found that the contents of the case had escaped a
wetting.

"Gimme a match, one of you fellows," he coughed.  "I'm just crazy for a
smoke.  This has been the rottenest day I've seen in a long time."

Hooker, having seen that the motorcycle was placed on its rack,
supplied the match, and Rackliff fired up, the light seeming to shine
through his thin, cupped hands as he protected the blaze from the light
draught that came in through the open door.  He looked tired, and the
first whiff or two set him coughing again.

By this time Springer had recovered, and he ventured to ask:

"What's this Rackliff tells me about the gug-game going nine innings?
It began to rain in the fifth and, wishing to get home as soon as I
could, I ducked when that was over.  I didn't have an idea----"

"It didn't rain any to speak of until long after the full game was
over," said Hooker.  "You should have stayed, Phil; they wanted
you--bad--in the eighth.  Eliot was simply tearing things up in his
frenzy to find you."

"Why--why, what happened?" faltered Springer, a sickening feeling
stealing over him.  "Tut-tell me what ha-happened, Roy."

"The Porters got after Grant and bumped him to beat the band.  Came
within one tally of tying the score.  If you'd been there Eliot would
have shoved you in, and you'd had a chance to win all sorts of glory
saving the game."

"Perhaps he would, and perhaps he wouldn't," muttered Phil.

"Oh, it's a dead sure thing he would have done it."

"How do you know?"

"Didn't I tell you he tried to find you!  Why, he even sent for me; he
was going to put me in."

"You?" breathed Springer incredulously.

"Yes, me; and I didn't have on a playing suit.  If Grant hadn't managed
to steady down at the last moment, I'd gone onto the slab.  What made
you skin out, Phil?"

After a few moments of silence, Springer forced himself by a great
effort to speak:

"I tut-told you I thought the game was o-over."

"You might have waited for the rest of the bunch.  If you'd done that
you'd known it wasn't over.  The fellows are pretty sore on you, for
they say you deserted."

Phil flushed and flared.  "Let them be sore, I don't care!  I'm the one
to be sore!  I got a rotten deal to-day.  I had every reason to suppose
I was going to pitch that game, but Roger Eliot ran Grant in.  I want
him to understand he can't play that sort of fuf-funny business with
me; I won't sus-stand for it.  I'm glad they hammered Grant!  Did they
win?"

"No; we pulled through by the skin of our teeth--seven to six.  It was
an awful snug rub.  I believe I could have stopped the Porters if I'd
got the chance; I'm dead sure you could.  That's why I say you made a
big mistake by scooting."

Herbert Rackliff, smoking, laughed sneeringly.

"Don't blame Springer a bit," he said.  "He did get a rotten deal, and
he has a right to resent it.  What ails you, Hook; are you going to let
Eliot softsoap round you?  He'll do it if you'll let him, for he's got
to have some sort of a scrub pitcher to fall back on for part of the
work.  Of course, this wild and woolly Texan will be the star and get
all the glory, but somebody must do the dirty work.  Hook, you're a
lobster.  I didn't think you'd fall for taffy like that.  You give me a
cramp."  He coughed behind a thin hand as he finished, his flat chest
torn and his stooping shoulders shaken by the effort.

"Now that will about do for you!" blazed Roy, turning on his erstwhile
chum.  "I want you to know that, at least, I'm no traitor to my school
team, and, though you hinted for me to favor you to-day, I'd done my
level best to win for Oakdale if I'd ever got the chance."

"You're a fool," returned Herbert coldly.  "Springer is a fool, too.
He made a chump of himself when he taught Grant to pitch.  In this
world the fellow who looks out for himself and lets others do the same
for themselves is the one who gets along.  You can bank on that every
time.  Think it over and see if I'm not right.  Good night."  With
which expression of selfish wisdom, he turned up his coat collar,
snapped aside his half-smoked cigarette and took his departure, leaving
Phil and Roy staring at each other in uncomfortable silence.

After a time Springer succeeded in forcing a laugh.

"That's just about what you told me a few days ago, Hook," he said,
"but I really didn't need anyone to point out that I had made a fool of
myself.  Sorry I didn't wait to make sure rain was going to stop the
game to-day.  What makes it worse, I told my folks a lie about that
game.  I'll feel cheap enough when they fuf-find out the truth.  Guess
I'll be going, too.  So long, Hook."

"Good night," said Roy.

He stood at the open door and watched Phil's figure disappear into the
gloom of the rainy night that was coming on.

"Told your folks a lie, did you?" he muttered after a time.  "Well,
that wasn't half as bad as stealing from them, and I----"  Without
finishing the sentence, he closed the door of the carriage house.




CHAPTER XXI.

A PERSISTENT RASCAL.

Nearly always it is false pride that spurs on the naturally decent
fellow who realizes he has made a mistake and knows deep down in his
heart that the course he is pursuing is wrong.  Thus it was with Phil
Springer.  Time and again his conscience condemned him and his judgment
bade him come forth like a man and own up to his error, but his pride
would not let him yield.

And so Phil found himself sulking at school, seeking to bear the
atmosphere of one who had been treated outrageously, and growing more
and more resentful and sullen as time passed and none of the fellows
came around to coddle and coax him.  He had felt certain that he would
be approached by some of them, and repeatedly he had rehearsed the
speeches by which he would let them know exactly how he felt about it,
resolved carefully to avoid uttering a word which might convey the
impression that he regarded himself as a single whit at fault.

But no one--not even Cooper or Tuttle--approached him, and he began to
believe that the time he had spent in constructing and committing those
speeches of mingled defense and accusation had been wasted.  He had
once been deeply concerned in a plan by which Rodney Grant had been
practically ostracized by the academy boys, and now, to his deepening
rage, while Grant floated high on the wave of popularity, he found
himself ignored.

Phil was naturally a sociable fellow, and a very little of such
treatment was sufficient to make him suffer keenly.  Nevertheless he
sought to hide the fact beneath a haughty and disdainful air, which was
a course his disposition and temperament hardly qualified him to do.

His sister, who had not attended the game at Clearport, was the first
of his family to learn that he had fibbed about that game, and this she
did not discover until the following Monday morning, when her chum,
Lela Barker, told her everything.

"Oh, Phil," Sadie had said when she found a chance to speak with him
privately, "what made you tell father such a whopper about the game?
Why, it wasn't stopped by rain at all, and they say you ran away right
in the middle of it, and that Roger wanted you after that when they got
to hitting Rodney, and that you couldn't be found anywhere, and that
all the fellows are sore on you because you skipped out, and that----"

"Oh, cut it!" interrupted Phil.  "What do I cuc-care what they say!
Let them talk their heads off."

"But, Phil," persisted the girl, "what made you do it?  You don't want
to get everybody down on you, do you?"

"They can get down on me or not, just as they pup-please!" he flung
back.  "I know when I get a rotten deal, and Roger Eliot, or Rod Grant,
or anybody else can't wipe his feet on me more than once--that's all!"

On Monday, when school was over for the day and the fellows hurried
over to the gym to dress for practice, Phil walked stiffly out of the
yard and turned his steps toward home.  It is true that he longed and
almost hoped to hear some one of those fellows calling after him, but
not a soul seemed to observe which way he went, and resentful anger
blazed yet more fiercely in his soul.

Thus it was upon Tuesday night, when he observed that Roy Hooker was
one of the fellows who hastened toward the gym, which was enough to
convince him that Roy had practically been taken onto the team to do a
portion of the pitching.

When his sister again tried to talk with him about baseball that night
he cut her off in such a snappy, savage manner that she was really
frightened.

The next night, however, he did not walk down the path to the gate in
view of the scholars, so that they might take notice that he declined
to accompany the baseball squad.  Instead of that, he dodged back round
the corner of the academy, crossed the yard at the rear, and took the
footpath across the field to High Street.

He was lonely and cast down and bitterly disappointed; for had he not
sounded the professed friendship of his chums of yesterday and found it
very shallow!  Not one of them had shown the decency to give him a word
of cheer; they were willing that he, who but a short time ago they were
regarding as their star slabman, should slide back into shadows and
forgetfulness, while a practical stranger from a distant part of the
country filled his place.  It was hard to believe of them, but he told
himself he was glad to find out just what they were.

Had Grant himself shown a further inclination to friendly advances Phil
might have met him halfway, but the Texan had some pride of his own,
and he was not the kind to seek continued rebuffs.  Had he known that
Springer was ready and yearning to yield, doubtless Rod would have lost
not a minute in again putting forth the hand of friendship; but, being
unaware of what was passing in Phil's heart, and feeling that already
he had tried to do the right thing, the boy from the Lone Star State
remained aloof with the others.

Halfway across the field, as the path curved round some bushes,
Springer came upon Herbert Rackliff, sitting on a stone, manicuring his
nails with the file blade of a pearl-handled knife, a cigarette
clinging to his moistened lower lip.

"Hello," said Herbert, with no intonation of surprise, as he looked up.
"How do you happen to be dodging across this way, Springer?"

Phil was annoyed.  He had never liked Rackliff.  Still here was some
one to whom he could talk, and desire to "chin" was strong upon him.
He stopped.

"This is a short cuc-cut for me," he explained.  "What are you doing
here?"

"Trimming my nails a bit.  Have to do my own manicuring down in this
jumping-off place, and I never have time for it mornings; barely get to
the old academy soon enough to escape the tardy record--sometimes I
don't escape.  Never knew you to come this way before, even if it is a
short cut.  In a hurry?"

"Ye-yes--no, not exactly; but this was as good a way as any."

"You don't seem to be practicing with the great Oakdale nine," said
Herbert, bringing forth a fresh cigarette.  "I'm surprised at that."

"Are you?  Well, you needn't be."

In lighting the cigarette Rackliff was seized by a choking fit of
coughing, which led him to wipe his eyes with a dainty silk
handkerchief.

"I knew I'd catch a beastly cold coming home through the rain the other
night on that old lemon of Hooker's," he said when he could get his
breath.  "I hate a cough; it always seems to tear my lungs out.  Next
thing I know I'll be throwing one of 'em up."

"You don't look well."

"I have felt better.  Never mind, I'll get over it; but, oh! you bet
your life you'll never catch me on a motorcycle again.  They are rotten
dirty things anyhow; simply cover you with dust when they don't paste
you with mud.  Have a smoke?"

"Don't care if I do," said Phil, accepting the proffered cigarette case
and selecting one.  "I don't make a practice of using the things, but I
need something to cheer me up."

Rackliff also supplied a match, and then motioned toward a near-by
stone, urging Phil to sit down and make himself comfortable.

"You haven't looked hilariously cheerful of late," said the city youth.
"Sort of taken your downfall to heart, haven't you?"

"My dud-downfall?"

"Yes.  Oh, you're down and out, all right, and you must realize it--you
do, too.  Your proficient pupil, Mr. Rodney Grant, has tumbled you off
the pedestal and taken your place."

"I wish you wouldn't tut-talk about him!" cried Phil.

Herbert shrugged his narrow shoulders and smiled.

"You don't like him any better than I do, that's plain.  You thought
you liked him once, but you've found him out.  He's a conceited pup.
Strange how everybody seems to fall for him, even Lela Barker.  Now
she's just about the nicest little clipper around these parts, but
she's got country ideas, and she can't see the difference between a
gentleman and a common cowpuncher--which latter Grant is, and mighty
common, at that.  Your sister is Lela's chum; I should think you might
get your sister to open Miss Barker's eyes to that fellow.  Couldn't
you show him up somehow and fix it so your sister would put Lela wise
to him?"

"If I could, I wouldn't take all that trouble," replied Phil, who had
seated himself and was puffing at the cigarette in a way that
threatened to demolish it in short order.  "He isn't worth it."

"Perhaps not, but I should think you'd want to get back at him after
the turn he's done you.  I never saw anything dirtier--never.  After
you coached him he simply wormed his way into Eliot's favor and crowded
you out as soon as he could.  He's got everybody saying that he's a
better pitcher than you ever were or ever could be.  You bet he doesn't
miss a chance to sneer about you behind your back; that's him.  I'm
glad you've shown spirit enough to resent it, and not to go crawling
around after him or any of the rest of that bunch."

"You'll never see me cuc-crawling after anybody!" cried Springer
fiercely; "and Grant better keep a decent tut-tongue in his head!  He
needn't think because he happens to have an ugly temper and belongs to
a fighting family that everybody is afraid of him.  I can stand a lot,
but there's a limit."

Herbert turned his head away for a moment to conceal the gleam of
satisfaction that sprang into his eyes, coughing behind his hand.

"You're made of different stuff from that soft slob Hooker," he said.
"I did think that Hook had some sand and spirit, but I've changed my
mind; he has just about as much backbone as a jellyfish.  He can talk
and blow, but it's all wind.  You're a fellow with genuine spirit and
pride; nobody wipes his feet on you."

"Not if I know it," growled Phil, flattered by the words of the crafty
fellow.

"Of course not; and that's the way to be.  It's only the marks who let
themselves be used for footmats; Hooker's a mark.  They'll use him, all
right.  He'll do the dirty work they would have given you if you'd let
them, while Grant will get all the glory."

Springer laughed.  "Perhaps he won't get as much glory as he expects.
Clearport came near batting him out.  Wait until he goes against
Wyndham next Saturday."

"Now you're talking!" exclaimed Rackliff with enthusiasm.  "There will
be something coming to him then.  I fancy it may be possible that you
would enjoy seeing Wyndham beat Oakdale?"

"Shu-surest thing you know," answered Phil, who had been cleverly led
into making such a confession.  "I hope Wyndham eats them up alive!"

"Your desire will be gratified.  Wyndham will make monkeys of them."

"You're confident."

"Dead sure."

"I don't just see how you can be."

"I suppose you've heard how Wyndham actually buried Barville last
Saturday.  The score was seventeen to three--something awful."

"But Clearport came mum-mighty near beating Wyndham the week before."

Herbert winked wisely.  "Maybe they did, and maybe they didn't," he
said.

"Oh, but they did!  They batted Wyndham's new pitcher, Newbert, off the
slab."

At this Rackliff laughed.  "Tell it to the marines.  I happen to know
Dade Newbert; we were chums.  I own up I was surprised when I heard how
the Porters had biffed him.  Wrote him asking about it.  He'd been out
the night before the game--out with a hot bunch playing poker till
daylight.  He didn't want to pitch anyhow, but the captain just shoved
him in; so when he got tired and Wyndham seemed to have a safe lead, he
just lobbed the ball over and let Clearport hit.  Of course he was
taken out, and that gave him a chance to look on while Twitt Crowell
did the heavy work."

"If that's right," said Phil, "Newbert can't be trusted.  Why, he might
have thrown the game away."

"Oh, he reckoned Crowell was good enough for the Porters, that's all.
The result proved his judgment correct."

"Still a fellow who'll tut-take such chances is liable to do anything.
He cuc-can't have any real loyal interest in his team.  If he took a
notion, he'd throw a game."

"You must remember," reminded Rackliff, "that Newbert doesn't belong in
Wyndham, and it really doesn't make any great difference to him whether
that team wins or not.  Of course, if he's pitching, ordinarily he'll
do as well as he can on his own account.  And let me tell you, Spring,
old fel, he's a lulu; there's nothing down in this neck of the woods
that can pitch with him.  I'm betting that he makes the Oakdale batters
look like monkeys."

"You haven't had very good lul-luck betting, have you?"

"Might have done better," admitted Herbert, shrugging.  "I'll even it
all up next Saturday, though, if these pikers around here have sand
enough to give me another show."

"Perhaps you will, and, then again, perhaps----"

"I'll bet you five or ten, even money, that Wyndham wins."

"Thought you went bub-broke last Saturday."

"I'll have some more money by to-morrow."

"Well, I don't want to bet.  I hope Wyndham does win.  It will make me
happy."

"Then you'll be happy, all right, Bo."

"Looks like the fight for the championship will be between Wyndham and
Oakdale.  If Wyndham takes the first game from Oakdale, the chances for
this town will be mum-mighty slim."

Herbert rose to his feet.

"Oakdale hasn't one chance in a hundred to win next Saturday," he
declared in a manner which seemed to denote that he positively believed
what he was saying.  "It's dead lucky for you, old man, that you're not
going to pitch.  Your dear friend Grant is enjoying great popularity
just at present, but even the dummys will realize that he's a
fourth-rater after they see him pitch against Newbert.  Dade knows what
I want him to do, and for old times sake he'll do his prettiest.  And,
by the way, if you want to coin some easy money, just find a sucker who
is ready to back Oakdale for a little bet."




CHAPTER XXII.

SELF-RESTRAINT OR COWARDICE.

Rackliff had succeeded in doubling Springer's hatred for Rodney Grant.
So the fellow Phil had befriended and taught to pitch was sneering
about him behind his back!  And everybody was saying that Grant was
already a better pitcher than his instructor ever could hope to become!
Springer wondered how it was possible that, even for a moment, he had
ever taken a fancy to such a chap.

"He'd better not say too much about me," Phil growled to himself.  "I
know he is a fighter.  I know he has a fearful temper.  But he'll find
out I'm not afraid of him."

That very night Lela Barker, coming to the post office to mail some
letters, was followed and annoyed by Rackliff when she started to
return home.  Herbert persisted in forcing his unwelcome company upon
her until, catching sight of a familiar figure passing on the opposite
side of the street, she called for assistance.

Rodney Grant came running across, giving Rackliff a look, cap in hand,
as he inquired the cause of the girl's alarm.

"Oh, Rod," she said, "I do wish you would walk home with me.
This--this fellow has persisted in following me and forcing his company
upon me."

"The onery, conceited, unmannerly cad!" exploded the Texan, evidently
itching to put hands on Herbert, who bluffed the situation through with
insolent effrontery, laughing as he lighted a cigarette.  "What he
needs is a good thrashing, and, if he wasn't a sickly, insignificant
creature, it would give me a right good heap of satisfaction to hand
him one."

"Bah!" said Herbert.  "You're a big blowhard, that's all.  It betrays
lamentably poor taste on Miss Barker's part to prefer the company of a
lout like you to that of a gentleman."

It was lucky for Rackliff that Lela was there and her hand fell on the
arm of the boy from Texas, for otherwise Rodney might have forgotten
himself.  Fearing his lack of self-restraint, the girl urged him away,
and they left Herbert leaning against a tree and still laughing, his
cigarette in the corner of his mouth.

Half an hour later Grant, having returned, was talking baseball with
several fellows who had gathered in a group near Stickney's store, when
Rackliff sauntered up.

"Just a word with you, Mr. Cowpuncher," said Herbert in a loud voice.
"You applied several objectionable adjectives to me a while ago, and
now I want to tell you just what I think about you.  You're nothing but
a common, low-bred, swaggering bluffer, as the blind dubs around here
are due to find out.  You think you're a baseball pitcher.  Excuse me
while I laugh in my sleeve.  You're the biggest case of egotistical
jackassism it has ever been my luck to encounter.  Next Saturday, when
you get up against a real pitcher who can pitch, you'll look cheaper
than thirty cents."

Grant surveyed the speaker with mingled amusement and disdain.

"Have you got that dose of bile out of your system?" he asked.  "If
it's all over, go lie down somewhere and forget yourself.  That will be
a relief.  Being ashamed all the time sure must get tiresome."

Herbert lost his head at once.  "You're a duffer and a bluffer!" he
shouted shrilly.  "How any decent, refined girl can have anything to do
with you I can't imagine.  It just shows that Lela Barker is----"

He got no further, for, brushing one of the fellows aside, Grant caught
the speaker by the throat and stopped him.  His face dark, the Texan
shook Rackliff until his teeth rattled.

"Shoot your mouth off about me as much as you please, you miserable
sneak," he grated; "but don't you dare ring in the name of any decent
girl unless you are thirsting to get the worst walloping of your life!"

Rod's eyes blazed and he was truly terrible.  Once before the boys had
seen him look like that, and then they had realized for the first time
that it was the young Texan's uncontrollable temper that he feared and
which had made him, by persistent efforts to avoid personal encounters,
appear like a coward.  There was not a cowardly drop of blood in
Grant's body, but experience and the record of his fighting father had
taught him to fear himself.

Even now the fact that he let himself go sufficiently to lay hands on
Rackliff seemed to spur him on, and, still shaking the limp and
helpless fellow, he maintained his hold on the city youth's neck until
Herbert's eyes began to bulge and his face grew purple.

Suddenly another lad pushed his way through the circle and seized Grant
by the shoulders:

"Lul-let up on that!" he cried, his voice vibrant with excitement.
"What are you trying to do, choke the lul-life out of a fellow that you
know isn't any match for you?  If you want to ch-choke somebody, let
him alone and take me."

It was Phil Springer.  His head jerked round toward his shoulder,
Rodney Grant looked into the eyes of his friend of a short time past,
and suddenly he released his hold on Rackliff, who, gasping and ready
to topple over, was supported by one of the other boys.

"If you want to choke somebody, take me!" repeated Phil savagely.  "You
ought to be ashamed of yourself!"

Grant took a long breath.  "That's right, Springer," he admitted, "I
reckon I ought.  I allow I clean forgot myself."

Somehow this quiet admission, which was wholly unexpected, seemed to
enrage Phil still more.

"I suppose you think everybub-body around here is afraid of you now
that they've found out your father was a genuine bad man," Springer
sneered.  "Well, you'll discover there's one person who isn't afraid.
I'll fight you."

To the amazement of all present, the boy from Texas shook his head,
something like a conciliatory smile appearing on his face.

"You won't fight _me_, Phil," he retorted, "for I won't fight."

Phil himself could not understand why this refusal simply added fuel to
the flame of his wrath.  He felt himself a-quiver with the intensity of
his emotions, and, seeing Grant so calm and self-possessed, he was
obsessed by a yearning to strike him in the face.

"Oh, so you won't fight, eh?  Why not?"

"We have been friends."

"We have been, but aren't any more, and we never will be again; for
I've found out just what sort of a fellow you are.  You think yourself
a better pitcher than I am or ever can be, do you?  Oh, I've heard what
you've been blowing around here about me, and you needn't deny it.
You've had some luck in one or two games, but you're due to get your
bumps.  If you've got any fuf-further talk to make about me, come and
make it before my face.  It's a sneak who goes round shooting off his
mouth behind another fellow's back--and that's what you are, Rod Grant!"

"Now there'll be something doing, sure!" breathed Chipper Cooper,
agitated by great expectations.

Still, to the increasing wonderment of the boys, Grant held himself in
hand.

"I couldn't take that off you, Phil," he said, a bit huskily, "if we
hadn't been friends and I didn't realize that you sure would never say
it in your right mind.  I'm right sorry----"

"Oh, yes," scoffed Phil derisively, "you're sus-sorry you can't work me
for a chump any more.  You know what I think of you, and if you've got
any real sand you'll pick it up.  All I ask is a square show, and I'll
give you the scrap of your life.  You can't frighten me with your
savage looks, and I've got my bub-blinkers on you so you can't catch me
off my guard and hit me.  That's the way you've won your reputation as
a fuf-fighter around these parts.  You've never faced anybody in a
sus-square stand-up scrap, but you've grabbed and ch-choked fellows
like Bunk Lander and Herbert Rackliff when they weren't expecting it.
I know a little something about handling my dukes, and I'll bet I can
lick you in less than tut-ten minutes."

"Perhaps you can," said Grant.

"Gee whiz!" spluttered Chipper Cooper.  "What do you know about that,
fellows?"

It was true that Grant had never engaged in a real fist fight since
coming to Oakdale, but he had once stretched an enemy prone and stiff
with a single sudden blow, and since the brave part he had played in
rescuing Lela Barker from drowning Phil was the first to question his
courage.

Herbert Rackliff, having recovered his breath and found sufficient
strength to stand without assistance, was looking on and listening in
the greatest satisfaction.  "Soak him, Phil!" he whispered faintly.
"Go for him!"

"Perhaps you're right," said Grant again, as Springer surveyed him with
marked contempt.  "Anyhow, I certain am not going to fight you."

Springer seemed genuinely disappointed.  "I have a mind to punch you,"
he declared.  "Perhaps you'd brace up then and show a little manhood."

Rod retreated a step, which added to the impression that he was afraid.

"You'll be sorry some time, old chap," he said, "just as I would be if
I permitted you to lead me into a wretched fight.  You don't
understand----"

"Oh, yes I do; I understand everything.  I've gug-got you sized up for
just what you are, a big case of bluff.  I've cuc-called you, and your
show-down is mighty rotten.  Bah!  If the fellows around here want to
think you the whole shooting match after this, they're welcome to do
so.  But in order to keep your reputation as a dangerous character
you'll have to do something besides jump on fellows like Rackliff and
Lander."

Disdainfully he turned his back on Grant.

"You chaps can sus-see just what sort of a creature your fine hero is,"
he said.  "Now hang around him as much as you like, and worship him.
You all make me sick!"

He walked away, followed hastily by Rackliff.  At the corner above the
square Herbert overtook Phil, who seemed surprised as he came up.

"Oh, say," chuckled the city youth, "you did bore it into him fine!
And he didn't dare put a hand on you, either.  That was queer, for, my
word! he's strong as Sandow.  He handled me as easy as if I wasn't out
of knickerbockers."

"Paugh!" said Phil.  "Anybody could do that.  You've sus-sucked
cigarettes until you haven't as much strength as a sick kitten."

"Oh, I don't know about that," retorted Rackliff resentfully.  "I guess
I'm about as strong as the average fellow; but I tell you he's a holy
terror--a perfect Hercules.  I thought every minute he'd open on you.
I don't see why he didn't, for you rubbed it in to the limit."

"He didn't dare, that's the reason why," declared Springer.  "I've got
him sized up now; he's the kind that strikes when the other chap isn't
lul-looking."

"I guess you're right.  I called him a bluffer, too.  It was first rate
of you to step in and take my part."

"I didn't do it on your account."

"No?"

"Not at all.  I was itching for an excuse to get at him, and you
provided one, that's all."

Herbert was somewhat taken aback by this frank confession.

"Well," he said slowly, "anyhow, you showed him up to that bunch of
lickspittles.  They were surprised."

"I fuf-fancy so.  This whole town has got the notion that Rod Grant is
simply it.  They thought he would fight at the drop of the hat."

"What would you have done if he'd taken you up?"

"Whipped him," answered Phil confidently.  "I've taken boxing lessons.
What does he know about scientific fighting?  I had made up my mum-mind
to take care that it was a regular fight by rounds, with seconds and a
referee to see fair play.  I'd certainly fixed him that way, all right."

Still, to his annoyance, Rackliff seemed doubtful.  "Perhaps you would,
but if he'd ever got in one wallop----"

"Oh, you make me tut-tired!" exclaimed Springer.

"Well, even if you didn't butt in on my account, I'm much obliged, just
the same.  You're all right, Spring, old fel, and if I can do you a
good turn I will.  Perhaps I'll have the chance.  Gee!  I want a whiff.
Have a smoke?"

"No," declined Phil.  "I'm going home.  Good night."

He left Herbert there, lighting a cigarette and coughing hollowly.




CHAPTER XXIII.

HOOKER BREAKS WITH RACKLIFF.

Passing Hooker's home on his way down into the village Thursday
evening, Rackliff saw a light in the carriage house, which led him to
fancy he might find Roy there.  In this he was not mistaken; Hooker was
puttering over his motorcycle by the light of a lantern.  Hearing a
footstep on the gravel outside, he looked up and perceived the visitor
entering by the open door.

"Hello," said Herbert.

"Hello," grunted Hooker, without any effort at cordiality or welcome.

"Tinkering with that old thing again, I see," coughed Rackliff.

"Thanks to you, I am."

"Thanks to me?"

"Yes; it has been out of order ever since you used it last.  Baseball
practice doesn't give me much time to work on it by daylight, and so
I'm trying to get her running now."

"Take my advice and pay somebody to remove the thing.  It's the biggest
old lemon I ever saw.  All it's worth is its price as junk.  Gee!  I'm
feeling rotten."  He sat down on a box, coughing again.

Indeed Herbert did not look well, and there seemed to be something of
an alarming nature in the sound of his cough.  His thin cheeks were
flushed and feverish.

"You don't have to worry yourself about it," returned Roy warmly.
"It's mine, and I presume I can do anything I please with it."

"Awful touchy to-night," muttered Rackliff.  He lighted a cigarette,
but the first whiff threw him into a most distressing fit of coughing
and he flung it out through the open door.  "Can't seem to get anything
out of a smoke," he complained.  "Cigarettes don't taste good, and they
raise the merry dickens with this old cough of mine.  I've got a
beastly headache, and I suppose I ought to be in bed, but I've got to
go down to the postoffice.  Expect a letter from Newbert to-night."

"So you're corresponding with him, are you?" said Roy, wiping his
greasy hands on some cotton waste.

"Sure.  Why not?  We were chums, you know."

"And of course you still think him the greatest pitcher that ever
happened?"

"He's just about the greatest in his class; you'll find that out
Saturday.  Watch how he shows Cowboy Grant up.  Say, Springer rather
showed that fellow up, too, didn't he?"

"How do you mean?"

"You know; the way he made him pull his horns and take water."

"Who says Phil Springer made Rod Grant take water?"

"I do.  I was there and saw it.  Your Texan hasn't got any nerve.  He's
the biggest case of fake to be found in seven States.  He's strong, I'm
not denying that; but when he saw that Springer really meant business
he didn't dare do a thing."

"I've heard the fellows talking about it," said Hooker, "but I don't
believe Grant was afraid of Phil Springer.  A fellow who would take the
chances he did to save Lela Barker from drowning couldn't be frightened
by Springer."

"I've heard about that, too, and, as near as I can make out, Grant took
those chances because he had to."

"Had to?  Why----"

"He had to after he got caught by the current and carried over the dam
with the girl.  There couldn't be any backing out then.  I'll bet he
never would have jumped into the water at all if he'd stopped a moment
to consider the danger.  According to the story I've heard, it was
really that big lout, Bunk Lander, who did the great act of heroism and
saved both Grant and the Barker girl; but of course Grant got most of
the credit.  Anyway, I know that some fellows have lost a bit of their
confidence in the cowpuncher since Springer faced him down; they're due
to get the rest of it shaken out before the game ends Saturday."

"I suppose you're mighty confident again that Oakdale will get beaten?"

"It's a certainty this time, Hook.  Let me give you a little tip.  You
lost some money on that game with Barville, and this is the chance to
win it back.  Bet on Wyndham Saturday and you'll even up your mistake
before."

"My mistake!  It wasn't my mistake; it was yours.  Besides, you didn't
keep your word about making good any loss I might suffer.  You put me
in a nasty hole, Rackliff."

"I don't see why.  To hear you talk, anybody might think you were
ruined instead of merely getting hit for less than a fiver.  Never knew
a fellow to put up such a squeal over a little money."

Hooker's cheeks were flushed and he faced Herbert, his undershot jaw
seeming to project still further than usual.

"I lost more than that," he said.

"What?  You did?  Why, you only gave me four dollars and----"

"I lost something more than money."

"You didn't tell me about it."

"I haven't told anyone--but my mother.  I had to tell her the other
day.  When you wanted me to bet on that game I told you I didn't have
any money."

"Yes."

"But I knew where my mother had some money put away in a drawer--some
money she had been saving up a little at a time to buy the material for
a new dress.  I went into that drawer and took that money.  You were so
positive that I could not lose that I--well, I stole the money."

"Dear me!" said Herbert, grinning and coughing behind his thin hand.
"What did the old girl say when she found it out?"

"She never suspected me," said Roy.  "She couldn't think I would do
such a thing.  And I--I lied about it.  When she discovered the money
was gone and became distressed over its loss, I lied."

"You would have been a fool if you'd owned up."

"I was a fool to touch a cent of that money, in the first place.  I was
a fool to listen to your blarney, Rackliff.  Just because I was idiot
enough to believe in you, I made myself a thief and a liar.  Oh, I've
been punished for it, all right.  Never knew I had a conscience that
could make me squirm so much.  Some nights I slept mighty mean."

"Paugh!  You make me laugh.  It wasn't anything to take a few paltry
dollars like that.  You're mother'll never know."

"She knows now."

"What?"

"I told her."

"You did?"

"Sure."

"Well, you are a big chump!  What made you do that?"

"I had to.  You can't understand how rotten I felt when I saw her
crying over the loss of that money.  I was ashamed and sick--oh, sick
as a dog!  I made up my mind I'd pay it back, every cent."

"And so you can if you'll just get hold of another fiver and bet it on
Wyndham."

"I've paid it back already, all but fifty cents.  Why do you think I
stayed out of school to work at any old job I could get?  I'm not
particularly stuck on work, but I couldn't go on feeling that I was a
thief--that I had stolen from my own mother.  That's what you brought
me to, Rackliff."

Herbert sneered.  "That's right, blame it all on me and let yourself
out entirely.  Now let me tell you something, my bucko: it was your
over-weening conceit, your jealousy of Springer and Grant, your itching
desire to see them get their bumps, that led you, as much as anything
else, to bet against Oakdale in that first game.  You were sore on
Eliot, too, because he didn't put you in to pitch--and you couldn't
pitch a little bit.  When I bet against Oakdale, I did so on judgment;
you did so because of prejudice and spite.  Now, don't put on any
virtuous frills with me, for I'm not feeling good to-day, and you make
me tired."

The insolence of the fellow infuriated Hooker, who, nevertheless, knew
there was no little truth in what he had been told.  Restraining
himself with an effort, Roy attempted to retort sarcastically.

"So you bet on _judgment_, did you?  Well, you must confess your
judgment was mighty poor.  And, to make the thing safe, you made
arrangements to betray Oakdale's pitching signals to Barville.  _I_
didn't know anything about that--until after the game.  If I had known
in advance----"

"Now what would you have done?" asked Herbert, snapping his fingers.
"If you had found out about that after your money was wagered on
Barville, I presume you would have warned your dear friend Eliot and
sacrificed everything!  I've noticed that you have kept mighty still
about it since you did find out."

"Yes, I've kept still, because you failed in your crooked scheme, and
because--well, because I wasn't anxious to have it known that I bet the
way I did, and I knew you'd retaliate by peaching on me if I breathed a
word concerning you."

Herbert laughed and coughed at the same time.  "Just so.  Wise boy.  I
certainly should have done just that.  Let me tell you now that things
will be fixed doubly solid for the game next Saturday, and----"

"Look here," cried Roy, facing the visitor threateningly, "if you
attempt to repeat that trick in Wyndham I'll expose you sure as
shooting.  I mean it.  You can't frighten me.  You can tell that I bet
against my own team if you want to, but----"

"I presume you're perfectly willing that I should tell how you came by
the money?  Oh, I guess you'd keep still even if I tried the same trick
over again."

"I wouldn't.  Try it and see!  I've paid the money back, and you can't
keep me still that way.  I'm pitching on the team now, and I want to
see it win."

"Too bad you're going to be so keenly disappointed.  You won't do any
pitching against Wyndham, that's a cinch.  Eliot has been forced to
take you up as a makeshift since losing Springer, but you'll be used
only in the minor games.  Grant will do all the heavy work in the big
games, and get all the glory.  The first time I heard you talk, Hook, I
thought you had some real spirit; but I've found out that you're just a
common weak-kneed, aspiring sycophant, ready to feed on crumbs and lick
the hand that flings them to you."

"I've heard about enough from you!" snarled Hooker.  "I think you'd
better get.  I don't want to put my hands on you, but I shall if you
stay any longer and shoot off your face.  I think you and I will call
it quits, Rackliff; I want no further dealings with you.  And let me
tell you before you go that if I find out you're up to any of your
tricks Saturday I'll put the fellows wise.  You can't frighten me into
keeping still."

Herbert rose and walked to the door.  "You poor, fawning dub!" he said.
"You'll be blacking Eliot's boots next.  I'm glad to be done with you.
But don't forget what I said, it's fixed so Wyndham's dead sure to win
Saturday.  I'm going to bet every cent I can raise on it."

"Well, I'm glad I'm done with him!" muttered Roy, closing the door as
Herbert went coughing down the gravel drive.




CHAPTER XXIV.

ONCE MORE.

Rackliff turned through Lake Street toward the square in the center of
the village, muttering to himself about Hooker, whom he now thoroughly
despised as a "soft thing" and a "quitter."  As he approached the Town
Hall a low whistle like a signal reached his ears, and he saw a dark
figure standing in the shadows near one corner of the building.

"It must be Springer," said Herbert.  "Now we'll find out if he has any
sand or is a quitter, too."

It was Springer, who spoke in a low tone as Herbert turned and drew
near.  "I thought it just as well for us not to meet where we would be
seen," said Phil, "so I watched for you here, being pretty sure you'd
come this way.  There's a bub-bunch of the fellows down at Stickney's."

"Good!" returned Herbert.  "I hope they've got their mazuma with them,
for I've got my cash at last, and I'm on the warpath.  It'll be just
like finding money for me if they'll only give me a chance at them."

"You're just as confident as ever that Wyndham will win?"

"My boy, I tell you it's a cold cinch; it's fixed so that Wyndham can't
lose."

"What do you mean by 'fixed'?"

Rackliff hesitated; recalling his late interview with Hooker, he
decided that it would be unwise to tell Springer too much.

"Never you mind what I mean, old sport," he returned.  "Leave it to me.
I wasn't born yesterday.  What these Joshuas around here have won off
me already will serve nicely as bait.  I'm bound to get them this time,
and, as we're friends, I'm letting you in on the deal.  After the
rotten way you've been treated, it should make you feel well to get the
chance.  I'll place your loose coin on Wyndham, and not a soul need
know about it until you're ready for him to know.  Perhaps by and by,
when this old baseball team is all to the punk, you'll feel like coming
out openly and informing them that you've added to your bank account by
betting against them; but, if you don't happen to feel that way, you
can keep still and enjoy the fruits of your cleverness--which should be
some satisfaction for the raw deal that's been handed out to you."

The fellow's words and manner were suave and seductive, and, if Phil
had wavered, he now put his hesitation aside.

"Oh, I'm ready to take a ch-chance," he declared.  "I want to see them
done up, and I'm not at all averse to winning some money through their
defeat.  Wyndham has always had rather the better team at baseball or
football, and I see no reason to believe she won't have this year."

"And every reason for believing she will have, considering the fact
that a dandy like Dade Newbert is going to pitch for her.  Wait till
you see him in action; it will open your eyes.  How much money have you
got?"

Springer moved until the light of the street lamp in front of the
postoffice over the way shone upon him, plunging his hand into his
pocket and bringing up a lot of silver.

"Here's five dollars in ten-cent pieces," he said; "and I've got two
dollars besides."

"Seven plunks, all told.  But say, I hope you didn't get this chicken
feed the way Hooker got his that he let me have to bet on the Barville
game."

"Eh?  How did he get it?"

"Stole it; swiped it off his own mother.  What do you know about that,
Bo?"

"Stole it!" cried Phil.  "Well, you nun-needn't think I got mine that
way!  I'm no thief!"

"I should hope not.  I'm not eager to chum with a fellow of that sort,
and I've cut Hooker out; told him what I thought of him and quit him
for good.  He's too cheap for me."  Herbert coughed behind his hand,
his air one of great virtue and uprightness.

"These dimes came from my ten-cent bank," explained Springer.  "I've
been saving them one at a tut-time as I could spare them, and I had it
pretty near full.  When I mum-made up my mind to bet--or let you bet
for me--I got enough to fill the bank and break it open; and that's why
there are so many of them.  Here they are; you can count them if you
want to.  And here's two dollars more."

Rackliff accepted the money and pocketed it "Don't suppose you want a
receipt?" he asked, laughing.

"Nun-no," faltered Phil, suddenly realizing that Herbert could deny the
whole transaction if he saw fit to do so, and that there would be no
way of proving it had ever taken place.  In spite of the fact that
circumstances and mutual sympathies had led him into taking up with the
city boy, he did not feel that a fellow of Herbert's stamp was wholly
to be trusted.

"Nun-no," mocked Rackliff with an intonation of resentment.  "I swear
that was weak!  I believe you are shaky.  If so you'd better take your
money back--quick."

"No, no," objected Springer.  "It's all right.  It was ju-just my
rotten stammering, that's all.  I wish I could break myself of it."

But suddenly Herbert grew very dignified.  "We'll do this thing in a
business-like way," he declared.  "You don't know much about me, and a
really square chap never gets haughty when he's asked to give some
proof of his squareness.  Just come over under the lamp."

Protesting, Phil followed; and the city boy, heedless of those
protests, brought forth a pocket-notebook and pencil, scribbled an
acknowledgement of the money on a leaf of the book, dashed his name at
the bottom, tore the leaf out and handed it over.

"I insist," he said.  "Now everything's all right.  This is a wicked
world, and every fellow who's dead wise has a right to take
precautions.  You say there's a bunch down by Stickney's, eh?  Well, I
think I'll meander down that way and see if I can't prod them into
making a few wagers.  Good night, old fel; sleep tight and don't worry
about the chink you've let me handle.  It will be an investment that'll
pay a hundred per cent. in double-quick time."

It was a delightfully warm spring night, and there on the platform of
Stickney's store, where the softened light from within shone upon them
through a huge window, the boys had gathered.  They were chatting,
jesting, chaffing one another, and occasionally playing pranks, which
once or twice started a squabble.  As Rackliff sauntered up Chub Tuttle
was complaining that nearly a pint of peanuts had been stolen from his
pocket.

"Why don't you put Sleuth onter the case?" laughingly drawled Sile
Crane.  "He'll ketch the thief, for he's sartainly got Sherlock Holmes
beat to a frazzle."

"My deduction is," said Piper, loudly shuffling his feet to drown the
noise as he stealthily cracked a peanut, "that there are scoundrels in
our very midst who would feel no compunction in swiping plugged money
from a contribution box.  Doubtless," he continued, deftly snapping the
shelled kernels into his mouth, "the hands of those scoundrels are even
now at work."

"Sleuthy's right," said Chipper Cooper, swiftly stowing away a handful
of the peanuts which he had skillfully removed from Piper's coat pocket
while the latter was speaking; "there are villyuns among us.  Anyhow,
there's liable to be one in a minute, unless we move."  Apparently this
concluding remark was caused by the appearance of Rackliff, who came
strolling into the light of the window and paused.

Herbert looked them over.  "Several prominent members of the great
Oakdale baseball team, I observe," he said.  "Been talking of the
coming game, I presume."

[Illustration: "Several prominent members of the great Oakdale baseball
team, I observe," said Rackliff.]

"You're presuming, as usual," returned Cooper.

"That remark is very stale; I think I've heard you use it before.  Your
efforts at wit are painful.  I suppose you're pretty confident, after
beating both Barville and Clearport?  Now I'm confident myself; I have
confidence----"

"You look like a confidence man," interrupted Chipper.

"I have confidence," pursued Herbert, trying to ignore the little chap,
"that Wyndham will win; and I'm ready to back my conviction with real
money."

"Dinged if I didn't think yeou'd got abaout enough of it bating against
Oakdale!" exclaimed Crane.

"Wonder where he gets so much money?" said Fred Sage.

"He's bluffing," was the opinion of Jack Nelson.  "He's dead broke, but
he wants to make believe that he's a dead game sport, and so----"

"If you think I'm dead broke," said Herbert, "and you can raise five or
ten bones to wager on Oakdale, just produce the currency and watch me
cover it.  I have about twenty-five dollars I'd like to put up on
Wyndham."

"Twenty-five dollars!"  spluttered Tuttle.  "That's some wealth for one
fellow to be packing around."

"Go on," advised Crane, waving his long arm at Herbert; "don't bother
us.  We're tired takin' your spondulicks away from ye; it's too easy."

"You're quitters," declared Herbert with a cutting sneer.  "There isn't
one of you who has a real drop of sporting blood in his veins, that's
what's the matter.  You've won my money, and now, being pikers and
quitters, you don't propose to give me a chance to win it back.  You
know Wyndham's going to put it all over you Saturday, and you're
shivering in your shoes.  I don't blame you for being frightened, as
you haven't one chance in a hundred to take that game.  It wouldn't
surprise me if you were beaten about twenty or thirty to nothing; I
sincerely hope it won't be worse than that."

Crane rose to his feet in the midst of this speech, which was far more
provoking and insulting than cold type can convey.

"Looker here, yeou," cried Sile; "I've got some money I won batin' with
you, and, by thut-ter! you'll find I ain't afraid to give ye all the
chance you want on that Wyndham game.  If you've really got twenty-five
dollars, mebbe we can raise a pool, same as we done before, and cover
the whole of it.  I'll put in my share anyhaow.  Who's the next feller?"

"I am!"

"Count me in!"

"I'm another!"

"Same here!"

"Me, too!"

It seemed that they were all eager to contribute to the pool, and
Herbert, smiling with self-complaisant satisfaction, felt that he had
cleverly accomplished his purpose.




CHAPTER XXV.

THE WYNDHAM PITCHER.

Shortly before nine o'clock on Saturday morning a touring car,
containing three youths, not one of whom was over eighteen years of
age, whirled up before the door of Mrs. Conway's boarding house in
Oakdale and stopped.

The occupants of the car did not belong in Oakdale; they came from
Wyndham, and the machine was the property of the father of the oldest
one, who was at the wheel.  This was Orville Foxhall, second baseman of
the Wyndham nine.  At Foxhall's side sat a husky, raw-boned, long-armed
chap, Dade Newbert, the pitcher on which Wyndham placed great
dependence.  The chap in the tonneau was Joe Snead, too fat and
indolent to take part in any game of an athletic nature.

"This is the house, Dade," said Foxhall; "this is where your friend
boards, all right."

"Humph!" grinned Newbert.  "It doesn't look swell enough to suit Herb's
style.  He's the real warm article, as you'll realize when you see him.
When it comes to cutting a dash--well, Rack can cut it, you bet.  I'll
see if he's around."

Springing out, Newbert strode to the door and rang.  After a time, as
he was growing impatient and had prepared to ring again, the door
opened a foot or so, and a tall, thin, hopeless-looking woman surveyed
him inquiringly.

Newbert asked for Rackliff.

"Yes, he boards here," answered the woman in a mechanical tone of
voice; "but he isn't up yet."

"Ho, ho!" laughed Newbert.  "Isn't up?  Well, that's like him; won't
pull himself away from the mattress until he has to.  He's a luxurious
brat."

"I'm afraid Mr. Rackliff may not be feeling very well this morning,"
said the woman.  "He has a very bad cold and coughs terribly.  I told
him last night that he should consult a doctor, and I heard him
coughing the greater part of the night."

"Well, well!  Sorry to hear it.  I'm an old friend of his, and I've
come over by appointment to take him back to Wyndham with me.  You tell
him that----"

A harsh cough came echoing down the stairs and a voice called:

"That you, Dade?  Come right up.  It's all right, Mrs. Conway; let him
come, please."

Herbert, in silk pajamas, was standing at the head of the stairs,
looking ill indeed.  He put out a limp hand, which Newbert grasped,
crying:

"By Jove! you are sick.  Now, that's tough."

"Come into my room," invited Herbert, leading the way.  "It's a pretty
bum joint, but it's the best in the house--the best I could find in
this wretched hole of a town.  I'm mighty glad to see you, old pal,
though I may not appear to be.  Oh, blazes! but I have got a headache!"

"What have you been doing?" asked the visitor, as Herbert keeled over,
with a groan, on the bed.  "Been hitting the pace?  Been attending too
many hot suppers?  Oh, but you're sure to sport wherever you go!"

"Hitting the pace around this graveyard!" mumbled Herbert dismally.
"What are you talking about, old fel?  Why, everybody dies here nights
at nine o'clock; there's not a thing doing after that.  It's the most
forsaken, dismal place imaginable after that hour.  I'm dying of dry
rot, that's what's the matter."  He finished with a cough that seemed
to wrack him from head to feet.

"You're sick," said Newbert, with a show of sympathy.  "You've got a
cold, and it has settled on your lungs.  You're none too strong, Herb,
and you'd better look out.  I guess you won't be able to take in the
game to-day."

"Yes, I will!" cried Rackliff suddenly.  "I wouldn't miss it for a
fortune.  Oh, I've got money bet on that game, Dade."

"Well, Orv Foxhall is outside with old man Foxhall's bubble.  Great
car, that.  And you should see Orv drive her.  Oh, he does cut it out
some!  He had 'em staring when he ripped up through the center of this
old town.  We nearly ran a team down back on the road; was going better
than fifty when we came round a curve and grazed the old jay's
wheel-hubs.  I'll bet that Reuben's hair stood on its hind legs.  Ho!
ho! ho!"

Herbert sat up.  "It won't take me long to dress," he said.  "I'll go
back to Wyndham with you."

"You haven't had any breakfast."

"Don't want any.  Haven't had an appetite for three days.  I caught
this rotten cold riding a motorcycle back here from Clearport after the
game last Saturday.  I wouldn't mind if this cough didn't tear me so."

"It's tough," said Newbert.  "Can I help you?  Going to take a dip?"

"Boo!  No, I won't bathe this morning; haven't got the nerve for a cold
plunge, and a warm one might fix me so I'd catch more cold.  Just you
make yourself comfortable as you can while I'm getting into my duds."

Three times while dressing Herbert was compelled to sit down to rest,
and Newbert declared that his friend seemed to be pretty nearly "all
in."

"I certainly am," agreed Rackliff; "I'm up against it.  Never was
knocked out like this before.  Why, I can't even smoke a cigarette, it
makes me bark so.  You can imagine how tough that is on me.  Sometimes
I'm half crazy for a smoke--I'm shaking all over; but when I try it I
just have to quit by the time I've taken three whiffs."

"You've smoked too many of those things, that's what's the matter.
Used to hit 'em up myself; thought it real devilish.  Never took any
real satisfaction in it, though."

"That was because you didn't inhale; they're no good unless you do."

"They're no good if you do; give me a cigar every time."

"You got my last letter all right?" asked Herbert, selecting a necktie
from his abundant supply.

"Oh, sure.  I've put all the bunch wise, too.  They're wondering how I
got hold of the information, but I didn't give you away, old pal.  I
reckon mebbe Foxy and Snead suspect now, but they won't say anything."

"You've got to win," said Herbert, carefully knotting his tie at the
mirror.  "My old man is kicking over being touched up for cash so
often; says he can't see how I spend so much in this quiet place.  I've
bet every sou of the last amount he sent me on your old baseball team,
and if you don't take this game----"

"We will, don't worry about that.  We could have done so anyhow, but of
course you've helped make it a dead-cold certainty.  If you've got any
friends here who----"

"Friends!" sneered Rackliff; "friends among these country yokels!
Don't make me laugh, for it might start me coughing again."

"But you said you let a chap in on the Barville deal.  He----"

"He wasn't a friend of mine," said Herbert scornfully; "he was only a
chap I wanted to use.  I've let another dub into this deal, but I
didn't do so simply to befriend him--not on your natural.  Perhaps
you've heard of him--Phil Springer.  He expected to be the star slab
artist on the great Oakdale nine this season, but he unwisely coached
another fellow to assist him as second-string pitcher, and now the
other man has pushed him into second place--and he has quit, dead sore.
He's an egotistical yap, and it simply killed him to death to have his
pupil step right over his head."

"What's your idea in boosting him by putting him next to a winning
proposition?"

"Perhaps I can use him, too.  At any rate, he can pitch some, and by
keeping him raw and working him the way I am, I'm weakening the
pitching staff.  See?"

"Oh, yes," muttered Newbert.  "I swear you're a clever schemer, Herb."

"Thanks.  You see, I induced this man Springer to let me have seven
bones to bet against Oakdale, and now, no matter how much they may
happen to need him, as long as he has his money at stake, they can't
coax him into the game to-day.  They may try to do that if you fellows
get to batting Grant good and plenty.  Oh, I've taken pains to
forestall in every direction, for I've simply got to make a killing on
this go.  How's the weather?"

"Fine, but you'll need to wear an overcoat in the auto.  I didn't take
one, but it's rather cool whistling through the air at the rate Foxy
drives.  Besides, you've got to look out for that cold.  Better wear a
cloth overcoat now than a wooden one by and by."

"Don't talk that way," shivered Herbert.  "I'm not anxious to shuffle
off."

He brought his overcoat from the wardrobe, and Newbert helped him into
it, after which they descended the stairs together.




CHAPTER XXVI.

THE PLUNGE FROM THE BRIDGE.

Herbert was introduced to Foxhall and Snead.  The former, with goggles
pushed up on his forehead, pulled off his gauntlet glove to shake
hands, saying he was mighty glad to meet Dade Newbert's chum, of whom
he'd heard so much from Newbert's lips.

"Yes," gurgled Snead, as he also shook hands; "according to Dade,
you're a warm old scout.  Get right in here with me, and hang on when
Foxy turns on the juice, for there'll be something doing.  I imagine
we'll touch only a few of the very elevated spots on our way back,
judging by the way he cut it out coming over.  If you're nervous----"

"Don't worry about me," said Rackliff, as he settled himself beside the
fat fellow.  "I'm simply dying for something to stir up my blood and
set it circulating."

Foxhall adjusted his goggles, switched on the current, and pressed a
button that started the engine.

"Ho! ho!  We're off!" cried Newbert.  "Just watch 'em rubber when we
zip down through town.  There's a bump this side of the bridge; hang on
when we strike it, Herb."

Foxhall turned the car, yanking it round in a see-saw that was hard on
transmission and brakes and tires, and started with a jerk that gave a
snap to the necks of his three companions, cutting out the muffler as
he shifted swiftly through the gears into direct drive.  When the main
street was reached the reckless youth scarcely slowed down at all to
take the turn, and the car came near skidding into the gutter.

"Isn't he the careless creature!" laughed Snead.  "He always drives
this way, and he's never had an accident."

Past Roger Eliot's home and the white Methodist church they whizzed,
the automobile gathering speed on the down grade and obtaining enough
momentum to carry it a considerable distance even though the power
should be cut off and the brakes applied sufficiently hard to lock the
rear wheels.  With the discordant electric horn snarling a demand for a
clear road, the foolish young driver tore up the dust through the very
heart of the village, regardless of his own safety and absolutely
ignoring the safety or rights of others.  The postoffice spun by on the
left; the machine shot across the small square; down the steepest grade
of the hill it flew toward the bridge.

Despite the fact that he pretended to be as serene and unconcerned as
his companions, who, perhaps, did not realize the danger, Herbert
Rackliff was not fully at his ease; for he knew that such driving
through a place where there were intersecting streets with blind
corners was folly indeed.

As the bridge was approached the road swung to the left.  At the very
end of the bridge an old building cut off the view of the greater part
of the structure from any one approaching from the main portion of the
village.

The "bump" of which Newbert had given warning was struck with
sufficient force to send the boys bouncing from their seats, and the
shock seemed to disturb Foxhall's hold on the steering wheel, for the
car swerved unpleasantly.  The young driver brought it back with a
yank, and then----

"Look out!" screamed Herbert, jumping up in the tonneau.

A woman of middle age, seated in a rickety old wagon, with a child on
either side of her, was driving a young and half-broken horse into
Oakdale.  The young horse snorted, attempted to turn round, and then
began to back up, cramping the wagon across the bridge.  The woman
struggled vainly with the reins, in a perfect panic of terror, and the
children screamed, clinging to her.

Foxhall knew he could not stop the car, and to his credit let it be
said that he did his best to avoid striking and smashing the wagon--and
succeeded.  Success, however, was costly; for, in attempting to turn
aside and shoot past, the wheel was pulled too sharply, and the machine
struck the wooden railing of the bridge, through which it cut as if the
railing had been built of cardboard.

Dade Newbert was the only one who managed to leap from the machine ere
it crashed through that railing and shot off in a clean leap for the
water below.  Unimpeded by any barrier, Newbert jumped, struck the
ground, plunged forward, and went sliding at full length almost beneath
the wheels of the old wagon.  Rackliff tried to jump, but he was on the
wrong side, and the tonneau door bothered him; however, as the machine
fell, with Snead sitting paralyzed in his place and Foxhall clinging to
the wheel, Herbert succeeded in flinging himself out over the side.

Surprising to relate, Dade Newbert was not seriously hurt, and, still
retaining a certain presence of mind, he scrambled back from the wagon
wheels and sat up on the bridge, covered with dirt, a rather woe-begone
spectacle.  He was still sitting thus when the horse, having turned
about at last without upsetting the wagon, went galloping away across
the bridge; and he continued to sit there until some boys came running
down from the village, shouting as they ran, and asked him if he was
hurt.

Then Dade scrambled up.  "Oh, mercy!" he gasped.  "Don't mind me.  I'm
all right.  The other fellers--they'll be drowned!"

He ran to the side of the bridge and looked over.  Foxhall was swimming
toward the nearest bank, with Snead puffing and blowing behind him; but
Rackliff, who had struck on his stomach sufficiently hard to have the
breath knocked out of him, was being carried away by the current,
struggling feebly.

With the idea of leaping in to help Herbert, Newbert pulled off his
coat; but before he could make the plunge some one flung him aside with
the sweep of a muscular arm and went shooting headlong like an arrow
toward the surface of the river.

People were running toward the bridge from various directions.  Some of
the boys started down to help the swimmers out when they should reach
the shore; but no one else ventured to plunge into the river.

The one who had made that unhesitating plunge was Rodney Grant.
Springer, who had reached the spot a moment ahead of Rod, saw Grant as
he shot downward with hands outstretched and palms pressed together.

"Wh-why didn't I do it?" muttered Phil.  "I didn't th-think quick
enough."

He saw Grant's head appear above the surface and beheld the Texan
striking out toward Rackliff with strong strokes that sent him forging
through the water.  The gathering crowd on the bridge began to cheer
the rescuer.

"Of course!" whispered Phil savagely.  "It's another feather in his
cap!  He'll help the chap out of the drink, and everybody in town will
say it was a nervy and daring piece of heroism.  Oh, I'm slow!  I lost
my chance!"

At that moment his bitterness toward Grant was so intense that he felt
he could unhesitatingly go to any extreme to injure him.  His lips
curled back from his teeth in a semblance of a snarl; he watched the
Texan reach the spot where Rackliff's head had an instant before
disappeared from view, saw him likewise plunge beneath the surface, and
beheld him rise, farther down the stream, with the still weakly
struggling fellow secured by a grip upon his coat collar at the back of
the neck.  Deftly the rescuer swung Herbert round, face upward, upon
his back, and, holding him thus, with mouth and nose above the water,
began swimming toward the nearest shore.

The rapidly increasing crowd of spectators on the bridge cheered still
more vociferously.

"It's getting to be a regular sus-stunt of his, this rescuing people
from drowning," muttered Springer.  "Hear them yell!  Bah!  What fools
people are!  Why didn't I think quick enough to get ahead of him!"

A short distance below the bridge Foxhall was wading out of the water,
disdaining assistance.  Snead, however, did not spurn the hands
extended to him when he came floundering and gurgling toward dry ground.

A dozen persons were running down toward the point for which Rodney
Grant was heading, all eager to take some part in the exciting rescue.
Of the boys who had rushed to the scene, Springer was the only one who
remained on the bridge.  He waited until he beheld Grant stand on his
feet in shallow water and wade toward the bank, bearing Rackliff in his
arms.

"I don't propose to hang around and see them slobber over him," he
whispered hoarsely; "so I think I'll beat it, get a move on, dig."

As he turned away his eyes fell on a folded sheet of paper lying at his
feet, and within three feet of the paper he discovered a pocket
notebook.  He picked up the paper and the notebook.

"Some one of that bunch dropped these," he decided.  "Oh, but they were
lucky to come out of this scrape alive!  I think this will cuc-cure
that idiot Foxhall of doing fancy stunts with his old man's gas cart."

Mechanically he unfolded the paper.  There was writing upon it, and
Phil was suddenly chained in his tracks as his senses took in the
meaning of those several short sentences, each of which was written on
a separate line:


"Bat held in right hand means hit and run.

"In left hand, try the steal.

"In both hands, perpendicular, play safe.

"In both hands, horizontal, will sacrifice.

"In right hand, handle down, squeeze play."


This was as far as Phil read, but the list covered the entire page,
being condensed, with the lines very close together, at the bottom,
evidently in order to get everything on that side of the sheet.
Springer's eyes threatened to pop out of his head and his under jaw
sagged.

"Great snakes!" he gasped.  "These are our playing signals!"

For a short time he stood there dazed, unconscious of the excitement
near at hand, deaf to the cheering of the crowd.  He had thought at
first that the paper, like the notebook, must be the property of one of
those boys who had occupied the automobile, but, with the discovery of
what was written on that paper, he slowly arrived at the conclusion
that his original conviction was erroneous.  The writing looked
familiar, too, although at that time he could not seem to recall the
person whose chirography it resembled.

"The notebook," he finally decided; "that may tell who it belongs to,
for doubtless the same chap dropped both."

On the fly leaf of the notebook he found the name of Dade Newbert.  He
had refolded the paper, and was still staring at the name written in
the notebook when Newbert himself, greatly excited, rushed toward him,
crying:

"I say, that's mine!  Dropped it out of my coat pocket when I pulled
the coat off.  Give it to me."

He was still carrying his coat in his hand.

"Then you're Nun-Newbert, are you?" questioned Springer, who until this
day had never set eyes on the chap.

"Yes, yes.  Gimme that!  The paper, too.  Have you----"

"Just picked them up," said Springer coolly, as he surrendered the
folded paper.  "Lul-looked in the book to see who it belonged to,
that's all."

Newbert seemed to take a breath of relief.  "I didn't know but you had
been----  Oh, fudge!  I dropped them only a minute ago.  Say, we've
kicked up a rumpus around here, haven't we?  That fellow who pulled
Rack out of the drink saved me from getting a soaking, as I was just
going overboard after Herb.  Rack thought he wouldn't take a bath this
morning, but he did, just the same.  Ho! ho! ho!"  The cause for the
laugh seemed to be nervousness and excitement rather than mirth.

"Rackliff!" muttered Springer, struck by sudden conviction.

"Old chum of mine.  Don't suppose this little experience will do his
cold any good, I got Orv Foxhall to come over here for Herb this
morning with old man Foxy's bubble that's down there at the bottom of
the canal, where it's liable to stay for some time.  I reckon we'll all
travel back to Wyndham by steam cars."  He turned and ran toward the
crowd that was coming up from the scene of the rescue.

"Rackliff!" muttered Springer once more.

He knew now who had written those signals on that sheet of paper.




CHAPTER XXVII.

A REBELLIOUS CONSCIENCE.

The game between Oakdale and Wyndham was in progress, and, wretchedly
miserable, Phil Springer sat watching from the bleachers.  Never before
in all his life had he felt so much like a contemptible criminal, a
dastardly traitor to his team, against which, through the agency of
Herbert Rackliff, he had wagered money.  It was not, however, the fact
that he had made such a wager that troubled him most, although at this
moment, deep down in his heart, he was sincerely ashamed of that.

The principal cause of his misery, the reason why he kept telling
himself over and over that he was a cowardly sneak, was his knowledge
that the playing signals of the visitors had been betrayed to the home
team, and that, taking advantage of the knowledge thus obtained,
Wyndham was prepared to block Oakdale's every play, and was doing this
in a manner which appeared to the average spectator like almost uncanny
foresight and cleverness at the game.

In the very first inning, with only one out and a runner on third, the
Oakdale batter, taking his instructions from Captain Eliot, had walked
out to the plate with the bat held in his right hand, handle downward,
which was the signal for the squeeze play.  But Wyndham had known what
was coming quite as well as Oakdale, and Newbert, pitching the ball
beyond the batsman's reach, gave the catcher every chance to get the
runner as he came lunging hopelessly toward the pan.

The second inning, also, had opened promisingly for Oakdale, but the
enemy's knowledge of the meaning of those signals had made it a simple
matter to bring that auspicious opening to a fruitless and discouraging
close.

Meanwhile Wyndham got a run in the first, and in the third she pushed
two more happy fellows over the rubber, aided by errors; for Grant was
pitching in excellent form, and not a tally of the three was really
earned.

The sight of Roy Hooker, wearing Springer's own suit and sitting on the
bench as a spare pitcher, did not serve in any way to make Phil more
comfortable.  He knew that by every bond of loyalty and decency he
should be there himself when he was not working on the slab.  Like some
other fellows, in the past he had occasionally laughed and joked about
Roy's aspirations to become a pitcher; but now, at last having gotten
his eyes open to some of his faults, and having succeeded in
restraining his jealousy of others who were in some respects his
superiors, Hooker was pursuing a course that had already led him to be
accepted in place of the deserter.

Phil held himself aloof from the crowd of sympathizers with the team
who had come over from Oakdale to root for the crimson; he did not even
wear the school colors.  When he saw them waving their bright banners
and heard them cheering he thought, with a heavy heart and no feeling
of satisfaction, that they little knew how utterly useless their
enthusiasm was.  The game was fixed; the cards were stacked, and there
was no chance for Oakdale to win.

He bit his lip as he saw Grant working steadily and coolly on the slab,
doing splendidly, little dreaming that, as the situation stood, he
might "wallop his wing off" with scarcely a ghost of a prospect that
Oakdale could overcome the lead the locals had already obtained.

"I'm glad--as far as _he_ is concerned," Springer whispered to himself;
"but I'm sus-sorry for the rest of the fellows.  It's a rotten piece of
business, and Rackliff ought to be ashamed of himself."

Where was Rackliff?  He knew Herbert had come to Wyndham after changing
his clothes for dry ones, following his rescue from the river by Grant,
but Phil had not put eyes on the fellow since his arrival on the scene
of the game.  It seemed very strange that Rackliff should not be
somewhere on hand to watch the progress of the contest.

"One thing is sure," was the promise the unhappy youth made himself,
"I'll tell him just what I think of him when I get a good chance, and I
won't mum-mince my words.  Oh, I wish I'd never let him have that money
to bet on Wyndham!  If I hadn't done that----"

He stopped short, thinking that, even though he had not wagered his
money, his hatred for Rod Grant and his desire to see the fellow pitch
a losing game would be sufficient to keep him silent concerning the
betrayal of the signals.  He sought to convince himself that, as he was
not concerned in that wretched piece of work, he was in no way
responsible.  His rebellious conscience, however, kept prodding him
with the knowledge that he was "an accessory to the crime."

Again and again he longed to rise and shout a warning to Eliot--yearned
to tell him loudly, that all might hear, that Wyndham knew Oakdale's
signals.  If he were to do such a thing as that--do it dramatically
before that great crowd--would it not serve to restore him to sudden
popularity with the fellows who now held him in contempt because of the
petty, peevish, jealous course he had pursued?

"I wish they'd ha-hammer Grant out," he muttered.  "If they'd only do
that, I'd warn Eliot.  Of course I wouldn't give it away that I knew
abub-bout the crookedness all the time, for that would queer me worse
than ever.  I've got to kuk-keep that a dark secret, sure enough."

He wondered what explanation he could make if he should warn Eliot;
surely he would have to tell how he came to believe that Wyndham was
wise to the signals of her opponents.  There seemed only one reasonable
story for him to put forward: he would be compelled to claim that he
had overheard some persons in the crowd telling each other that such
was the case.

And that would be a lie!

"I lied once on account of that fellow Grant, and got caught at it,"
thought Phil.  "If I should tell Eliot now, Rackliff might----  But he
doesn't know that I know he gave our signals to Wyndham.  Still, if I
come out publicly and warn Roger, Rackliff may get sore and blow around
that part of the money he bet on Wyndham belonged to me."

Thus, wavering, tortured and miserable, he followed the progress of the
game, realizing more and more as it went on that Oakdale had absolutely
no chance at all while the players of the other side could see and
understand every batting and base-running signal that was given.
Fighting against such odds without knowledge of the fact seemed to Phil
to be a most outrageous thing, and he pledged himself that, from this
day forward, he would have no more dealings with Rackliff.

As it was not necessary for the first batter in an inning to signal,
Wyndham could not "lay for him" by the aid of knowledge gained in
advance, and to open the fourth Sile Cane strode forth and fell on one
of Newbert's slants, straightening it out handsomely for two sacks.

Grant, following, took his cue from Eliot and signalled Crane that he
would bunt, on which sacrifice the lanky fellow was to take third.

Springer's teeth grated together as he beheld the entire Wyndham
infield prepare to handle Rod's bunt, while Newbert drove Josh back and
held him as close as possible to the second sack.  Suddenly the ball
was whipped over the pan, high and close, in spite of which the batter
succeeded in sending it rolling heavily into the diamond.  But Newbert,
racing forward as soon as the sphere left his fingers, scooped it
cleanly with one hand and snapped it across to third without
straightening up.  The baseman was covering the sack in a position to
get the long-geared runner, and, catching the ball, he put it on to
Crane with considerable viciousness as Josh slid.

"Out at third!" shouted the umpire, with up-flung hand.

The attempted sacrifice had been turned into a miserable failure solely
because the locals had known precisely what their opponents would try
to do.

"I can't stand much more of this!" groaned Springer aloud.  "It's worse
than robbery!  I'll have to get out."

Hearing the words, a rejoicing Wyndham sympathizer slapped him heavily
on the shoulder.  "Don't take it so hard," laughingly advised the
familiar fellow.  "It's just what everybody expected."

"Oh, is that so?" snapped Phil resentfully, turning his head to look up
at the chap.  "Well, if this was a square game they might get their
expectations stepped on."

"A square game!" retorted the other.  "What do you mean by that?
What's the matter with it?  So far, it's the cleanest game I've seen
this year.

"It's the dirtiest game I ever saw!  It's cuc-crooked from the start.
Oakdale hasn't a sus-show."

"Of course she hasn't; she's outclassed.  You Oakdalers are poor
losers; you always squeal."

"Outclassed--nothing!" fumed Phil.  "Oakdale is playing just as good
baseball as Wyndham--and playing it on the level."

"And by that I suppose you mean that Wyndham isn't playing on the
level?"

"You don't have to gug-guess twice; that's what I mean."

"Oh, go crawl into your hole!  There hasn't been a kick.  Anybody can
see that we're playing all round you simply because we've got the best
team.  Dade Newbert is a dandy."

"Yes, he's a dandy at this sort of baseball.  I happen to know just
what he is, and a fellow who'll do what he's dud-done to win this game
hasn't any right to pitch on a respectable nine."

"You're dotty.  Look here, you better be careful about shooting off
that sort of talk, or you may have a chance to prove it."

"I can bub-back up anything I've said," declared Phil, now thoroughly
aroused.  "I'm dead onto the whole dirty deal.  If I should tell Roger
Eliot what I know you'd sus-see a change in the complexion of this game
in short order."

"Oh, really!" scoffed the incredulous Wyndhamite.  "If you know so
much, why don't you tell it?  If you know anything that amounts to
anything, you'll tell it--unless you're crooked yourself."

That cut deeply, and Springer choked back further heated words which
were boiling to his lips.  What right had he to rail against Newbert?
Under the circumstances, his failure to warn his former teammates made
him fully as dishonest and deserving of contempt as the Wyndham
pitcher--far more so.  The white anger of his face turned to a crimson
flush of shame.

Silenced, he saw Wyndham, ready to block the hit and run, take Cooper's
zipping grounder and turn into a double play what possibly might
otherwise have been a safety.  In that moment Springer's mind was made
up, and he immediately left his seat on the bleachers.

"I'll tell Eliot the truth at any cost," he muttered.




CHAPTER XXVIII.

WHEN THE SIGNALS WERE CHANGED.

While Phil Springer was making his way round to the Oakdale side of the
field an accident took place.  The first Wyndham batter to face Grant
in that inning hit the ball squarely and hard, driving it on a dead
line toward the pitcher, but a trifle to his right.  Grant might have
dodged, but, instead of that, he tried to catch that red-hot liner with
his bare right hand, and the ball split two of his fingers.
Nevertheless, he stopped it, caught it up with his left hand when it
fell to the ground, and tossed it to Sile Crane at first in time for a
put-out.

Rod showed his blood-streaming hand to the umpire, who promptly called
"time."  Then the Texan walked toward the bench, Eliot running to join
him.

"How bad are you hurt, old man?" asked the captain anxiously.

"I don't know," was the answer.  "Didn't know I was hurt at all until I
saw the claret spouting; reckoned my paw was benumbed a bit, and that
was all."

But when water was poured over those bleeding fingers and Roger saw
just what had happened to them, he turned quickly to Hooker, saying in
a low tone:

"Get a ball, Hook, and warm up.  You'll have to pitch the game out."

A doctor pressed through the crowd that had surrounded the injured
player.

"Fix these busted fingers up quick, doc," urged Grant, "so I can get
back into the game without delaying things too long."

"You'll play no more baseball to-day, my boy," said the physician; "nor
for some days to come.  You're out of it, and you may as well accept
the alternative with good grace."

And so Springer saw Hooker go in to pitch, aware that only for his
jealousy and blind folly he would have been the one called upon to
replace the injured chap.

"Serves me right," he muttered.  Which was proof sufficient that he was
getting his eyes open.

Naturally, Hooker was very nervous, although secretly elated by the
opportunity to pitch in this most important game.  Eliot talked with
him a moment or two about signals, finishing by placing a hand on his
shoulder and saying:

"Now, keep cool, Hook, and take your time.  Mind my signals, and do
your best for control.  It's your chance to show the stuff that's in
you.  Don't be afraid of Wyndham, and don't listen to the crowd.  Close
your ears and eyes to everything outside of the game.  You may surprise
yourself and everybody else, if you keep your head."

There was something in Roger's words and manner that proved very
steadying to Roy, and he toed the slab with an outward show of
confidence, whether or not he was inwardly perturbed.  The majority of
the Oakdale players were much cast down, however, and it was a rather
feeble and heartless cheer that the rooters with the crimson banners
gave the substitute pitcher.

Hooker pitched two balls wide, and then put one over; which the batsman
hit, rolling a grounder into the diamond for Chipper Cooper to handle.
Chipper managed to get it and wing it across to Crane for a clean
put-out.

"Two gone, fellows," called Eliot.  "We'll keep right on playing
baseball.  Get this next man, now."

The next man hoisted a long fly to center, where Ben Stone, sure as
fate, took charge of it; and Hooker, now really quite calm and
confident, jogged to the bench.

"See if you can't start something, Sleuth," urged Roger as Piper found
his bat.  "We've got to make some runs pretty soon, and we may as well
begin now."

Springer, walking swiftly out to the bench, spoke Eliot's name.  "I
want a few words with you, Roger," he said; "I've gug-gug-got
something--something important to--to tell you."  He stumbled more than
usual over his words, and his face was very pale; but his manner was
resolute and determined.

A slight frown fell on the face of the Oakdale captain as he turned his
eyes upon the speaker.  "What is it, Springer?" he asked almost
repellantly.

"Just sus-step one side a bit so I can tell you without anybody else
hearing," begged Phil.

Roger complied, lending an ear to the startling information Springer
had to impart, but, after his usual composure, retaining his
self-possessed atmosphere to such a degree that scarcely any one who
chanced to be watching them could have dreamed how disturbing that
information really was.

"How do you happen to know about this, Phil?" Eliot asked.

"Don't ask me.  I can't tut-tell you now.  But it's dead straight,
Roger, and Oakdale hasn't a ghost of a show as long as you continue to
stick by those signals."

"We'll change them right away."

Piper had succeeded in bumping a slow grounder into the diamond, on
which he scudded for first with amazing speed, for he was really a
splendid sprinter.  The ball was handled a bit too slowly, giving the
Oakdale lad time to reach the sack by the narrowest margin.

"Never mind that, fellows," grinned Orv Foxhall from his position at
second.  "I'll get him when he comes down this way.  He may be pretty
speedy, but----"

"He won't run off the bridge," cried Cooper, on the coaching line.
"Your speed has made you pawn things more than once, and now you've
gone and soaked your daddy's automobubble."

"Bright boy," scoffed Foxhall.  "I always enjoy it when you make a
choke, but I'd enjoy it more if you'd make one that would finish you."

Sile Crane came running down from the bench, catching Cooper by the
shoulders and whispering something into his ear.  Chipper looked
surprised, and then, as Crane was jogging back, in violation of the
rules, the coacher ran out to first, grabbed Piper and whispered to him.

"Hey?" gasped Sleuth, staring at Chub Tuttle, who was walking to the
plate with his bat held in a manner which seemed to indicate that he
would bunt the ball.  "What's the----"

"Shut up!" hissed Chipper.  "Mind!  Get a lead now!  Be ready!"  Then
he skipped back over the chalk-mark before the umpire could order him
back.

The Wyndham infielders crept forward, crouching and ready.  Newbert,
contemptuous of Tuttle's skill as a batter, handed up an easy one.
Instead of bunting, the fat lad rapped out a little fly, that sailed
over the heads of the in-drawn infielders, and Cooper, having obtained
a good start, went twinkling over second and on to third.

Wyndham had been deceived, much to the annoyance of the local players,
who looked at one another inquiringly.  It was rather remarkable that
Tuttle had not followed his own signal, plainly given.  It was
possible, however, that, seeing the infielders prepared to take his
bunt, the fellow had decided at the last moment to do something else.

Nelson followed Tuttle, and he held his bat in a manner that seemed to
proclaim he would "take one," giving Chub a chance to try to steal
second on the first ball pitched.  Believing this was the program,
Newbert whipped over a beautiful straight ball for a called strike.

But Nelson did not let that handsome one pass; it was just the kind he
liked, and he fell on it with great glee, smashing a liner into the
outfield, between right and center.

Piper, laughing, scored at a jog trot; while Tuttle, his fists
clenched, his eyes glaring, his cheeks puffed out like toy balloons,
galloped over the sacks with all the grace of a frightened elephant.

"Score, Chub--score!" shrieked Crane, who had pranced down onto the
coaching line back of third, and who was waving his long arms
grotesquely.  "Make it or bust!  You kin do it!"

Tuttle continued to the plate, where, raising a great cloud of dust, he
arrived on an attempted slide, a moment ahead of the ball, being
declared safe.

The Wyndham crowd was filled with dismay; the Oakdalers with the
crimson banners were leaping and shrieking on the bleachers.  The local
players knew something was wrong, and they showed the greatest
confusion and consternation.  Dade Newbert was making some remarks that
would not look well in print.

Captain Eliot had instructed his players to abandon the use of signals
for the time being, and to bat and run bases wholly as their judgment
might dictate, and this sudden change threatened totally to demoralize
the Wyndhamites.

Not a man was out, and the visitors, having already secured two
tallies, had a runner moored at third.  Berlin Barker stepped forth
briskly, urging the umpire to keep the game in motion, his bat held as
if he intended to try for a safe bingle.  As matters stood, it seemed
logical that he should do this, and the Wyndhamites got ready for him.

But Berlin, trusting the speedy Nelson to take advantage of it, bunted
the first ball.  His confidence in Nelson was not misplaced, Jack
sprinting to the plate, while the baffled home players bestirred
themselves too late even to get Barker, whose bunt went for a safe hit.

The score was tied.

Foxhall, rushing up to Newbert, whispered excitedly:

"They've changed their signals!  That's what's fooling us.  We've got
to----"

There was a yell.  Observing that second base was left practically
unguarded, Barker scooted down from first, and he got there ahead of
the shortstop, who made an effort to cover the sack.

"This is a great year for high flying," laughingly whooped Cooper.
"Ten thousand feet in an aeroplane isn't so much; why, this whole
Wyndham bunch is up in the air higher than that this very minute.
They're liable to come down hard, too."

Like Foxhall, the Wyndham captain had decided that Oakdale was no
longer using the known code of batting and base-running signals, and he
made haste to warn his players to place no further reliance upon the
information they had obtained concerning those signals.

"We want another run to take the lead, Stoney," said Eliot as Ben
stepped into the batter's box.

Stone took in the situation and also did the unexpected, dropping
another bunt in front of the pan.  The catcher got the ball in time to
throw Stone out, but the batter's object was obtained, for Barker had
sailed along to third.

The Oakdaleites on the seats implored Eliot to get a hit, and Roger
responded by cutting a grounder through into short right field, which
let Barker score and placed the visitors in the lead.

Newbert's face was white as chalk.  Up to this inning he had been
insolent in his self-confidence and contempt for the visitors, but the
strain now put upon him proved too much, and he hit Crane in the ribs,
following with a pass to Hooker, which filled the corners.

Then, amid the tumultuous cheering and laughter of the Oakdale crowd.
Captain Holley sent Newbert to the bench and called Twitt Crowell forth
to take his place.




CHAPTER XXIX

PHIL GETS HIS EYES OPEN

"Too bad little Herbie Rackliff isn't here to witness the fate of his
chum, the wonderful pitcher from Boston," laughed Jack Nelson.

"Where is Rackliff?" questioned Stone.

"Why, don't you know?  He's sick abed; just went down flat after
reaching this town, and had to have a doctor."

With the bases full, Chipper Cooper longed for a handsome clean drive;
but fortune seemed to favor Crowell, for when Chipper did hit the ball
he simply rolled it straight at the man on the slab, who scooped it and
snapped it back to the catcher with Eliot only a little more than
halfway down the line from third.  Taking the ball, with one foot on
the plate, the catcher hummed it past Cooper's ear to first, completing
a double play.

Of course the downcast Wyndhamites awoke and cheered, but the visitors,
although disappointed by the abrupt ending of their "streak," felt very
well satisfied.

"Now keep steady and play the game, boys," called Eliot.  "This is the
game we want to win."

Springer, literally a-tingle with joy over the turn the game had taken,
watched Hooker, who was given excellent support, pull through the fifth
without letting more than one man reach first base.

"I'm glad," muttered Phil.  "I don't care if it does cost me seven
dollars, for Wyndham deserves to be beaten."

Eliot, removing his cage at the end of the inning, looked for Springer
and found him.  "Come here, Phil," he called, beckoning.

Phil hesitated, more than half disposed to pretend that he did not hear
and to get away from that locality at once; but, realizing he would
find it necessary to face Roger's questions sooner or later, he finally
plucked up courage to answer the summons.  Greatly to his relief, the
captain of the nine did not question him then; instead of that, Roger
said:

"I'm much obliged to you, old fellow, for putting me wise, although I'm
ashamed that I didn't tumble to the fact myself.  I hope we can win
this game now; we must win it somehow.  Grant is knocked out for some
time to come, and there's only Hooker left to depend on.  If anything
happens to Hook, it's all off; there's no one to take his place."

Suddenly Phil understood what Roger was driving at, and his pale face
flamed with color.  "If I can----" he began eagerly, and then stopped,
choking a bit.

"I thought so!" exclaimed Roger, with great satisfaction; "I thought
you must be still loyal and true.  I've got to pay close attention to
the run of the game.  Won't you find Grant and ask him to let you have
his suit?  Get into it as soon as you can, and hurry back here; for
Wyndham is liable to solve Hook's delivery any minute.  Hustle, old
chap--do."

With this admonition, he turned to give his attention to his players.

"Still loyal and true!" muttered Phil.  "If he only knew the truth!
Well, I suppose he'll find out before long, for Rackliff will blow on
me.  I'll have to face it, that's all.  I wonder wh-where Grant is."

A few moments later he found the fellow he was seeking, the doctor
having just finished bandaging Rod's injured fingers.  Springer
hesitated, feeling that it was almost impossible for him to approach
the Texan, and, as he was wavering, Grant, still wearing his playing
suit, started for the Oakdale bench.

"I--I bub-beg your pardon," stammered Phil as Rodney was passing.

"Oh!" exclaimed the young Texan, stopping short.  "Is it you--Phil?
What's the matter?"

"I--want--your--suit."  Springer could not meet Rod's eyes, and he
could feel his cheeks burning; for over him had swept a full and
complete understanding of his own folly in permitting jealousy to lead
him into the course he had been pursuing.

"My--my suit?" said Rod, as if he did not quite understand.  "You----"

"Eliot sus-sent me for it," Phil hastened to explain.  "You know he
hasn't a spare man on the bench now, and if anything should happen to
another pup-player----"

"Come on," said Rod, turning sharply.  "The dressing room is over back
of the seats here."

In the dressing room Grant got out of the playing suit as quickly as
possible, while Springer stripped off his street clothes and
unhesitatingly donned each piece as it was tossed to him.  Both were
silent, for the situation was such that neither could seem to find
words to fit it.  However, having put on Rod's clothes down to the
brass-clipped pitching shoes and being on the point of leaving the
Texan struggling slowly into his everyday garments, Phil stopped and
half turned, after taking a step toward the door.

"I'm sus-sorry you got your fingers busted," he stated in a low tone.

"Thanks," returned Rod, without looking up.

"He despises me," whispered Springer, as soon as he was outside.
"Well, perhaps I deserve it."

At the end of the tiered seats he came upon Herbert Rackliff, who had
just arrived at the field.  Herbert's eyes widened on beholding
Springer in that suit.  His face was pale save for two burning spots
upon his hollow cheeks.

"What the dickens does this mean?" exclaimed Rackliff, his wondering
eyes flashing over Phil from head to heels.

"Nothing," was the answer, "only Grant's hurt, and I'm going onto the
bub-bench as spare man--at Eliot's request."

An odd smile twisted Rackliff's lips.  "Now wouldn't that kill you
dead!" he coughed.  "At Eliot's request!  Ha! ha! ha!  If he only knew!
But of course he doesn't suspect, for I haven't given you away.  Well,
this is a joke!"

"I'm in a hurry, so I'll hustle along."

"Wait a jiffy.  I've just got here.  Sort of went to pieces after
landing in this town, and they stowed me in bed, with a pill-slinger
looking at my tongue, taking my pulse and asking a lot of tiresome
questions.  He even sounded my lungs, though I protested against it.
And then he told me I was to stay in bed, and left a lot of nasty
medicine for me to take.  I stayed in bed as long as I could, knowing
this game was going on.  Now that I'm here, how does it stand?"

"Your great pup-pitcher, Newbert, was batted out in the fifth inning."

"What's that?  I don't believe it!"

"It's a fact."

"The score--what's the score?"

"It was four to three in Oakdale's favor at the end of the fifth."

"Rotten!" snarled Herbert, and a tempestuous burst of coughing shook
him frightfully.

When Phil started away the still coughing lad grasped his arm and
restrained him.

"You--you wait!" gasped Rackliff.  "Wyndham must win this game--she
just must, that's all.  Did you say Grant was hurt?"

"Yes."

"How much?"

"Enough to knock him out; he got two fingers busted by a liner hot from
the bub-bat."

"Good!  Then I suppose that dub Hooker is pitching now?"

"Yes."

"Well, if I had any more money I'd be willing to bet the limit that
Wyndham gets to him, all right.  He'll get his."

"Perhaps not.  He fuf-finished the fifth in style."

"He'll get his," repeated Herbert positively.  "Then you'll be run in.
That's why Eliot wants you.  That will fix things beautifully.  You
know what to do."

"Yes, I know what to do," said Phil slowly, "and I shall do it if I get
the chance."

"That's the talk!  You can do it cleverly enough so no one will suspect
that you're throwing the game, and we'll win----"

"If I'm put in to pitch," said Springer, still uttering his words in
that slow and positive manner, "I shall do my level best to hold
Wyndham down and give Oakdale a chance to win the game."

"You--you'll what?" spluttered Rackliff incredulously.  "Why, you're
joking!  Your money, seven dollars which you gave me, is bet on
Wyndham.  If Oakdale wins you lose the seven."

"If I could do anything to help Oakdale win, I'd do it, even if I stood
to lose seven hundred dollars by it," declared Phil.




CHAPTER XXX.

THE GREATEST VICTORY.

The sixth inning was over before Springer reached the Oakdale bench.
He found the boys in high spirits, for they had gathered two more
tallies by taking Crowell's measure, while again Hooker had pulled
through without being scored upon, which made the scorers' record six
to three in favor of the visitors at the beginning of the seventh.
Oakdale seemed to have the game bagged.

When the seventh passed with the score unchanged on either side and
Hooker apparently "still going strong," it began to look as if Springer
would get no chance to do any pitching in that game.  But baseball is
sometimes most uncertain, which is one reason why the game is so
popular in America.  In the last of the eighth, with one man gone, the
locals finally took Hooker's measure and began batting him to all
quarters of the field.  Almost before the gasping, excited spectators
could realize it, Wyndham had made one run and the bases were all
occupied, with one of the strongest hitters of the home team at bat.

Springer had limbered up, with Stone catching him, in the first of the
seventh while Oakdale was at bat, and now Eliot stepped upon the plate,
giving a signal which meant that Roy was to retire and Phil was to take
his place.

Phil was sorry for Hooker, who showed that he was fearfully upset and
chagrined, and, as he passed the unlucky pitcher on his way out to the
firing line, he said in a low, sympathetic tone:

"Don't you care, old ch-chap.  It happens to the best of us; I got mine
in that Barville game, you know.  Next time you'll make good."

But could he now "make good" himself?  That was the question, of a most
disturbing sort, which insinuated itself upon Springer as he stepped
into position and received the ball from Captain Eliot.  The anxious
Oakdale crowd gave him a cheer.

"There's Springer!" he heard a voice shout.  "He'll stop it.  Hold 'em,
Phil--hold 'em!"

"I must, and I will," thought Phil.

Eliot smiled on him encouragingly as he adjusted the cage and stepped
back into position, crouching to give a signal.  The Wyndham coachers
began chattering, and the local crowd "rooted" hard.  Surely it was a
moment to test the nerve of any young pitcher.

[Illustration: The local crowd "rooted" hard.]

Phil caught Roger's signal, nodded, and bent the first ball over.  The
batter hit it to the left of the pitcher, and Springer, shooting out
his gloved hand, simply deflected the ball enough to prevent Nelson,
who was almost directly in line, from getting it.  The Wyndham crowd
yelled madly as another runner scored and the hitter reached first
safely.

"This pitcher's the easiest one yet!" shrieked one of the coachers.
"Nail the game right here, fellows.  It's easy! it's easy!"

Fear sought to fasten its benumbing clutch upon Springer.  What if he
could not stop Wyndham?  Rackliff would hear that he had warned Eliot
about the signals, and, seeking retaliation, would betray the fact that
he had likewise wagered money that Wyndham would win.  To everybody it
must seem that Phil had at last shown himself thoroughly despicable and
untrustworthy by betraying his own team on the field.  This thought
actually made him sick and giddy for a moment.

"Never mind, Spring--never mind," Eliot was saying.  "That was an
accident; it wasn't a hit.  Get the next man; get this fellow.  You can
do it."

"I must, and I will!" thought Phil once more.

He shook off the touch of fear and steadied himself.  Again Eliot gave
a signal, and again he nodded.  Strangely enough, the next batter hit a
liner to the left of Springer, almost precisely as the other had done;
but this time the pitcher's gloved fingers caught and held the ball,
following which he instantly turned and snapped it to first base before
the runner, who had started down the line, could get back.

It was a double play, and a mighty shout of joy was flung forth from
beneath the fluttering crimson banners of the Oakdale spectators.
Again Phil was cheered.

"Well done, Spring," complimented Eliot quietly, as Phil reached the
bench.

Then Herbert Rackliff, pale and desperate, rushed forth to the bench,
catching Eliot's arm and saying:

"Perhaps you're not aware that Mr. Springer has bet money on this game.
He has bet money that Wyndham will win.  If you don't believe me, ask
him."

Roger turned to Phil.  "Is this true?"

"Yes," was the husky answer, "it's true.  I gave this sus-sneaking
blabber seven dollars to bet on Wyndham, and I'll never gug-get over
being ashamed of it as long as I live.  He's the creature who gave away
our signals to Wyndham.  I hope I lose that mum-money, and, if you'll
trust me, I'll do my level best to make myself lose it."

The Oakdale captain turned on Rackliff.  "Get off the field," he
ordered sternly.  "Get back where you belong, and be quick about it."

Herbert retired, his last remaining hope being that Phil would go to
pieces in the ninth.

But Springer was strengthened and steadied by a great desire, and,
although Oakdale's lead was not increased, he pitched so well that the
slender margin was sufficient to give the visitors the victory.  Not a
Wyndhamite reached first, and two of the three who faced Springer were
mowed down on strikes.

The overjoyed Oakdale crowd charged onto the diamond and surrounded the
winners as they were giving Wyndham a cheer.  Springer was swept off
his feet and caught up on the shoulders of the crowd, who bellowed his
name again and again.  Looking downward, he saw that his right leg
rested on the shoulder of Rodney Grant, who was cheering madly.

In the dressing room, a little later, Grant came up quietly and put
forth his uninjured left hand.

"Put it there, partner," he begged.  "You sure turned the trick, and
you held them down handsomely.  It was a great victory."

Springer seized the proffered hand, laughing to hide the fact that joy
threatened to blind his eyes with tears.

"It was a great victory," he agreed, thinking, however, of the victory
he had won over himself.

"Sure," beamed the Texan.  "And now Oakdale ought to win the
championship; she ought to win it with you and me--and Hooker, for
pitchers."  He said this laughing in a way that robbed his words of any
touch of egotism.


Oakdale did win the championship, without the loss of a single game.
Grant and Springer did the greater part of the pitching, the work being
divided almost equally between them; but Hooker was not wholly
forgotten, and he obtained some opportunities, actually pitching one
complete game in a most creditable manner.

Herbert Rackliff saw no more baseball after the Wyndham game, for his
parents were notified that he had contracted a pronounced case of
pulmonary trouble, and, this being confirmed later by the family
physician, he was hurriedly shipped to Colorado, in hopes that the dry
and bracing atmosphere of that State might restore him to health.
Although the boys of Oakdale charitably refrained from making much talk
about him, he was little missed by them.



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