The Redheaded Outfield, and Other Baseball Stories

By Zane Grey

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Stories, by Zane Grey

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Title: The Redheaded Outfield and Other Baseball Stories

Author: Zane Grey

Posting Date: September 27, 2008 [EBook #385]
Release Date: January, 1996

Language: English


*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK REDHEADED OUTFIELD, OTHER STORIES ***




Produced by Charles Keller.  HTML version by Al Haines.









THE REDHEADED OUTFIELD AND OTHER BASEBALL STORIES


by

ZANE GREY



CONTENTS

  THE REDHEADED OUTFIELD
  THE RUBE
  THE RUBE'S PENNANT
  THE RUBE'S HONEYMOON
  THE RUBE'S WATERLOO
  BREAKING INTO FAST COMPANY
  THE KNOCKER
  THE WINNING BALL
  FALSE COLORS
  THE MANAGER OF MADDEN'S HILL
  OLD WELL-WELL




THE REDHEADED OUTFIELD AND OTHER BASEBALL STORIES



There was Delaney's red-haired trio--Red Gilbat, left fielder; Reddy
Clammer, right fielder, and Reddie Ray, center fielder, composing the
most remarkable outfield ever developed in minor league baseball.  It
was Delaney's pride, as it was also his trouble.

Red Gilbat was nutty--and his batting average was .371.  Any student of
baseball could weigh these two facts against each other and understand
something of Delaney's trouble.  It was not possible to camp on Red
Gilbat's trail.  The man was a jack-o'-lantern, a will-o'-the-wisp, a
weird, long-legged, long-armed, red-haired illusive phantom. When the
gong rang at the ball grounds there were ten chances to one that Red
would not be present.  He had been discovered with small boys peeping
through knotholes at the vacant left field he was supposed to inhabit
during play.

Of course what Red did off the ball grounds was not so important as
what he did on.  And there was absolutely no telling what under the sun
he might do then except once out of every three times at bat he could
be counted on to knock the cover off the ball.

Reddy Clammer was a grand-stand player--the kind all managers
hated--and he was hitting .305. He made circus catches, circus stops,
circus throws, circus steals--but particularly circus catches.  That is
to say, he made easy plays appear difficult.  He was always strutting,
posing, talking, arguing, quarreling--when he was not engaged in making
a grand-stand play.  Reddy Clammer used every possible incident and
artifice to bring himself into the limelight.

Reddie Ray had been the intercollegiate champion in the sprints and a
famous college ball player.  After a few months of professional ball he
was hitting over .400 and leading the league both at bat and on the
bases.  It was a beautiful and a thrilling sight to see him run.  He
was so quick to start, so marvelously swift, so keen of judgment, that
neither Delaney nor any player could ever tell the hit that he was not
going to get.  That was why Reddie Ray was a whole game in himself.

Delaney's Rochester Stars and the Providence Grays were tied for first
place.  Of the present series each team had won a game.  Rivalry had
always been keen, and as the teams were about to enter the long
homestretch for the pennant there was battle in the New England air.

The September day was perfect.  The stands were half full and the
bleachers packed with a white-sleeved mass.  And the field was
beautifully level and green.  The Grays were practicing and the Stars
were on their bench.

"We're up against it," Delaney was saying. "This new umpire, Fuller,
hasn't got it in for us. Oh, no, not at all!  Believe me, he's a
robber. But Scott is pitchin' well.  Won his last three games.  He'll
bother 'em.  And the three Reds have broken loose.  They're on the
rampage. They'll burn up this place today."

Somebody noted the absence of Gilbat.

Delaney gave a sudden start.  "Why, Gil was here," he said slowly.
"Lord!--he's about due for a nutty stunt."

Whereupon Delaney sent boys and players scurrying about to find Gilbat,
and Delaney went himself to ask the Providence manager to hold back the
gong for a few minutes.

Presently somebody brought Delaney a telephone message that Red Gilbat
was playing ball with some boys in a lot four blocks down the street.
When at length a couple of players marched up to the bench with Red in
tow Delaney uttered an immense sigh of relief and then, after a close
scrutiny of Red's face, he whispered, "Lock the gates!"

Then the gong rang.  The Grays trooped in. The Stars ran out, except
Gilbat, who ambled like a giraffe.  The hum of conversation in the
grand stand quickened for a moment with the scraping of chairs, and
then grew quiet.  The bleachers sent up the rollicking cry of
expectancy.  The umpire threw out a white ball with his stentorian
"Play!" and Blake of the Grays strode to the plate.

Hitting safely, he started the game with a rush. With Dorr up, the Star
infield played for a bunt. Like clockwork Dorr dumped the first ball as
Blake got his flying start for second base.  Morrissey tore in for the
ball, got it on the run and snapped it underhand to Healy, beating the
runner by an inch.  The fast Blake, with a long slide, made third base.
The stands stamped.  The bleachers howled.  White, next man up, batted
a high fly to left field.  This was a sun field and the hardest to play
in the league.  Red Gilbat was the only man who ever played it well.
He judged the fly, waited under it, took a step hack, then forward, and
deliberately caught the ball in his gloved hand.  A throw-in to catch
the runner scoring from third base would have been futile, but it was
not like Red Gilbat to fail to try.  He tossed the ball to O'Brien.
And Blake scored amid applause.

"What do you know about that?" ejaculated Delaney, wiping his moist
face.  "I never before saw our nutty Redhead pull off a play like that."

Some of the players yelled at Red, "This is a two-handed league, you
bat!"

The first five players on the list for the Grays were left-handed
batters, and against a right-handed pitcher whose most effective ball
for them was a high fast one over the outer corner they would naturally
hit toward left field.  It was no surprise to see Hanley bat a
skyscraper out to left. Red had to run to get under it.  He braced
himself rather unusually for a fielder.  He tried to catch the ball in
his bare right hand and muffed it, Hanley got to second on the play
while the audience roared.  When they got through there was some
roaring among the Rochester players.  Scott and Captain Healy roared at
Red, and Red roared back at them.

"It's all off.  Red never did that before," cried Delaney in despair.
"He's gone clean bughouse now."

Babcock was the next man up and he likewise hit to left.  It was a low,
twisting ball--half fly, half liner--and a difficult one to field.
Gilbat ran with great bounds, and though he might have got two hands on
the ball he did not try, but this time caught it in his right, retiring
the side.

The Stars trotted in, Scott and Healy and Kane, all veterans, looking
like thunderclouds.  Red ambled in the last and he seemed very
nonchalant.

"By Gosh, I'd 'a' ketched that one I muffed if I'd had time to change
hands," he said with a grin, and he exposed a handful of peanuts.  He
had refused to drop the peanuts to make the catch with two hands.  That
explained the mystery.  It was funny, yet nobody laughed.  There was
that run chalked up against the Stars, and this game had to be won.

"Red, I--I want to take the team home in the lead," said Delaney, and
it was plain that he suppressed strong feeling.  "You didn't play the
game, you know."

Red appeared mightily ashamed.

"Del, I'll git that run back," he said.

Then he strode to the plate, swinging his wagon-tongue bat.  For all
his awkward position in the box he looked what he was--a formidable
hitter. He seemed to tower over the pitcher--Red was six feet one--and
he scowled and shook his bat at Wehying and called, "Put one over--you
wienerwurst!"  Wehying was anything but red-headed, and he wasted so
many balls on Red that it looked as if he might pass him.  He would
have passed him, too, if Red had not stepped over on the fourth ball
and swung on it.  White at second base leaped high for the stinging
hit, and failed to reach it.  The ball struck and bounded for the
fence.  When Babcock fielded it in,  Red was standing on third base,
and the bleachers groaned.

Whereupon Chesty Reddy Clammer proceeded to draw attention to himself,
and incidentally delay the game, by assorting the bats as if the
audience and the game might gladly wait years to see him make a choice.

"Git in the game!" yelled Delaney.

"Aw, take my bat, Duke of the Abrubsky!" sarcastically said Dump Kane.
When the grouchy Kane offered to lend his bat matters were critical in
the Star camp.

Other retorts followed, which Reddy Clammer deigned not to notice.  At
last he got a bat that suited him--and then, importantly, dramatically,
with his cap jauntily riding his red locks, he marched to the plate.

Some wag in the bleachers yelled into the silence, "Oh, Maggie, your
lover has come!"

Not improbably Clammer was thinking first of his presence before the
multitude, secondly of his batting average and thirdly of the run to be
scored.  In this instance he waited and feinted at balls and fouled
strikes at length to work his base. When he got to first base suddenly
he bolted for second, and in the surprise of the unlooked-for play he
made it by a spread-eagle slide.  It was a circus steal.

Delaney snorted.  Then the look of profound disgust vanished in a flash
of light.  His huge face beamed.

Reddie Ray was striding to the plate.

There was something about Reddie Ray that pleased all the senses.  His
lithe form seemed instinct with life; any sudden movement was
suggestive of stored lightning.  His position at the plate was on the
left side, and he stood perfectly motionless, with just a hint of tense
waiting alertness.  Dorr, Blake and Babcock, the outfielders for the
Grays, trotted round to the right of their usual position.  Delaney
smiled derisively, as if he knew how futile it was to tell what field
Reddie Ray might hit into.  Wehying, the old fox, warily eyed the
youngster, and threw him a high curve, close in.  It grazed Reddie's
shirt, but he never moved a hair.  Then Wehying, after the manner of
many veteran pitchers when trying out a new and menacing batter, drove
a straight fast ball at Reddie's head.  Reddie ducked, neither too slow
nor too quick, just right to show what an eye he had, how hard it was
to pitch to.  The next was a strike.  And on the next he appeared to
step and swing in one action.  There was a ringing rap, and the ball
shot toward right, curving down, a vicious, headed hit.  Mallory, at
first base, snatched at it and found only the air.  Babcock had only
time to take a few sharp steps, and then he plunged down, blocked the
hit and fought the twisting ball.  Reddie turned first base, flitted on
toward second, went headlong in the dust, and shot to the base before
White got the throw-in from Babcock.  Then, as White wheeled and lined
the ball home to catch the scoring Clammer, Reddie Ray leaped up, got
his sprinter's start and, like a rocket, was off for third.  This time
he dove behind the base, sliding in a half circle, and as Hanley caught
Strickland's perfect throw and whirled with the ball, Reddie's hand
slid to the bag.

Reddie got to his feet amid a rather breathless silence.  Even the
coachers were quiet.  There was a moment of relaxation, then Wehying
received the ball from Hanley and faced the batter.

This was Dump Kane.  There was a sign of some kind, almost
imperceptible, between Kane and Reddie.  As Wehying half turned in his
swing to pitch, Reddie Ray bounded homeward.  It was not so much the
boldness of his action as the amazing swiftness of it that held the
audience spellbound.  Like a thunderbolt Reddie came down the line,
almost beating Wehying's pitch to the plate.  But Kane's bat
intercepted the ball, laying it down, and Reddie scored without
sliding. Dorr, by sharp work, just managed to throw Kane out.

Three runs so quick it was hard to tell how they had come.  Not in the
major league could there have been faster work.  And the ball had been
fielded perfectly and thrown perfectly.

"There you are," said Delaney, hoarsely. "Can you beat it?  If you've
been wonderin' how the cripped Stars won so many games just put what
you've seen in your pipe and smoke it.  Red Gilbat gets on--Reddy
Clammer gets on--and then Reddie Ray drives them home or chases them
home."

The game went on, and though it did not exactly drag it slowed down
considerably.  Morrissey and Healy were retired on infield plays.  And
the sides changed.  For the Grays, O'Brien made a scratch hit, went to
second on Strickland's sacrifice, stole third and scored on Mallory's
infield out.  Wehying missed three strikes.  In the Stars' turn the
three end players on the batting list were easily disposed of.  In the
third inning the clever Blake, aided by a base on balls and a hit
following, tied the score, and once more struck fire and brimstone from
the impatient bleachers.  Providence was a town that had to have its
team win.

"Git at 'em, Reds!" said Delaney gruffly.

"Batter up!" called Umpire Fuller, sharply.

"Where's Red?  Where's the bug?  Where's the nut?  Delaney, did you
lock the gates?  Look under the bench!"  These and other remarks, not
exactly elegant, attested to the mental processes of some of the Stars.
Red Gilbat did not appear to be forthcoming.  There was an anxious
delay Capt. Healy searched for the missing player. Delaney did not say
any more.

Suddenly a door under the grand stand opened and Red Gilbat appeared.
He hurried for his bat and then up to the plate.  And he never offered
to hit one of the balls Wehying shot over.  When Fuller had called the
third strike Red hurried back to the door and disappeared.

"Somethin' doin'," whispered Delaney.

Lord Chesterfield Clammer paraded to the batter's box and, after
gradually surveying the field, as if picking out the exact place he
meant to drive the ball, he stepped to the plate.  Then a roar from the
bleachers surprised him.

"Well, I'll be dog-goned!" exclaimed Delaney. "Red stole that sure as
shootin'."

Red Gilbat was pushing a brand-new baby carriage toward the batter's
box.  There was a tittering in the grand stand; another roar from the
bleachers.  Clammer's face turned as red as his hair.  Gilbat shoved
the baby carriage upon the plate, spread wide his long arms, made a
short presentation speech and an elaborate bow, then backed away.

All eyes were centered on Clammer.  If he had taken it right the
incident might have passed without undue hilarity.  But Clammer became
absolutely wild with rage.  It was well known that he was unmarried.
Equally well was it seen that Gilbat had executed one of his famous
tricks. Ball players were inclined to be dignified about the
presentation of gifts upon the field, and Clammer, the dude, the swell,
the lady's man, the favorite of the baseball gods--in his own
estimation--so far lost control of himself that he threw his bat at his
retreating tormentor.  Red jumped high and the bat skipped along the
ground toward the bench.  The players sidestepped and leaped and, of
course, the bat cracked one of Delaney's big shins.  His eyes popped
with pain, but he could not stop laughing.  One by one the players lay
down and rolled over and yelled.  The superior Clammer was not
overliked by his co-players.

From the grand stand floated the laughter of ladies and gentlemen.  And
from the bleachers--that throne of the biting, ironic, scornful
fans--pealed up a howl of delight.  It lasted for a full minute.  Then,
as quiet ensued, some boy blew a blast of one of those infernal little
instruments of pipe and rubber balloon, and over the field wailed out a
shrill, high-keyed cry, an excellent imitation of a baby.  Whereupon
the whole audience roared, and in discomfiture Reddy Clammer went in
search of his bat.

To make his chagrin all the worse he ingloriously struck out.  And then
he strode away under the lea of the grand-stand wall toward right field.

Reddie Ray went to bat and, with the infield playing deep and the
outfield swung still farther round to the right, he bunted a little
teasing ball down the third-base line.  Like a flash of light he had
crossed first base before Hanley got his hands on the ball.  Then Kane
hit into second base, forcing Reddie out.

Again the game assumed less spectacular and more ordinary play.  Both
Scott and Wehying held the batters safely and allowed no runs.  But in
the fifth inning, with the Stars at bat and two out, Red Gilbat again
electrified the field.  He sprang up from somewhere and walked to the
plate, his long shape enfolded in a full-length linen duster.  The
color and style of this garment might not have been especially
striking, but upon Red it had a weird and wonderful effect. Evidently
Red intended to bat while arrayed in his long coat, for he stepped into
the box and faced the pitcher.  Capt. Healy yelled for him to take the
duster off.  Likewise did the Grays yell.

The bleachers shrieked their disapproval.  To say the least, Red
Gilbat's crazy assurance was dampening to the ardor of the most blindly
confident fans.  At length Umpire Fuller waved his hand, enjoining
silence and calling time.

"Take it off or I'll fine you."

From his lofty height Gilbat gazed down upon the little umpire, and it
was plain what he thought.

"What do I care for money!" replied Red.

"That costs you twenty-five," said Fuller.

"Cigarette change!" yelled Red.

"Costs you fifty."

"Bah!  Go to an eye doctor," roared Red.

"Seventy-five," added Fuller, imperturbably.

"Make it a hundred!"

"It's two hundred."

"ROB-B-BER!" bawled Red.

Fuller showed willingness to overlook Red's back talk as well as
costume, and he called, "Play!"

There was a mounting sensation of prophetic certainty.  Old fox Wehying
appeared nervous. He wasted two balls on Red; then he put one over the
plate, and then he wasted another.  Three balls and one strike!  That
was a bad place for a pitcher, and with Red Gilbat up it was worse.
Wehying swung longer and harder to get all his left behind the throw
and let drive.  Red lunged and cracked the ball.  It went up and up and
kept going up and farther out, and as the murmuring audience was slowly
transfixed into late realization the ball soared to its height and
dropped beyond the left-field fence.  A home run!

Red Gilbat gathered up the tails of his duster, after the manner of a
neat woman crossing a muddy street, and ambled down to first base and
on to second, making prodigious jumps upon the bags, and round third,
to come down the home-stretch wagging his red head.  Then he stood on
the plate, and, as if to exact revenge from the audience for the fun
they made of him, he threw back his shoulders and bellowed:  "HAW!
HAW! HAW!"

Not a handclap greeted him, but some mindless, exceedingly adventurous
fan yelled:  "Redhead! Redhead!  Redhead!"

That was the one thing calculated to rouse Red Gilbat.  He seemed to
flare, to bristle, and he paced for the bleachers.

Delaney looked as if he might have a stroke. "Grab him!  Soak him with
a bat!  Somebody grab him!"

But none of the Stars was risking so much, and Gilbat, to the howling
derision of the gleeful fans, reached the bleachers.  He stretched his
long arms up to the fence and prepared to vault over. "Where's the guy
who called me redhead?" he yelled.

That was heaping fuel on the fire.  From all over the bleachers, from
everywhere, came the obnoxious word.  Red heaved himself over the fence
and piled into the fans.  Then followed the roar of many voices, the
tramping of many feet, the pressing forward of line after line of
shirt-sleeved men and boys.  That bleacher stand suddenly assumed the
maelstrom appearance of a surging mob round an agitated center.  In a
moment all the players rushed down the field, and confusion reigned.

"Oh!  Oh!  Oh!" moaned Delaney.

However, the game had to go on.  Delaney, no doubt, felt all was over.
Nevertheless there were games occasionally that seemed an unending
series of unprecedented events.  This one had begun admirably to break
a record.  And the Providence fans, like all other fans, had cultivated
an appetite as the game proceeded.  They were wild to put the other
redheads out of the field or at least out for the inning, wild to tie
the score, wild to win and wilder than all for more excitement. Clammer
hit safely.  But when Reddie Ray lined to the second baseman, Clammer,
having taken a lead, was doubled up in the play.

Of course, the sixth inning opened with the Stars playing only eight
men.  There was another delay.  Probably everybody except Delaney and
perhaps Healy had forgotten the Stars were short a man.  Fuller called
time.  The impatient bleachers barked for action.

Capt. White came over to Delaney and courteously offered to lend a
player for the remaining innings.  Then a pompous individual came out
of the door leading from the press boxes--he was a director Delaney
disliked.

"Guess you'd better let Fuller call the game," he said brusquely.

"If you want to--as the score stands now in our favor," replied Delaney.

"Not on your life!  It'll be ours or else we'll play it out and beat
you to death."

He departed in high dudgeon.

"Tell Reddie to swing over a little toward left," was Delaney's order
to Healy.  Fire gleamed in the manager's eye.

Fuller called play then, with Reddy Clammer and Reddie Ray composing
the Star outfield.  And the Grays evidently prepared to do great
execution through the wide lanes thus opened up.  At that stage it
would not have been like matured ball players to try to crop hits down
into the infield.

White sent a long fly back of Clammer.  Reddy had no time to loaf on
this hit.  It was all he could do to reach it and he made a splendid
catch, for which the crowd roundly applauded him.  That applause was
wine to Reddy Clammer.  He began to prance on his toes and sing out to
Scott:  "Make 'em hit to me, old man!  Make 'em hit to me!" Whether
Scott desired that or not was scarcely possible to say; at any rate,
Hanley pounded a hit through the infield.  And Clammer, prancing high
in the air like a check-reined horse, ran to intercept the ball.  He
could have received it in his hands, but that would never have served
Reddy Clammer.  He timed the hit to a nicety, went down with his old
grand-stand play and blocked the ball with his anatomy.  Delaney swore.
And the bleachers, now warm toward the gallant outfielder, lustily
cheered him.  Babcock hit down the right-field foul line, giving
Clammer a long run.  Hanley was scoring and Babcock was sprinting for
third base when Reddy got the ball. He had a fine arm and he made a
hard and accurate throw, catching his man in a close play.

Perhaps even Delaney could not have found any fault with that play.
But the aftermath spoiled the thing.  Clammer now rode the air; he
soared; he was in the clouds; it was his inning and he had utterly
forgotten his team mates, except inasmuch as they were performing mere
little automatic movements to direct the great machinery in his
direction for his sole achievement and glory.

There is fate in baseball as well as in other walks of life.  O'Brien
was a strapping fellow and he lifted another ball into Clammer's wide
territory.  The hit was of the high and far-away variety.  Clammer
started to run with it, not like a grim outfielder, but like one
thinking of himself, his style, his opportunity, his inevitable
success.  Certain it was that in thinking of himself the outfielder
forgot his surroundings.  He ran across the foul line, head up, hair
flying, unheeding the warning cry from Healy.  And, reaching up to make
his crowning circus play, he smashed face forward into the bleachers
fence.  Then, limp as a rag, he dropped.  The audience sent forth a
long groan of sympathy.

"That wasn't one of his stage falls," said Delaney.  "I'll bet he's
dead....  Poor Reddy! And I want him to bust his face!"

Clammer was carried off the field into the dressing room and a
physician was summoned out of the audience.

"Cap., what'd it--do to him?" asked Delaney.

"Aw, spoiled his pretty mug, that's all," replied Healy, scornfully.
"Mebee he'll listen to me now."

Delaney's change was characteristic of the man. "Well, if it didn't
kill him I'm blamed glad he got it....  Cap, we can trim 'em yet.
Reddie Ray'll play the whole outfield.  Give Reddie a chance to run!
Tell the boy to cut loose.  And all of you git in the game.  Win or
lose, I won't forget it.  I've a hunch.  Once in a while I can tell
what's comin' off.  Some queer game this!  And we're goin' to win.
Gilbat lost the game; Clammer throwed it away again, and now Reddie
Ray's due to win it....  I'm all in, but I wouldn't miss the finish
to save my life."

Delaney's deep presaging sense of baseball events was never put to a
greater test.  And the seven Stars, with the score tied, exhibited the
temper and timber of a championship team in the last ditch.  It was so
splendid that almost instantly it caught the antagonistic bleachers.

Wherever the tired Scott found renewed strength and speed was a
mystery.  But he struck out the hard-hitting Providence catcher and
that made the third out.  The Stars could not score in their half of
the inning.  Likewise the seventh inning passed without a run for
either side; only the infield work of the Stars was something superb.
When the eighth inning ended, without a tally for either team, the
excitement grew tense. There was Reddy Ray playing outfield alone, and
the Grays with all their desperate endeavors had not lifted the ball
out of the infield.

But in the ninth, Blake, the first man up, lined low toward right
center.  The hit was safe and looked good for three bases.  No one
looking, however, had calculated on Reddie's Ray's fleetness. He
covered ground and dove for the bounding ball and knocked it down.
Blake did not get beyond first base.  The crowd cheered the play
equally with the prospect of a run.  Dorr bunted and beat the throw.
White hit one of the high fast balls Scott was serving and sent it
close to the left-field foul line.  The running Reddie Ray made on that
play held White at second base.  But two runs had scored with no one
out.

Hanley, the fourth left-handed hitter, came up and Scott pitched to him
as he had to the others--high fast balls over the inside corner of the
plate.  Reddy Ray's position was some fifty yards behind deep short,
and a little toward center field. He stood sideways, facing two-thirds
of that vacant outfield.  In spite of Scott's skill, Hanley swung the
ball far round into right field, but he hit it high, and almost before
he actually hit it the great sprinter was speeding across the green.

The suspense grew almost unbearable as the ball soared in its parabolic
flight and the red-haired runner streaked dark across the green. The
ball seemed never to be coming down.  And when it began to descend and
reached a point perhaps fifty feet above the ground there appeared more
distance between where it would alight and where Reddie was than
anything human could cover.  It dropped and dropped, and then dropped
into Reddie Ray's outstretched hands.  He had made the catch look easy.
But the fact that White scored from second base on the play showed what
the catch really was.

There was no movement or restlessness of the audience such as usually
indicated the beginning of the exodus.  Scott struck Babcock out.  The
game still had fire.  The Grays never let up a moment on their
coaching.  And the hoarse voices of the Stars were grimmer than ever.
Reddie Ray was the only one of the seven who kept silent. And he
crouched like a tiger.

The teams changed sides with the Grays three runs in the lead.
Morrissey, for the Stars, opened with a clean drive to right.  Then
Healy slashed a ground ball to Hanley and nearly knocked him down.
When old Burns, by a hard rap to short, advanced the runners a base and
made a desperate, though unsuccessful, effort to reach first the
Providence crowd awoke to a strange and inspiring appreciation.  They
began that most rare feature in baseball audiences--a strong and
trenchant call for the visiting team to win.

The play had gone fast and furious.  Wehying, sweaty and disheveled,
worked violently.  All the Grays were on uneasy tiptoes.  And the Stars
were seven Indians on the warpath.  Halloran fouled down the
right-field line; then he fouled over the left-field fence.  Wehying
tried to make him too anxious, but it was in vain.  Halloran was
implacable.  With two strikes and three balls he hit straight down to
white, and was out.  The ball had been so sharp that neither runner on
base had a chance to advance.

Two men out, two on base, Stars wanting three runs to tie, Scott, a
weak batter, at the plate! The situation was disheartening.  Yet there
sat Delaney, shot through and through with some vital compelling force.
He saw only victory.  And when the very first ball pitched to Scott hit
him on the leg, giving him his base, Delaney got to his feet, unsteady
and hoarse.

Bases full, Reddie Ray up, three runs to tie!

Delaney looked at Reddie.  And Reddie looked at Delaney.  The manager's
face was pale, intent, with a little smile.  The player had eyes of
fire, a lean, bulging jaw and the hands he reached for his bat clutched
like talons.

"Reddie, I knew it was waitin' for you," said Delaney, his voice
ringing.  "Break up the game!"

After all this was only a baseball game, and perhaps from the fans'
viewpoint a poor game at that.  But the moment when that lithe,
redhaired athlete toed the plate was a beautiful one.  The long crash
from the bleachers, the steady cheer from the grand stand, proved that
it was not so much the game that mattered.

Wehying had shot his bolt; he was tired.  Yet he made ready for a final
effort.  It seemed that passing Reddie Ray on balls would have been a
wise play at that juncture.  But no pitcher, probably, would have done
it with the bases crowded and chances, of course, against the batter.

Clean and swift, Reddie leaped at the first pitched ball.  Ping!  For a
second no one saw the hit.  Then it gleamed, a terrific drive, low
along the ground, like a bounding bullet, straight at Babcock in right
field.  It struck his hands and glanced viciously away to roll toward
the fence.

Thunder broke loose from the stands.  Reddie Ray was turning first
base.  Beyond first base he got into his wonderful stride.  Some
runners run with a consistent speed, the best they can make for a given
distance.  But this trained sprinter gathered speed as he ran.  He was
no short-stepping runner.  His strides were long.  They gave an
impression of strength combined with fleetness. He had the speed of a
race horse, but the trimness, the raciness, the delicate legs were not
characteristic of him.  Like the wind he turned second, so powerful
that his turn was short.  All at once there came a difference in his
running.  It was no longer beautiful.  The grace was gone.  It was now
fierce, violent.  His momentum was running him off his legs.  He
whirled around third base and came hurtling down the homestretch. His
face was convulsed, his eyes were wild.  His arms and legs worked in a
marvelous muscular velocity.  He seemed a demon--a flying streak. He
overtook and ran down the laboring Scott, who had almost reached the
plate.

The park seemed full of shrill, piercing strife. It swelled, reached a
highest pitch, sustained that for a long moment, and then declined.

"My Gawd!" exclaimed Delaney, as he fell back.  "Wasn't that a finish?
Didn't I tell you to watch them redheads!"



THE RUBE

It was the most critical time I had yet experienced in my career as a
baseball manager. And there was more than the usual reason why I must
pull the team out.  A chance for a business deal depended upon the
good-will of the stockholders of the Worcester club.  On the outskirts
of the town was a little cottage that I wanted to buy, and this
depended upon the business deal.  My whole future happiness depended
upon the little girl I hoped to install in that cottage.

Coming to the Worcester Eastern League team, I had found a strong
aggregation and an enthusiastic following.  I really had a team with
pennant possibilities.  Providence was a strong rival, but I beat them
three straight in the opening series, set a fast pace, and likewise set
Worcester baseball mad.  The Eastern League clubs were pretty evenly
matched; still I continued to hold the lead until misfortune overtook
me.

Gregg smashed an umpire and had to be laid off.  Mullaney got spiked
while sliding and was out of the game.  Ashwell sprained his ankle and
Hirsch broke a finger.  Radbourne, my great pitcher, hurt his arm on a
cold day and he could not get up his old speed.  Stringer, who had
batted three hundred and seventy-one and led the league the year
before, struck a bad spell and could not hit a barn door handed up to
him.

Then came the slump.  The team suddenly let down; went to pieces;
played ball that would have disgraced an amateur nine.  It was a trying
time. Here was a great team, strong everywhere.  A little hard luck had
dug up a slump--and now! Day by day the team dropped in the race.  When
we reached the second division the newspapers flayed us.  Worcester
would never stand for a second division team.  Baseball admirers,
reporters, fans--especially the fans--are fickle.  The admirers quit,
the reporters grilled us, and the fans, though they stuck to the games
with that barnacle-like tenacity peculiar to them, made life miserable
for all of us.  I saw the pennant slowly fading, and the successful
season, and the business deal, and the cottage, and Milly----

But when I thought of her I just could not see failure.  Something must
be done, but what?  I was at the end of my wits.  When Jersey City beat
us that Saturday, eleven to two, shoving us down to fifth place with
only a few percentage points above the Fall River team, I grew
desperate, and locking my players in the dressing room I went after
them.  They had lain down on me and needed a jar.  I told them so
straight and flat, and being bitter, I did not pick and choose my words.

"And fellows," I concluded, "you've got to brace.  A little more of
this and we can't pull out. I tell you you're a championship team.  We
had that pennant cinched.  A few cuts and sprains and hard luck--and
you all quit!  You lay down! I've been patient.  I've plugged for you.
Never a man have I fined or thrown down.  But now I'm at the end of my
string.  I'm out to fine you now, and I'll release the first man who
shows the least yellow.  I play no more substitutes. Crippled or not,
you guys have got to get in the game."

I waited to catch my breath and expected some such outburst as managers
usually get from criticized players.  But not a word!  Then I addressed
some of them personally.

"Gregg, your lay-off ends today.  You play Monday.  Mullaney, you've
drawn your salary for two weeks with that spiked foot.  If you can't
run on it--well, all right, but I put it up to your good faith.  I've
played the game and I know it's hard to run on a sore foot.  But you
can do it. Ashwell, your ankle is lame, I know--now, can you run?"

"Sure I can.  I'm not a quitter.  I'm ready to go in," replied Ashwell.

"Raddy, how about you?" I said, turning to my star twirler.

"Connelly, I've seen as fast a team in as bad a rut and yet pull out,"
returned Radbourne. "We're about due for the brace.  When it
comes--look out!  As for me, well, my arm isn't right, but it's acting
these warm days in a way that tells me it will be soon.  It's been
worked too hard. Can't you get another pitcher?  I'm not knocking Herne
or Cairns.  They're good for their turn, but we need a new man to help
out.  And he must be a crackerjack if we're to get back to the lead."

"Where on earth can I find such a pitcher?" I shouted, almost
distracted.

"Well, that's up to you," replied Radbourne.

Up to me it certainly was, and I cudgeled my brains for inspiration.
After I had given up in hopelessness it came in the shape of a notice I
read in one of the papers.  It was a brief mention of an amateur
Worcester ball team being shut out in a game with a Rickettsville nine.
Rickettsville played Sunday ball, which gave me an opportunity to look
them over.

It took some train riding and then a journey by coach to get to
Rickettsville.  I mingled with the crowd of talking rustics.  There was
only one little "bleachers" and this was loaded to the danger point
with the feminine adherents of the teams.  Most of the crowd centered
alongside and back of the catcher's box.  I edged in and got a position
just behind the stone that served as home plate.

Hunting up a player in this way was no new thing to me.  I was too wise
to make myself known before I had sized up the merits of my man.  So,
before the players came upon the field I amused myself watching the
rustic fans and listening to them.  Then a roar announced the
appearance of the Rickettsville team and their opponents, who wore the
name of Spatsburg on their Canton flannel shirts.  The uniforms of
these country amateurs would have put a Philadelphia Mummer's parade to
the blush, at least for bright colors.  But after one amused glance I
got down to the stern business of the day, and that was to discover a
pitcher, and failing that, baseball talent of any kind.

Never shall I forget my first glimpse of the Rickettsville twirler.  He
was far over six feet tall and as lean as a fence rail.  He had a great
shock of light hair, a sunburned, sharp-featured face, wide, sloping
shoulders, and arms enormously long.  He was about as graceful and had
about as much of a baseball walk as a crippled cow.

"He's a rube!" I ejaculated, in disgust and disappointment.

But when I had seen him throw one ball to his catcher I grew as keen as
a fox on a scent.  What speed he had!  I got round closer to him and
watched him with sharp, eager eyes.  He was a giant.  To be sure, he
was lean, rawboned as a horse, but powerful.  What won me at once was
his natural, easy swing.  He got the ball away with scarcely any
effort.  I wondered what he could do when he brought the motion of his
body into play.

"Bub, what might be the pitcher's name?" I asked of a boy.

"Huh, mister, his name might be Dennis, but it ain't.  Huh!" replied
this country youngster. Evidently my question had thrown some
implication upon this particular player.

"I reckon you be a stranger in these parts," said a pleasant old
fellow.  "His name's Hurtle--Whitaker Hurtle.  Whit fer short.  He
hain't lost a gol-darned game this summer.  No sir-ee! Never pitched
any before, nuther."

Hurtle!  What a remarkably fitting name!

Rickettsville chose the field and the game began. Hurtle swung with his
easy motion.  The ball shot across like a white bullet.  It was a
strike, and so was the next, and the one succeeding.  He could not
throw anything but strikes, and it seemed the Spatsburg players could
not make even a foul.

Outside of Hurtle's work the game meant little to me.  And I was so
fascinated by what I saw in him that I could hardly contain myself.
After the first few innings I no longer tried to.  I yelled with the
Rickettsville rooters.  The man was a wonder.  A blind baseball manager
could have seen that.  He had a straight ball, shoulder high, level as
a stretched string, and fast.  He had a jump ball, which he evidently
worked by putting on a little more steam, and it was the speediest
thing I ever saw in the way of a shoot.  He had a wide-sweeping
outcurve, wide as the blade of a mowing scythe.  And he had a drop--an
unhittable drop.  He did not use it often, for it made his catcher dig
too hard into the dirt.  But whenever he did I glowed all over.  Once
or twice he used an underhand motion and sent in a ball that fairly
swooped up.  It could not have been hit with a board.  And best of all,
dearest to the manager's heart, he had control.  Every ball he threw
went over the plate.  He could not miss it.  To him that plate was as
big as a house.

What a find!  Already I had visions of the long-looked-for brace of my
team, and of the pennant, and the little cottage, and the happy light
of a pair of blue eyes.  What he meant to me, that country pitcher
Hurtle!  He shut out the Spatsburg team without a run or a hit or even
a scratch. Then I went after him.  I collared him and his manager, and
there, surrounded by the gaping players, I bought him and signed him
before any of them knew exactly what I was about.  I did not haggle.  I
asked the manager what he wanted and produced the cash; I asked Hurtle
what he wanted, doubled his ridiculously modest demand, paid him in
advance, and got his name to the contract.  Then I breathed a long,
deep breath; the first one for weeks.  Something told me that with
Hurtle's signature in my pocket I had the Eastern League pennant.  Then
I invited all concerned down to the Rickettsville hotel.

We made connections at the railroad junction and reached Worcester at
midnight in time for a good sleep.  I took the silent and backward
pitcher to my hotel.  In the morning we had breakfast together.  I
showed him about Worcester and then carried him off to the ball grounds.

I had ordered morning practice, and as morning practice is not
conducive to the cheerfulness of ball players, I wanted to reach the
dressing room a little late.  When we arrived, all the players had
dressed and were out on the field.  I had some difficulty in fitting
Hurtle with a uniform, and when I did get him dressed he resembled a
two-legged giraffe decked out in white shirt, gray trousers and maroon
stockings.

Spears, my veteran first baseman and captain of the team, was the first
to see us.

"Sufferin' umpires!" yelled Spears.  "Here, you Micks!  Look at this
Con's got with him!"

What a yell burst from that sore and disgruntled bunch of ball tossers!
My players were a grouchy set in practice anyway, and today they were
in their meanest mood.

"Hey, beanpole!"

"Get on to the stilts!"

"Con, where did you find that?"

I cut short their chaffing with a sharp order for batting practice.

"Regular line-up, now no monkey biz," I went on.  "Take two cracks and
a bunt.  Here, Hurtle," I said, drawing him toward the pitcher's box,
"don't pay any attention to their talk.  That's only the fun of ball
players.  Go in now and practice a little.  Lam a few over."

Hurtle's big freckled hands closed nervously over the ball.  I thought
it best not to say more to him, for he had a rather wild look.  I
remembered my own stage fright upon my first appearance in fast
company.  Besides I knew what my amiable players would say to him.  I
had a secret hope and belief that presently they would yell upon the
other side of the fence.

McCall, my speedy little left fielder, led off at bat.  He was full of
ginger, chipper as a squirrel, sarcastic as only a tried ball player
can be.

"Put 'em over, Slats, put 'em over," he called, viciously swinging his
ash.

Hurtle stood stiff and awkward in the box and seemed to be rolling
something in his mouth. Then he moved his arm.  We all saw the ball
dart down straight--that is, all of us except McCall, because if he had
seen it he might have jumped out of the way.  Crack!  The ball hit him
on the shin.

McCall shrieked.  We all groaned.  That crack hurt all of us.  Any
baseball player knows how it hurts to be hit on the shinbone.  McCall
waved his bat madly.

"Rube!  Rube!  Rube!" he yelled.

Then and there Hurtle got the name that was to cling to him all his
baseball days.

McCall went back to the plate, red in the face, mad as a hornet, and he
sidestepped every time Rube pitched a ball.  He never even ticked one
and retired in disgust, limping and swearing. Ashwell was next.  He did
not show much alacrity. On Rube's first pitch down went Ashwell flat in
the dust.  The ball whipped the hair of his head.  Rube was wild and I
began to get worried. Ashwell hit a couple of measly punks, but when he
assayed a bunt the gang yelled derisively at him.

"What's he got?"  The old familiar cry of batters when facing a new
pitcher!

Stringer went up, bold and formidable.  That was what made him the
great hitter he was.  He loved to bat; he would have faced anybody; he
would have faced even a cannon.  New curves were a fascination to him.
And speed for him, in his own words, was "apple pie."  In this
instance, surprise was in store for Stringer.  Rube shot up the
straight one, then the wide curve, then the drop.  Stringer missed them
all, struck out, fell down ignominiously.  It was the first time he had
fanned that season and he looked dazed. We had to haul him away.

I called off the practice, somewhat worried about Rube's showing, and
undecided whether or not to try him in the game that day.  So I went to
Radbourne, who had quietly watched Rube while on the field.  Raddy was
an old pitcher and had seen the rise of a hundred stars.  I told him
about the game at Rickettsville and what I thought of Rube, and frankly
asked his opinion.

"Con, you've made the find of your life," said Raddy, quietly and
deliberately.

This from Radbourne was not only comforting; it was relief, hope,
assurance.  I avoided Spears, for it would hardly be possible for him
to regard the Rube favorably, and I kept under cover until time to show
up at the grounds.

Buffalo was on the ticket for that afternoon, and the Bisons were
leading the race and playing in topnotch form.  I went into the
dressing room while the players were changing suits, because there was
a little unpleasantness that I wanted to spring on them before we got
on the field.

"Boys," I said, curtly, "Hurtle works today. Cut loose, now, and back
him up."

I had to grab a bat and pound on the wall to stop the uproar.

"Did you mutts hear what I said?  Well, it goes. Not a word, now.  I'm
handling this team.  We're in bad, I know, but it's my judgment to
pitch Hurtle, rube or no rube, and it's up to you to back us.  That's
the baseball of it."

Grumbling and muttering, they passed out of the dressing room.  I knew
ball players.  If Hurtle should happen to show good form they would
turn in a flash.  Rube tagged reluctantly in their rear.  He looked
like a man in a trance.  I wanted to speak encouragingly to him, but
Raddy told me to keep quiet.

It was inspiring to see my team practice that afternoon.  There had
come a subtle change.  I foresaw one of those baseball climaxes that
can be felt and seen, but not explained.  Whether it was a hint of the
hoped-for brace, or only another flash of form before the final
let-down, I had no means to tell.  But I was on edge.

Carter, the umpire, called out the batteries, and I sent my team into
the field.  When that long, lanky, awkward rustic started for the
pitcher's box, I thought the bleachers would make him drop in his
tracks.  The fans were sore on any one those days, and a new pitcher
was bound to hear from them.

"Where!  Oh, where!  Oh, where!"

"Connelly's found another dead one!"

"Scarecrow!"

"Look at his pants!"

"Pad his legs!"

Then the inning began, and things happened. Rube had marvelous speed,
but he could not find the plate.  He threw the ball the second he got
it; he hit men, walked men, and fell all over himself trying to field
bunts.  The crowd stormed and railed and hissed.  The Bisons pranced
round the bases and yelled like Indians.  Finally they retired with
eight runs.

Eight runs!  Enough to win two games!  I could not have told how it
happened.  I was sick and all but crushed.  Still I had a blind, dogged
faith in the big rustic.  I believed he had not got started right.  It
was a trying situation.  I called Spears and Raddy to my side and
talked fast.

"It's all off now.  Let the dinged rube take his medicine," growled
Spears.

"Don't take him out," said Raddy.  "He's not shown at all what's in
him.  The blamed hayseed is up in the air.  He's crazy.  He doesn't
know what he's doing.  I tell you, Con, he may be scared to death, but
he's dead in earnest."

Suddenly I recalled the advice of the pleasant old fellow at
Rickettsville.

"Spears, you're the captain," I said, sharply. "Go after the rube.
Wake him up.  Tell him he can't pitch.  Call him 'Pogie!'  That's a
name that stirs him up."

"Well, I'll be dinged!  He looks it," replied Spears.  "Here, Rube, get
off the bench.  Come here."

Rube lurched toward us.  He seemed to be walking in his sleep.  His
breast was laboring and he was dripping with sweat.

"Who ever told you that you could pitch?" asked Spears genially.  He
was master at baseball ridicule.  I had never yet seen the youngster
who could stand his badinage.  He said a few things, then wound up
with:  "Come now, you cross between a hayrack and a wagon tongue, get
sore and do something.  Pitch if you can.  Show us!  Do you hear, you
tow-headed Pogie!"

Rube jumped as if he had been struck.  His face flamed red and his
little eyes turned black.  He shoved his big fist under Capt. Spears'
nose.

"Mister, I'll lick you fer thet--after the game! And I'll show you
dog-goned well how I can pitch."

"Good!" exclaimed Raddy; and I echoed his word.  Then I went to the
bench and turned my attention to the game.  Some one told me that
McCall had made a couple of fouls, and after waiting for two strikes
and three balls had struck out.  Ashwell had beat out a bunt in his old
swift style, and Stringer was walking up to the plate on the moment.
It was interesting, even in a losing game, to see Stringer go to bat.
We all watched him, as we had been watching him for weeks, expecting
him to break his slump with one of the drives that had made him famous.
Stringer stood to the left side of the plate, and I could see the bulge
of his closely locked jaw.  He swung on the first pitched ball.  With
the solid rap we all rose to watch that hit.  The ball lined first,
then soared and did not begin to drop till it was far beyond the
right-field fence.  For an instant we were all still, so were the
bleachers.  Stringer had broken his slump with the longest drive ever
made on the grounds.  The crowd cheered as he trotted around the bases
behind Ashwell.  Two runs.

"Con, how'd you like that drive?" he asked me, with a bright gleam in
his eyes.

"O-h-!--a beaut!" I replied, incoherently.  The players on the bench
were all as glad as I was. Henley flew out to left.  Mullaney smashed a
two-bagger to right.  Then Gregg hit safely, but Mullaney, in trying to
score on the play, was out at the plate.

"Four hits!  I tell you fellows, something's coming off," said Raddy.
"Now, if only Rube----"

What a difference there was in that long rustic! He stalked into the
box, unmindful of the hooting crowd and grimly faced Schultz, the first
batter up for the Bisons.  This time Rube was deliberate. And where he
had not swung before he now got his body and arm into full motion.  The
ball came in like a glint of light.  Schultz looked surprised.  The
umpire called "Strike!"

"Wow!" yelled the Buffalo coacher.  Rube sped up the sidewheeler and
Schultz reached wide to meet it and failed.  The third was the
lightning drop, straight over the plate.  The batter poked weakly at
it.  Then Carl struck out and Manning following, did likewise.  Three
of the best hitters in the Eastern retired on nine strikes!  That was
no fluke.  I knew what it meant, and I sat there hugging myself with
the hum of something joyous in my ears.

Gregg had a glow on his sweaty face.  "Oh, but say, boys, take a tip
from me!  The Rube's a world beater!  Raddy knew it; he sized up that
swing, and now I know it.  Get wise, you its!"

When old Spears pasted a single through shortstop, the Buffalo manager
took Clary out of the box and put in Vane, their best pitcher.  Bogart
advanced the runner to second, but was thrown out on the play.  Then
Rube came up.  He swung a huge bat and loomed over the Bison's twirler.
Rube had the look of a hitter.  He seemed to be holding himself back
from walking right into the ball.  And he hit one high and far away.
The fast Carl could not get under it, though he made a valiant effort.
Spears scored and Rube's long strides carried him to third.  The cold
crowd in the stands came to life; even the sore bleachers opened up.
McCall dumped a slow teaser down the line, a hit that would easily have
scored Rube, but he ran a little way, then stopped, tried to get back,
and was easily touched out.  Ashwell's hard chance gave the Bison's
shortstop an error, and Stringer came up with two men on bases.
Stringer hit a foul over the right-field fence and the crowd howled.
Then he hit a hard long drive straight into the centerfielder's hands.

"Con, I don't know what to think, but ding me if we ain't hittin' the
ball," said Spears.  Then to his players:  "A little more of that and
we're back in our old shape.  All in a minute--at 'em now!  Rube, you
dinged old Pogie, pitch!"

Rube toed the rubber, wrapped his long brown fingers round the ball,
stepped out as he swung and--zing!  That inning he unloosed a few more
kinks in his arm and he tried some new balls upon the Bisons.  But
whatever he used and wherever he put them the result was the same--they
cut the plate and the Bisons were powerless.

That inning marked the change in my team. They had come hack.  The
hoodoo had vanished. The championship Worcester team was itself again.

The Bisons were fighting, too, but Rube had them helpless.  When they
did hit a ball one of my infielders snapped it up.  No chances went to
the outfield.  I sat there listening to my men, and reveled in a moment
that I had long prayed for.

"Now you're pitching some, Rube.  Another strike!  Get him a board!"
called Ashwell.

"Ding 'em, Rube, ding 'em!" came from Capt. Spears.

"Speed?  Oh-no!" yelled Bogart at third base.

"It's all off, Rube!  It's all off--all off!"

So, with the wonderful pitching of an angry rube, the Worcester team
came into its own again.  I sat through it all without another word;
without giving a signal.  In a way I realized the awakening of the
bleachers, and heard the pound of feet and the crash, but it was the
spirit of my team that thrilled me.  Next to that the work of my new
find absorbed me.  I gloated over his easy, deceiving swing.  I rose
out of my seat when he threw that straight fast ball, swift as a
bullet, true as a plumb line.  And when those hard-hitting, sure
bunting Bisons chopped in vain at the wonderful drop, I choked back a
wild yell.  For Rube meant the world to me that day.

In the eighth the score was 8 to 6.  The Bisons had one scratch hit to
their credit, but not a runner had got beyond first base.  Again Rube
held them safely, one man striking out, another fouling out, and the
third going out on a little fly.

Crash!  Crash!  Crash!  Crash!  The bleachers were making up for many
games in which they could not express their riotous feelings.

"It's a cinch we'll win!" yelled a fan with a voice.  Rube was the
first man up in our half of the ninth and his big bat lammed the first
ball safe over second base.  The crowd, hungry for victory, got to
their feet and stayed upon their feet, calling, cheering for runs.  It
was the moment for me to get in the game, and I leaped up, strung like
a wire, and white hot with inspiration. I sent Spears to the coaching
box with orders to make Rube run on the first ball.  I gripped McCall
with hands that made him wince.

Then I dropped back on the bench spent and panting.  It was only a
game, yet it meant so much!  Little McCall was dark as a thunder cloud,
and his fiery eyes snapped.  He was the fastest man in the league, and
could have bunted an arrow from a bow.  The foxy Bison third baseman
edged in.  Mac feinted to bunt toward him then turned his bat inward
and dumped a teasing curving ball down the first base line.  Rube ran
as if in seven-league boots.  Mac's short legs twinkled; he went like
the wind; he leaped into first base with his long slide, and beat the
throw.

The stands and bleachers seemed to be tumbling down.  For a moment the
air was full of deafening sound.  Then came the pause, the dying away
of clatter and roar, the close waiting, suspended quiet.  Spears' clear
voice, as he coached Rube, in its keen note seemed inevitable of
another run.

Ashwell took his stand.  He was another left-hand hitter, and against a
right-hand pitcher, in such circumstances as these, the most dangerous
of men.  Vane knew it.  Ellis, the Bison captain knew it, as showed
plainly in his signal to catch Rube at second.  But Spears' warning
held or frightened Rube on the bag.

Vane wasted a ball, then another.  Ashwell could not be coaxed.
Wearily Vane swung; the shortstop raced out to get in line for a
possible hit through the wide space to his right, and the second
baseman got on his toes as both base runners started.

Crack!  The old story of the hit and run game! Ashwell's hit crossed
sharply where a moment before the shortstop had been standing.  With
gigantic strides Rube rounded the corner and scored.  McCall flitted
through second, and diving into third with a cloud of dust, got the
umpire's decision.  When Stringer hurried up with Mac on third and Ash
on first the whole field seemed racked in a deafening storm.  Again it
subsided quickly.  The hopes of the Worcester fans had been crushed too
often of late for them to be fearless.

But I had no fear.  I only wanted the suspense ended.  I was like a man
clamped in a vise. Stringer stood motionless.  Mac bent low with the
sprinters' stoop; Ash watched the pitcher's arm and slowly edged off
first.  Stringer waited for one strike and two balls, then he hit the
next.  It hugged the first base line, bounced fiercely past the bag and
skipped over the grass to bump hard into the fence.  McCall romped
home, and lame Ashwell beat any run he ever made to the plate. Rolling,
swelling, crashing roar of frenzied feet could not down the high
piercing sustained yell of the fans.  It was great.  Three weeks of
submerged bottled baseball joy exploded in one mad outburst!  The fans,
too, had come into their own again.

We scored no more.  But the Bisons were beaten.  Their spirit was
broken.  This did not make the Rube let up in their last half inning.
Grim and pale he faced them.  At every long step and swing he tossed
his shock of light hair.  At the end he was even stronger than at the
beginning. He still had the glancing, floating airy quality that
baseball players call speed.  And he struck out the last three batters.

In the tumult that burst over my ears I sat staring at the dots on my
score card.  Fourteen strike outs! one scratch hit!  No base on balls
since the first inning!  That told the story which deadened senses
doubted.  There was a roar in my ears.  Some one was pounding me.  As I
struggled to get into the dressing room the crowd mobbed me.  But I did
not hear what they yelled. I had a kind of misty veil before my eyes,
in which I saw that lanky Rube magnified into a glorious figure.  I saw
the pennant waving, and the gleam of a white cottage through the trees,
and a trim figure waiting at the gate.  Then I rolled into the dressing
room.

Somehow it seemed strange to me.  Most of the players were stretched
out in peculiar convulsions. Old Spears sat with drooping head.  Then a
wild flaming-eyed giant swooped upon me.  With a voice of thunder he
announced:

"I'm a-goin' to lick you, too!"

After that we never called him any name except Rube.



THE RUBE'S PENNANT

"Fellows, it's this way.  You've got to win today's game.  It's the
last of the season and means the pennant for Worcester.  One more hard
scrap and we're done!  Of all the up-hill fights any bunch ever made to
land the flag, our has been the best.  You're the best team I ever
managed, the gamest gang of ball players that ever stepped in spikes.
We've played in the hardest kind of luck all season, except that short
trip we called the Rube's Honeymoon.  We got a bad start, and sore arms
and busted fingers, all kinds of injuries, every accident calculated to
hurt a team's chances, came our way.  But in spite of it all we got the
lead and we've held it, and today we're still a few points ahead of
Buffalo."

I paused to catch my breath, and looked round on the grim, tired faces
of my players.  They made a stern group.  The close of the season found
them almost played out.  What a hard chance it was, after their
extraordinary efforts, to bring the issue of the pennant down to this
last game!

"If we lose today, Buffalo, with three games more to play at home, will
pull the bunting," I went on.  "But they're not going to win!  I'm
putting it up to you that way.  I know Spears is all in; Raddy's arm is
gone; Ash is playing on one leg; you're all crippled.  But you've got
one more game in you, I know.  These last few weeks the Rube has been
pitching out of turn and he's about all in, too.  He's kept us in the
lead.  If he wins today it'll be Rube's Pennant.  But that might apply
to all of you.  Now, shall we talk over the play today?  Any tricks to
pull off?  Any inside work?"

"Con, you're pretty much upset an' nervous," replied Spears, soberly.
"It ain't no wonder. This has been one corker of a season.  I want to
suggest that you let me run the team today.  I've talked over the play
with the fellers.  We ain't goin' to lose this game, Con.  Buffalo has
been comin' with a rush lately, an' they're confident. But we've been
holdin' in, restin' up as much as we dared an' still keep our lead.
Mebbee it'll surprise you to know we've bet every dollar we could get
hold of on this game.  Why, Buffalo money is everywhere."

"All right, Spears, I'll turn the team over to you.  We've got the
banner crowd of the year out there right now, a great crowd to play
before. I'm more fussed up over this game than any I remember.  But I
have a sort of blind faith in my team....  I guess that's all I want
to say."

Spears led the silent players out of the dressing room and I followed;
and while they began to toss balls to and fro, to limber up cold, dead
arms, I sat on the bench.

The Bisons were prancing about the diamond, and their swaggering
assurance was not conducive to hope for the Worcesters.  I wondered how
many of that vast, noisy audience, intent on the day's sport, even had
a thought of what pain and toil it meant to my players.  The Buffalo
men were in good shape; they had been lucky; they were at the top of
their stride, and that made all the difference.

At any rate, there were a few faithful little women in the grand
stand--Milly and Nan and Rose Stringer and Kate Bogart--who sat with
compressed lips and hoped and prayed for that game to begin and end.

The gong called off the practice, and Spears, taking the field, yelled
gruff encouragement to his men.  Umpire Carter brushed off the plate
and tossed a white ball to Rube and called:  "Play!" The bleachers set
up an exultant, satisfied shout and sat down to wait.

Schultz toed the plate and watched the Rube pitch a couple.  There
seemed to be no diminution of the great pitcher's speed and both balls
cut the plate.  Schultz clipped the next one down the third-base Line.
Bogart trapped it close to the bag, and got it away underhand, beating
the speedy runner by a nose.  It was a pretty play to start with, and
the spectators were not close-mouthed in appreciation.  The short,
stocky Carl ambled up to bat, and I heard him call the Rube something.
It was not a friendly contest, this deciding game between Buffalo and
Worcester.

"Bing one close to his swelled nut!" growled Spears to the Rube.

Carl chopped a bouncing grounder through short and Ash was after it
like a tiger, but it was a hit.  The Buffalo contingent opened up.
Then Manning faced the Rube, and he, too, vented sarcasm.  It might not
have been heard by the slow, imperturbable pitcher for all the notice
he took. Carl edged off first, slid back twice, got a third start, and
on the Rube's pitch was off for second base with the lead that always
made him dangerous. Manning swung vainly, and Gregg snapped a throw to
Mullaney.  Ball and runner got to the bag apparently simultaneously;
the umpire called Carl out, and the crowd uttered a quick roar of
delight.

The next pitch to Manning was a strike.  Rube was not wasting any
balls, a point I noted with mingled fear and satisfaction.  For he
might have felt that he had no strength to spare that day and so could
not try to work the batters.  Again he swung, and Manning rapped a long
line fly over McCall.  As the little left fielder turned at the sound
of the hit and sprinted out, his lameness was certainly not in
evidence.  He was the swiftest runner in the league and always when he
got going the crowd rose in wild clamor to watch him. Mac took that fly
right off the foul flag in deep left, and the bleachers dinned their
pleasure.

The teams changed positions.  "Fellers," said Spears, savagely, "we may
be a bunged-up lot of stiffs, but, say!  We can hit!  If you love your
old captain--sting the ball!"

Vane, the Bison pitcher, surely had his work cut out for him.  For one
sympathetic moment I saw his part through his eyes.  My Worcester
veterans, long used to being under fire, were relentlessly bent on
taking that game.  It showed in many ways, particularly in their
silence, because they were seldom a silent team.  McCall hesitated a
moment over his bats.  Then, as he picked up the lightest one, I saw
his jaw set, and I knew he intended to bunt.  He was lame, yet he meant
to beat out an infield hit.  He went up scowling.

Vane had an old head, and he had a varied assortment of balls.  For Mac
he used an under hand curve, rising at the plate and curving in to the
left-hander.  Mac stepped back and let it go.

"That's the place, Bo," cried the Buffalo infielders.  "Keep 'em close
on the Crab."  Eager and fierce as McCall was, he let pitch after pitch
go by till he had three balls and two strikes.  Still the heady Vane
sent up another pitch similar to the others.  Mac stepped forward in
the box, dropped his bat on the ball, and leaped down the line toward
first base.  Vane came rushing in for the bunt, got it and threw.  But
as the speeding ball neared the baseman, Mac stretched out into the air
and shot for the bag.  By a fraction of a second he beat the ball.  It
was one of his demon-slides.  He knew that the chances favored his
being crippled; we all knew that some day Mac would slide recklessly
once too often.  But that, too, is all in the game and in the spirit of
a great player.

"We're on," said Spears; "now keep with him."

By that the captain meant that Mac would go down, and Ashwell would hit
with the run.

When Vane pitched, little McCall was flitting toward second.  The Bison
shortstop started for the bag, and Ash hit square through his tracks. A
rolling cheer burst from the bleachers, and swelled till McCall overran
third base and was thrown back by the coacher.  Stringer hurried
forward with his big bat.

"Oh!  My!" yelled a fan, and he voiced my sentiments exactly.  Here we
would score, and be one run closer to that dearly bought pennant.

How well my men worked together!  As the pitcher let the ball go, Ash
was digging for second and Mac was shooting plateward.  They played on
the chance of Stringer's hitting. Stringer swung, the bat cracked, we
heard a thud somewhere, and then Manning, half knocked over, was
fumbling for the ball.  He had knocked down a terrific drive with his
mitt, and he got the ball in time to put Stringer out.  But Mac scored
and Ash drew a throw to third base and beat it.  He had a bad ankle,
but no one noticed it in that daring run.

"Watch me paste one!" said Captain Spears, as he spat several yards.
He batted out a fly so long and high and far that, slow as he was, he
had nearly run to second base when Carl made the catch.  Ash easily
scored on the throw-in.  Then Bogart sent one skipping over second, and
Treadwell, scooping it on the run, completed a play that showed why he
was considered the star of the Bison infield.

"Two runs, fellers!" said Spears.  "That's some!  Push 'em over, Rube."

The second inning somewhat quickened the pace.  Even the Rube worked a
little faster.  Ellis lined to Cairns in right; Treadwell fouled two
balls and had a called strike, and was out; McKnight hit a low fly over
short, then Bud Wiler sent one between Spears and Mullaney.  Spears
went for it while the Rube with giant strides ran to cover first base.
Between them they got Bud, but it was only because he was heavy and
slow on his feet.

In our half of that inning Mullaney, Gregg and Cairns went out in one,
two, three order.

With Pannell up, I saw that the Rube held in on his speed, or else he
was tiring.  Pannell hit the second slow ball for two bases.  Vane
sacrificed, and then the redoubtable Schultz came up. He appeared to be
in no hurry to bat.  Then I saw that the foxy Buffalo players were
working to tire the Rube.  They had the situation figured. But they
were no wiser than old Spears.

"Make 'em hit, Rube.  Push 'em straight over. Never mind the corners.
We don't care for a few runs.  We'll hit this game out."

Shultz flied to Mac, who made a beautiful throw to the plate too late
to catch Pannell.  Carl deliberately bunted to the right of the Rube
and it cost the big pitcher strenuous effort to catch his man.

"We got the Rube waggin'!" yelled a Buffalo player.

Manning tripled down the left foul line--a hit the bleachers called a
screamer.  When Ellis came up, it looked like a tie score, and when the
Rube pitched it was plain that he was tired.  The Bisons yelled their
assurance of this and the audience settled into quiet.  Ellis batted a
scorcher that looked good for a hit.  But the fast Ashwell was moving
with the ball, and he plunged lengthwise to get it square in his glove.
The hit had been so sharp that he had time to get up and make the throw
to beat the runner.  The bleachers thundered at the play.

"You're up, Rube," called Spears.  "Lam one out of the lot!"

The Rube was an uncertain batter.  There was never any telling what he
might do, for he had spells of good and bad hitting.  But when he did
get his bat on the ball it meant a chase for some fielder.  He went up
swinging his huge club, and he hit a fly that would have been an easy
home run for a fast man.  But the best Rube could do was to reach third
base.  This was certainly good enough, as the bleachers loudly
proclaimed, and another tally for us seemed sure.

McCall bunted toward third, another of his teasers.  The Rube would
surely have scored had he started with the ball, but he did not try and
missed a chance.  Wiler, of course, held the ball, and Mac got to first
without special effort.  He went down on the first pitch.  Then Ash
lined to Carl.  The Rube waited till the ball was caught and started
for home.  The crowd screamed, the Rube ran for all he was worth and
Carl's throw to the plate shot in low and true.  Ellis blocked the Rube
and tagged him out.

It looked to the bleachers as if Ellis had been unnecessarily rough,
and they hissed and stormed disapproval.  As for me, I knew the Bisons
were losing no chance to wear out my pitcher.  Stringer fouled out with
Mac on third, and it made him so angry that he threw his bat toward the
bench, making some of the boys skip lively.

The next three innings, as far as scoring was concerned, were all for
Buffalo.  But the Worcester infield played magnificent ball, holding
their opponents to one run each inning.

That made the score 4 to 2 in favor of Buffalo.

In the last half of the sixth, with Ash on first base and two men out,
old Spears hit another of his lofty flies, and this one went over the
fence and tied the score.  How the bleachers roared! It was full two
minutes before they quieted down. To make it all the more exciting,
Bogart hit safely, ran like a deer to third on Mullaney's grounder,
which Wiler knocked down, and scored on a passed ball.  Gregg ended the
inning by striking out.

"Get at the Rube!" boomed Ellis, the Bison captain.  "We'll have him up
in the air soon.  Get in the game now, you stickers!"

Before I knew what had happened, the Bisons had again tied the score.
They were indomitable. They grew stronger all the time.  A stroke of
good luck now would clinch the game for them. The Rube was beginning to
labor in the box; Ashwell was limping; Spears looked as if he would
drop any moment; McCall could scarcely walk. But if the ball came his
way he could still run. Nevertheless, I never saw any finer fielding
than these cripped players executed that inning.

"Ash--Mac--can you hold out?" I asked, when they limped in.  I received
glances of scorn for my question.  Spears, however, was not sanguine.

"I'll stick pretty much if somethin' doesn't happen," he said; "but I'm
all in.  I'll need a runner if I get to first this time."

Spears lumbered down to first base on an infield hit and the heavy
Manning gave him the hip. Old Spears went down, and I for one knew he
was out in more ways than that signified by Carter's sharp:  "Out!"

The old war-horse gathered himself up slowly and painfully, and with
his arms folded and his jaw protruding, he limped toward the umpire.

"Did you call me out?" he asked, in a voice plainly audible to any one
on the field.

"Yes," snapped Carter.

"What for?  I beat the ball, an' Mannin' played dirty with me--gave me
the hip."

"I called you out."

"But I wasn't out!"

"Shut up now!  Get off the diamond!" ordered Carter, peremptorily.

"What?  Me?  Say, I'm captain of this team. Can't I question a
decision?"

"Not mine.  Spears, you're delaying the game."

"I tell you it was a rotten decision," yelled Spears.  The bleachers
agreed with him.

Carter grew red in the face.  He and Spears had before then met in
field squabbles, and he showed it.

"Fifty dollars!"

"More!  You cheap-skate you piker!  More!"

"It's a hundred!"

"Put me out of the game!" roared Spears.

"You bet!  Hurry now--skedaddle!"

"Rob-b-ber!" bawled Spears.

Then he labored slowly toward the bench, all red, and yet with
perspiration, his demeanor one of outraged dignity.  The great crowd,
as one man, stood up and yelled hoarsely at Carter, and hissed and
railed at him.  When Spears got to the bench he sat down beside me as
if in pain, but he was smiling.

"Con, I was all in, an' knowin' I couldn't play any longer, thought I'd
try to scare Carter.  Say, he was white in the face.  If we play into a
close decision now, he'll give it to us."

Bogart and Mullaney batted out in short order, and once more the
aggressive Bisons hurried in for their turn.  Spears sent Cairns to
first base and Jones to right.  The Rube lobbed up his slow ball.  In
that tight pinch he showed his splendid nerve.  Two Buffalo players,
over-anxious, popped up flies.  The Rube kept on pitching the slow
curve until it was hit safely.  Then heaving his shoulders with all his
might he got all the motion possible into his swing and let drive. He
had almost all of his old speed, but it hurt me to see him work with
such desperate effort. He struck Wiler out.

He came stooping into the bench, apparently deaf to the stunning round
of applause.  Every player on the team had a word for the Rube. There
was no quitting in that bunch, and if I ever saw victory on the stern
faces of ball players it was in that moment.

"We haven't opened up yet.  Mebbee this is the innin'.  If it ain't,
the next is," said Spears.

With the weak end of the batting list up, there seemed little hope of
getting a run on Vane that inning.  He had so much confidence that he
put the ball over for Gregg, who hit out of the reach of the infield.
Again Vane sent up his straight ball, no doubt expecting Cairns to hit
into a double play.  But Cairns surprised Vane and everybody else by
poking a safety past first base. The fans began to howl and pound and
whistle.

The Rube strode to bat.  The infield closed in for a bunt, but the Rube
had no orders for that style of play.  Spears had said nothing to him.
Vane lost his nonchalance and settled down.  He cut loose with all his
speed.  Rube stepped out, suddenly whirled, then tried to dodge, but
the ball hit him fair in the back.  Rube sagged in his tracks, then
straightened up, and walked slowly to first base.  Score 5 to 5, bases
full, no outs, McCall at bat.  I sat dumb on the bench, thrilling and
shivering.  McCall!  Ashwell!  Stringer to bat!

"Play it safe!  Hold the bags!" yelled the coacher.

McCall fairly spouted defiance as he faced Vane.

"Pitch!  It's all off!  An' you know it!"

If Vane knew that, he showed no evidence of it.  His face was cold,
unsmiling, rigid.  He had to pitch to McCall, the fastest man in the
league; to Ashwell, the best bunter; to Stringer, the champion batter.
It was a supreme test for a great pitcher.  There was only one kind of
a ball that McCall was not sure to hit, and that was a high curve, in
close.  Vane threw it with all his power. Carter called it a strike.
Again Vane swung and his arm fairly cracked.  Mac fouled the ball.  The
third was wide.  Slowly, with lifting breast, Vane got ready, whirled
savagely and shot up the ball. McCall struck out.

As the Buffalo players crowed and the audience groaned it was worthy of
note that little McCall showed no temper.  Yet he had failed to grasp a
great opportunity.

"Ash, I couldn't see 'em," he said, as he passed to the bench.  "Speed,
whew! look out for it. He's been savin' up.  Hit quick, an' you'll get
him."

Ashwell bent over the plate and glowered at Vane.

"Pitch!  It's all off!  An' you know it!" he hissed, using Mac's words.

Ashwell, too, was left-handed; he, too, was extremely hard to pitch to;
and if he had a weakness that any of us ever discovered, it was a slow
curve and change of pace.  But I doubted if Vane would dare to use slow
balls to Ash at that critical moment.  I had yet to learn something of
Vane. He gave Ash a slow, wide-sweeping sidewheeler, that curved round
over the plate.  Ash always took a strike, so this did not matter.
Then Vane used his deceptive change of pace, sending up a curve that
just missed Ash's bat as he swung.

"Oh!  A-h-h! hit!" wailed the bleachers.

Vane doubled up like a contortionist, and shot up a lightning-swift
drop that fooled Ash completely.  Again the crowd groaned.  Score tied,
bases full, two out, Stringer at bat!

"It's up to you, String," called Ash, stepping aside.

Stringer did not call out to Vane.  That was not his way.  He stood
tense and alert, bat on his shoulder, his powerful form braced, and he
waited.  The outfielders trotted over toward right field, and the
infielders played deep, calling out warnings and encouragement to the
pitcher. Stringer had no weakness, and Vane knew this. Nevertheless he
did not manifest any uneasiness, and pitched the first ball without any
extra motion.  Carter called it a strike.  I saw Stringer sink down
slightly and grow tenser all over.  I believe that moment was longer
for me than for either the pitcher or the batter.  Vane took his time,
watched the base runners, feinted to throw to catch them, and then
delivered the ball toward the plate with the limit of his power.

Stringer hit the ball.  As long as I live, I will see that glancing low
liner.  Shultz, by a wonderful play in deep center, blocked the ball
and thereby saved it from being a home run.  But when Stringer stopped
on second base, all the runners had scored.

A shrill, shrieking, high-pitched yell!  The bleachers threatened to
destroy the stands and also their throats in one long revel of baseball
madness.

Jones, batting in place of Spears, had gone up and fouled out before
the uproar had subsided.

"Fellers, I reckon I feel easier," said the Rube. It was the only time
I had ever heard him speak to the players at such a stage.

"Only six batters, Rube," called out Spears. "Boys, it's a grand game,
an' it's our'n!"

The Rube had enough that inning to dispose of the lower half of the
Buffalo list without any alarming bids for a run.  And in our half,
Bogart and Mullaney hit vicious ground balls that gave Treadwell and
Wiler opportunities for superb plays.  Carl, likewise, made a beautiful
running catch of Gregg's line fly.  The Bisons were still in the game,
still capable of pulling it out at the last moment.

When Shultz stalked up to the plate I shut my eyes a moment, and so
still was it that the field and stands might have been empty.  Yet,
though I tried, I could not keep my eyes closed.  I opened them to
watch the Rube.  I knew Spears felt the same as I, for he was blowing
like a porpoise and muttering to himself:  "Mebee the Rube won't last
an' I've no one to put in!"

The Rube pitched with heavy, violent effort. He had still enough speed
to be dangerous.  But after the manner of ball players Shultz and the
coachers mocked him.

"Take all you can," called Ellis to Shultz.

Every pitch lessened the Rube's strength and these wise opponents knew
it.  Likewise the Rube himself knew, and never had he shown better head
work than in this inning.  If he were to win, he must be quick.  So he
wasted not a ball.  The first pitch and the second, delivered breast
high and fairly over the plate, beautiful balls to hit, Shultz watched
speed by.  He swung hard on the third and the crippled Ashwell dove for
it in a cloud of dust, got a hand in front of it, but uselessly, for
the hit was safe.  The crowd cheered that splendid effort.

Carl marched to bat, and he swung his club over the plate as if he knew
what to expect.  "Come on, Rube!" he shouted.  Wearily, doggedly, the
Rube whirled, and whipped his arm.  The ball had all his old glancing
speed and it was a strike. The Rube was making a tremendous effort.
Again he got his body in convulsive motion--two strikes!  Shultz had
made no move to run, nor had Carl made any move to hit.  These veterans
were waiting.  The Rube had pitched five strikes--could he last?

"Now, Carl!" yelled Ellis, with startling suddenness, as the Rube
pitched again.

Crack!  Carl placed that hit as safely through short as if he had
thrown it.  McCall's little legs twinkled as he dashed over the grass.
He had to head off that hit and he ran like a streak.  Down and forward
he pitched, as if in one of his fierce slides, and he got his body in
front of the ball, blocking it, and then he rolled over and over.  But
he jumped up and lined the ball to Bogart, almost catching Shultz at
third-base.  Then, as Mac tried to walk, his lame leg buckled under
him, and down he went, and out.

"Call time," I called to Carter.  "McCall is done....  Myers, you go
to left an' for Lord's sake play ball!"

Stringer and Bogart hurried to Mac and, lifting him up and supporting
him between them with his arms around their shoulders, they led him off
amid cheers from the stands.  Mac was white with pain.

"Naw, I won't go off the field.  Leave me on the bench," he said.
"Fight 'em now.  It's our game.  Never mind a couple of runs."

The boys ran back to their positions and Carter called play.  Perhaps a
little delay had been helpful to the Rube.  Slowly he stepped into the
box and watched Shultz at third and Carl at second. There was not much
probability of his throwing to catch them off the base, but enough of a
possibility to make them careful, so he held them close.

The Rube pitched a strike to Manning, then another.  That made eight
strikes square over the plate that inning.  What magnificent control!
It was equaled by the implacable patience of those veteran Bisons.
Manning hit the next ball as hard as Carl had hit his.  But Mullaney
plunged down, came up with the ball, feinted to fool Carl, then let
drive to Gregg to catch the fleeting Shultz. The throw went wide, but
Gregg got it, and, leaping lengthwise, tagged Shultz out a yard from
the plate.

One out.  Two runners on bases.  The bleachers rose and split their
throats.  Would the inning never end?

Spears kept telling himself:  "They'll score, but we'll win.  It's our
game!"

I had a sickening fear that the strange confidence that obsessed the
Worcester players had been blind, unreasoning vanity.

"Carl will steal," muttered Spears.  "He can't be stopped."

Spears had called the play.  The Rube tried to hold the little
base-stealer close to second, but, after one attempt, wisely turned to
his hard task of making the Bisons hit and hit quickly.  Ellis let the
ball pass; Gregg made a perfect throw to third; Bogart caught the ball
and moved like a flash, but Carl slid under his hands to the bag.
Manning ran down to second.  The Rube pitched again, and this was his
tenth ball over the plate. Even the Buffalo players evinced eloquent
appreciation of the Rube's defence at this last stand.

Then Ellis sent a clean hit to right, scoring both Carl and Manning.  I
breathed easier, for it seemed with those two runners in, the Rube had
a better chance.  Treadwell also took those two runners in, the Rube
had a way those Bisons waited.  They had their reward, for the Rube's
speed left him.  When he pitched again the ball had control, but no
shoot.  Treadwell hit it with all his strength.  Like a huge cat
Ashwell pounced upon it, ran over second base, forcing Ellis, and his
speedy snap to first almost caught Treadwell.

Score 8 to 7.  Two out.  Runner on first.  One run to tie.

In my hazy, dimmed vision I saw the Rube's pennant waving from the
flag-pole.

"It's our game!" howled Spears in my ear, for the noise from the stands
was deafening. "It's our pennant!"

The formidable batting strength of the Bisons had been met, not without
disaster, but without defeat.  McKnight came up for Buffalo and the
Rube took his weary swing.  The batter made a terrific lunge and hit
the ball with a solid crack It lined for center.

Suddenly electrified into action, I leaped up. That hit!  It froze me
with horror.  It was a home-run.  I saw Stringer fly toward left
center. He ran like something wild.  I saw the heavy Treadwell
lumbering round the bases.  I saw Ashwell run out into center field.

"Ah-h!"  The whole audience relieved its terror in that expulsion of
suspended breath. Stringer had leaped high to knock down the ball,
saving a sure home-run and the game.  He recovered himself, dashed back
for the ball and shot it to Ash.

When Ash turned toward the plate, Treadwell was rounding third base.  A
tie score appeared inevitable.  I saw Ash's arm whip and the ball shoot
forward, leveled, glancing, beautiful in its flight.  The crowd saw it,
and the silence broke to a yell that rose and rose as the ball sped in.
That yell swelled to a splitting shriek, and Treadwell slid in the
dust, and the ball shot into Gregg's hands all at the same instant.

Carter waved both arms upwards.  It was the umpire's action when his
decision went against the base-runner.  The audience rolled up one
great stentorian cry.

"Out!"

I collapsed and sank back upon the bench.  My confused senses received
a dull roar of pounding feet and dinning voices as the herald of
victory. I felt myself thinking how pleased Milly would be. I had a
distinct picture in my mind of a white cottage on a hill, no longer a
dream, but a reality, made possible for me by the Rube's winning of the
pennant.



THE RUBE'S HONEYMOON

"He's got a new manager.  Watch him pitch now!"  That was what Nan
Brown said to me about Rube Hurtle, my great pitcher, and I took it as
her way of announcing her engagement.

My baseball career held some proud moments, but this one, wherein I
realized the success of my matchmaking plans, was certainly the
proudest one.  So, entirely outside of the honest pleasure I got out of
the Rube's happiness, there was reason for me to congratulate myself.
He was a transformed man, so absolutely renewed, so wild with joy, that
on the strength of it, I decided the pennant for Worcester was a
foregone conclusion, and, sure of the money promised me by the
directors, Milly and I began to make plans for the cottage upon the
hill.

The Rube insisted on pitching Monday's game against the Torontos, and
although poor fielding gave them a couple of runs, they never had a
chance.  They could not see the ball.  The Rube wrapped it around their
necks and between their wrists and straight over the plate with such
incredible speed that they might just as well have tried to bat rifle
bullets.

That night I was happy.  Spears, my veteran captain, was one huge
smile; Radbourne quietly assured me that all was over now but the
shouting; all the boys were happy.

And the Rube was the happiest of all.  At the hotel he burst out with
his exceeding good fortune.  He and Nan were to be married upon the
Fourth of July!

After the noisy congratulations were over and the Rube had gone, Spears
looked at me and I looked at him.

"Con," said he soberly, "we just can't let him get married on the
Fourth."

"Why not?  Sure we can.  We'll help him get married.  I tell you it'll
save the pennant for us. Look how he pitched today!  Nan Brown is our
salvation!"

"See here, Con, you've got softenin' of the brain, too.  Where's your
baseball sense?  We've got a pennant to win.  By July Fourth we'll be
close to the lead again, an' there's that three weeks' trip on the
road, the longest an' hardest of the season.  We've just got to break
even on that trip.  You know what that means.  If the Rube marries
Nan--what are we goin' to do?  We can't leave him behind.  If he takes
Nan with us--why it'll be a honeymoon!  An' half the gang is stuck on
Nan Brown!  An' Nan Brown would flirt in her bridal veil! ...  Why
Con, we're up against a worse proposition than ever."

"Good Heavens! Cap.  You're right," I groaned.  "I never thought of
that.  We've got to postpone the wedding....  How on earth can we?
I've heard her tell Milly that.  She'll never consent to it.  Say,
this'll drive me to drink."

"All I got to say is this, Con.  If the Rube takes his wife on that
trip it's goin' to be an all-fired hummer.  Don't you forget that."

"I'm not likely to.  But, Spears, the point is this--will the Rube win
his games?"

"Figurin' from his work today, I'd gamble he'll never lose another
game.  It ain't that.  I'm thinkin' of what the gang will do to him an'
Nan on the cars an' at the hotels.  Oh! Lord, Con, it ain't possible to
stand for that honeymoon trip! Just think!"

"If the worst comes to the worst, Cap, I don't care for anything but
the games.  If we get in the lead and stay there I'll stand for
anything.... Couldn't the gang be coaxed or bought off to let the
Rube and Nan alone?"

"Not on your life!  There ain't enough love or money on earth to stop
them.  It'll be awful. Mind, I'm not responsible.  Don't you go holdin'
me responsible.  In all my years of baseball I never went on a trip
with a bride in the game. That's new on me, an' I never heard of it.
I'd be bad enough if he wasn't a rube an' if she wasn't a crazy
girl-fan an' a flirt to boot, an' with half the boys in love with her,
but as it is----"

Spears gave up and, gravely shaking his head, he left me.  I spent a
little while in sober reflection, and finally came to the conclusion
that, in my desperate ambition to win the pennant, I would have taken
half a dozen rube pitchers and their baseball-made brides on the trip,
if by so doing I could increase the percentage of games won.
Nevertheless, I wanted to postpone the Rube's wedding if it was
possible, and I went out to see Milly and asked her to help us.  But
for once in her life Milly turned traitor.

"Connie, you don't want to postpone it.  Why, how perfectly lovely! ...
Mrs. Stringer will go on that trip and Mrs. Bogart....  Connie,
I'm going too!"

She actually jumped up and down in glee.  That was the woman in her.
It takes a wedding to get a woman.  I remonstrated and pleaded and
commanded, all to no purpose.  Milly intended to go on that trip to see
the games, and the fun, and the honeymoon.

She coaxed so hard that I yielded.  Thereupon she called up Mrs.
Stringer on the telephone, and of course found that young woman just as
eager as she was.  For my part, I threw anxiety and care to the four
winds, and decided to be as happy as any of them.  The pennant was
mine!  Something kept ringing that in my ears.  With the Rube working
his iron arm for the edification of his proud Nancy Brown, there was
extreme likelihood of divers shut-outs and humiliating defeats for some
Eastern League teams.

How well I calculated became a matter of baseball history during that
last week of June.  We won six straight games, three of which fell to
the Rube's credit.  His opponents scored four runs in the three games,
against the nineteen we made. Upon July 1, Radbourne beat Providence
and Cairns won the second game.  We now had a string of eight
victories.  Sunday we rested, and Monday was the Fourth, with morning
and afternoon games with Buffalo.

Upon the morning of the Fourth, I looked for the Rube at the hotel, but
could not find him.  He did not show up at the grounds when the other
boys did, and I began to worry.  It was the Rube's turn to pitch and we
were neck and neck with Buffalo for first place.  If we won both games
we would go ahead of our rivals.  So I was all on edge, and kept going
to the dressing-room to see if the Rube had arrived.  He came, finally,
when all the boys were dressed, and about to go out for practice.  He
had on a new suit, a tailor-made suit at that, and he looked fine.
There was about him a kind of strange radiance.  He stated simply that
he had arrived late because he had just been married.  Before
congratulations were out of our mouths, he turned to me.

"Con, I want to pitch both games today," he said.

"What!  Say, Whit, Buffalo is on the card today and we are only three
points behind them. If we win both we'll be leading the league once
more.  I don't know about pitching you both games."

"I reckon we'll be in the lead tonight then," he replied, "for I'll win
them both."

I was about to reply when Dave, the ground-keeper, called me to the
door, saying there was a man to see me.  I went out, and there stood
Morrisey, manager of the Chicago American League team.  We knew each
other well and exchanged greetings.

"Con, I dropped off to see you about this new pitcher of yours, the one
they call the Rube.  I want to see him work.  I've heard he's pretty
fast.  How about it?"

"Wait--till you see him pitch," I replied.  I could scarcely get that
much out, for Morrisey's presence meant a great deal and I did not want
to betray my elation.

"Any strings on him?" queried the big league manager, sharply.

"Well, Morrisey, not exactly.  I can give you the first call.  You'll
have to bid high, though. Just wait till you see him work."

"I'm glad to hear that.  My scout was over here watching him pitch and
says he's a wonder."

What luck it was that Morrisey should have come upon this day!  I could
hardly contain myself. Almost I began to spend the money I would get
for selling the Rube to the big league manager. We took seats in the
grand stand, as Morrisey did not want to be seen by any players, and I
stayed there with him until the gong sounded. There was a big
attendance.  I looked all over the stand for Nan, but she was lost in
the gay crowd.  But when I went down to the bench I saw her up in my
private box with Milly.  It took no second glance to see that Nan Brown
was a bride and glorying in the fact.

Then, in the absorption of the game, I became oblivious to Milly and
Nan; the noisy crowd; the giant fire-crackers and the smoke; to the
presence of Morrisey; to all except the Rube and my team and their
opponents.  Fortunately for my hopes, the game opened with
characteristic Worcester dash.  Little McCall doubled, Ashwell drew his
base on four wide pitches, and Stringer drove the ball over the
right-field fence--three runs!

Three runs were enough to win that game.  Of all the exhibitions of
pitching with which the Rube had favored us, this one was the finest.
It was perhaps not so much his marvelous speed and unhittable curves
that made the game one memorable in the annals of pitching; it was his
perfect control in the placing of balls, in the cutting of corners; in
his absolute implacable mastery of the situation.  Buffalo was unable
to find him at all.  The game was swift short, decisive, with the score
5 to 0 in our favor.  But the score did not tell all of the Rube's work
that morning.  He shut out Buffalo without a hit, or a scratch, the
first no-hit, no-run game of the year.  He gave no base on balls; not a
Buffalo player got to first base; only one fly went to the outfield.

For once I forgot Milly after a game, and I hurried to find Morrisey,
and carried him off to have dinner with me.

"Your rube is a wonder, and that's a fact," he said to me several
times.  "Where on earth did you get him?  Connelly, he's my meat.  Do
you understand?  Can you let me have him right now?"

"No, Morrisey, I've got the pennant to win first.  Then I'll sell him."

"How much?  Do you hear?  How much?" Morrisey hammered the table with
his fist and his eyes gleamed.

Carried away as I was by his vehemence, I was yet able to calculate
shrewdly, and I decided to name a very high price, from which I could
come down and still make a splendid deal.

"How much?" demanded Morrisey.

"Five thousand dollars," I replied, and gulped when I got the words out.

Morrisey never batted an eye.

"Waiter, quick, pen and ink and paper!"

Presently my hand, none too firm, was signing my name to a contract
whereby I was to sell my pitcher for five thousand dollars at the close
of the current season.  I never saw a man look so pleased as Morrisey
when he folded that contract and put it in his pocket.  He bade me
good-bye and hurried off to catch a train, and he never knew the Rube
had pitched the great game on his wedding day.

That afternoon before a crowd that had to be roped off the diamond, I
put the Rube against the Bisons.  How well he showed the baseball
knowledge he had assimilated!  He changed his style in that second
game.  He used a slow ball and wide curves and took things easy.  He
made Buffalo hit the ball and when runners got on bases once more let
out his speed and held them down.  He relied upon the players behind
him and they were equal to the occasion.

It was a totally different game from that of the morning, and perhaps
one more suited to the pleasure of the audience.  There was plenty of
hard hitting, sharp fielding and good base running, and the game was
close and exciting up to the eighth, when Mullaney's triple gave us two
runs, and a lead that was not headed.  To the deafening roar of the
bleachers the Rube walked off the field, having pitched Worcester into
first place in the pennant race.

That night the boys planned their first job on the Rube.  We had
ordered a special Pullman for travel to Toronto, and when I got to the
depot in the morning, the Pullman was a white fluttering mass of satin
ribbons.  Also, there was a brass band, and thousands of baseball fans,
and barrels of old foot-gear.  The Rube and Nan arrived in a cab and
were immediately mobbed. The crowd roared, the band played, the engine
whistled, the bell clanged; and the air was full of confetti and
slippers, and showers of rice like hail pattered everywhere.  A
somewhat dishevelled bride and groom boarded the Pullman and
breathlessly hid in a state room.  The train started, and the crowd
gave one last rousing cheer.  Old Spears yelled from the back platform:

"Fellers, an' fans, you needn't worry none about leavin' the Rube an'
his bride to the tender mercies of the gang.  A hundred years from now
people will talk about this honeymoon baseball trip.  Wait till we come
back--an' say, jest to put you wise, no matter what else happens, we're
comin' back in first place!"

It was surely a merry party in that Pullman. The bridal couple emerged
from their hiding place and held a sort of reception in which the Rube
appeared shy and frightened, and Nan resembled a joyous, fluttering
bird in gray.  I did not see if she kissed every man on the team, but
she kissed me as if she had been wanting to do it for ages. Milly
kissed the Rube, and so did the other women, to his infinite
embarrassment.  Nan's effect upon that crowd was most singular.  She
was sweetness and caprice and joy personified.

We settled down presently to something approaching order, and I, for
one, with very keen ears and alert eyes, because I did not want to miss
anything.

"I see the lambs a-gambolin'," observed McCall, in a voice louder than
was necessary to convey his meaning to Mullaney, his partner in the
seat.

"Yes, it do seem as if there was joy aboundin' hereabouts," replied Mul
with fervor.

"It's more spring-time than summer," said Ashwell, "an' everything in
nature is runnin' in pairs.  There are the sheep an' the cattle an' the
birds.  I see two kingfishers fishin' over here. An' there's a couple
of honey-bees makin' honey. Oh, honey, an' by George, if there ain't
two butterflies foldin' their wings round each other.  See the
dandelions kissin' in the field!"

Then the staid Captain Spears spoke up with an appearance of sincerity
and a tone that was nothing short of remarkable.

"Reggie, see the sunshine asleep upon yon bank.  Ain't it lovely?  An'
that white cloud sailin' thither amid the blue--how spontaneous! Joy is
a-broad o'er all this boo-tiful land today--Oh, yes!  An' love's wings
hover o 'er the little lambs an' the bullfrogs in the pond an' the
dicky birds in the trees.  What sweetness to lie in the grass, the lap
of bounteous earth, eatin' apples in the Garden of Eden, an' chasin'
away the snakes an' dreamin' of Thee, Sweet-h-e-a-r-t----"

Spears was singing when he got so far and there was no telling what he
might have done if Mullaney, unable to stand the agony, had not jabbed
a pin in him.  But that only made way for the efforts of the other
boys, each of whom tried to outdo the other in poking fun at the Rube
and Nan.  The big pitcher was too gloriously happy to note much of what
went on around him, but when it dawned upon him he grew red and white
by turns.

Nan, however, was more than equal to the occasion.  Presently she
smiled at Spears, such a smile!  The captain looked as if he had just
partaken of an intoxicating wine.  With a heightened color in her
cheeks and a dangerous flash in her roguish eyes, Nan favored McCall
with a look, which was as much as to say that she remembered him with a
dear sadness.  She made eyes at every fellow in the car, and then
bringing back her gaze to the Rube, as if glorying in comparison, she
nestled her curly black head on his shoulder.  He gently tried to move
her; but it was not possible. Nan knew how to meet the ridicule of half
a dozen old lovers.  One by one they buried themselves in newspapers,
and finally McCall, for once utterly beaten, showed a white feather,
and sank back out of sight behind his seat.

The boys did not recover from that shock until late in the afternoon.
As it was a physical impossibility for Nan to rest her head all day
upon her husband's broad shoulder, the boys toward dinner time came out
of their jealous trance.  I heard them plotting something.  When dinner
was called, about half of my party, including the bride and groom, went
at once into the dining-car. Time there flew by swiftly.  And later,
when we were once more in our Pullman, and I had gotten interested in a
game of cards with Milly and Stringer and his wife, the Rube came
marching up to me with a very red face.

"Con, I reckon some of the boys have stolen my--our grips," said he.

"What?" I asked, blankly.

He explained that during his absence in the dining-car someone had
entered his stateroom and stolen his grip and Nan's.  I hastened at
once to aid the Rube in his search.  The boys swore by everything under
and beyond the sun they had not seen the grips; they appeared very much
grieved at the loss and pretended to help in searching the Pullman.  At
last, with the assistance of a porter, we discovered the missing grips
in an upper berth.  The Rube carried them off to his stateroom and we
knew soon from his uncomplimentary remarks that the contents of the
suitcases had been mixed and manhandled.  But he did not hunt for the
jokers.

We arrived at Toronto before daylight next morning, and remained in the
Pullman until seven o'clock.  When we got out, it was discovered that
the Rube and Nan had stolen a march upon us. We traced them to the
hotel, and found them at breakfast.  After breakfast we formed a merry
sight-seeing party and rode all over the city.

That afternoon, when Raddy let Toronto down with three hits and the
boys played a magnificent game behind him, and we won 7 to 2, I knew at
last and for certain that the Worcester team had come into its own
again.  Then next day Cairns won a close, exciting game, and following
that, on the third day, the matchless Rube toyed with the Torontos.
Eleven straight games won!  I was in the clouds, and never had I seen
so beautiful a light as shone in Milly's eyes.

From that day The Honeymoon Trip of the Worcester Baseball Club, as the
newspapers heralded it--was a triumphant march.  We won two out of
three games at Montreal, broke even with the hard-fighting Bisons, took
three straight from Rochester, and won one and tied one out of three
with Hartford.  It would have been wonderful ball playing for a team to
play on home grounds and we were doing the full circuit of the league.

Spears had called the turn when he said the trip would be a hummer.
Nan Hurtle had brought us wonderful luck.

But the tricks they played on Whit and his girl-fan bride!

Ashwell, who was a capital actor, disguised himself as a conductor and
pretended to try to eject Whit and Nan from the train, urging that
love-making was not permitted.  Some of the team hired a clever young
woman to hunt the Rube up at the hotel, and claim old acquaintance with
him.  Poor Whit almost collapsed when the young woman threw her arms
about his neck just as Nan entered the parlor.  Upon the instant Nan
became wild as a little tigress, and it took much explanation and
eloquence to reinstate Whit in her affections.

Another time Spears, the wily old fox, succeeded in detaining Nan on
the way to the station, and the two missed the train.  At first the
Rube laughed with the others, but when Stringer remarked that he had
noticed a growing attachment between Nan and Spears, my great pitcher
experienced the first pangs of the green-eyed monster.  We had to hold
him to keep him from jumping from the train, and it took Milly and Mrs.
Stringer to soothe him.  I had to wire back to Rochester for a special
train for Spears and Nan, and even then we had to play half a game
without the services of our captain.

So far upon our trip I had been fortunate in securing comfortable rooms
and the best of transportation for my party.  At Hartford, however, I
encountered difficulties.  I could not get a special Pullman, and the
sleeper we entered already had a number of occupants.  After the ladies
of my party had been assigned to berths, it was necessary for some of
the boys to sleep double in upper berths.

It was late when we got aboard, the berths were already made up, and
soon we had all retired. In the morning very early I was awakened by a
disturbance.  It sounded like a squeal.  I heard an astonished
exclamation, another squeal, the pattering of little feet, then hoarse
uproar of laughter from the ball players in the upper berths. Following
that came low, excited conversation between the porter and somebody,
then an angry snort from the Rube and the thud of his heavy feet in the
aisle.  What took place after that was guess-work for me.  But I
gathered from the roars and bawls that the Rube was after some of the
boys.  I poked my head between the curtains and saw him digging into
the berths.

"Where's McCall?" he yelled.

Mac was nowhere in that sleeper, judging from the vehement denials.
But the Rube kept on digging and prodding in the upper berths.

"I'm a-goin' to lick you, Mac, so I reckon you'd better show up,"
shouted the Rube.

The big fellow was mad as a hornet.  When he got to me he grasped me
with his great fence-rail splitting hands and I cried out with pain.

"Say!  Whit, let up!  Mac's not here.... What's wrong?"

"I'll show you when I find him."  And the Rube stalked on down the
aisle, a tragically comic figure in his pajamas.  In his search for Mac
he pried into several upper berths that contained occupants who were
not ball players, and these protested in affright.  Then the Rube began
to investigate the lower berths.  A row of heads protruded in a bobbing
line from between the curtains of the upper berths.

"Here, you Indian!  Don't you look in there! That's my wife's berth!"
yelled Stringer.

Bogart, too, evinced great excitement.

"Hurtle, keep out of lower eight or I'll kill you," he shouted.

What the Rube might have done there was no telling, but as he grasped a
curtain, he was interrupted by a shriek from some woman assuredly not
of our party.

"Get out! you horrid wretch!  Help!  Porter! Help!  Conductor!"

Instantly there was a deafening tumult in the car.  When it had
subsided somewhat, and I considered I would be safe, I descended from
my berth and made my way to the dressing room. Sprawled over the
leather seat was the Rube pommelling McCall with hearty good will.  I
would have interfered, had it not been for Mac's demeanor.  He was half
frightened, half angry, and utterly unable to defend himself or even
resist, because he was laughing, too.

"Dog-gone it!  Whit--I didn't--do it!  I swear it was Spears!  Stop
thumpin' me now--or I'll get sore....  You hear me!  It wasn't me, I
tell you.  Cheese it!"

For all his protesting Mac received a good thumping, and I doubted not
in the least that he deserved it.  The wonder of the affair, however,
was the fact that no one appeared to know what had made the Rube so
furious.  The porter would not tell, and Mac was strangely reticent,
though his smile was one to make a fellow exceedingly sure something
out of the ordinary had befallen. It was not until I was having
breakfast in Providence that I learned the true cause of Rube's
conduct, and Milly confided it to me, insisting on strict confidence.

"I promised not to tell," she said.  "Now you promise you'll never
tell."

"Well, Connie," went on Milly, when I had promised, "it was the
funniest thing yet, but it was horrid of McCall.  You see, the Rube had
upper seven and Nan had lower seven.  Early this morning, about
daylight, Nan awoke very thirsty and got up to get a drink.  During her
absence, probably, but any way some time last night, McCall changed the
number on her curtain, and when Nan came back to number seven of course
she almost got in the wrong berth."

"No wonder the Rube punched him!" I declared. "I wish we were safe
home.  Something'll happen yet on this trip."

I was faithful to my promise to Milly, but the secret leaked out
somewhere; perhaps Mac told it, and before the game that day all the
players knew it.  The Rube, having recovered his good humor, minded it
not in the least.  He could not have felt ill-will for any length of
time.  Everything seemed to get back into smooth running order, and the
Honeymoon Trip bade fair to wind up beautifully.

But, somehow or other, and about something unknown to the rest of us,
the Rube and Nan quarreled.  It was their first quarrel.  Milly and I
tried to patch it up but failed.

We lost the first game to Providence and won the second.  The next day,
a Saturday, was the last game of the trip, and it was Rube's turn to
pitch.  Several times during the first two days the Rube and Nan about
half made up their quarrel, only in the end to fall deeper into it.
Then the last straw came in a foolish move on the part of wilful Nan.
She happened to meet Henderson, her former admirer, and in a flash she
took up her flirtation with him where she had left off.

"Don't go to the game with him, Nan," I pleaded.  "It's a silly thing
for you to do.  Of course you don't mean anything, except to torment
Whit.  But cut it out.  The gang will make him miserable and we'll lose
the game.  There's no telling what might happen."

"I'm supremely indifferent to what happens," she replied, with a
rebellious toss of her black head.  "I hope Whit gets beaten."

She went to the game with Henderson and sat in the grand stand, and the
boys spied them out and told the Rube.  He did not believe it at first,
but finally saw them, looked deeply hurt and offended, and then grew
angry.  But the gong, sounding at that moment, drew his attention to
his business of the day, to pitch.

His work that day reminded me of the first game he ever pitched for me,
upon which occasion Captain Spears got the best out of him by making
him angry.  For several innings Providence was helpless before his
delivery.  Then something happened that showed me a crisis was near.  A
wag of a fan yelled from the bleachers.

"Honeymoon Rube!"

This cry was taken up by the delighted fans and it rolled around the
field.  But the Rube pitched on, harder than ever.  Then the knowing
bleacherite who had started the cry changed it somewhat.

"Nanny's Rube!" he yelled.

This, too, went the rounds, and still the Rube, though red in the face,
preserved his temper and his pitching control.  All would have been
well if Bud Wiler, comedian of the Providence team, had not hit upon a
way to rattle Rube.

"Nanny's Goat!" he shouted from the coaching lines.  Every Providence
player took it up.

The Rube was not proof against that.  He yelled so fiercely at them,
and glared so furiously, and towered so formidably, that they ceased
for the moment.  Then he let drive with his fast straight ball and hit
the first Providence batter in the ribs.  His comrades had to help him
to the bench.  The Rube hit the next batter on the leg, and judging
from the crack of the ball, I fancied that player would walk lame for
several days. The Rube tried to hit the next batter and sent him to
first on balls.  Thereafter it became a dodging contest with honors
about equal between pitcher and batters.  The Providence players
stormed and the bleachers roared.  But I would not take the Rube out
and the game went on with the Rube forcing in runs.

With the score a tie, and three men on bases one of the players on the
bench again yelled "Nanny's Goat!"

Straight as a string the Rube shot the ball at this fellow and bounded
after it.  The crowd rose in an uproar.  The base runners began to
score. I left my bench and ran across the space, but not in time to
catch the Rube.  I saw him hit two or three of the Providence men.
Then the policemen got to him, and a real fight brought the big
audience into the stamping melee.  Before the Rube was collared I saw
at least four blue-coats on the grass.

The game broke up, and the crowd spilled itself in streams over the
field.  Excitement ran high.  I tried to force my way into the mass to
get at the Rube and the officers, but this was impossible.  I feared
the Rube would be taken from the officers and treated with violence, so
I waited with the surging crowd, endeavoring to get nearer.  Soon we
were in the street, and it seemed as if all the stands had emptied
their yelling occupants.

A trolley car came along down the street, splitting the mass of people
and driving them back. A dozen policemen summarily bundled the Rube
upon the rear end of the car.  Some of these officers boarded the car,
and some remained in the street to beat off the vengeful fans.

I saw some one thrust forward a frantic young woman.  The officers
stopped her, then suddenly helped her on the car, just as I started.  I
recognized Nan.  She gripped the Rube with both hands and turned a
white, fearful face upon the angry crowd.

The Rube stood in the grasp of his wife and the policemen, and he
looked like a ruffled lion. He shook his big fist and bawled in
far-reaching voice:

"I can lick you all!"

To my infinite relief, the trolley gathered momentum and safely passed
out of danger.  The last thing I made out was Nan pressing close to the
Rube's side.  That moment saw their reconciliation and my joy that it
was the end of the Rube's Honeymoon.



THE RUBE'S WATERLOO

It was about the sixth inning that I suspected the Rube of weakening.
For that matter he had not pitched anything resembling his usual brand
of baseball.  But the Rube had developed into such a wonder in the box
that it took time for his let-down to dawn upon me.  Also it took a tip
from Raddy, who sat with me on the bench.

"Con, the Rube isn't himself today," said Radbourne.  "His mind's not
on the game.  He seems hurried and flustered, too.  If he doesn't
explode presently, I'm a dub at callin' the turn."

Raddy was the best judge of a pitcher's condition, physical or mental,
in the Eastern League. It was a Saturday and we were on the road and
finishing up a series with the Rochesters.  Each team had won and lost
a game, and, as I was climbing close to the leaders in the pennant
race, I wanted the third and deciding game of that Rochester series.
The usual big Saturday crowd was in attendance, noisy, demonstrative
and exacting.

In this sixth inning the first man up for Rochester had flied to
McCall.  Then had come the two plays significant of Rube's weakening.
He had hit one batter and walked another.  This was sufficient,
considering the score was three to one in our favor, to bring the
audience to its feet with a howling, stamping demand for runs.

"Spears is wise all right," said Raddy.

I watched the foxy old captain walk over to the Rube and talk to him
while he rested, a reassuring hand on the pitcher's shoulder.  The
crowd yelled its disapproval and Umpire Bates called out sharply:

"Spears, get back to the bag!"

"Now, Mister Umpire, ain't I hurrin' all I can?" queried Spears as he
leisurely ambled back to first.

The Rube tossed a long, damp welt of hair back from his big brow and
nervously toed the rubber. I noted that he seemed to forget the runners
on bases and delivered the ball without glancing at either bag.  Of
course this resulted in a double steal.  The ball went wild--almost a
wild pitch.

"Steady up, old man," called Gregg between the yells of the bleachers.
He held his mitt square over the plate for the Rube to pitch to.  Again
the long twirler took his swing, and again the ball went wild.  Clancy
had the Rube in the hole now and the situation began to grow serious.
The Rube did not take half his usual deliberation, and of the next two
pitches one of them was a ball and the other a strike by grace of the
umpire's generosity.  Clancy rapped the next one, an absurdly slow
pitch for the Rube to use, and both runners scored to the shrill tune
of the happy bleachers.

I saw Spears shake his head and look toward the bench.  It was plain
what that meant.

"Raddy, I ought to take the Rube out," I said, "but whom can I put in?
You worked yesterday--Cairns' arm is sore.  It's got to be nursed. And
Henderson, that ladies' man I just signed, is not in uniform."

"I'll go in," replied Raddy, instantly.

"Not on your life."  I had as hard a time keeping Radbourne from
overworking as I had in getting enough work out of some other players.
"I guess I'll let the Rube take his medicine.  I hate to lose this
game, but if we have to, we can stand it.  I'm curious, anyway, to see
what's the matter with the Rube.  Maybe he'll settle down presently."

I made no sign that I had noticed Spears' appeal to the bench.  And my
aggressive players, no doubt seeing the situation as I saw it, sang out
their various calls of cheer to the Rube and of defiance to their
antagonists.  Clancy stole off first base so far that the Rube,
catching somebody's warning too late, made a balk and the umpire sent
the runner on to second.  The Rube now plainly showed painful evidences
of being rattled.

He could not locate the plate without slowing up and when he did that a
Rochester player walloped the ball.  Pretty soon he pitched as if he
did not care, and but for the fast fielding of the team behind him the
Rochesters would have scored more than the eight runs it got.  When the
Rube came in to the bench I asked him if he was sick and at first he
said he was and then that he was not.  So I let him pitch the remaining
innings, as the game was lost anyhow, and we walked off the field a
badly beaten team.

That night we had to hurry from the hotel to catch a train for
Worcester and we had dinner in the dining-car.  Several of my players'
wives had come over from Worcester to meet us, and were in the
dining-car when I entered.  I observed a pretty girl sitting at one of
the tables with my new pitcher, Henderson.

"Say, Mac," I said to McCall, who was with me, "is Henderson married?"

"Naw, but he looks like he wanted to be.  He was in the grand stand
today with that girl."

"Who is she?  Oh! a little peach!"

A second glance at Henderson's companion brought this compliment from
me involuntarily.

"Con, you'll get it as bad as the rest of this mushy bunch of ball
players.  We're all stuck on that kid.  But since Henderson came she's
been a frost to all of us.  An' it's put the Rube in the dumps."

"Who's the girl?"

"That's Nan Brown.  She lives in Worcester an' is the craziest girl fan
I ever seen.  Flirt! Well, she's got them all beat.  Somebody
introduced the Rube to her.  He has been mooney ever since."

That was enough to whet my curiosity, and I favored Miss Brown with
more than one glance during dinner.  When we returned to the parlor car
I took advantage of the opportunity and remarked to Henderson that he
might introduce his manager.  He complied, but not with amiable grace.

So I chatted with Nan Brown, and studied her. She was a pretty,
laughing, coquettish little minx and quite baseball mad.  I had met
many girl fans, but none so enthusiastic as Nan.  But she was wholesome
and sincere, and I liked her.

Before turning in I sat down beside the Rube. He was very quiet and his
face did not encourage company.  But that did not stop me.

"Hello, Whit; have a smoke before you go to bed?" I asked cheerfully.

He scarcely heard me and made no move to take the proffered cigar.  All
at once it struck me that the rustic simplicity which had characterized
him had vanished.

"Whit, old fellow, what was wrong today?" I asked, quietly, with my
hand on his arm.

"Mr. Connelly, I want my release, I want to go back to Rickettsville,"
he replied hurriedly.

For the space of a few seconds I did some tall thinking.  The situation
suddenly became grave. I saw the pennant for the Worcesters fading,
dimming.

"You want to go home?" I began slowly. "Why, Whit, I can't keep you.  I
wouldn't try if you didn't want to stay.  But I'll tell you
confidentially, if you leave me at this stage I'm ruined."

"How's that?" he inquired, keenly looking at me.

"Well, I can't win the pennant without you.  If I do win it there's a
big bonus for me.  I can buy the house I want and get married this fall
if I capture the flag.  You've met Milly.  You can imagine what your
pitching means to me this year.  That's all."

He averted his face and looked out of the window. His big jaw quivered.

"If it's that--why, I'll stay, I reckon," he said huskily.

That moment bound Whit Hurtle and Frank Connelly into a far closer
relation than the one between player and manager.  I sat silent for a
while, listening to the drowsy talk of the other players and the rush
and roar of the train as it sped on into the night.

"Thank you, old chap," I replied.  "It wouldn't have been like you to
throw me down at this stage.  Whit, you're in trouble?"

"Yes."

"Can I help you--in any way?"'

"I reckon not."

"Don't be too sure of that.  I'm a pretty wise guy, if I do say it
myself.  I might be able to do as much for you as you're going to do
for me."

The sight of his face convinced me that I had taken a wrong tack.  It
also showed me how deep Whit's trouble really was.  I bade him good
night and went to my berth, where sleep did not soon visit me.  A
saucy, sparkling-eyed woman barred Whit Hurtle's baseball career at its
threshold.

Women are just as fatal to ball players as to men in any other walk of
life.  I had seen a strong athlete grow palsied just at a scornful
slight.  It's a great world, and the women run it.  So I lay awake
racking my brains to outwit a pretty disorganizer; and I plotted for
her sake.  Married, she would be out of mischief.  For Whit's sake, for
Milly's sake, for mine, all of which collectively meant for the sake of
the pennant, this would be the solution of the problem.

I decided to take Milly into my confidence, and finally on the strength
of that I got to sleep.  In the morning I went to my hotel, had
breakfast, attended to my mail, and then boarded a car to go out to
Milly's house.  She was waiting for me on the porch, dressed as I liked
to see her, in blue and white, and she wore violets that matched the
color of her eyes.

"Hello, Connie.  I haven't seen a morning paper, but I know from your
face that you lost the Rochester series," said Milly, with a gay laugh.

"I guess yes.  The Rube blew up, and if we don't play a pretty smooth
game, young lady, he'll never come down."

Then I told her.

"Why, Connie, I knew long ago.  Haven't you seen the change in him
before this?"

"What change?" I asked blankly.

"You are a man.  Well, he was a gawky, slouchy, shy farmer boy when he
came to us.  Of course the city life and popularity began to influence
him.  Then he met Nan.  She made the Rube a worshipper.  I first
noticed a change in his clothes.  He blossomed out in a new suit, white
negligee, neat tie and a stylish straw hat. Then it was evident he was
making heroic struggles to overcome his awkwardness.  It was plain he
was studying and copying the other boys. He's wonderfully improved, but
still shy.  He'll always be shy.  Connie, Whit's a fine fellow, too
good for Nan Brown."

"But, Milly," I interrupted, "the Rube's hard hit.  Why is he too good
for her?"

"Nan is a natural-born flirt," Milly replied. "She can't help it.  I'm
afraid Whit has a slim chance.  Nan may not see deep enough to learn
his fine qualities.  I fancy Nan tired quickly of him, though the one
time I saw them together she appeared to like him very well.  This new
pitcher of yours, Henderson, is a handsome fellow and smooth.  Whit is
losing to him.  Nan likes flash, flattery, excitement."

"McCall told me the Rube had been down in the mouth ever since
Henderson joined the team. Milly, I don't like Henderson a whole lot.
He's not in the Rube's class as a pitcher.  What am I going to do?
Lose the pennant and a big slice of purse money just for a pretty
little flirt?"

"Oh, Connie, it's not so bad as that.  Whit will come around all right."

"He won't unless we can pull some wires.  I've got to help him win Nan
Brown.  What do you think of that for a manager's job?  I guess maybe
winning pennants doesn't call for diplomatic genius and cunning!  But
I'll hand them a few tricks before I lose.  My first move will be to
give Henderson his release."

I left Milly, as always, once more able to make light of
discouragements and difficulties.

Monday I gave Henderson his unconditional release.  He celebrated the
occasion by verifying certain rumors I had heard from other managers.
He got drunk.  But he did not leave town, and I heard that he was
negotiating with Providence for a place on that team.

Radbourne pitched one of his gilt-edged games that afternoon against
Hartford and we won. And Milly sat in the grand stand, having contrived
by cleverness to get a seat next to Nan Brown.  Milly and I were
playing a vastly deeper game than baseball--a game with hearts.  But we
were playing it with honest motive, for the good of all concerned, we
believed, and on the square. I sneaked a look now and then up into the
grand stand.  Milly and Nan appeared to be getting on famously.  It was
certain that Nan was flushed and excited, no doubt consciously proud of
being seen with my affianced.  After the game I chanced to meet them on
their way out.  Milly winked at me, which was her sign that all was
working beautifully.

I hunted up the Rube and bundled him off to the hotel to take dinner
with me.  At first he was glum, but after a while he brightened up
somewhat to my persistent cheer and friendliness. Then we went out on
the hotel balcony to smoke, and there I made my play.

"Whit, I'm pulling a stroke for you.  Now listen and don't be offended.
I know what's put you off your feed, because I was the same way when
Milly had me guessing.  You've lost your head over Nan Brown.  That's
not so terrible, though I daresay you think it's a catastrophe.
Because you've quit.  You've shown a yellow streak. You've lain down.

"My boy, that isn't the way to win a girl. You've got to scrap.  Milly
told me yesterday how she had watched your love affairs with Nan, and
how she thought you had given up just when things might have come your
way.  Nan is a little flirt, but she's all right.  What's more, she was
getting fond of you.  Nan is meanest to the man she likes best.  The
way to handle her, Whit, is to master her.  Play high and mighty.  Get
tragical.  Then grab her up in your arms.  I tell you, Whit, it'll all
come your way if you only keep your nerve.  I'm your friend and so is
Milly. We're going out to her house presently--and Nan will be there."

The Rube drew a long, deep breath and held out his hand.  I sensed
another stage in the evolution of Whit Hurtle.

"I reckon I've taken baseball coachin'," he said presently, "an' I
don't see why I can't take some other kind.  I'm only a rube, an'
things come hard for me, but I'm a-learnin'."

It was about dark when we arrived at the house.

"Hello, Connie.  You're late.  Good evening, Mr. Hurtle.  Come right
in.  You've met Miss Nan Brown?  Oh, of course; how stupid of me!"

It was a trying moment for Milly and me.  A little pallor showed under
the Rube's tan, but he was more composed than I had expected.  Nan got
up from the piano.  She was all in white and deliciously pretty.  She
gave a quick, glad start of surprise.  What a relief that was to my
troubled mind!  Everything had depended upon a real honest liking for
Whit, and she had it.

More than once I had been proud of Milly's cleverness, but this night
as hostess and an accomplice she won my everlasting admiration. She
contrived to give the impression that Whit was a frequent visitor at
her home and very welcome.  She brought out his best points, and in her
skillful hands he lost embarrassment and awkwardness. Before the
evening was over Nan regarded Whit with different eyes, and she never
dreamed that everything had not come about naturally.  Then Milly
somehow got me out on the porch, leaving Nan and Whit together.

"Milly, you're a marvel, the best and sweetest ever," I whispered.
"We're going to win.  It's a cinch."

"Well, Connie, not that--exactly," she whispered back demurely.  "But
it looks hopeful."

I could not help hearing what was said in the parlor.

"Now I can roast you," Nan was saying, archly. She had switched back to
her favorite baseball vernacular.  "You pitched a swell game last
Saturday in Rochester, didn't you?  Not!  You had no steam, no control,
and you couldn't have curved a saucer."

"Nan, what could you expect?" was the cool reply.  "You sat up in the
stand with your handsome friend.  I reckon I couldn't pitch.  I just
gave the game away."

"Whit!--Whit!----"

Then I whispered to Milly that it might be discreet for us to move a
little way from the vicinity.

It was on the second day afterward that I got a chance to talk to Nan.
She reached the grounds early, before Milly arrived, and I found her in
the grand stand.  The Rube was down on the card to pitch and when he
started to warm up Nan said confidently that he would shut out Hartford
that afternoon.

"I'm sorry, Nan, but you're way off.  We'd do well to win at all, let
alone get a shutout."

"You're a fine manager!" she retorted, hotly. "Why won't we win?"

"Well, the Rube's not in good form.  The Rube----"

"Stop calling him that horrid name."

"Whit's not in shape.  He's not right.  He's ill or something is wrong.
I'm worried sick about him."

"Why--Mr. Connelly!" exclaimed Nan.  She turned quickly toward me.

I crowded on full canvas of gloom to my already long face.

"I'm serious, Nan.  The lad's off, somehow. He's in magnificent
physical trim, but he can't keep his mind on the game.  He has lost his
head. I've talked with him, reasoned with him, all to no good.  He only
goes down deeper in the dumps. Something is terribly wrong with him,
and if he doesn't brace, I'll have to release----"

Miss Nan Brown suddenly lost a little of her rich bloom.  "Oh! you
wouldn't--you couldn't release him!"

"I'll have to if he doesn't brace.  It means a lot to me, Nan, for of
course I can't win the pennant this year without Whit being in shape.
But I believe I wouldn't mind the loss of that any more than to see him
fall down.  The boy is a magnificent pitcher.  If he can only be
brought around he'll go to the big league next year and develop into
one of the greatest pitchers the game has ever produced.  But somehow
or other he has lost heart.  He's quit.  And I've done my best for him.
He's beyond me now.  What a shame it is!  For he's the making of such a
splendid man outside of baseball.  Milly thinks the world of him.
Well, well; there are disappointments--we can't help them.  There goes
the gong.  I must leave you.  Nan, I'll bet you a box of candy Whit
loses today.  Is it a go?"

"It is," replied Nan, with fire in her eyes. "You go to Whit Hurtle and
tell him I said if he wins today's game I'll kiss him!"

I nearly broke my neck over benches and bats getting to Whit with that
message.  He gulped once.

Then he tightened his belt and shut out Hartford with two scratch
singles.  It was a great exhibition of pitching.  I had no means to
tell whether or not the Rube got his reward that night, but I was so
happy that I hugged Milly within an inch of her life.

But it turned out that I had been a little premature in my elation.  In
two days the Rube went down into the depths again, this time clear to
China, and Nan was sitting in the grand stand with Henderson.  The Rube
lost his next game, pitching like a schoolboy scared out of his wits.
Henderson followed Nan like a shadow, so that I had no chance to talk
to her.  The Rube lost his next game and then another.  We were pushed
out of second place.

If we kept up that losing streak a little longer, our hopes for the
pennant were gone.  I had begun to despair of the Rube.  For some
occult reason he scarcely spoke to me.  Nan flirted worse than ever.
It seemed to me she flaunted her conquest of Henderson in poor Whit's
face.

The Providence ball team came to town and promptly signed Henderson and
announced him for Saturday's game.  Cairns won the first of the series
and Radbourne lost the second.  It was Rube's turn to pitch the
Saturday game and I resolved to make one more effort to put the
love-sick swain in something like his old fettle.  So I called upon Nan.

She was surprised to see me, but received me graciously.  I fancied her
face was not quite so glowing as usual.  I came bluntly out with my
mission.  She tried to freeze me but I would not freeze.  I was out to
win or lose and not to be lightly laughed aside or coldly denied.  I
played to make her angry, knowing the real truth of her feelings would
show under stress.

For once in my life I became a knocker and said some unpleasant
things--albeit they were true--about Henderson.  She championed
Henderson royally, and when, as a last card, I compared Whit's fine
record with Henderson's, not only as a ball player, but as a man,
particularly in his reverence for women, she flashed at me:

"What do you know about it?  Mr. Henderson asked me to marry him.  Can
a man do more to show his respect?  Your friend never so much as hinted
such honorable intentions.  What's more--he insulted me!"  The blaze in
Nan's black eyes softened with a film of tears.  She looked hurt.  Her
pride had encountered a fall.

"Oh, no, Nan, Whit couldn't insult a lady," I protested.

"Couldn't he?  That's all you know about him. You know I--I promised to
kiss him if he beat Hartford that day.  So when he came I--I did. Then
the big savage began to rave and he grabbed me up in his arms.  He
smothered me; almost crushed the life out of me.  He frightened me
terribly.  When I got away from him--the monster stood there and coolly
said I belonged to him.  I ran out of the room and wouldn't see him any
more.  At first I might have forgiven him if he had apologized--said he
was sorry, but never a word.  Now I never will forgive him."

I had to make a strenuous effort to conceal my agitation.  The Rube had
most carefully taken my fool advice in the matter of wooing a woman.

When I had got a hold upon myself, I turned to Nan white-hot with
eloquence.  Now I was talking not wholly for myself or the pennant, but
for this boy and girl who were at odds in that strangest game of
life--love.

What I said I never knew, but Nan lost her resentment, and then her
scorn and indifference. Slowly she thawed and warmed to my reason,
praise, whatever it was, and when I stopped she was again the radiant
bewildering Nan of old.

"Take another message to Whit for me," she said, audaciously.  "Tell
him I adore ball players, especially pitchers.  Tell him I'm going to
the game today to choose the best one.  If he loses the game----"

She left the sentence unfinished.  In my state of mind I doubted not in
the least that she meant to marry the pitcher who won the game, and so
I told the Rube.  He made one wild upheaval of his arms and shoulders,
like an erupting volcano, which proved to me that he believed it, too.

When I got to the bench that afternoon I was tired.  There was a big
crowd to see the game; the weather was perfect; Milly sat up in the box
and waved her score card at me; Raddy and Spears declared we had the
game; the Rube stalked to and fro like an implacable Indian chief--but
I was not happy in mind.  Calamity breathed in the very air.

The game began.  McCall beat out a bunt; Ashwell sacrificed and
Stringer laced one of his beautiful triples against the fence.  Then he
scored on a high fly.  Two runs!  Worcester trotted out into the field.
The Rube was white with determination; he had the speed of a bullet and
perfect control of his jump ball and drop.  But Providence hit and had
the luck.  Ashwell fumbled, Gregg threw wild.  Providence tied the
score.

The game progressed, growing more and more of a nightmare to me.  It
was not Worcester's day.  The umpire could not see straight; the boys
grumbled and fought among themselves; Spears roasted the umpire and was
sent to the bench; Bogart tripped, hurting his sore ankle, and had to
be taken out.  Henderson's slow, easy ball baffled my players, and when
he used speed they lined it straight at a Providence fielder.

In the sixth, after a desperate rally, we crowded the bases with only
one out.  Then Mullaney's hard rap to left, seemingly good for three
bases, was pulled down by Stone with one hand.  It was a wonderful
catch and he doubled up a runner at second.  Again in the seventh we
had a chance to score, only to fail on another double play, this time
by the infield.

When the Providence players were at bat their luck not only held good
but trebled and quadrupled.  The little Texas-league hits dropped
safely just out of reach of the infielders.  My boys had an off day in
fielding.  What horror that of all days in a season this should be the
one for them to make errors!

But they were game, and the Rube was the gamest of all.  He did not
seem to know what hard luck was, or discouragement, or poor support. He
kept everlastingly hammering the ball at those lucky Providence
hitters.  What speed he had!  The ball streaked in, and somebody would
shut his eyes and make a safety.  But the Rube pitched, on, tireless,
irresistibly, hopeful, not forgetting to call a word of cheer to his
fielders.

It was one of those strange games that could not be bettered by any
labor or daring or skill. I saw it was lost from the second inning, yet
so deeply was I concerned, so tantalizingly did the plays reel
themselves off, that I groveled there on the bench unable to abide by
my baseball sense.

The ninth inning proved beyond a shadow of doubt how baseball fate, in
common with other fates, loved to balance the chances, to lift up one,
then the other, to lend a deceitful hope only to dash it away.

Providence had almost three times enough to win.  The team let up in
that inning or grew over-confident or careless, and before we knew what
had happened some scratch hits, and bases on balls, and errors, gave us
three runs and left two runners on bases.  The disgusted bleachers came
out of their gloom and began to whistle and thump.  The Rube hit
safely, sending another run over the plate.  McCall worked his old
trick, beating out a slow bunt.

Bases full, three runs to tie!  With Ashwell up and one out, the noise
in the bleachers mounted to a high-pitched, shrill, continuous sound.
I got up and yelled with all my might and could not hear my voice.
Ashwell was a dangerous man in a pinch.  The game was not lost yet.  A
hit, anything to get Ash to first--and then Stringer!

Ash laughed at Henderson, taunted him, shook his bat at him and dared
him to put one over. Henderson did not stand under fire.  The ball he
pitched had no steam.  Ash cracked it--square on the line into the
shortstop's hands.  The bleachers ceased yelling.

Then Stringer strode grimly to the plate.  It was a hundred to one, in
that instance, that he would lose the ball.  The bleachers let out one
deafening roar, then hushed.  I would rather have had Stringer at the
bat than any other player in the world, and I thought of the Rube and
Nan and Milly--and hope would not die.

Stringer swung mightily on the first pitch and struck the ball with a
sharp, solid bing!  It shot toward center, low, level, exceedingly
swift, and like a dark streak went straight into the fielder's hands.
A rod to right or left would have made it a home run.  The crowd
strangled a victorious yell.  I came out of my trance, for the game was
over and lost.  It was the Rube's Waterloo.

I hurried him into the dressing room and kept close to him.  He looked
like a man who had lost the one thing worth while in his life.  I
turned a deaf ear to my players, to everybody, and hustled the Rube out
and to the hotel.  I wanted to be near him that night.

To my amaze we met Milly and Nan as we entered the lobby.  Milly wore a
sweet, sympathetic smile.  Nan shone more radiant than ever. I simply
stared.  It was Milly who got us all through the corridor into the
parlor.  I heard Nan talking.

"Whit, you pitched a bad game but--" there was the old teasing, arch,
coquettishness--"but you are the best pitcher!"

"Nan!"

"Yes!"



BREAKING INTO FAST COMPANY

They may say baseball is the same in the minor leagues that it is in
the big leagues, but any old ball player or manager knows better.
Where the difference comes in, however, is in the greater excellence
and unity of the major players, a speed, a daring, a finish that can be
acquired only in competition with one another.

I thought of this when I led my party into Morrisey's private box in
the grand stand of the Chicago American League grounds.  We had come to
see the Rube's break into fast company. My great pitcher, Whittaker
Hurtle, the Rube, as we called him, had won the Eastern League Pennant
for me that season, and Morrisey, the Chicago magnate, had bought him.
Milly, my affianced, was with me, looking as happy as she was pretty,
and she was chaperoned by her mother, Mrs. Nelson.

With me, also, were two veterans of my team, McCall and Spears, who
lived in Chicago, and who would have traveled a few miles to see the
Rube pitch.  And the other member of my party was Mrs. Hurtle, the
Rube's wife, as saucy and as sparkling-eyed as when she had been Nan
Brown.  Today she wore a new tailor-made gown, new bonnet, new
gloves--she said she had decorated herself in a manner befitting the
wife of a major league pitcher.

Morrisey's box was very comfortable, and, as I was pleased to note, so
situated that we had a fine view of the field and stands, and yet were
comparatively secluded.  The bleachers were filling. Some of the
Chicago players were on the field tossing and batting balls; the Rube,
however, had not yet appeared.

A moment later a metallic sound was heard on the stairs leading up into
the box.  I knew it for baseball spiked shoes clanking on the wood.

The Rube, looking enormous in his uniform, stalked into the box,
knocking over two chairs as he entered.  He carried a fielder's glove
in one huge freckled hand, and a big black bat in the other.

Nan, with much dignity and a very manifest pride, introduced him to
Mrs. Nelson.

There was a little chatting, and then, upon the arrival of Manager
Morrisey, we men retired to the back of the box to talk baseball.

Chicago was in fourth place in the league race, and had a fighting
chance to beat Detroit out for the third position.  Philadelphia was
scheduled for that day, and Philadelphia had a great team. It was
leading the race, and almost beyond all question would land the flag.
In truth, only one more victory was needed to clinch the pennant. The
team had three games to play in Chicago and it was to wind up the
season with three in Washington.  Six games to play and only one
imperatively important to win!  But baseball is uncertain, and until
the Philadelphians won that game they would be a band of fiends.

"Well, Whit, this is where you break in," I said.  "Now, tip us
straight.  You've had more than a week's rest.  How's that arm?"

"Grand, Con, grand!" replied the Rube with his frank smile.  "I was a
little anxious till I warmed up.  But say!  I've got more up my sleeve
today than I ever had."

"That'll do for me," said Morrisey, rubbing his hands.  "I'll spring
something on these swelled Quakers today.  Now, Connelly, give Hurtle
one of your old talks--the last one--and then I'll ring the gong."

I added some words of encouragement, not forgetting my old ruse to
incite the Rube by rousing his temper.  And then, as the gong rang and
the Rube was departing, Nan stepped forward for her say.  There was a
little white under the tan on her cheek, and her eyes had a darkling
flash.

"Whit, it's a magnificent sight--that beautiful green field and the
stands.  What a crowd of fans!  Why, I never saw a real baseball crowd
before.  There are twenty thousand here.  And there's a difference in
the feeling.  It's sharper--new to me.  It's big league baseball.  Not
a soul in that crowd ever heard of you, but, I believe, tomorrow the
whole baseball world will have heard of you.  Mr. Morrisey knows.  I
saw it in his face.  Captain Spears knows.  Connie knows.  I know."

Then she lifted her face and, pulling him down within reach, she kissed
him.  Nan took her husband's work in dead earnest; she gloried in it,
and perhaps she had as much to do with making him a great pitcher as
any of us.

The Rube left the box, and I found a seat between Nan and Milly.  The
field was a splendid sight.  Those bleachers made me glow with
managerial satisfaction.  On the field both teams pranced and danced
and bounced around in practice.

In spite of the absolutely last degree of egotism manifested by the
Philadelphia players, I could not but admire such a splendid body of
men.

"So these are the champions of last season and of this season, too,"
commented Milly.  "I don't wonder.  How swiftly and cleanly they play!
They appear not to exert themselves, yet they always get the ball in
perfect time.  It all reminds me of--of the rhythm of music.  And that
champion batter and runner--that Lane in center--isn't he just
beautiful?  He walks and runs like a blue-ribbon winner at the horse
show.  I tell you one thing, Connie, these Quakers are on dress parade."

"Oh, these Quakers hate themselves, I don't think!" retorted Nan.
Being a rabid girl-fan it was, of course, impossible for Nan to speak
baseball convictions or gossip without characteristic baseball slang.
"Stuck on themselves!  I never saw the like in my life.  That fellow
Lane is so swelled that he can't get down off his toes.  But he's a
wonder, I must admit that.  They're a bunch of stars.  Easy, fast,
trained--they're machines, and I'll bet they're Indians to fight.  I
can see it sticking out all over them.  This will certainly be some
game with Whit handing up that jump ball of his to this gang of champs.
But, Connie, I'll go you Whit beats them."

I laughed and refused to gamble.

The gong rang; the crowd seemed to hum and rustle softly to quiet
attention; Umpire McClung called the names of the batteries; then the
familiar "Play!"

There was the usual applause from the grand stand and welcome cheers
from the bleachers. The Rube was the last player to go out. Morrisey
was a manager who always played to the stands, and no doubt he held the
Rube back for effect.  If so, he ought to have been gratified. That
moment reminded me of my own team and audience upon the occasion of the
Rube's debut. It was the same only here it happened in the big league,
before a championship team and twenty thousand fans.

The roar that went up from the bleachers might well have scared an
unseasoned pitcher out of his wits.  And the Quakers lined up before
their bench and gazed at this newcomer who had the nerve to walk out
there to the box.  Cogswell stood on the coaching line, looked at the
Rube and then held up both arms and turned toward the Chicago bench as
if to ask Morrisey:  "Where did you get that?"

Nan, quick as a flash to catch a point, leaned over the box-rail and
looked at the champions with fire in her eye.  "Oh, you just wait!
wait!" she bit out between her teeth.

Certain it was that there was no one who knew the Rube as well as I;
and I knew beyond the shadow of a doubt that the hour before me would
see brightening of a great star pitcher on the big league horizon.  It
was bound to be a full hour for me.  I had much reason to be grateful
to Whit Hurtle.  He had pulled my team out of a rut and won me the
pennant, and the five thousand dollars I got for his release bought the
little cottage on the hill for Milly and me.  Then there was my pride
in having developed him.  And all that I needed to calm me, settle me
down into assurance and keen criticism of the game, was to see the Rube
pitch a few balls with his old incomparable speed and control.

Berne, first batter for the Quakers, walked up to the plate.  He was
another Billy Hamilton, built like a wedge.  I saw him laugh at the
long pitcher.

Whit swayed back, coiled and uncoiled.  Something thin, white,
glancing, shot at Berne.  He ducked, escaping the ball by a smaller
margin than appeared good for his confidence.  He spoke low to the
Rube, and what he said was probably not flavored with the milk of
friendly sweetness.

"Wild!  What'd you look for?" called out Cogswell scornfully.  "He's
from the woods!"

The Rube swung his enormously long arm, took an enormous stride toward
third base, and pitched again.  It was one of his queer deliveries.
The ball cut the plate.

"Ho!  Ho!" yelled the Quakers.

The Rube's next one was his out curve.  It broke toward the corner of
the plate and would have been a strike had not Berne popped it up.

Callopy, the second hitter, faced the Rube, and he, too, after the
manner of ball players, made some remark meant only for the Rube's
ears. Callopy was a famous waiter.  He drove more pitchers mad with his
implacable patience than any hitter in the league.  The first one of
the Rube's he waited on crossed the in-corner; the second crossed the
out-corner and the third was Rube's wide, slow, tantalizing
"stitch-ball," as we call it, for the reason that it came so slow a
batter could count the stitches.  I believe Callopy waited on that
curve, decided to hit it, changed his mind and waited some more, and
finally the ball maddened him and he had to poke at it, the result
being a weak grounder.

Then the graceful, powerful Lane, champion batter, champion base
runner, stepped to the plate.  How a baseball crowd, any crowd,
anywhere, loves the champion batter!  The ovation Lane received made me
wonder, with this impressive reception in a hostile camp, what could be
the manner of it on his home field?  Any boy ball-player from the lots
seeing Lane knock the dirt out of his spikes and step into position
would have known he was a 400 hitter.

I was curious to see what the Rube would pitch Lane.  It must have been
a new and significant moment for Hurtle.  Some pitchers actually wilt
when facing a hitter of Lane's reputation.  But he, on his baseball
side, was peculiarly unemotional. Undoubtedly he could get furious, but
that only increased his effectiveness.  To my amazement the Rube
pitched Lane a little easy ball, not in any sense like his floater or
stitch-ball, but just a little toss that any youngster might have
tossed. Of all possible balls, Lane was not expecting such as that, and
he let it go.  If the nerve of it amazed me, what did it not do to
Lane?  I saw his face go fiery red.  The grand stand murmured; let out
one short yelp of pleasure; the Quaker players chaffed Lane.

The pitch was a strike.  I was gripping my chair now, and for the next
pitch I prophesied the Rube's wonderful jump ball, which he had not yet
used.  He swung long, and at the end of his swing seemed to jerk
tensely.  I scarcely saw the ball. It had marvelous speed.  Lane did
not offer to hit it, and it was a strike.  He looked at the Rube, then
at Cogswell.  That veteran appeared amused. The bleachers, happy and
surprised to be able to yell at Lane, yelled heartily.

Again I took it upon myself to interpret the Rube's pitching mind.  He
had another ball that he had not used, a drop, an unhittable drop.  I
thought he would use that next.  He did, and though Lane reached it
with the bat, the hit was a feeble one.  He had been fooled and the
side was out.

Poole, the best of the Quaker's pitching staff, walked out to the slab.
He was a left-hander, and Chicago, having so many players who batted
left-handed, always found a southpaw a hard nut to crack.  Cogswell,
field manager and captain of the Quakers, kicked up the dust around
first base and yelled to his men:  "Git in the game!"

Staats hit Poole's speed ball into deep short and was out; Mitchell
flew out to Berne; Rand grounded to second.

While the teams again changed sides the fans cheered, and then indulged
in the first stretch of the game.  I calculated that they would be
stretching their necks presently, trying to keep track of the Rube's
work.  Nan leaned on the railing absorbed in her own hope and faith.
Milly chattered about this and that, people in the boxes, and the
chances of the game.

My own interest, while it did not wholly preclude the fortunes of the
Chicago players at the bat, was mostly concerned with the Rube's
fortunes in the field.

In the Rube's half inning he retired Bannister and Blandy on feeble
infield grounders, and worked Cogswell into hitting a wide curve high
in the air.

Poole meant to win for the Quakers if his good arm and cunning did not
fail him, and his pitching was masterly.  McCloskey fanned, Hutchinson
fouled out, Brewster got a short safe fly just out of reach, and
Hoffner hit to second, forcing Brewster.

With Dugan up for the Quakers in the third inning, Cogswell and
Bannister, from the coaching lines, began to talk to the Rube.  My
ears, keen from long practice, caught some of the remarks in spite of
the noisy bleachers.

"Say, busher, you 've lasted longer'n we expected, but you don't know
it!"

"Gol darn you city ball tossers!  Now you jest let me alone!"

"We're comin' through the rye!"

"My top-heavy rustic friend, you'll need an airship presently, when you
go up!"

All the badinage was good-natured, which was sure proof that the
Quakers had not arrived at anything like real appreciation of the Rube.
They were accustomed to observe the trying out of many youngsters, of
whom ninety-nine out of a hundred failed to make good.

Dugan chopped at three strikes and slammed his bat down.  Hucker hit a
slow fly to Hoffer. Three men out on five pitched balls!  Cogswell, old
war horse that he was, stood a full moment and watched the Rube as he
walked in to the bench.  An idea had penetrated Cogswell's brain, and I
would have given something to know what it was.  Cogswell was a great
baseball general, and though he had a preference for matured
ball-players he could, when pressed, see the quality in a youngster.
He picked up his mitt and took his position at first with a gruff word
to his players.

Rand for Chicago opened with a hit, and the bleachers, ready to strike
fire, began to cheer and stamp.  When McCloskey, in an attempt to
sacrifice, beat out his bunt the crowd roared.  Rand, being slow on his
feet, had not attempted to make third on the play.  Hutchinson
sacrificed, neatly advancing the runners.  Then the bleachers played
the long rolling drum of clattering feet with shrill whistling
accompaniment.  Brewster batted a wicked ground ball to Blandy.  He
dove into the dust, came up with the ball, and feinting to throw home
he wheeled and shot the ball to Cogswell, who in turn shot it to the
plate to head Rand.  Runner and ball got there apparently together, but
Umpire McClung's decision went against Rand.  It was fine, fast work,
but how the bleachers stormed at McClung!

"Rob-b-ber!"

Again the head of the Quakers' formidable list was up.  I knew from the
way that Cogswell paced the coaching box that the word had gone out to
look the Rube over seriously.  There were possibilities even in rubes.

Berne carefully stepped into the batter's box, as if he wanted to be
certain to the breadth of a hair how close he was to the plate.  He was
there this time to watch the Rube pitch, to work him out, to see what
was what.  He crouched low, and it would have been extremely hard to
guess what he was up to.  His great play, however, was his ability to
dump the ball and beat out the throw to first.  It developed presently,
that this was now his intention and that the Rube knew it and pitched
him the one ball which is almost impossible to bunt--a high incurve,
over the inside corner. There was no mistaking the Rube's magnificent
control.  True as a plumb line he shot up the ball--once, twice, and
Berne fouled both--two strikes.  Grudgingly he waited on the next, but
it, too, was over the corner, and Berne went out on strikes.  The great
crowd did not, of course, grasp the finesse of the play, but Berne had
struck out--that was enough for them.

Callopy, the famous spiker, who had put many a player out of the game
for weeks at a time, strode into the batter's place, and he, too, was
not at the moment making any funny remarks.  The Rube delivered a ball
that all but hit Callopy fair on the head.  It was the second narrow
escape for him, and the roar he let out showed how he resented being
threatened with a little of his own medicine.  As might have been
expected, and very likely as the Rube intended, Callopy hit the next
ball, a sweeping curve, up over the infield.

I was trying to see all the intricate details of the motive and action
on the field, and it was not easy to watch several players at once.
But while Berne and Callopy were having their troubles with the Rube, I
kept the tail of my eye on Cogswell.  He was prowling up and down the
third-base line.

He was missing no signs, no indications, no probabilities, no
possibilities.  But he was in doubt.  Like a hawk he was watching the
Rube, and, as well, the crafty batters.  The inning might not tell the
truth as to the Rube's luck, though it would test his control.  The
Rube's speed and curves, without any head work, would have made him a
pitcher of no mean ability, but was this remarkable placing of balls
just accident?  That was the question.

When Berne walked to the bench I distinctly heard him say:  "Come out
of it, you dubs.  I say you can't work him or wait him.  He's peggin'
'em out of a gun!"

Several of the Quakers were standing out from the bench, all intent on
the Rube.  He had stirred them up.  First it was humor; then ridicule,
curiosity, suspicion, doubt.  And I knew it would grow to wonder and
certainty, then fierce attack from both tongues and bats, and
lastly--for ball players are generous--unstinted admiration.

Somehow, not only the first climaxes of a game but the decisions, the
convictions, the reputations of pitchers and fielders evolve around the
great hitter.  Plain it was that the vast throng of spectators, eager
to believe in a new find, wild to welcome a new star, yet loath to
trust to their own impulsive judgments, held themselves in check until
once more the great Lane had faced the Rube.

The field grew tolerably quiet just then.  The Rube did not exert
himself.  The critical stage had no concern for him.  He pitched Lane a
high curve, over the plate, but in close, a ball meant to be hit and a
ball hard to hit safely.  Lane knew that as well as any hitter in the
world, so he let two of the curves go by--two strikes.  Again the Rube
relentlessly gave him the same ball; and Lane, hitting viciously,
spitefully, because he did not want to hit that kind of a ball, sent up
a fly that Rand easily captured.

"Oh, I don't know!  Pretty fair, I guess!" yelled a tenor-voiced fan;
and he struck the key-note.  And the bleachers rose to their feet and
gave the Rube the rousing cheer of the brotherhood of fans.

Hoffer walked to first on a base on balls. Sweeney advanced him.  The
Rube sent up a giant fly to Callopy.  Then Staats hit safely, scoring
the first run of the game.  Hoffer crossed the plate amid vociferous
applause.  Mitchell ended the inning with a fly to Blandy.

What a change had come over the spirit of that Quaker aggregation!  It
was something to make a man thrill with admiration and, if he happened
to favor Chicago, to fire all his fighting blood. The players poured
upon the Rube a continuous stream of scathing abuse.  They would have
made a raging devil of a mild-mannered clergyman. Some of them were
skilled in caustic wit, most of them were possessed of forked tongues;
and Cogswell, he of a thousand baseball battles, had a genius for
inflaming anyone he tormented.  This was mostly beyond the ken of the
audience, and behind the back of the umpire, but it was perfectly plain
to me.  The Quakers were trying to rattle the Rube, a trick of the game
as fair for one side as for the other.  I sat there tight in my seat,
grimly glorying in the way the Rube refused to be disturbed.  But the
lion in him was rampant. Fortunately, it was his strange gift to pitch
better the angrier he got; and the more the Quakers flayed him, the
more he let himself out to their crushing humiliation.

The innings swiftly passed to the eighth with Chicago failing to score
again, with Philadelphia failing to score at all.  One scratch hit and
a single, gifts to the weak end of the batting list, were all the lank
pitcher allowed them.  Long since the bleachers had crowned the Rube.
He was theirs and they were his; and their voices had the peculiar
strangled hoarseness due to over-exertion. The grand stand, slower to
understand and approve, arrived later; but it got there about the
seventh, and ladies' gloves and men's hats were sacrificed.

In the eighth the Quakers reluctantly yielded their meed of praise,
showing it by a cessation of their savage wordy attacks on the Rube.
It was a kind of sullen respect, wrung from the bosom of great foes.

Then the ninth inning was at hand.  As the sides changed I remembered
to look at the feminine group in our box.  Milly was in a most
beautiful glow of happiness and excitement.  Nan sat rigid, leaning
over the rail, her face white and drawn, and she kept saying in a low
voice: "Will it never end?  Will it never end?"  Mrs. Nelson stared
wearily.

It was the Quakers' last stand.  They faced it as a team that had won
many a game in the ninth with two men out.  Dugan could do nothing with
the Rube's unhittable drop, for a drop curve was his weakness, and he
struck out.  Hucker hit to Hoffer, who fumbled, making the first error
of the game.  Poole dumped the ball, as evidently the Rube desired, for
he handed up a straight one, but the bunt rolled teasingly and the
Rube, being big and tall, failed to field it in time.

Suddenly the whole field grew quiet.  For the first time Cogswell's
coaching was clearly heard.

"One out!  Take a lead!  Take a lead!  Go through this time.  Go
through!"

Could it be possible, I wondered, that after such a wonderful
exhibition of pitching the Rube would lose out in the ninth?

There were two Quakers on base, one out, and two of the best hitters in
the league on deck, with a chance of Lane getting up.

"Oh!  Oh!  Oh!" moaned Nan.

I put my hand on hers.  "Don't quit, Nan. You'll never forgive yourself
if you quit.  Take it from me, Whit will pull out of this hole!"

What a hole that was for the Rube on the day of his break into fast
company!  I measured it by his remarkable deliberation.  He took a long
time to get ready to pitch to Berne, and when he let drive it was as if
he had been trifling all before in that game.  I could think of no way
to figure it except that when the ball left him there was scarcely any
appreciable interval of time before it cracked in Sweeney's mitt.  It
was the Rube's drop, which I believed unhittable.  Berne let it go by,
shaking his head as McClung called it a strike.  Another followed,
which Berne chopped at vainly.  Then with the same upheaval of his
giant frame, the same flinging of long arms and lunging forward, the
Rube delivered a third drop. And Berne failed to hit it.

The voiceless bleachers stamped on the benches and the grand stand
likewise thundered.

Callopy showed his craft by stepping back and lining Rube's high pitch
to left.  Hoffer leaped across and plunged down, getting his gloved
hand in front of the ball.  The hit was safe, but Hoffer's valiant
effort saved a tie score.

Lane up!  Three men on bases!  Two out!

Not improbably there were many thousand spectators of that thrilling
moment who pitied the Rube for the fate which placed Lane at the bat
then.  But I was not one of them.  Nevertheless my throat was clogged,
my mouth dry, and my ears full of bells.  I could have done something
terrible to Hurtle for his deliberation, yet I knew he was proving
himself what I had always tried to train him to be.

Then he swung, stepped out, and threw his body with the ball.  This was
his rarely used pitch, his last resort, his fast rise ball that jumped
up a little at the plate.  Lane struck under it.  How significant on
the instant to see old Cogswell's hands go up!  Again the Rube pitched,
and this time Lane watched the ball go by.  Two strikes!

That whole audience leaped to its feet, whispering, yelling, screaming,
roaring, bawling.

The Rube received the ball from Sweeney and quick as lightning he sped
it plateward.  The great Lane struck out!  The game was over--Chicago,
1; Philadelphia, 0.

In that whirling moment when the crowd went mad and Milly was hugging
me, and Nan pounding holes in my hat, I had a queer sort of blankness,
a section of time when my sensations were deadlocked.

"Oh!  Connie, look!" cried Nan.  I saw Lane and Cogswell warmly shaking
hands with the Rube.  Then the hungry clamoring fans tumbled upon the
field and swarmed about the players.

Whereupon Nan kissed me and Milly, and then kissed Mrs. Nelson.  In
that radiant moment Nan was all sweetness.

"It is the Rube's break into fast company," she said.



THE KNOCKER

"Yes, Carroll, I got my notice.  Maybe it's no surprise to you.  And
there's one more thing I want to say.  You're 'it' on this team.
You're the topnotch catcher in the Western League and one of the best
ball players in the game--but you're a knocker!"

Madge Ellston heard young Sheldon speak. She saw the flash in his gray
eyes and the heat of his bronzed face as he looked intently at the big
catcher.

"Fade away, sonny.  Back to the bush-league for yours!" replied
Carroll, derisively.  "You're not fast enough for Kansas City.  You
look pretty good in a uniform and you're swift on your feet, but you
can't hit.  You've got a glass arm and you run bases like an ostrich
trying to side.  That notice was coming to you.  Go learn the game!"

Then a crowd of players trooped noisily out of the hotel lobby and
swept Sheldon and Carroll down the porch steps toward the waiting
omnibus.

Madge's uncle owned the Kansas City club. She had lived most of her
nineteen years in a baseball atmosphere, but accustomed as she was to
baseball talk and the peculiar banterings and bickerings of the
players, there were times when it seemed all Greek.  If a player got
his "notice" it meant he would be released in ten days.  A "knocker"
was a ball player who spoke ill of his fellow players.  This scrap of
conversation, however, had an unusual interest because Carroll had paid
court to her for a year, and Sheldon, coming to the team that spring,
had fallen desperately in love with her.  She liked Sheldon pretty
well, but Carroll fascinated her.  She began to wonder if there were
bad feelings between the rivals--to compare them--to get away from
herself and judge them impersonally.

When Pat Donahue, the veteran manager of the team came out, Madge
greeted him with a smile.  She had always gotten on famously with Pat,
notwithstanding her imperious desire to handle the managerial reins
herself upon occasions. Pat beamed all over his round ruddy face.

"Miss Madge, you weren't to the park yesterday an' we lost without our
pretty mascot.  We shure needed you.  Denver's playin' at a fast clip."

"I'm coming out today," replied Miss Ellston, thoughtfully.  "Pat,
what's a knocker?"

"Now, Miss Madge, are you askin' me that after I've been coachin' you
in baseball for years?" questioned Pat, in distress.

"I know what a knocker is, as everybody else does.  But I want to know
the real meaning, the inside-ball of it, to use your favorite saying."

Studying her grave face with shrewd eyes Donahue slowly lost his smile.

"The inside-ball of it, eh?  Come, let's sit over here a bit--the sun's
shure warm today.... Miss Madge, a knocker is the strangest man
known in the game, the hardest to deal with an' what every baseball
manager hates most."

Donahue told her that he believed the term "knocker" came originally
from baseball; that in general it typified the player who strengthened
his own standing by belittling the ability of his team-mates, and by
enlarging upon his own superior qualities.  But there were many phases
of this peculiar type.  Some players were natural born knockers; others
acquired the name in their later years in the game when younger men
threatened to win their places.  Some of the best players ever produced
by baseball had the habit in its most violent form.  There were players
of ridiculously poor ability who held their jobs on the strength of
this one trait.  It was a mystery how they misled magnates and managers
alike; how for months they held their places, weakening a team, often
keeping a good team down in the race; all from sheer bold suggestion of
their own worth and other players' worthlessness. Strangest of all was
the knockers' power to disorganize; to engender a bad spirit between
management and team and among the players. The team which was without
one of the parasites of the game generally stood well up in the race
for the pennant, though there had been championship teams noted for
great knockers as well as great players.

"It's shure strange, Miss Madge," said Pat in conclusion, shaking his
gray head.  "I've played hundreds of knockers, an' released them, too.
Knockers always get it in the end, but they go on foolin' me and
workin' me just the same as if I was a youngster with my first team.
They're part an' parcel of the game."

"Do you like these men off the field--outside of baseball, I mean?"

"No, I shure don't, an' I never seen one yet that wasn't the same off
the field as he was on."

"Thank you, Pat.  I think I understand now. And--oh, yes, there's
another thing I want to ask you.  What's the matter with Billie
Sheldon? Uncle George said he was falling off in his game. Then I've
read the papers.  Billie started out well in the spring."

"Didn't he?  I was sure thinkin' I had a find in Billie.  Well, he's
lost his nerve.  He's in a bad slump.  It's worried me for days.  I'm
goin' to release Billie.  The team needs a shake-up. That's where
Billie gets the worst of it, for he's really the makin' of a star; but
he's slumped, an' now knockin' has made him let down.  There, Miss
Madge, that's an example of what I've just been tellin' you.  An' you
can see that a manager has his troubles.  These hulkin' athletes are a
lot of spoiled babies an' I often get sick of my job."

That afternoon Miss Ellston was in a brown study all the way out to the
baseball park.  She arrived rather earlier than usual to find the
grand-stand empty.  The Denver team had just come upon the field, and
the Kansas City players were practising batting at the left of the
diamond. Madge walked down the aisle of the grand stand and out along
the reporters' boxes.  She asked one of the youngsters on the field to
tell Mr. Sheldon that she would like to speak with him a moment.

Billie eagerly hurried from the players' bench with a look of surprise
and expectancy on his sun-tanned face.  Madge experienced for the first
time a sudden sense of shyness at his coming.  His lithe form and his
nimble step somehow gave her a pleasure that seemed old yet was new.
When he neared her, and, lifting his cap, spoke her name, the shade of
gloom in his eyes and lines of trouble on his face dispelled her
confusion.

"Billie, Pat tells me he's given you ten days' notice," she said.

"It's true."

"What's wrong with you, Billie?"

"Oh, I've struck a bad streak--can't hit or throw."

"Are you a quitter?"

"No, I'm not," he answered quickly, flushing a dark red.

"You started off this spring with a rush.  You played brilliantly and
for a while led the team in batting.  Uncle George thought so well of
you. Then came this spell of bad form.  But, Billie, it's only a slump;
you can brace."

"I don't know," he replied, despondently. "Awhile back I got my mind
off the game.  Then--people who don't like me have taken advantage of
my slump to----"

"To knock," interrupted Miss Ellston.

"I'm not saying that," he said, looking away from her.

"But I'm saying it.  See here, Billie Sheldon, my uncle owns this team
and Pat Donahue is manager. I think they both like me a little.  Now I
don't want to see you lose your place.  Perhaps----"

"Madge, that's fine of you--but I think--I guess it'd be best for me to
leave Kansas City."

"Why?"

"You know," he said huskily.  "I've lost my head--I'm in love--I can't
think of baseball--I'm crazy about you."

Miss Ellston's sweet face grew rosy, clear to the tips of her ears.

"Billie Sheldon," she replied, spiritedly. "You're talking nonsense.
Even if you were were that way, it'd be no reason to play poor ball.
Don't throw the game, as Pat would say. Make a brace!  Get up on your
toes!  Tear things!  Rip the boards off the fence!  Don't quit!"

She exhausted her vocabulary of baseball language if not her
enthusiasm, and paused in blushing confusion.

"Madge!"

"Will you brace up?"

"Will I--will I!" he exclaimed, breathlessly.

Madge murmured a hurried good-bye and, turning away, went up the
stairs.  Her uncle's private box was upon the top of the grand stand
and she reached it in a somewhat bewildered state of mind.  She had a
confused sense of having appeared to encourage Billie, and did not know
whether she felt happy or guilty.  The flame in his eyes had warmed all
her blood.  Then, as she glanced over the railing to see the powerful
Burns Carroll, there rose in her breast a panic at strange variance
with her other feelings.

Many times had Madge Ellston viewed the field and stands and the
outlying country from this high vantage point; but never with the same
mingling emotions, nor had the sunshine ever been so golden, the woods
and meadows so green, the diamond so smooth and velvety, the whole
scene so gaily bright.

Denver had always been a good drawing card, and having won the first
game of the present series, bade fair to draw a record attendance. The
long lines of bleachers, already packed with the familiar mottled
crowd, sent forth a merry, rattling hum.  Soon a steady stream of
well-dressed men and women poured in the gates and up the grand-stand
stairs.  The soft murmur of many voices in light conversation and
laughter filled the air.  The peanut venders and score-card sellers
kept up their insistent shrill cries.  The baseball park was alive now
and restless; the atmosphere seemed charged with freedom and pleasure.
The players romped like skittish colts, the fans shrieked their
witticisms--all sound and movements suggested play.

Madge Ellston was somehow relieved to see her uncle sitting in one of
the lower boxes.  During this game she wanted to be alone, and she
believed she would be, for the President of the League and directors of
the Kansas City team were with her uncle.  When the bell rang to call
the Denver team in from practice the stands could hold no more, and the
roped-off side lines were filling up with noisy men and boys.  From her
seat Madge could see right down upon the players' bench, and when she
caught both Sheldon and Carroll gazing upward she drew back with
sharply contrasted thrills.

Then the bell rang again, the bleachers rolled out their welcoming
acclaim, and play was called with Kansas City at the bat.

Right off the reel Hunt hit a short fly safely over second.  The ten
thousand spectators burst into a roar.  A good start liberated applause
and marked the feeling for the day.

Madge was surprised and glad to see Billie Sheldon start next for the
plate.  All season, until lately, he had been the second batter.
During his slump he had been relegated to the last place on the batting
list.  Perhaps he had asked Pat to try him once more at the top.  The
bleachers voiced their unstinted appreciation of this return, showing
that Billie still had a strong hold on their hearts.

As for Madge, her breast heaved and she had difficulty in breathing.
This was going to be a hard game for her.  The intensity of her desire
to see Billie brace up to his old form amazed her. And Carroll's rude
words beat thick in her ears. Never before had Billie appeared so
instinct with life, so intent and strung as when he faced Keene, the
Denver pitcher.  That worthy tied himself up in a knot, and then,
unlimbering a long arm, delivered the brand new ball.

Billie seemed to leap forward and throw his bat at it.  There was a
sharp ringing crack--and the ball was like a white string marvelously
stretching out over the players, over the green field beyond, and then,
sailing, soaring, over the right-field fence.  For a moment the stands,
even the bleachers, were stone quiet.  No player had ever hit a ball
over that fence.  It had been deemed impossible, as was attested to by
the many painted "ads" offering prizes for such a feat.  Suddenly the
far end of the bleachers exploded and the swelling roar rolled up to
engulf the grand stand in thunder.  Billie ran round the bases to
applause never before vented on that field.  But he gave no sign that
it affected him; he did not even doff his cap.  White-faced and stern,
he hurried to the bench, where Pat fell all over him and many of the
players grasped his hands.

Up in her box Madge was crushing her score-card and whispering:  "Oh!
Billie, I could hug you for that!"

Two runs on two pitched balls!  That was an opening to stir an exacting
audience to the highest pitch of enthusiasm.  The Denver manager
peremptorily called Keene off the diamond and sent in Steele, a
south-paw, who had always bothered Pat's left-handed hitters.  That
move showed his astute judgment, for Steele struck out McReady and
retired Curtis and Mahew on easy chances.

It was Dalgren's turn to pitch and though he had shown promise in
several games he had not yet been tried out on a team of Denver's
strength. The bleachers gave him a good cheering as he walked into the
box, but for all that they whistled their wonder at Pat's assurance in
putting him against the Cowboys in an important game.

The lad was visibly nervous and the hard-hitting and loud-coaching
Denver players went after him as if they meant to drive him out of the
game.  Crane stung one to left center for a base, Moody was out on a
liner to short, almost doubling up Crane; the fleet-footed Bluett
bunted and beat the throw to first; Langly drove to left for what
seemed a three-bagger, but Curtis, after a hard run, caught the ball
almost off the left-field bleachers.  Crane and Bluett advanced a base
on the throw-in.  Then Kane batted up a high foul-fly. Burns Carroll,
the Kansas City catcher, had the reputation of being a fiend for
chasing foul flies, and he dashed at this one with a speed that
threatened a hard fall over the players' bench or a collision with the
fence.  Carroll caught the ball and crashed against the grand stand,
but leaped back with an agility that showed that if there was any harm
done it had not been to him.

Thus the sharp inning ended with a magnificent play.  It electrified
the spectators into a fierce energy of applause.  With one accord, by
baseball instinct, the stands and bleachers and roped-in-sidelines
realized it was to be a game of games and they answered to the stimulus
with a savage enthusiasm that inspired ballplayers to great plays.

In the first half of the second inning, Steele's will to do and his arm
to execute were very like his name.  Kansas City could not score.  In
their half the Denver team made one run by clean hitting.

Then the closely fought advantage see-sawed from one team to the other.
It was not a pitchers' battle, though both men worked to the limit of
skill and endurance.  They were hit hard.  Dazzling plays kept the
score down and the innings short.  Over the fields hung the portent of
something to come, every player, every spectator felt the subtle
baseball chance; each inning seemed to lead closer and more thrillingly
up to the climax.  But at the end of the seventh, with the score tied
six and six, with daring steals, hard hits and splendid plays, enough
to have made memorable several games, it seemed that the great
portentous moment was still in abeyance.

The head of the batting list for Kansas City was up.  Hunt caught the
first pitched ball squarely on the end of his bat.  It was a mighty
drive and as the ball soared and soared over the center-field Hunt
raced down the base line, and the winged-footed Crane sped outward, the
bleachers split their throats.  The hit looked good for a home run, but
Crane leaped up and caught the ball in his gloved hand.  The sudden
silence and then the long groan which racked the bleachers was greater
tribute to Crane's play than any applause.

Billie Sheldon then faced Steele.  The fans roared hoarsely, for Billie
had hit safely three times out of four.  Steele used his curve ball,
but he could not get the batter to go after it.  When he had wasted
three balls, the never-despairing bleachers howled:  "Now, Billie, in
your groove! Sting the next one!"  But Billie waited.  One strike!  Two
strikes!  Steele cut the plate.  That was a test which proved Sheldon's
caliber.

With seven innings of exciting play passed, with both teams on edge,
with the bleachers wild and the grand stands keyed up to the breaking
point, with everything making deliberation almost impossible, Billie
Sheldon had remorselessly waited for three balls and two strikes.

"Now! ...  Now! ...  Now!" shrieked the bleachers.

Steele had not tired nor lost his cunning.  With hands before him he
grimly studied Billie, then whirling hard to get more weight into his
motion, he threw the ball.

Billie swung perfectly and cut a curving liner between the first
baseman and the base.  Like a shot it skipped over the grass out along
the foul-line into right field.  Amid tremendous uproar Billie
stretched the hit into a triple, and when he got up out of the dust
after his slide into third the noise seemed to be the crashing down of
the bleachers.  It died out with the choking gurgling yell of the most
leather-lunged fan.

"O-o-o-o-you-Billie-e!"

McReady marched up and promptly hit a long fly to the redoubtable
Crane.  Billie crouched in a sprinter's position with his eye on the
graceful fielder, waiting confidently for the ball to drop. As if there
had not already been sufficient heart-rending moments, the chance that
governed baseball meted out this play; one of the keenest, most trying
known to the game.  Players waited, spectators waited, and the instant
of that dropping ball was interminably long.  Everybody knew Crane
would catch it; everybody thought of the wonderful throwing arm that
had made him famous.  Was it possible for Billie Sheldon to beat the
throw to the plate?

Crane made the catch and got the ball away at the same instant Sheldon
leaped from the base and dashed for home.  Then all eyes were on the
ball.  It seemed incredible that a ball thrown by human strength could
speed plateward so low, so straight, so swift.  But it lost its force
and slanted down to bound into the catcher's hands just as Billie slid
over the plate.

By the time the bleachers had stopped stamping and bawling, Curtis
ended the inning with a difficult grounder to the infield.

Once more the Kansas City players took the field and Burns Carroll sang
out in his lusty voice: "Keep lively, boys!  Play hard!  Dig 'em up an'
get 'em!"  Indeed the big catcher was the main-stay of the home team.
The bulk of the work fell upon his shoulders.  Dalgren was wild and
kept his catcher continually blocking low pitches and wide curves and
poorly controlled high fast balls. But they were all alike to Carroll.
Despite his weight, he was as nimble on his feet as a goat, and if he
once got his hands on the ball he never missed it.  It was his
encouragement that steadied Dalgren; his judgment of hitters that
carried the young pitcher through dangerous places; his lightning swift
grasp of points that directed the machine-like work of his team.

In this inning Carroll exhibited another of his demon chases after a
foul fly; he threw the base-stealing Crane out at second, and by a
remarkable leap and stop of McReady's throw, he blocked a runner who
would have tied the score.

The Cowboys blanked their opponents in the first half of the ninth, and
trotted in for their turn needing one run to tie, two runs to win.

There had scarcely been a breathing spell for the onlookers in this
rapid-fire game.  Every inning had held them, one moment breathless,
the next wildly clamorous, and another waiting in numb fear.  What did
these last few moments hold in store?  The only answer to that was the
dogged plugging optimism of the Denver players. To listen to them, to
watch them, was to gather the impression that baseball fortune always
favored them in the end.

"Only three more, Dal.  Steady boys, it's our game," rolled out
Carroll's deep bass.  How virile he was!  What a tower of strength to
the weakening pitcher!

But valiantly as Dalgren tried to respond, he failed.  The grind--the
strain had been too severe. When he finally did locate the plate Bluett
hit safely.  Langley bunted along the base line and beat the ball.

A blank, dead quiet settled down over the bleachers and stands.
Something fearful threatened. What might not come to pass, even at the
last moment of this nerve-racking game?  There was a runner on first
and a runner on second. That was bad.  Exceedingly bad was it that
these runners were on base with nobody out.  Worst of all was the fact
that Kane was up.  Kane, the best bunter, the fastest man to first, the
hardest hitter in the league!  That he would fail to advance those two
runners was scarcely worth consideration.  Once advanced, a fly to the
outfield, a scratch, anything almost, would tie the score. So this was
the climax presaged so many times earlier in the game.  Dalgren seemed
to wilt under it.

Kane swung his ash viciously and called on Dalgren to put one over.
Dalgren looked in toward the bench as if he wanted and expected to be
taken out.  But Pat Donahue made no sign. Pat had trained many a
pitcher by forcing him to take his medicine.  Then Carroll, mask under
his arm, rolling his big hand in his mitt, sauntered down to the
pitcher's box.  The sharp order of the umpire in no wise disconcerted
him.  He said something to Dalgren, vehemently nodding his head the
while.  Players and audience alike supposed he was trying to put a
little heart into Dalgren, and liked him the better, notwithstanding
the opposition to the umpire.

Carroll sauntered back to his position.  He adjusted his breast
protector, and put on his mask, deliberately taking his time.  Then he
stepped behind the plate, and after signing for the pitch, he slowly
moved his right hand up to his mask.

Dalgren wound up, took his swing, and let drive. Even as he delivered
the ball Carroll bounded away from his position, flinging off the mask
as he jumped.  For a single fleeting instant, the catcher's position
was vacated.  But that instant was long enough to make the audience
gasp.  Kane bunted beautifully down the third base line, and there
Carroll stood, fifteen feet from the plate, agile as a huge monkey.  He
whipped the ball to Mahew at third.  Mahew wheeled quick as thought and
lined the ball to second.  Sheldon came tearing for the bag, caught the
ball on the run, and with a violent stop and wrench threw it like a
bullet to first base.  Fast as Kane was, the ball beat him ten feet.  A
triple play!

The players of both teams cheered, but the audience, slower to grasp
the complex and intricate points, needed a long moment to realize what
had happened.  They needed another to divine that Carroll had
anticipated Kane's intention to bunt, had left his position as the ball
was pitched, had planned all, risked all, played all on Kane's sure
eye; and so he had retired the side and won the game by creating and
executing the rarest play in baseball.

Then the audience rose in a body to greet the great catcher.  What a
hoarse thundering roar shook the stands and waved in a blast over the
field!  Carroll stood bowing his acknowledgment, and then swaggered a
little with the sun shining on his handsome heated face.  Like a
conqueror conscious of full blown power he stalked away to the
clubhouse.

Madge Ellston came out of her trance and viewed the ragged score-card,
her torn parasol, her battered gloves and flying hair, her generally
disheveled state with a little start of dismay, but when she got into
the thick and press of the moving crowd she found all the women more or
less disheveled.  And they seemed all the prettier and friendlier for
that.  It was a happy crowd and voices were conspicuously hoarse.

When Madge entered the hotel parlor that evening she found her uncle
with guests and among them was Burns Carroll.  The presence of the
handsome giant affected Madge more impellingly than ever before, yet in
some inexplicably different way.  She found herself trembling; she
sensed a crisis in her feelings for this man and it frightened her.
She became conscious suddenly that she had always been afraid of him.
Watching Carroll receive the congratulations of many of those present,
she saw that he dominated them as he had her.  His magnetism was
over-powering; his great stature seemed to fill the room; his easy
careless assurance emanated from superior strength.  When he spoke
lightly of the game, of Crane's marvelous catch, of Dalgren's pitching
and of his own triple play, it seemed these looming features retreated
in perspective--somehow lost their vital significance because he
slighted them.

In the light of Carroll's illuminating talk, in the remembrance of
Sheldon's bitter denunciation, in the knowledge of Pat Donahue's
estimate of a peculiar type of ball-player, Madge Ellston found herself
judging the man--bravely trying to resist his charm, to be fair to him
and to herself.

Carroll soon made his way to her side and greeted her with his old
familiar manner of possession.  However irritating it might be to Madge
when alone, now it held her bound.

Carroll possessed the elemental attributes of a conqueror.  When with
him Madge whimsically feared that he would snatch her up in his arms
and carry her bodily off, as the warriors of old did with the women
they wanted.  But she began to believe that the fascination he
exercised upon her was merely physical.  That gave her pause. Not only
was Burns Carroll on trial, but also a very foolish fluttering little
moth--herself.  It was time enough, however, to be stern with herself
after she had tried him.

"Wasn't that a splendid catch of Crane's today?" she asked.

"A lucky stab!  Crane has a habit of running round like an ostrich and
sticking out a hand to catch a ball.  It's a grand-stand play.  Why, a
good outfielder would have been waiting under that fly."

"Dalgren did fine work in the box, don't you think?"

"Oh, the kid's all right with an old head back of the plate.  He's
wild, though, and will never make good in fast company.  I won his game
today. He wouldn't have lasted an inning without me.  It was dead wrong
for Pat to pitch him. Dalgren simply can't pitch and he hasn't sand
enough to learn."

A hot retort trembled upon Madge Ellston's lips, but she withheld it
and quietly watched Carroll.  How complacent he was, how utterly
self-contained!

"And Billie Sheldon--wasn't it good to see him brace?  What hitting! .
..  That home run!"

"Sheldon flashed up today.  That's the worst of such players.  This
talk of his slump is all rot. When he joined the team he made some
lucky hits and the papers lauded him as a comer, but he soon got down
to his real form.  Why, to break into a game now and then, to shut his
eyes and hit a couple on the nose--that's not baseball. Pat's given him
ten days' notice, and his release will be a good move for the team.
Sheldon's not fast enough for this league."

"I'm sorry.  He seemed so promising," replied Madge.  "I liked
Billy--pretty well."

"Yes, that was evident," said Carroll, firing up.  "I never could
understand what you saw in him.  Why, Sheldon's no good.  He----"

Madge turned a white face that silenced Carroll.  She excused herself
and returned to the parlor, where she had last seen her uncle.  Not
finding him there, she went into the long corridor and met Sheldon,
Dalgren and two more of the players.  Madge congratulated the young
pitcher and the other players on their brilliant work; and they, not to
be outdone, gallantly attributed the day's victory to her presence at
the game.  Then, without knowing in the least how it came about, she
presently found herself alone with Billy, and they were strolling into
the music-room.

"Madge, did I brace up?"

The girl risked one quick look at him.  How boyish he seemed, how
eager!  What an altogether different Billie!  But was the difference
all in him!  Somehow, despite a conscious shyness in the moment she
felt natural and free, without the uncertainty and restraint that had
always troubled her while with him.

"Oh, Billie, that glorious home run!"

"Madge, wasn't that hit a dandy?  How I made it is a mystery, but the
bat felt like a feather.  I thought of you.  Tell me--what did you
think when I hit that ball over the fence?"

"Billie, I'll never, never tell you."

"Yes--please--I want to know.  Didn't you think something--nice of me?"

The pink spots in Madge's cheeks widened to crimson flames.

"Billie, are you still--crazy about me?  Now, don't come so close.
Can't you behave yourself? And don't break my fingers with you terrible
baseball hands....  Well, when you made that hit I just collapsed
and I said----"

"Say it!  Say it!" implored Billie.

She lowered her face and then bravely raised it.

"I said, 'Billie, I could hug you for that!' ... Billie, let me go!
Oh, you mustn't!--please!"

Quite a little while afterward Madge remembered to tell Billie that she
had been seeking her uncle.  They met him and Pat Donahue, coming out
of the parlor.

"Where have you been all evening?" demanded Mr. Ellston.

"Shure it looks as if she's signed a new manager," said Pat, his shrewd
eyes twinkling.

The soft glow in Madge's cheeks deepened into tell-tale scarlet; Billie
resembled a schoolboy stricken in guilt.

"Aha! so that's it?" queried her uncle.

"Ellston," said Pat.  "Billie's home-run drive today recalled his
notice an' if I don't miss guess it won him another game--the best game
in life."

"By George!" exclaimed Mr. Ellston.  "I was afraid it was Carroll!"

He led Madge away and Pat followed with Billie.

"Shure, it was good to see you brace, Billie," said the manager, with a
kindly hand on the young man's arm.  "I'm tickled to death.  That ten
days' notice doesn't go.  See?  I've had to shake up the team but your
job is good.  I released McReady outright an' traded Carroll to Denver
for a catcher and a fielder.  Some of the directors hollered murder,
an' I expect the fans will roar, but I'm running this team, I'll have
harmony among my players.  Carroll is a great catcher, but he's a
knocker."



THE WINNING BALL

One day in July our Rochester club, leader in the Eastern League, had
returned to the hotel after winning a double-header from the Syracuse
club.  For some occult reason there was to be a lay-off next day and
then on the following another double-header.  These double-headers we
hated next to exhibition games.  Still a lay-off for twenty-four hours,
at that stage of the race, was a Godsend, and we received the news with
exclamations of pleasure.

After dinner we were all sitting and smoking comfortably in front of
the hotel when our manager, Merritt, came hurriedly out of the lobby.
It struck me that he appeared a little flustered.

"Say, you fellars," he said brusquely.  "Pack your suits and be ready
for the bus at seven-thirty."

For a moment there was a blank, ominous silence, while we assimilated
the meaning of his terse speech.

"I've got a good thing on for tomorrow," continued the manager.  "Sixty
per cent gate receipts if we win.  That Guelph team is hot stuff,
though."

"Guelph!" exclaimed some of the players suspiciously.  "Where's Guelph?"

"It's in Canada.  We'll take the night express an' get there tomorrow
in time for the game. An' we'll hev to hustle."

Upon Merritt then rained a multiplicity of excuses.  Gillinger was not
well, and ought to have that day's rest.  Snead's eyes would profit by
a lay-off.  Deerfoot Browning was leading the league in base running,
and as his legs were all bruised and scraped by sliding, a manager who
was not an idiot would have a care of such valuable runmakers for his
team.  Lake had "Charley-horse."  Hathaway's arm was sore.  Bane's
stomach threatened gastritis.  Spike Doran's finger needed a chance to
heal.  I was stale, and the other players, three pitchers, swore their
arms should be in the hospital.

"Cut it out!" said Merritt, getting exasperated. "You'd all lay down on
me--now, wouldn't you?  Well, listen to this:  McDougal pitched today;
he doesn't go.  Blake works Friday, he doesn't go.  But the rest of you
puffed-up, high-salaried stiffs pack your grips quick.  See?  It'll
cost any fresh fellar fifty for missin' the train."

So that was how eleven of the Rochester team found themselves moodily
boarding a Pullman en route for Buffalo and Canada.  We went to bed
early and arose late.

Guelph lay somewhere in the interior of Canada, and we did not expect
to get there until 1 o'clock.

As it turned out, the train was late; we had to dress hurriedly in the
smoking room, pack our citizen clothes in our grips and leave the train
to go direct to the ball grounds without time for lunch.

It was a tired, dusty-eyed, peevish crowd of ball players that climbed
into a waiting bus at the little station.

We had never heard of Guelph; we did not care anything about Rube
baseball teams.  Baseball was not play to us; it was the hardest kind
of work, and of all things an exhibition game was an abomination.

The Guelph players, strapping lads, met us with every mark of respect
and courtesy and escorted us to the field with a brass band that was
loud in welcome, if not harmonious in tune.

Some 500 men and boys trotted curiously along with us, for all the
world as if the bus were a circus parade cage filled with striped
tigers. What a rustic, motley crowd massed about in and on that ball
ground.  There must have been 10,000.

The audience was strange to us.  The Indians, half-breeds,
French-Canadians; the huge, hulking, bearded farmers or traders, or
trappers, whatever they were, were new to our baseball experience.

The players themselves, however, earned the largest share of our
attention.  By the time they had practiced a few moments we looked at
Merritt and Merritt looked at us.

These long, powerful, big-handed lads evidently did not know the
difference between lacrosse and baseball; but they were quick as cats
on their feet, and they scooped up the ball in a way wonderful to see.
And throw!--it made a professional's heart swell just to see them line
the ball across the diamond.

"Lord! what whips these lads have!" exclaimed Merritt.  "Hope we're not
up against it. If this team should beat us we wouldn't draw a handful
at Toronto.  We can't afford to be beaten. Jump around and cinch the
game quick.  If we get in a bad place, I'll sneak in the 'rabbit.'"

The "rabbit" was a baseball similar in appearance to the ordinary
league ball; under its horse-hide cover, however, it was remarkably
different.

An ingenious fan, a friend of Merritt, had removed the covers from a
number of league balls and sewed them on rubber balls of his own
making. They could not be distinguished from the regular article, not
even by an experienced professional--until they were hit.  Then!  The
fact that after every bounce one of these rubber balls bounded swifter
and higher had given it the name of the "rabbit."

Many a game had the "rabbit" won for us at critical stages.  Of course
it was against the rules of the league, and of course every player in
the league knew about it; still, when it was judiciously and cleverly
brought into a close game, the "rabbit" would be in play, and very
probably over the fence, before the opposing captain could learn of it,
let alone appeal to the umpire.

"Fellars, look at that guy who's goin' to pitch," suddenly spoke up one
of the team.

Many as were the country players whom we seasoned and traveled
professionals had run across, this twirler outclassed them for
remarkable appearance.  Moreover, what put an entirely different tinge
to our momentary humor was the discovery that he was as wild as a March
hare and could throw a ball so fast that it resembled a pea shot from a
boy's air gun.

Deerfoot led our batting list, and after the first pitched ball, which
he did not see, and the second, which ticked his shirt as it shot past,
he turned to us with an expression that made us groan inwardly.

When Deerfoot looked that way it meant the pitcher was dangerous.
Deerfoot made no effort to swing at the next ball, and was promptly
called out on strikes.

I was second at bat, and went up with some reluctance.  I happened to
be leading the league in both long distance and safe hitting, and I
doted on speed.  But having stopped many mean in-shoots with various
parts of my anatomy, I was rather squeamish about facing backwoods yaps
who had no control.

When I had watched a couple of his pitches, which the umpire called
strikes, I gave him credit for as much speed as Rusie.  These balls
were as straight as a string, singularly without curve, jump, or
variation of any kind.  I lined the next one so hard at the shortstop
that it cracked like a pistol as it struck his hands and whirled him
half off his feet.  Still he hung to the ball and gave opportunity for
the first crash of applause.

"Boys, he's a trifle wild," I said to my team-mates, "but he has the
most beautiful ball to hit you ever saw.  I don't believe he uses a
curve, and when we once time that speed we'll kill it."

Next inning, after old man Hathaway had baffled the Canadians with his
wide, tantalizing curves, my predictions began to be verified.  Snead
rapped one high and far to deep right field.  To our infinite surprise,
however, the right fielder ran with fleetness that made our own
Deerfoot seem slow, and he got under the ball and caught it.

Doran sent a sizzling grasscutter down toward left.  The lanky third
baseman darted over, dived down, and, coming up with the ball,
exhibited the power of a throwing arm that made as all green with envy.

Then, when the catcher chased a foul fly somewhere back in the crowd
and caught it, we began to take notice.

"Lucky stabs!" said Merritt cheerfully.  "They can't keep that up.
We'll drive him to the woods next time."

But they did keep it up; moreover, they became more brilliant as the
game progressed.  What with Hathaway's heady pitching we soon disposed
of them when at the bat; our turns, however, owing to the wonderful
fielding of these backwoodsmen, were also fruitless.

Merritt, with his mind ever on the slice of gate money coming if we
won, began to fidget and fume and find fault.

"You're a swell lot of champions, now, ain't you?" he observed between
innings.

All baseball players like to bat, and nothing pleases them so much as
base hits; on the other hand, nothing is quite so painful as to send
out hard liners only to see them caught.  And it seemed as if every man
on our team connected with that lanky twirler's fast high ball and hit
with the force that made the bat spring only to have one of these rubes
get his big hands upon it.

Considering that we were in no angelic frame of mind before the game
started, and in view of Merritt's persistently increasing ill humor,
this failure of ours to hit a ball safely gradually worked us into a
kind of frenzy.  From indifference we passed to determination, and from
that to sheer passionate purpose.

Luck appeared to be turning in the sixth inning. With one out, Lake hit
a beauty to right.  Doran beat an infield grounder and reached first.
Hathaway struck out.

With Browning up and me next, the situation looked rather precarious
for the Canadians.

"Say, Deerfoot," whispered Merritt, "dump one down the third-base line.
He's playin' deep. It's a pipe.  Then the bases will be full an'
Reddy'll clean up."

In a stage like that Browning was a man absolutely to depend upon.  He
placed a slow bunt in the grass toward third and sprinted for first.
The third baseman fielded the ball, but, being confused, did not know
where to throw it.

"Stick it in your basket," yelled Merritt, in a delight that showed how
hard he was pulling for the gate money, and his beaming smile as he
turned to me was inspiring.  "Now, Reddy, it's up to you!  I'm not
worrying about what's happened so far.  I know, with you at bat in a
pinch, it's all off!"

Merritt's compliment was pleasing, but it did not augment my purpose,
for that already had reached the highest mark.  Love of hitting, if no
other thing, gave me the thrilling fire to arise to the opportunity.
Selecting my light bat, I went up and faced the rustic twirler and
softly said things to him.

He delivered the ball, and I could have yelled aloud, so fast, so
straight, so true it sped toward me.  Then I hit it harder than I had
ever hit a ball in my life.  The bat sprung, as if it were whalebone.
And the ball took a bullet course between center and left.  So
beautiful a hit was it that I watched as I ran.

Out of the tail of my eye I saw the center fielder running.  When I
rounded first base I got a good look at this fielder, and though I had
seen the greatest outfielders the game ever produced, I never saw one
that covered ground so swiftly as he.

On the ball soared, and began to drop; on the fielder sped, and began
to disappear over a little hill back of his position.  Then he reached
up with a long arm and marvelously caught the ball in one hand.  He
went out of sight as I touched second base, and the heterogeneous crowd
knew about a great play to make more noise than a herd of charging
buffalo.

In the next half inning our opponents, by clean drives, scored two runs
and we in our turn again went out ignominiously.  When the first of the
eighth came we were desperate and clamored for the "rabbit."

"I've sneaked it in," said Merritt, with a low voice.  "Got it to the
umpire on the last passed ball.  See, the pitcher's got it now.  Boys,
it's all off but the fireworks!  Now, break loose!"

A peculiarity about the "rabbit" was the fact that though it felt as
light as the regulation league ball it could not be thrown with the
same speed and to curve it was an impossibility.

Bane hit the first delivery from our hoosier stumbling block.  The ball
struck the ground and began to bound toward short.  With every bound it
went swifter, longer and higher, and it bounced clear over the
shortstop's head.  Lake chopped one in front of the plate, and it
rebounded from the ground straight up so high that both runners were
safe before it came down.

Doran hit to the pitcher.  The ball caromed his leg, scooted fiendishly
at the second baseman, and tried to run up all over him like a tame
squirrel.  Bases full!

Hathaway got a safe fly over the infield and two runs tallied.  The
pitcher, in spite of the help of the umpire, could not locate the plate
for Balknap, and gave him a base on balls.  Bases full again!

Deerfoot slammed a hot liner straight at the second baseman, which,
striking squarely in his hands, recoiled as sharply as if it had struck
a wall.  Doran scored, and still the bases were filled.

The laboring pitcher began to get rattled; he could not find his usual
speed; he knew it, but evidently could not account for it.

When I came to bat, indications were not wanting that the Canadian team
would soon be up in the air.  The long pitcher delivered the "rabbit,"
and got it low down by my knees, which was an unfortunate thing for
him.  I swung on that one, and trotted round the bases behind the
runners while the center and left fielders chased the ball.

Gillinger weighed nearly two hundred pounds, and he got all his weight
under the "rabbit."  It went so high that we could scarcely see it.
All the infielders rushed in, and after staggering around, with heads
bent back, one of them, the shortstop, managed to get under it.  The
"rabbit" bounded forty feet out of his hands!

When Snead's grounder nearly tore the third baseman's leg off; when
Bane's hit proved as elusive as a flitting shadow; when Lake's liner
knocked the pitcher flat, and Doran's fly leaped high out of the center
fielder's glove--then those earnest, simple, country ballplayers
realized something was wrong.  But they imagined it was in themselves,
and after a short spell of rattles, they steadied up and tried harder
than ever.  The motions they went through trying to stop that jumping
jackrabbit of a ball were ludicrous in the extreme.

Finally, through a foul, a short fly, and a scratch hit to first, they
retired the side and we went into the field with the score 14 to 2 in
our favor.

But Merritt had not found it possible to get the "rabbit" out of play!

We spent a fatefully anxious few moments squabbling with the umpire and
captain over the "rabbit."  At the idea of letting those herculean
railsplitters have a chance to hit the rubber ball we felt our blood
run cold.

"But this ball has a rip in it," blustered Gillinger.  He lied
atrociously.  A microscope could not have discovered as much as a
scratch in that smooth leather.

"Sure it has," supplemented Merritt, in the suave tones of a stage
villain.  "We're used to playing with good balls."

"Why did you ring this one in on us?" asked the captain.  "We never
threw out this ball.  We want a chance to hit it."

That was just the one thing we did not want them to have.  But fate
played against us.

"Get up on your toes, now an' dust," said Merritt.  "Take your
medicine, you lazy sit-in-front-of-the-hotel stiffs!  Think of pay day!"

Not improbably we all entertained the identical thought that old man
Hathaway was the last pitcher under the sun calculated to be effective
with the "rabbit."  He never relied on speed; in fact, Merritt often
scornfully accused him of being unable to break a pane of glass; he
used principally what we called floaters and a change of pace.  Both
styles were absolutely impractical with the "rabbit."

"It's comin' to us, all right, all right!" yelled Deerfoot to me,
across the intervening grass.  I was of the opinion that it did not
take any genius to make Deerfoot's ominous prophecy.

Old man Hathaway gazed at Merritt on the bench as if he wished the
manager could hear what he was calling him and then at his
fellow-players as if both to warn and beseech them. Then he pitched the
"rabbit."

Crack!

The big lumbering Canadian rapped the ball at Crab Bane.  I did not see
it, because it went so fast, but I gathered from Crab's actions that it
must have been hit in his direction.  At any rate, one of his legs
flopped out sidewise as if it had been suddenly jerked, and he fell in
a heap. The ball, a veritable "rabbit" in its wild jumps, headed on for
Deerfoot, who contrived to stop it with his knees.

The next batter resembled the first one, and the hit likewise, only it
leaped wickedly at Doran and went through his hands as if they had been
paper.  The third man batted up a very high fly to Gillinger.  He
clutched at it with his huge shovel hands, but he could not hold it.
The way he pounced upon the ball, dug it out of the grass, and hurled
it at Hathaway, showed his anger.

Obviously Hathaway had to stop the throw, for he could not get out of
the road, and he spoke to his captain in what I knew were no
complimentary terms.

Thus began retribution.  Those husky lads continued to hammer the
"rabbit" at the infielders and as it bounced harder at every bounce so
they batted harder at every bat.

Another singular feature about the "rabbit" was the seeming
impossibility for professionals to hold it.  Their familiarity with it,
their understanding of its vagaries and inconsistencies, their mortal
dread made fielding it a much more difficult thing than for their
opponents.

By way of variety, the lambasting Canadians commenced to lambast a few
over the hills and far away, which chased Deerfoot and me until our
tongues lolled out.

Every time a run crossed the plate the motley crowd howled, roared,
danced and threw up their hats.  The members of the batting team
pranced up and down the side lines, giving a splendid imitation of
cannibals celebrating the occasion of a feast.

Once Snead stooped down to trap the "rabbit," and it slipped through
his legs, for which his comrades jeered him unmercifully.  Then a
brawny batter sent up a tremendously high fly between short and third.

"You take it!" yelled Gillinger to Bane.

"You take it!" replied the Crab, and actually walked backward.  That
ball went a mile high. The sky was hazy, gray, the most perplexing in
which to judge a fly ball.  An ordinary fly gave trouble enough in the
gauging.

Gillinger wandered around under the ball for what seemed an age.  It
dropped as swiftly as a rocket shoots upward.  Gillinger went forward
in a circle, then sidestepped, and threw up his broad hands.  He
misjudged the ball, and it hit him fairly on the head and bounced
almost to where Doran stood at second.

Our big captain wilted.  Time was called.  But Gillinger, when he came
to, refused to leave the game and went back to third with a lump on his
head as large as a goose egg.

Every one of his teammates was sorry, yet every one howled in glee.  To
be hit on the head was the unpardonable sin for a professional.

Old man Hathaway gradually lost what little speed he had, and with it
his nerve.  Every time he pitched the "rabbit" he dodged.  That was
about the funniest and strangest thing ever seen on a ball field.  Yet
it had an element of tragedy.

Hathaway's expert contortions saved his head and body on divers
occasions, but presently a low bounder glanced off the grass and
manifested an affinity for his leg.

We all knew from the crack and the way the pitcher went down that the
"rabbit" had put him out of the game.  The umpire called time, and
Merritt came running on the diamond.

"Hard luck, old man," said the manager. "That'll make a green and
yellow spot all right. Boys, we're still two runs to the good.  There's
one out, an' we can win yet.  Deerfoot, you're as badly crippled as
Hathaway.  The bench for yours.  Hooker will go to center, an' I'll
pitch."

Merritt's idea did not strike us as a bad one. He could pitch, and he
always kept his arm in prime condition.  We welcomed him into the fray
for two reasons--because he might win the game, and because he might be
overtaken by the baseball Nemesis.

While Merritt was putting on Hathaway's baseball shoes, some of us
endeavored to get the "rabbit" away from the umpire, but he was too
wise.

Merritt received the innocent-looking ball with a look of mingled
disgust and fear, and he summarily ordered us to our positions.

Not far had we gone, however, when we were electrified by the umpire's
sharp words:

"Naw!  Naw, you don't.  I saw you change the ball I gave you fer one in
your pocket!  Naw! You don't come enny of your American dodges on us!
Gimmee thet ball, an' you use the other, or I'll stop the game."

Wherewith the shrewd umpire took the ball from Merritt's hand and
fished the "rabbit" from his pocket.  Our thwarted manager stuttered
his wrath.  "Y-you be-be-wh-whiskered y-yap!  I'll g-g-give----"

What dire threat he had in mind never materialized, for he became
speechless.  He glowered upon the cool little umpire, and then turned
grandly toward the plate.

It may have been imagination, yet I made sure Merritt seemed to shrink
and grow smaller before he pitched a ball.  For one thing the plate was
uphill from the pitcher's box, and then the fellow standing there
loomed up like a hill and swung a bat that would have served as a wagon
tongue. No wonder Merritt evinced nervousness.  Presently he whirled
and delivered the ball.

Bing!

A dark streak and a white puff of dust over second base showed how safe
that hit was.  By dint of manful body work, Hooker contrived to stop
the "rabbit" in mid-center.  Another run scored.  Human nature was
proof against this temptation, and Merritt's players tendered him
manifold congratulations and dissertations.

"Grand, you old skinflint, grand!"

"There was a two-dollar bill stickin' on thet hit.  Why didn't you stop
it?"

"Say, Merritt, what little brains you've got will presently be ridin'
on the 'rabbit.'"

"You will chase up these exhibition games!"

"Take your medicine now.  Ha!  Ha!  Ha!"

After these merciless taunts, and particularly after the next slashing
hit that tied the score, Merritt looked appreciably smaller and humbler.

He threw up another ball, and actually shied as it neared the plate.

The giant who was waiting to slug it evidently thought better of his
eagerness as far as that pitch was concerned, for he let it go by.

Merritt got the next ball higher.  With a mighty swing, the batsman hit
a terrific liner right at the pitcher.

Quick as lightning, Merritt wheeled, and the ball struck him with the
sound of two boards brought heavily together with a smack.

Merritt did not fall; he melted to the ground and writhed while the
runners scored with more tallies than they needed to win.

What did we care!  Justice had been done us, and we were unutterably
happy.  Crabe Bane stood on his head; Gillinger began a war dance; old
man Hathaway hobbled out to the side lines and whooped like an Indian;
Snead rolled over and over in the grass.  All of us broke out into
typical expressions of baseball frenzy, and individual ones
illustrating our particular moods.

Merritt got up and made a dive for the ball. With face positively
flaming he flung it far beyond the merry crowd, over into a swamp.
Then he limped for the bench.  Which throw ended the most memorable
game ever recorded to the credit of the "rabbit."



FALSE COLORS

"Fate has decreed more bad luck for Salisbury in Saturday's game with
Bellville.  It has leaked out that our rivals will come over
strengthened by a 'ringer,' no less than Yale's star pitcher, Wayne.
We saw him shut Princeton out in June, in the last game of the college
year, and we are not optimistic in our predictions as to what Salisbury
can do with him.  This appears a rather unfair procedure for Bellville
to resort to.  Why couldn't they come over with their regular team?
They have won a game, and so have we; both games were close and
brilliant; the deciding game has roused unusual interest.  We are
inclined to resent Bellville's methods as unsportsmanlike. All our
players can do is to go into this game on Saturday and try the harder
to win."

Wayne laid down the Salisbury Gazette, with a little laugh of
amusement, yet feeling a vague, disquieting sense of something akin to
regret.

"Pretty decent of that chap not to roast me," he soliloquized.

Somewhere he had heard that Salisbury maintained an unsalaried team.
It was notorious among college athletes that the Bellville Club paid
for the services of distinguished players.  And this in itself rather
inclined Wayne to sympathize with Salisbury.  He knew something of the
struggles of a strictly amateur club to cope with its semi-professional
rivals.

As he was sitting there, idly tipped back in a comfortable chair,
dreaming over some of the baseball disasters he had survived before his
college career, he saw a young man enter the lobby of the hotel, speak
to the clerk, and then turn and come directly toward the window where
Wayne was sitting.

"Are yon Mr. Wayne, the Yale pitcher?" he asked eagerly.  He was a
fair-haired, clean-cut young fellow, and his voice rang pleasantly.

"Guilty," replied Wayne.

"My name's Huling.  I'm captain of the Salisbury nine.  Just learned
you were in town and are going to pitch against us tomorrow.  Won't you
walk out into the grounds with me now? You might want to warm up a
little."

"Thank you, yes, I will.  Guess I won't need my suit.  I'll just limber
up, and give my arm a good rub."

It struck Wayne before they had walked far that Huling was an amiable
and likable chap.  As the captain of the Salisbury nine, he certainly
had no reason to be agreeable to the Morristown "ringer," even though
Wayne did happen to be a famous Yale pitcher.

The field was an oval, green as an emerald, level as a billiard table
and had no fences or stands to obstruct the open view of the
surrounding wooded country.  On each side of the diamond were rows of
wooden benches, and at one end of the field stood a little clubhouse.

Wayne took off his coat, and tossed a ball for a while to an ambitious
youngster, and then went into the clubhouse, where Huling introduced
him to several of his players.  After a good rubdown, Wayne thanked
Huling for his courtesy, and started out, intending to go back to town.

"Why not stay to see us practice?" asked the captain.  "We're not
afraid you'll size up our weaknesses.  As a matter of fact, we don't
look forward to any hitting stunts tomorrow, eh, Burns?  Burns, here,
is our leading hitter, and he's been unusually noncommittal since he
heard who was going to pitch for Bellville."

"Well, I wouldn't give a whole lot for my prospects of a home run
tomorrow," said Burns, with a laugh.

Wayne went outside, and found a seat in the shade.  A number of urchins
had trooped upon the green field, and carriages and motors were already
in evidence.  By the time the players came out of the dressing room,
ready for practice, there was quite a little crowd in attendance.

Despite Wayne's hesitation, Huling insisted upon introducing him to
friends, and finally hauled him up to a big touring car full of girls.
Wayne, being a Yale pitcher, had seen several thousand pretty girls,
but the group in that automobile fairly dazzled him.  And the last one
to whom Huling presented him--with the words:  "Dorothy, this is Mr.
Wayne, the Yale pitcher, who is to play with Bellville tomorrow; Mr.
Wayne, my sister"--was the girl he had known he would meet some day.

"Climb up, Mr. Wayne.  We can make room," invited Miss Huling.

Wayne thought the awkwardness with which he found a seat beside her was
unbecoming to a Yale senior.  But, considering she was the girl he had
been expecting to discover for years, his clumsiness bespoke the
importance of the event.  The merry laughter of the girls rang in his
ears. Presently, a voice detached itself from the others, and came
floating softly to him.

"Mr. Wayne, so you're going to wrest our laurels from us?" asked Miss
Huling.

"I don't know--I'm not infallible--I've been beaten."

"When?  Not this season?" she inquired quickly, betraying a knowledge
of his record that surprised and pleased him.  "Mr. Wayne, I was at the
Polo Grounds on June fifteenth."

Her white hand lightly touched the Princeton pin at her neck.  Wayne
roused suddenly out of his trance.  The girl was a Princeton girl!  The
gleam of her golden hair, the flash of her blue eyes, became clear in
sight.

"I'm very pleased to hear it," he replied.

"It was a great game, Mr. Wayne, and you may well be proud of your part
in winning it.  I shouldn't be surprised if you treated the Salisbury
team to the same coat of whitewash.  We girls are up in arms.  Our boys
stood a fair chance to win this game, but now there's a doubt.  By the
way, are you acquainted in Bellville?"

"No.  I met Reed, the Bellville captain, in New York this week.  He had
already gotten an extra pitcher--another ringer--for this game, but he
said he preferred me, if it could be arranged."

While conversing, Wayne made note of the fact that the other girls
studiously left him to Miss Huling.  If the avoidance had not been so
marked, he would never have thought of it.

"Mr. Wayne, if your word is not involved--will you change your mind and
pitch tomorrow's game for us instead of Bellville?"

Quite amazed, Wayne turned squarely to look at Miss Huling.  Instead of
disarming his quick suspicion, her cool, sweet voice, and brave, blue
eyes confirmed it.  The charms of the captain's sister were to be used
to win him away from the Bellville nine.  He knew the trick; it had
been played upon him before.

But never had any other such occasion given him a feeling of regret.
This case was different. She was the girl.  And she meant to flirt with
him, to use her eyes for all they were worth to encompass the Waterloo
of the rival team.

No, he had made a mistake, after all--she was not the real girl.
Suddenly conscious of a little shock of pain, he dismissed that dream
girl from his mind, and determined to meet Miss Huling half way in her
game.  He could not flirt as well as he could pitch; still, he was no
novice.

"Well, Miss Huling, my word certainly is not involved.  But as to
pitching for Salisbury--that depends."

"Upon what?"

"Upon what there is in it."

"Mr. Wayne, you mean--money?  Oh, I know. My brother Rex told me how
you college men are paid big sums.  Our association will not give a
dollar, and, besides, my brother knows nothing of this.  But we girls
are heart and soul on winning this game.  We'll----"

"Miss Huling, I didn't mean remuneration in sordid cash," interrupted
Wayne, in a tone that heightened the color in her cheeks.

Wayne eyed her keenly with mingled emotions. Was that rose-leaf flush
in her cheeks natural? Some girls could blush at will.  Were the
wistful eyes, the earnest lips, only shamming?  It cost him some
bitterness to decide that they were. Her beauty fascinated, while it
hardened him. Eternally, the beauty of women meant the undoing of men,
whether they played the simple, inconsequential game of baseball, or
the great, absorbing, mutable game of life.

The shame of the situation for him was increasingly annoying, inasmuch
as this lovely girl should stoop to flirtation with a stranger, and the
same time draw him, allure him, despite the apparent insincerity.

"Miss Huling, I'll pitch your game for two things," he continued.

"Name them."

"Wear Yale blue in place of that orange-and-black Princeton pin."

"I will."  She said it with a shyness, a look in her eyes that made
Wayne wince.  What a perfect little actress!  But there seemed just a
chance that this was not deceit.  For an instant he wavered, held back
by subtle, finer intuition; then he beat down the mounting influence of
truth in those dark-blue eyes, and spoke deliberately:

"The other thing is--if I win the game--a kiss."

Dorothy Huling's face flamed scarlet.  But this did not affect Wayne so
deeply, though it showed him his mistake, as the darkening shadow of
disappointment in her eyes.  If she had been a flirt, she would have
been prepared for rudeness.  He began casting about in his mind for
some apology, some mitigation of his offense; but as he was about to
speak, the sudden fading of her color, leaving her pale, and the look
in her proud, dark eyes disconcerted him out of utterance.

"Certainly, Mr. Wayne.  I agree to your price if you win the game."

But how immeasurable was the distance between the shy consent to wear
Yale blue, and the pale, surprised agreement to his second proposal!
Wayne experienced a strange sensation of personal loss.

While he endeavored to find his tongue, Miss Huling spoke to one of the
boys standing near, and he started off on a run for the field.
Presently Huling and the other players broke for the car, soon
surrounding it in breathless anticipation.

"Wayne, is it straight?  You'll pitch for us tomorrow?" demanded the
captain, with shining eyes.

"Surely I will.  Bellville don't need me. They've got Mackay, of
Georgetown," replied Wayne.

Accustomed as he was to being mobbed by enthusiastic students and
admiring friends, Wayne could not but feel extreme embarrassment at the
reception accorded him now.  He felt that he was sailing under false
colors.  The boys mauled him, the girls fluttered about him with glad
laughter. He had to tear himself away; and when he finally reached his
hotel, he went to his room, with his mind in a tumult.

Wayne cursed himself roundly; then he fell into deep thought.  He began
to hope he could retrieve the blunder.  He would win the game; he would
explain to her the truth; he would ask for an opportunity to prove he
was worthy of her friendship; he would not mention the kiss.  This last
thought called up the soft curve of her red lips and that it was
possible for him to kiss her made the temptation strong.

His sleep that night was not peaceful and dreamless.  He awakened late,
had breakfast sent to his room, and then took a long walk out into the
country.  After lunch he dodged the crowd in the hotel lobby, and
hurried upstairs, where he put on his baseball suit.  The first person
he met upon going down was Reed, the Bellville man.

"What's this I hear, Wayne, about your pitching for Salisbury today?  I
got your telegram."

"Straight goods," replied Wayne.

"But I thought you intended to pitch for us?"

"I didn't promise, did I?"

"No.  Still, it looks fishy to me."

"You've got Mackay, haven't you?"

"Yes.  The truth is, I intended to use you both."

"Well, I'll try to win for Salisbury.  Hope there's no hard feeling."

"Not at all.  Only if I didn't have the Georgetown crack, I'd yell
murder.  As it is, we'll trim Salisbury anyway."

"Maybe," answered Wayne, laughing.  "It's a hot day, and my arm feels
good."

When Wayne reached the ball grounds, he thought he had never seen a
more inspiring sight. The bright green oval was surrounded by a
glittering mass of white and blue and black.  Out along the foul lines
were carriages, motors, and tally-hos, brilliant with waving fans and
flags. Over the field murmured the low hum of many voices.

"Here you are!" cried Huling, making a grab for Wayne.  "Where were you
this morning? We couldn't find you.  Come!  We've got a minute before
the practice whistle blows, and I promised to exhibit you."

He hustled Wayne down the first-base line, past the cheering crowd, out
among the motors, to the same touring car that he remembered.  A bevy
of white-gowned girls rose like a covey of ptarmigans, and whirled
flags of maroon and gray.

Dorothy Huling wore a bow of Yale blue upon her breast, and Wayne saw
it and her face through a blur.

"Hurry, girls; get it over.  We've got to practice," said the captain.

In the merry melee some one tied a knot of ribbon upon Wayne.  Who it
was he did not know; he saw only the averted face of Dorothy Huling.
And as he returned to the field with a dull pang, he determined he
would make her indifference disappear with the gladness of a victory
for her team.

The practice was short, but long enough for Wayne to locate the glaring
weakness of Salisbury at shortstop and third base.  In fact, most of
the players of his team showed rather poor form; they were
overstrained, and plainly lacked experience necessary for steadiness in
an important game.

Burns, the catcher, however, gave Wayne confidence.  He was a short,
sturdy youngster, with all the earmarks of a coming star.  Huling, the
captain, handled himself well at first base.  The Bellville players
were more matured, and some of them were former college cracks.  Wayne
saw that he had his work cut out for him.

The whistle blew.  The Bellville team trotted to their position in the
field; the umpire called play, and tossed a ball to Mackay, the long,
lean Georgetown pitcher.

Wells, the first batter, fouled out; Stamford hit an easy bounce to the
pitcher, and Clews put up a little Texas leaguer--all going out, one,
two, three, on three pitched balls.

The teams changed from bat to field.  Wayne faced the plate amid
vociferous cheering.  He felt that he could beat this team even without
good support.  He was in the finest condition, and his arm had been
resting for ten days.  He knew that if he had control of his high
inshoot, these Bellville players would feel the whiz of some speed
under their chins.

He struck Moore out, retired Reed on a measly fly, and made Clark hit a
weak grounder to second; and he walked in to the bench assured of the
outcome.  On some days he had poor control; on others his drop ball
refused to work properly; but, as luck would have it, he had never had
greater speed or accuracy, or a more bewildering fast curve than on
this day, when he meant to win a game for a girl.

"Boys, I've got everything," he said to his fellow-players, calling
them around him.  "A couple of runs will win for us.  Now, listen, I
know Mackay.  He hasn't any speed, or much of a curve. All he's got is
a teasing slow ball and a foxy head. Don't be too anxious to hit.  Make
him put 'em over."

But the Salisbury players were not proof against the tempting slow
balls that Mackay delivered.  They hit at wide curves far off the plate
and when they did connect with the ball it was only to send an easy
chance to the infielders.

The game seesawed along, inning after inning; it was a pitcher's battle
that looked as if the first run scored would win the game.  Mackay
toyed with the Salisbury boys; it was his pleasure to toss up twisting,
floating balls that could scarcely be hit out of the diamond.  Wayne
had the Bellville players utterly at his mercy; he mixed up his high
jump and fast drop so cleverly, with his sweeping out-curve, that his
opponents were unable to gauge his delivery at all.

In the first of the seventh, Barr for Bellville hit a ball which the
third baseman should have fielded.  But he fumbled.  The second batter
sent a fly to shortstop, who muffed it.  The third hitter reached his
base on another error by an infielder.  Here the bases were crowded,
and the situation had become critical all in a moment. Wayne believed
the infield would go to pieces, and lose the game, then and there, if
another hit went to short or third.

"Steady up, boys," called Wayne, and beckoned for his catcher.

"Burns, it's up to you and me," he said, in a low tone.  "I've got to
fan the rest of these hitters.  You're doing splendidly.  Now, watch
close for my drop.  Be ready to go down on your knees. When I let
myself out, the ball generally hits the ground just back of the plate."

"Speed 'em over!" said Burns, his sweaty face grim and determined.
"I'll get in front of 'em."

The head of the batting list was up for Bellville, and the whole
Bellville contingent on the side lines rose and yelled and cheered.

Moore was a left handed hitter, who choked his bat up short, and poked
at the ball.  He was a good bunter, and swift on his feet.  Wayne had
taken his measure, as he had that of the other players, earlier in the
game; and he knew it was good pitching to keep the ball in close to
Moore's hands, so that if he did hit it, the chances were it would not
go safe.

Summoning all his strength, Wayne took his long swing and shot the ball
over the inside corner with terrific speed.

One strike!

Wayne knew it would not do to waste any balls if he wished to maintain
that speed, so he put the second one in the same place.  Moore struck
too late.

Two strikes!

Then Burns signed for the last drop.  Wayne delivered it with
trepidation, for it was a hard curve to handle.  Moore fell all over
himself trying to hit it.  Little Burns dropped to his knees to block
the vicious curve.  It struck the ground, and, glancing, boomed deep on
the breast protector.

How the Salisbury supporters roared their approval!  One man out--the
bases full--with Reed, the slugging captain, at bat!

If Reed had a weakness, Wayne had not discovered it yet, although Reed
had not hit safely. The captain stood somewhat back from the plate, a
fact that induced Wayne to try him with the speedy outcurve.  Reed
lunged with a powerful swing, pulling away from the plate, and he
missed the curve by a foot.

Wayne did not need to know any more.  Reed had made his reputation
slugging straight balls from heedless pitchers.  He chopped the air
twice more, and flung his bat savagely to the ground.

"Two out--play the hitter!" called Wayne to his team.

Clark, the third man up, was the surest batter on the Bellville team.
He looked dangerous.  He had made the only hit so far to the credit of
his team.  Wayne tried to work him on a high, fast ball close in.
Clark swung freely and cracked a ripping liner to left.  Half the crowd
roared, and then groaned, for the beautiful hit went foul by several
yards.  Wayne wisely decided to risk all on his fast drop.  Clark
missed the first, fouled the second.

Two strikes!

Then he waited.  He cooly let one, two, three of the fast drops go by
without attempting to hit them.  Burns valiantly got his body in front
of them.  These balls were all over the plate, but too low to be called
strikes.  With two strikes, and three balls, and the bases full, Clark
had the advantage.

Tight as the place was, Wayne did not flinch. The game depended
practically upon the next ball delivered.  Wayne craftily and daringly
decided to use another fast drop, for of all his assortment that would
be the one least expected by Clark. But it must be started higher, so
that in case Clark made no effort to swing, it would still be a strike.

Gripping the ball with a clinched hand, Wayne swung sharply, and drove
it home with the limit of his power.  It sped like a bullet, waist
high, and just before reaching the plate darted downward, as if it had
glanced on an invisible barrier.

Clark was fooled completely and struck futilely. But the ball caromed
from the hard ground, hit Burns with a resounding thud, and bounced
away. Clark broke for first, and Moore dashed for home. Like a tiger
the little catcher pounced upon the ball, and, leaping back into line,
blocked the sliding Moore three feet from the plate.

Pandemonium burst loose among the Salisbury adherents.  The men bawled,
the women screamed, the boys shrieked, and all waved their hats and
flags, and jumped up and down, and manifested symptoms of baseball
insanity.

In the first of the eighth inning, Mackay sailed up the balls like
balloons, and disposed of three batters on the same old weak hits to
his clever fielders.  In the last of the eighth, Wayne struck out three
more Bellville players.

"Burns, you're up," said Wayne, who, in his earnestness to win, kept
cheering his comrades. "Do something.  Get your base any way you can.
Get in front of one.  We must score this inning."

Faithful, battered Burns cunningly imposed his hip over the plate and
received another bruise in the interests of his team.  The opposing
players furiously stormed at the umpire for giving him his base, but
Burns' trick went through.  Burnett bunted skilfully, sending Burns to
second.  Cole hit a fly to center.  Then Huling singled between short
and third.

It became necessary for the umpire to delay the game while he put the
madly leaping boys back off the coaching lines.  The shrill, hilarious
cheering gradually died out, and the field settled into a forced quiet.

Wayne hurried up to the plate and took his position.  He had always
been a timely hitter, and he gritted his teeth in his resolve to settle
this game.  Mackay whirled his long arm, wheeled, took his long stride,
and pitched a slow, tantalizing ball that seemed never to get anywhere.
But Wayne waited, timed it perfectly, and met it squarely.

The ball flew safely over short, and but for a fine sprint and stop by
the left fielder, would have resulted in a triple, possibly a home run.
As it was, Burns and Huling scored; and Wayne, by a slide, reached
second base.  When he arose and saw the disorderly riot, and heard the
noise of that well-dressed audience, he had a moment of exultation.
Then Wells flew out to center ending the chances for more runs.

As Wayne received the ball in the pitcher's box, he paused and looked
out across the field toward a white-crowned motor car, and he caught a
gleam of Dorothy Huling's golden hair, and wondered if she were glad.

For nothing short of the miraculous could snatch this game from him
now.  Burns had withstood a severe pounding, but he would last out the
inning, and Wayne did not take into account the rest of the team.  He
opened up with no slackening of his terrific speed, and he struck out
the three remaining batters on eleven pitched balls. Then in the rising
din he ran for Burns and gave him a mighty hug.

"You made the gamest stand of any catcher I ever pitched to," he said
warmly.

Burns looked at his quivering, puffed, and bleeding hands, and smiled
as if to say that this was praise to remember, and reward enough. Then
the crowd swooped down on them, and they were swallowed up in the
clamor and surge of victory.  When Wayne got out of the thick and press
of it, he made a bee line for his hotel, and by running a gauntlet
managed to escape.

Resting, dressing, and dining were matters which he went through
mechanically, with his mind ever on one thing.  Later, he found a dark
corner of the porch and sat there waiting, thinking. There was to be a
dance given in honor of the team that evening at the hotel.  He watched
the boys and girls pass up the steps.  When the music commenced, he
arose and went into the hall. It was bright with white gowns, and gay
with movement.

"There he is.  Grab him, somebody," yelled Huling.

"Do something for me, quick," implored Wayne of the captain, as he saw
the young people wave toward him.

"Salisbury is yours tonight," replied Huling

"Ask your sister to save me one dance."

Then he gave himself up.  He took his meed of praise and flattery, and
he withstood the battery of arch eyes modestly, as became the winner of
many fields.  But even the reception after the Princeton game paled in
comparison with this impromptu dance.

She was here.  Always it seemed, while he listened or talked or danced,
his eyes were drawn to a slender, graceful form, and a fair face
crowned with golden hair.  Then he was making his way to where she
stood near one of the open windows.

He never knew what he said to her, nor what reply she made, but she put
her arm in his, and presently they were gliding over the polished
floor.  To Wayne the dance was a dream.  He led her through the hall
and out upon the balcony, where composure strangely came to him.

"Mr. Wayne, I have to thank you for saving the day for us.  You pitched
magnificently."

"I would have broken my arm to win that game," burst out Wayne.  "Miss
Huling, I made a blunder yesterday.  I thought there was a conspiracy
to persuade me to throw down Bellville. I've known of such things, and
I resented it. You understand what I thought.  I humbly offer my
apologies, and beg that you forget the rude obligation I forced upon
you."

How cold she was!  How unattainable in that moment!  He caught his
breath, and rushed on.

"Your brother and the management of the club have asked me to pitch for
Salisbury the remainder of the season.  I shall be happy to--if----"

"If what?"  She was all alive now, flushing warmly, dark eyes alight,
the girl of his dreams.

"If you will forgive me--if you will let me be your friend--if--Miss
Huling, you will again wear that bit of Yale blue."

"If, Mr. Wayne, you had very sharp eyes you would have noticed that I
still wear it!"



THE MANAGER OF MADDEN'S HILL

Willie Howarth loved baseball.  He loved it all the more because he was
a cripple.  The game was more beautiful and wonderful to him because he
would never be able to play it.  For Willie had been born with one leg
shorter than the other; he could not run and at 11 years of age it was
all he could do to walk with a crutch.

Nevertheless Willie knew more about baseball than any other boy on
Madden's Hill.  An uncle of his had once been a ballplayer and he had
taught Willie the fine points of the game.  And this uncle's ballplayer
friends, who occasionally visited him, had imparted to Willie the
vernacular of the game.  So that Willie's knowledge of players and
play, and particularly of the strange talk, the wild and whirling words
on the lips of the real baseball men, made him the envy of every boy on
Madden's Hill, and a mine of information.  Willie never missed
attending the games played on the lots, and he could tell why they were
won or lost.

Willie suffered considerable pain, mostly at night, and this had given
him a habit of lying awake in the dark hours, grieving over that
crooked leg that forever shut him out of the heritage of youth.  He had
kept his secret well; he was accounted shy because he was quiet and had
never been able to mingle with the boys in their activity. No one
except his mother dreamed of the fire and hunger and pain within his
breast.  His school-mates called him "Daddy."  It was a name given for
his bent shoulders, his labored gait and his thoughtful face, too old
for his years.  And no one, not even his mother, guessed how that name
hurt Willie.

It was a source of growing unhappiness with Willie that the Madden's
Hill boys were always beaten by the other teams of the town.  He really
came to lose his sadness over his own misfortune in pondering on the
wretched play of the Madden's Hill baseball club.  He had all a boy's
pride in the locality where he lived.  And when the Bogg's Farm team
administered a crushing defeat to Madden's Hill, Willie grew desperate.

Monday he met Lane Griffith, the captain of the Madden's Hill nine.

"Hello, Daddy," said Lane.  He was a big, aggressive boy, and in a way
had a fondness for Willie.

"Lane, you got an orful trimmin' up on the Boggs.  What 'd you wanter
let them country jakes beat you for?"

"Aw, Daddy, they was lucky.  Umpire had hay-seed in his eyes!  Robbed
us!  He couldn't see straight.  We'll trim them down here Saturday."

"No, you won't--not without team work.  Lane, you've got to have a
manager."

"Durn it!  Where 're we goin' to get one?" Lane blurted out.

"You can sign me.  I can't play, but I know the game.  Let me coach the
boys."

The idea seemed to strike Capt. Griffith favorably.  He prevailed upon
all the boys living on Madden's Hill to come out for practice after
school.  Then he presented them to the managing coach.  The boys were
inclined to poke fun at Daddy Howarth and ridicule him; but the idea
was a novel one and they were in such a state of subjection from many
beatings that they welcomed any change.  Willie sat on a bench
improvised from a soap box and put them through a drill of batting and
fielding.  The next day in his coaching he included bunting and
sliding.  He played his men in different positions and for three more
days he drove them unmercifully.

When Saturday came, the day for the game with Bogg's Farm, a wild
protest went up from the boys.  Willie experienced his first bitterness
as a manager.  Out of forty aspirants for the Madden's Hill team he
could choose but nine to play the game.  And as a conscientious manager
he could use no favorites.  Willie picked the best players and assigned
them to positions that, in his judgment, were the best suited to them.
Bob Irvine wanted to play first base and he was down for right field.
Sam Wickhart thought he was the fastest fielder, and Willie had him
slated to catch. Tom Lindsay's feelings were hurt because he was not to
play in the infield.  Eddie Curtis suffered a fall in pride when he
discovered he was not down to play second base.  Jake Thomas, Tay-Tay
Mohler and Brick Grace all wanted to pitch.  The manager had chosen
Frank Price for that important position, and Frank's one ambition was
to be a shortstop.

So there was a deadlock.  For a while there seemed no possibility of a
game.  Willie sat on the bench, the center of a crowd of discontented,
quarreling boys.  Some were jealous, some were outraged, some tried to
pacify and persuade the others.  All were noisy.  Lane Griffith stood
by his manager and stoutly declared the players should play the
positions to which they had been assigned or not at all.  And he was
entering into a hot argument with Tom Lindsay when the Bogg's Farm team
arrogantly put in an appearance.

The way that team from the country walked out upon the field made a
great difference.  The spirit of Madden's Hill roused to battle.  The
game began swiftly and went on wildly.  It ended almost before the Hill
boys realized it had commenced. They did not know how they had won but
they gave Daddy Howarth credit for it.  They had a bonfire that night
to celebrate the victory and they talked baseball until their parents
became alarmed and hunted them up.

Madden's Hill practiced all that next week and on Saturday beat the
Seventh Ward team.  In four more weeks they had added half a dozen more
victories to their record.  Their reputation went abroad.  They got
uniforms, and baseball shoes with spikes, and bats and balls and
gloves.  They got a mask, but Sam Wickhart refused to catch with it.

"Sam, one of these days you'll be stoppin' a high inshoot with your
eye," sagely remarked Daddy Howarth.  "An' then where'll I get a
catcher for the Natchez game?"

Natchez was the one name on the lips of every Madden's Hill boy.  For
Natchez had the great team of the town and, roused by the growing
repute of the Hill club, had condescended to arrange a game.  When that
game was scheduled for July Fourth Daddy Howarth set to driving his
men. Early and late he had them out.  This manager, in keeping with all
other famous managers, believed that batting was the thing which won
games.  He developed a hard-hitting team.  He kept everlastingly at
them to hit and run, hit and run.

On the Saturday before the Fourth, Madden's Hill had a game to play
that did not worry Daddy and he left his team in charge of the captain.

"Fellers, I'm goin' down to the Round House to see Natchez play.  I'll
size up their game," said Daddy.

When he returned he was glad to find that his team had won its ninth
straight victory, but he was not communicative in regard to the playing
of the Natchez club.  He appeared more than usually thoughtful.

The Fourth fell on Tuesday.  Daddy had the boys out Monday and he let
them take only a short, sharp practice.  Then he sent them home. In his
own mind, Daddy did not have much hope of beating Natchez.  He had been
greatly impressed by their playing, and one inning toward the close of
the Round House game they had astonished him with the way they suddenly
seemed to break loose and deluge their opponents in a flood of hits and
runs.  He could not understand this streak of theirs--for they did the
same thing every time they played--and he was too good a baseball
student to call it luck.

He had never wanted anything in his life, not even to have two good
legs, as much as he wanted to beat Natchez.  For the Madden's Hill boys
had come to believe him infallible.  He was their idol. They imagined
they had only to hit and run, to fight and never give up, and Daddy
would make them win.  There was not a boy on the team who believed that
Natchez had a chance.  They had grown proud and tenacious of their
dearly won reputation.  First of all, Daddy thought of his team and
their loyalty to him; then he thought of the glory lately come to
Madden's Hill, and lastly of what it meant to him to have risen from a
lonely watcher of the game--a cripple who could not even carry a
bat--to manager of the famous Hill team. It might go hard with the boys
to lose this game, but it would break his heart.

From time out of mind there had always been rivalry between Madden's
Hill and Natchez.  And there is no rivalry so bitter as that between
boys. So Daddy, as he lay awake at night planning the system of play he
wanted to use, left out of all account any possibility of a peaceful
game.  It was comforting to think that if it came to a fight Sam and
Lane could hold their own with Bo Stranathan and Slugger Blandy.

In the managing of his players Daddy observed strict discipline.  It
was no unusual thing for him to fine them.  On practice days and off
the field they implicitly obeyed him.  During actual play, however,
they had evinced a tendency to jump over the traces.  It had been his
order for them not to report at the field Tuesday until 2 o'clock. He
found it extremely difficult to curb his own inclination to start
before the set time.  And only the stern duty of a man to be an example
to his players kept Daddy at home.

He lived near the ball grounds, yet on this day, as he hobbled along on
his crutch, he thought the distance interminably long, and for the
first time in weeks the old sickening resentment at his useless leg
knocked at his heart.  Manfully Daddy refused admittance to that old
gloomy visitor. He found comfort and forgetfulness in the thought that
no strong and swift-legged boy of his acquaintance could do what he
could do.

Upon arriving at the field Daddy was amazed to see such a large crowd.
It appeared that all the boys and girls in the whole town were in
attendance, and, besides, there was a sprinkling of grown-up people
interspersed here and there around the diamond.  Applause greeted
Daddy's appearance and members of his team escorted him to the soap-box
bench.

Daddy cast a sharp eye over the Natchez players practicing on the
field.  Bo Stranathan had out his strongest team.  They were not a
prepossessing nine.  They wore soiled uniforms that did not match in
cut or color.  But they pranced and swaggered and strutted!  They were
boastful and boisterous.  It was a trial for any Madden's Hill boy just
to watch them.

"Wot a swelled bunch!" exclaimed Tom Lindsay.

"Fellers, if Slugger Blandy tries to pull any stunt on me today he'll
get a swelleder nut," growled Lane Griffith.

"T-t-t-t-t-te-te-tell him t-t-t-to keep out of m-m-m-my way an' not
b-b-b-b-bl-block me," stuttered Tay-Tay Mohler.

"We're a-goin' to skin 'em," said Eddie Curtis.

"Cheese it, you kids, till we git in the game," ordered Daddy.  "Now,
Madden's Hill, hang round an' listen.  I had to sign articles with
Natchez--had to let them have their umpire.  So we're up against it.
But we'll hit this pitcher Muckle Harris.  He ain't got any steam.  An'
he ain't got much nerve.  Now every feller who goes up to bat wants to
talk to Muck.  Call him a big swelled stiff.  Tell him he can't break a
pane of glass--tell him he can't put one over the pan--tell him it he
does you'll slam it down in the sand bank.  Bluff the whole team.  Keep
scrappy all the time.  See!  That's my game today.  This Natchez bunch
needs to be gone after.  Holler at the umpire.  Act like you want to
fight."

Then Daddy sent his men out for practice.

"Boss, enny ground rules?" inquired Bo Stranathan.  He was a big,
bushy-haired boy with a grin and protruding teeth.  "How many bases on
wild throws over first base an' hits over the sand bank?"

"All you can get," replied Daddy, with a magnanimous wave of hand.

"Huh!  Lemmee see your ball?"

Daddy produced the ball that he had Lane had made for the game.

"Huh!  Watcher think?  We ain 't goin' to play with no mush ball like
thet," protested Bo.  "We play with a hard ball.  Looka here!  We'll
trow up the ball."

Daddy remembered what he had heard about the singular generosity of the
Natchez team to supply the balls for the games they played.

"We don't hev to pay nothin' fer them balls. A man down at the Round
House makes them for us.  They ain't no balls as good," explained Bo,
with pride.

However, as Bo did not appear eager to pass over the balls for
examination Daddy simply reached out and took them.  They were small,
perfectly round and as hard as bullets.  They had no covers.  The yarn
had been closely and tightly wrapped and then stitched over with fine
bees-waxed thread.  Daddy fancied he detected a difference in the
weight of the ball, but Bo took them back before Daddy could be sure of
that point.

"You don't have to fan about it.  I know a ball when I see one,"
observed Daddy.  "But we're on our own grounds an' we'll use our own
ball. Thanks all the same to you, Stranathan."

"Huh!  All I gotta say is we'll play with my ball er there won't be no
game," said Bo suddenly.

Daddy shrewdly eyed the Natchez captain.  Bo did not look like a fellow
wearing himself thin from generosity.  It struck Daddy that Bo's habit
of supplying the ball for the game might have some relation to the fact
that he always carried along his own umpire.  There was a strange
feature about this umpire business and it was that Bo's man had earned
a reputation for being particularly fair.  No boy ever had any real
reason to object to Umpire Gale's decisions.  When Gale umpired away
from the Natchez grounds his close decisions always favored the other
team, rather than his own.  It all made Daddy keen and thoughtful.

"Stranathan, up here on Madden's Hill we know how to treat visitors.
We'll play with your ball....  Now keep your gang of rooters from
crowdin' on the diamond."

"Boss, it's your grounds.  Fire 'em off if they don't suit you....
Come on, let's git in the game.  Watcher want--field er bat?"

"Field," replied Daddy briefly.

Billy Gale called "Play," and the game began with Slugger Blandy at
bat.  The formidable way in which he swung his club did not appear to
have any effect on Frank Price or the player back of him.  Frank's most
successful pitch was a slow, tantalizing curve, and he used it.  Blandy
lunged at the ball, missed it and grunted.

"Frank, you got his alley," called Lane.

Slugger fouled the next one high in the air back of the plate.  Sam
Wickhart, the stocky bowlegged catcher, was a fiend for running after
foul flies, and now he plunged into the crowd of boys, knocking them
right and left, and he caught the ball.  Whisner came up and hit safely
over Griffith, whereupon the Natchez supporters began to howl.  Kelly
sent a grounder to Grace at short stop.  Daddy's weak player made a
poor throw to first base, so the runner was safe.  Then Bo Stranathan
batted a stinging ball through the infield, scoring Whisner.

"Play the batter!  Play the batter!" sharply called Daddy from the
bench.

Then Frank struck out Molloy and retired Dundon on an easy fly.

"Fellers, git in the game now," ordered Daddy, as his players eagerly
trotted in.  "Say things to that Muckle Harris!  We'll walk through
this game like sand through a sieve."

Bob Irvin ran to the plate waving his bat at Harris.

"Put one over, you freckleface!  I 've been dyin' fer this chanst.
You're on Madden's Hill now."

Muckle evidently was not the kind of pitcher to stand coolly under such
bantering.  Obviously he was not used to it.  His face grew red and his
hair waved up.  Swinging hard, he threw the ball straight at Bob's
head.  Quick as a cat, Bob dropped flat.

"Never touched me!" he chirped, jumping up and pounding the plate with
his bat.  "You couldn't hit a barn door.  Come on.  I'll paste one a
mile!"

Bob did not get an opportunity to hit, for Harris could not locate the
plate and passed him to first on four balls.

"Dump the first one," whispered Daddy in Grace's ear.  Then he gave Bob
a signal to run on the first pitch.

Grace tried to bunt the first ball, but he missed it.  His attempt,
however, was so violent that he fell over in front of the catcher, who
could not recover in time to throw, and Bob got to second base.  At
this juncture, the Madden's Hill band of loyal supporters opened up
with a mingling of shrill yells and whistles and jangling of tin cans
filled with pebbles.  Grace hit the next ball into second base and,
while he was being thrown out, Bob raced to third.  With Sam Wickhart
up it looked good for a score, and the crowd yelled louder.  Sam was
awkward yet efficient, and he batted a long fly to right field.  The
fielder muffed the ball.  Bob scored, Sam reached second base, and the
crowd yelled still louder.  Then Lane struck out and Mohler hit to
shortstop, retiring the side.

Natchez scored a run on a hit, a base on balls, and another error by
Grace.  Every time a ball went toward Grace at short Daddy groaned.  In
their half of the inning Madden's Hill made two runs, increasing the
score 3 to 2.

The Madden's Hill boys began to show the strain of such a close
contest.  If Daddy had voiced aloud his fear it would have been:
"They'll blow up in a minnit!"  Frank Price alone was slow and cool,
and he pitched in masterly style. Natchez could not beat him.  On the
other hand, Madden's Hill hit Muck Harris hard, but superb fielding
kept runners off the bases.  As Daddy's team became more tense and
excited Bo Stranathan's players grew steadier and more arrogantly
confident.  Daddy saw it with distress, and he could not realize just
where Natchez had license for such confidence.  Daddy watched the game
with the eyes of a hawk.

As the Natchez players trooped in for their sixth inning at bat, Daddy
observed a marked change in their demeanor.  Suddenly they seemed to
have been let loose; they were like a band of Indians.  Daddy saw
everything.  He did not miss seeing Umpire Gale take a ball from his
pocket and toss it to Frank, and Daddy wondered if that was the ball
which had been in the play.  Straightway, however, he forgot that in
the interest of the game.

Bo Stranathan bawled:  "Wull, Injuns, hyar's were we do 'em.  We've
jest ben loafin' along.  Git ready to tear the air, you rooters!"

Kelly hit a wonderfully swift ball through the infield.  Bo batted out
a single.  Malloy got up in the way of one of Frank's pitches, and was
passed to first base.  Then, as the Natchez crowd opened up in shrill
clamor, the impending disaster fell.  Dundon hit a bounder down into
the infield. The ball appeared to be endowed with life.  It bounded
low, then high and, cracking into Grace's hands, bounced out and rolled
away.  The runners raced around the bases.

Pickens sent up a tremendous fly, the highest ever batted on Madden's
Hill.  It went over Tom Lindsay in center field, and Tom ran and ran.
The ball went so far up that Tom had time to cover the ground, but he
could not judge it.  He ran round in a little circle, with hands up in
bewilderment.  And when the ball dropped it hit him on the head and
bounded away.

"Run, you Injun, run!" bawled Bo.  "What'd I tell you?  We ain't got
'em goin', oh, no!  Hittin' 'em on the head!"

Bill dropped a slow, teasing ball down the third-base line.  Jake
Thomas ran desperately for it, and the ball appeared to strike his
hands and run up his arms and caress his nose and wrap itself round his
neck and then roll gently away.  All the while, the Natchez runners
tore wildly about the bases and the Natchez supporters screamed and
whistled.  Muck Harris could not bat, yet he hit the first ball and it
shot like a bullet over the infield.  Then Slugger Blandy came to the
plate.

The ball he sent out knocked Grace's leg from under him as if it were a
ten-pin.  Whisner popped a fly over Tay Tay Mohler's head.  Now Tay Tay
was fat and slow, but he was a sure catch.  He got under the ball.  It
struck his hands and jumped back twenty feet up into the air.  It was a
strangely live ball.  Kelly again hit to shortstop, and the ball
appeared to start slow, to gather speed with every bound and at last to
dart low and shoot between Grace's legs.

"Haw!  Haw!" roared Bo.  "They've got a hole at short.  Hit fer the
hole, fellers.  Watch me!  Jest watch me!"

And he swung hard on the first pitch.  The ball glanced like a streak
straight at Grace, took a vicious jump, and seemed to flirt with the
infielder's hands, only to evade them.

Malloy fouled a pitch and the ball hit Sam Wickhart square over the
eye.  Sam's eye popped out and assumed the proportions and color of a
huge plum.

"Hey!" yelled Blandy, the rival catcher.  "Air you ketchin' with yer
mug?"

Sam would not delay the game nor would he don the mask.

Daddy sat hunched on his soap-box, and, as in a hateful dream, he saw
his famous team go to pieces.  He put his hands over his ears to shut
out some of the uproar.  And he watched that little yarn ball fly and
shoot and bound and roll to crush his fondest hopes.  Not one of his
players appeared able to hold it.  And Grace had holes in his hands and
legs and body.  The ball went right through him.  He might as well have
been so much water.  Instead of being a shortstop he was simply a hole.
After every hit Daddy saw that ball more and more as something alive.
It sported with his infielders.  It bounded like a huge jack-rabbit,
and went swifter and higher at every bound.  It was here, there,
everywhere.

And it became an infernal ball.  It became endowed with a fiendish
propensity to run up a player's leg and all about him, as if trying to
hide in his pocket.  Grace's efforts to find it were heartbreaking to
watch.  Every time it bounded out to center field, which was of
frequent occurrence, Tom would fall on it and hug it as if he were
trying to capture a fleeing squirrel.  Tay Tay Mohler could stop the
ball, but that was no great credit to him, for his hands took no part
in the achievement.  Tay Tay was fat and the ball seemed to like him.
It boomed into his stomach and banged against his stout legs.  When Tay
saw it coming he dropped on his knees and valorously sacrificed his
anatomy to the cause of the game.

Daddy tried not to notice the scoring of runs by his opponents.  But he
had to see them and he had to count.  Ten runs were as ten blows!
After that each run scored was like a stab in his heart. The play went
on, a terrible fusilade of wicked ground balls that baffled any attempt
to field them. Then, with nineteen runs scored, Natchez appeared to
tire.  Sam caught a foul fly, and Tay Tay, by obtruding his wide person
to the path of infield hits, managed to stop them, and throw out the
runners.

Score--Natchez, 21; Madden Hill, 3.

Daddy's boys slouched and limped wearily in.

"Wot kind of a ball's that?" panted Tom, as he showed his head with a
bruise as large as a goose-egg.

"T-t-t-t-ta-ta-tay-tay-tay-tay----" began Mohler, in great excitement,
but as he could not finish what he wanted to say no one caught his
meaning.

Daddy's watchful eye had never left that wonderful, infernal little
yarn ball.  Daddy was crushed under defeat, but his baseball brains
still continued to work.  He saw Umpire Gale leisurely step into the
pitcher's box, and leisurely pick up the ball and start to make a
motion to put it in his pocket.

Suddenly fire flashed all over Daddy.

"Hyar!  Don't hide that ball!" he yelled, in his piercing tenor.

He jumped up quickly, forgetting his crutch, and fell headlong.  Lane
and Sam got him upright and handed the crutch to him.  Daddy began to
hobble out to the pitcher's box.

"Don't you hide that ball.  See!  I've got my eye on this game.  That
ball was in play, an' you can't use the other."

Umpire Gale looked sheepish, and his eyes did not meet Daddy's.  Then
Bo came trotting up.

"What's wrong, boss?" he asked.

"Aw, nuthin'.  You're tryin' to switch balls on me.  That's all.  You
can't pull off any stunts on Madden's Hill."

"Why, boss, thet ball's all right.  What you hollerin' about?"

"Sure that ball's all right," replied Daddy. "It's a fine ball.  An' we
want a chanst to hit it! See?"

Bo flared up and tried to bluster, but Daddy cut him short.

"Give us our innin'--let us git a whack at that ball, or I'll run you
off Madden's Hill."

Bo suddenly looked a little pale and sick.

"Course youse can git a whack at it," he said, in a weak attempt to be
natural and dignified.

Daddy tossed the ball to Harris, and as he hobbled off the field he
heard Bo calling out low and cautiously to his players.  Then Daddy was
certain he had discovered a trick.  He called his players around him.

"This game ain't over yet.  It ain't any more'n begun.  I'll tell you
what.  Last innin' Bo's umpire switched balls on us.  That ball was
lively. An' they tried to switch back on me.  But nix! We're goin' to
git a chanst to hit that lively ball, An' they're goin' to git a dose
of their own medicine.  Now, you dead ones--come back to life! Show me
some hittin' an' runnin'."

"Daddy, you mean they run in a trick on us?" demanded Lane, with
flashing eyes.

"Funny about Natchez's strong finishes!" replied Daddy, coolly, as he
eyed his angry players.

They let out a roar, and then ran for the bats.

The crowd, quick to sense what was in the air, thronged to the diamond
and manifested alarming signs of outbreak.

Sam Wickhart leaped to the plate and brandished his club.

"Sam, let him pitch a couple," called Daddy from the bench.  "Mebbe
we'll git wise then."

Harris had pitched only twice when the fact became plain that he could
not throw this ball with the same speed as the other.  The ball was
heavier; besides Harris was also growing tired. The next pitch Sam hit
far out over the center fielder's head for a home run.  It was a longer
hit than any Madden's Hill boy had ever made. The crowd shrieked its
delight.  Sam crossed the plate and then fell on the bench beside Daddy.

"Say! that ball nearly knocked the bat out of my hands," panted Sam.
"It made the bat spring!"

"Fellers, don't wait," ordered Daddy.  "Don't give the umpire a chanst
to roast us now.  Slam the first ball!"

The aggressive captain lined the ball at Bo Stranathan.  The Natchez
shortstop had a fine opportunity to make the catch, but he made an
inglorious muff.  Tay Tay hurried to bat.  Umpire Gale called the first
pitch a strike.  Tay slammed down his club.  "T-t-t-t-to-to-twasn't
over," he cried.  "T-t-t-tay----"

"Shut up," yelled Daddy.  "We want to git this game over today."

Tay Tay was fat and he was also strong, so that when beef and muscle
both went hard against the ball it traveled.  It looked as if it were
going a mile straight up.  All the infielders ran to get under it.
They got into a tangle, into which the ball descended.  No one caught
it, and thereupon the Natchez players began to rail at one another. Bo
stormed at them, and they talked back to him. Then when Tom Lindsay hit
a little slow grounder into the infield it seemed that a just
retribution had overtaken the great Natchez team.

Ordinarily this grounder of Tom's would have been easy for a novice to
field.  But this peculiar grounder, after it has hit the ground once,
seemed to wake up and feel lively.  It lost its leisurely action and
began to have celerity.  When it reached Dundon it had the strange,
jerky speed so characteristic of the grounders that had confused the
Madden's Hill team.  Dundon got his hands on the ball and it would not
stay in them.  When finally he trapped it Tom had crossed first base
and another runner had scored.  Eddie Curtis cracked another at Bo.
The Natchez captain dove for it, made a good stop, bounced after the
rolling ball, and then threw to Kelly at first.  The ball knocked
Kelly's hands apart as if they had been paper.  Jake Thomas batted left
handed and he swung hard on a slow pitch and sent the ball far into
right field.  Runners scored.  Jake's hit was a three-bagger.  Then
Frank Price hit up an infield fly.  Bo yelled for Dundon to take it and
Dundon yelled for Harris.  They were all afraid to try for it.  It
dropped safely while Jake ran home.

With the heavy batters up the excitement increased.  A continuous
scream and incessant rattle of tin cans made it impossible to hear what
the umpire called out.  But that was not important, for he seldom had a
chance to call either ball or strike.  Harris had lost his speed and
nearly every ball he pitched was hit by the Madden's Hill boys.  Irvine
cracked one down between short and third.  Bo and Pickens ran for it
and collided while the ball jauntily skipped out to left field and,
deftly evading Bell, went on and on.  Bob reached third.  Grace hit
another at Dundon, who appeared actually to stop it four times before
he could pick it up, and then he was too late.  The doughty bow-legged
Sam, with his huge black eye, hung over the plate and howled at Muckle.
In the din no one heard what he said, but evidently Muck divined it.
For he roused to the spirit of a pitcher who would die of shame if he
could not fool a one-eyed batter.  But Sam swooped down and upon the
first ball and drove it back toward the pitcher.  Muck could not get
out of the way and the ball made his leg buckle under him.  Then that
hit glanced off to begin a marvelous exhibition of high and erratic
bounding about the infield.

Daddy hunched over his soap-box bench and hugged himself.  He was
farsighted and he saw victory.  Again he watched the queer antics of
that little yarn ball, but now with different feelings. Every hit
seemed to lift him to the skies.  He kept silent, though every time the
ball fooled a Natchez player Daddy wanted to yell.  And when it started
for Bo and, as if in revenge, bounded wickeder at every bounce to skip
off the grass and make Bo look ridiculous, then Daddy experienced the
happiest moments of his baseball career.  Every time a tally crossed
the plate he would chalk it down on his soap box.

But when Madden's Hill scored the nineteenth run without a player being
put out, then Daddy lost count.  He gave himself up to revel.  He sat
motionless and silent; nevertheless his whole internal being was in the
state of wild tumult.  It was as if he was being rewarded in joy for
all the misery he had suffered because he was a cripple. He could never
play baseball, but he had baseball brains.  He had been too wise for
the tricky Stranathan.  He was the coach and manager and general of the
great Madden's Hill nine. If ever he had to lie awake at night again he
would not mourn over his lameness; he would have something to think
about.  To him would be given the glory of beating the invincible
Natchez team.  So Daddy felt the last bitterness leave him.  And he
watched that strange little yarn ball, with its wonderful skips and
darts and curves.  The longer the game progressed and the wearier
Harris grew, the harder the Madden's Hill boys batted the ball and the
crazier it bounced at Bo and his sick players.  Finally, Tay Tay Mohler
hit a teasing grounder down to Bo.

Then it was as if the ball, realizing a climax, made ready for a final
spurt.  When Bo reached for the ball it was somewhere else.  Dundon
could not locate it.  And Kelly, rushing down to the chase, fell all
over himself and his teammates trying to grasp the illusive ball, and
all the time Tay Tay was running.  He never stopped.  But as he was
heavy and fat he did not make fast time on the bases.  Frantically the
outfielders ran in to head off the bouncing ball, and when they had
succeeded Tay Tay had performed the remarkable feat of making a home
run on a ball batted into the infield.

That broke Natchez's spirit.  They quit.  They hurried for their bats.
Only Bo remained behind a moment to try to get his yarn ball.  But Sam
had pounced upon it and given it safely to Daddy. Bo made one sullen
demand for it.

"Funny about them fast finishes of yours!" said Daddy scornfully.
"Say! the ball's our'n.  The winnin' team gits the ball.  Go home an'
look up the rules of the game!"

Bo slouched off the field to a shrill hooting and tin canning.

"Fellers, what was the score?" asked Daddy.

Nobody knew the exact number of runs made by Madden's Hill.

"Gimme a knife, somebody," said the manager.

When it had been produced Daddy laid down the yarn ball and cut into
it.  The blade entered readily for a inch and then stopped.  Daddy cut
all around the ball, and removed the cover of tightly wrapped yarn.
Inside was a solid ball of India rubber.

"Say! it ain't so funny now--how that ball bounced," remarked Daddy.

"Wot you think of that!" exclaimed Tom, feeling the lump on his head.

"T-t-t-t-t-t-t-ta-tr----" began Tay Tay Mohler.

"Say it!  Say it!" interrupted Daddy.

"Ta-ta-ta-tr-trimmed them wa-wa-wa-wa-with their own
b-b-b-b-b-ba-ba-ball," finished Tay.



OLD WELL-WELL

He bought a ticket at the 25-cent window, and edging his huge bulk
through the turnstile, laboriously followed the noisy crowd toward the
bleachers. I could not have been mistaken.  He was Old Well-Well,
famous from Boston to Baltimore as the greatest baseball fan in the
East.  His singular yell had pealed into the ears of five hundred
thousand worshippers of the national game and would never be forgotten.

At sight of him I recalled a friend's baseball talk.  "You remember Old
Well-Well?  He's all in--dying, poor old fellow!  It seems young Burt,
whom the Phillies are trying out this spring, is Old Well-Well's nephew
and protege.  Used to play on the Murray Hill team; a speedy youngster.
When the Philadelphia team was here last, Manager Crestline announced
his intention to play Burt in center field.  Old Well-Well was too ill
to see the lad get his tryout.  He was heart-broken and said:  'If I
could only see one more game!'"

The recollection of this random baseball gossip and the fact that
Philadelphia was scheduled to play New York that very day, gave me a
sudden desire to see the game with Old Well-Well.  I did not know him,
but where on earth were introductions as superfluous as on the
bleachers?  It was a very easy matter to catch up with him.  He walked
slowly, leaning hard on a cane and his wide shoulders sagged as he
puffed along.  I was about to make some pleasant remark concerning the
prospects of a fine game, when the sight of his face shocked me and I
drew back.  If ever I had seen shadow of pain and shade of death they
hovered darkly around Old Well-Well.

No one accompanied him; no one seemed to recognize him.  The majority
of that merry crowd of boys and men would have jumped up wild with
pleasure to hear his well-remembered yell.  Not much longer than a year
before, I had seen ten thousand fans rise as one man and roar a
greeting to him that shook the stands.  So I was confronted by a
situation strikingly calculated to rouse my curiosity and sympathy.

He found an end seat on a row at about the middle of the right-field
bleachers and I chose one across the aisle and somewhat behind him. No
players were yet in sight.  The stands were filling up and streams of
men were filing into the aisles of the bleachers and piling over the
benches. Old Well-Well settled himself comfortably in his seat and
gazed about him with animation.  There had come a change to his massive
features.  The hard lines had softened; the patches of gray were no
longer visible; his cheeks were ruddy; something akin to a smile shone
on his face as he looked around, missing no detail of the familiar
scene.

During the practice of the home team Old Well-Well sat still with his
big hands on his knees; but when the gong rang for the Phillies, he
grew restless, squirming in his seat and half rose several times.  I
divined the importuning of his old habit to greet his team with the
yell that had made him famous.  I expected him to get up; I waited for
it.  Gradually, however, he became quiet as a man governed by severe
self-restraint and directed his attention to the Philadelphia center
fielder.

At a glance I saw that the player was new to me and answered the
newspaper description of young Burt.  What a lively looking athlete!
He was tall, lithe, yet sturdy.  He did not need to chase more than two
fly balls to win me.  His graceful, fast style reminded me of the great
Curt Welch.  Old Well-Well's face wore a rapt expression.  I discovered
myself hoping Burt would make good; wishing he would rip the boards off
the fence; praying he would break up the game.

It was Saturday, and by the time the gong sounded for the game to begin
the grand stand and bleachers were packed.  The scene was glittering,
colorful, a delight to the eye.  Around the circle of bright faces
rippled a low, merry murmur.  The umpire, grotesquely padded in front
by his chest protector, announced the batteries, dusted the plate, and
throwing out a white ball, sang the open sesame of the game:  "Play!"

Then Old Well-Well arose as if pushed from his seat by some strong
propelling force.  It had been his wont always when play was ordered or
in a moment of silent suspense, or a lull in the applause, or a
dramatic pause when hearts heat high and lips were mute, to bawl out
over the listening, waiting multitude his terrific blast:
"Well-Well-Well!"

Twice he opened his mouth, gurgled and choked, and then resumed his
seat with a very red, agitated face; something had deterred him from
his purpose, or he had been physically incapable of yelling.

The game opened with White's sharp bounder to the infield.  Wesley had
three strikes called on him, and Kelly fouled out to third base.  The
Phillies did no better, being retired in one, two, three order.  The
second inning was short and no tallies were chalked up.  Brain hit
safely in the third and went to second on a sacrifice.  The bleachers
began to stamp and cheer.  He reached third on an infield hit that the
Philadelphia short-stop knocked down but could not cover in time to
catch either runner.  The cheer in the grand stand was drowned by the
roar in the bleachers. Brain scored on a fly-ball to left.  A double
along the right foul line brought the second runner home.  Following
that the next batter went out on strikes.

In the Philadelphia half of the inning young Burt was the first man up.
He stood left-handed at the plate and looked formidable.  Duveen, the
wary old pitcher for New York, to whom this new player was an unknown
quantity, eyed his easy position as if reckoning on a possible
weakness. Then he took his swing and threw the ball.  Burt never moved
a muscle and the umpire called strike. The next was a ball, the next a
strike; still Burt had not moved.

"Somebody wake him up!" yelled a wag in the bleachers.  "He's from
Slumbertown, all right, all right!" shouted another.

Duveen sent up another ball, high and swift. Burt hit straight over the
first baseman, a line drive that struck the front of the right-field
bleachers.

"Peacherino!" howled a fan.

Here the promise of Burt's speed was fulfilled. Run!  He was fleet as a
deer.  He cut through first like the wind, settled to a driving strides
rounded second, and by a good, long slide beat the throw in to third.
The crowd, who went to games to see long hits and daring runs, gave him
a generous hand-clapping.

Old Well-Well appeared on the verge of apoplexy. His ruddy face turned
purple, then black; he rose in his seat; he gave vent to smothered
gasps; then he straightened up and clutched his hands into his knees.

Burt scored his run on a hit to deep short, an infielder's choice, with
the chances against retiring a runner at the plate.  Philadelphia could
not tally again that inning.  New York blanked in the first of the
next.  For their opponents, an error, a close decision at second
favoring the runner, and a single to right tied the score.  Bell of New
York got a clean hit in the opening of the fifth. With no one out and
chances for a run, the impatient fans let loose.  Four subway trains in
collision would not have equalled the yell and stamp in the bleachers.
Maloney was next to bat and he essayed a bunt.  This the fans derided
with hoots and hisses.  No team work, no inside ball for them.

"Hit it out!" yelled a hundred in unison.

"Home run!" screamed a worshipper of long hits.

As if actuated by the sentiments of his admirers Maloney lined the ball
over short.  It looked good for a double; it certainly would advance
Bell to third; maybe home.  But no one calculated on Burt.  His
fleetness enabled him to head the bounding ball.  He picked it up
cleanly, and checking his headlong run, threw toward third base. Bell
was half way there.  The ball shot straight and low with terrific force
and beat the runner to the bag.

"What a great arm!" I exclaimed, deep in my throat.  "It's the lad's
day!  He can't be stopped."

The keen newsboy sitting below us broke the amazed silence in the
bleachers.

"Wot d'ye tink o' that?"

Old Well-Well writhed in his seat.  To him if was a one-man game, as it
had come to be for me. I thrilled with him; I gloried in the making
good of his protege; it got to be an effort on my part to look at the
old man, so keenly did his emotion communicate itself to me.

The game went on, a close, exciting, brilliantly fought battle.  Both
pitchers were at their best. The batters batted out long flies, low
liners, and sharp grounders; the fielders fielded these difficult
chances without misplay.  Opportunities came for runs, but no runs were
scored for several innings.  Hopes were raised to the highest pitch
only to be dashed astonishingly away.  The crowd in the grand stand
swayed to every pitched ball; the bleachers tossed like surf in a storm.

To start the eighth, Stranathan of New York tripled along the left foul
line.  Thunder burst from the fans and rolled swellingly around the
field.  Before the hoarse yelling, the shrill hooting, the hollow
stamping had ceased Stranathan made home on an infield hit.  Then
bedlam broke loose.  It calmed down quickly, for the fans sensed
trouble between Binghamton, who had been thrown out in the play, and
the umpire who was waving him back to the bench.

"You dizzy-eyed old woman, you can't see straight!" called Binghamton.

The umpire's reply was lost, but it was evident that the offending
player had been ordered out of the grounds.

Binghamton swaggered along the bleachers while the umpire slowly
returned to his post.  The fans took exception to the player's
objection and were not slow in expressing it.  Various witty enconiums,
not to be misunderstood, attested to the bleachers' love of fair play
and their disgust at a player's getting himself put out of the game at
a critical stage.

The game proceeded.  A second batter had been thrown out.  Then two
hits in succession looked good for another run.  White, the next
batter, sent a single over second base.  Burt scooped the ball on the
first bounce and let drive for the plate. It was another extraordinary
throw.  Whether ball or runner reached home base first was most
difficult to decide.  The umpire made his sweeping wave of hand and the
breathless crowd caught his decision.

"Out!"

In action and sound the circle of bleachers resembled a long curved
beach with a mounting breaker thundering turbulently high.

"Rob--b--ber--r!" bawled the outraged fans, betraying their marvelous
inconsistency.

Old Well-Well breathed hard.  Again the wrestling of his body signified
an inward strife.  I began to feel sure that the man was in a mingled
torment of joy and pain, that he fought the maddening desire to yell
because he knew he had not the strength to stand it.  Surely, in all
the years of his long following of baseball he had never had the
incentive to express himself in his peculiar way that rioted him now.
Surely, before the game ended he would split the winds with his
wonderful yell.

Duveen's only base on balls, with the help of a bunt, a steal, and a
scratch hit, resulted in a run for Philadelphia, again tying the score.
How the fans raged at Fuller for failing to field the lucky scratch.

"We had the game on ice!" one cried.

"Get him a basket!"

New York men got on bases in the ninth and made strenuous efforts to
cross the plate, but it was not to be.  Philadelphia opened up with two
scorching hits and then a double steal.  Burt came up with runners on
second and third.  Half the crowd cheered in fair appreciation of the
way fate was starring the ambitious young outfielder; the other half,
dyed-in-the-wool home-team fans, bent forward in a waiting silent gloom
of fear.  Burt knocked the dirt out of his spikes and faced Duveen.
The second ball pitched he met fairly and it rang like a bell.

No one in the stands saw where it went.  But they heard the crack, saw
the New York shortstop stagger and then pounce forward to pick up the
ball and speed it toward the plate.  The catcher was quick to tag the
incoming runner, and then snap the ball to first base, completing a
double play.

When the crowd fully grasped this, which was after an instant of
bewilderment, a hoarse crashing roar rolled out across the field to
bellow back in loud echo from Coogan's Bluff.  The grand stand
resembled a colored corn field waving in a violent wind; the bleachers
lost all semblance of anything.  Frenzied, flinging action--wild
chaos--shrieking cries--manifested sheer insanity of joy.

When the noise subsided, one fan, evidently a little longer-winded than
his comrades, cried out hysterically:

"O-h!  I don't care what becomes of me--now-w!"

Score tied, three to three, game must go ten innings--that was the
shibboleth; that was the overmastering truth.  The game did go ten
innings--eleven--twelve, every one marked by masterly pitching, full of
magnificent catches, stops and throws, replete with reckless
base-running and slides like flashes in the dust.  But they were
unproductive of runs.  Three to three!  Thirteen innings!

"Unlucky thirteenth," wailed a superstitious fan.

I had got down to plugging, and for the first time, not for my home
team.  I wanted Philadelphia to win, because Burt was on the team.
With Old Well-Well sitting there so rigid in his seat, so obsessed by
the playing of the lad, I turned traitor to New York.

White cut a high twisting bounder inside the third base, and before the
ball could be returned he stood safely on second.  The fans howled with
what husky voice they had left.  The second hitter batted a
tremendously high fly toward center field. Burt wheeled with the crack
of the ball and raced for the ropes.  Onward the ball soared like a
sailing swallow; the fleet fielder ran with his back to the stands.
What an age that ball stayed in the air!  Then it lost its speed,
gracefully curved and began to fall.  Burt lunged forward and upwards;
the ball lit in his hands and stuck there as he plunged over the ropes
into the crowd.  White had leisurely trotted half way to third; he saw
the catch, ran back to touch second and then easily made third on the
throw-in.  The applause that greeted Burt proved the splendid spirit of
the game.  Bell placed a safe little hit over short, scoring White.
Heaving, bobbing bleachers--wild, broken, roar on roar!

Score four to three--only one half inning left for Philadelphia to
play--how the fans rooted for another run!  A swift double-play,
however, ended the inning.

Philadelphia's first hitter had three strikes called on him.

"Asleep at the switch!" yelled a delighted fan.

The next batter went out on a weak pop-up fly to second.

"Nothin' to it!"

"Oh, I hate to take this money!"

"All-l o-over!"

Two men at least of all that vast assemblage had not given up victory
for Philadelphia.  I had not dared to look at Old Well-Well for a long,
while.  I dreaded the nest portentious moment. I felt deep within me
something like clairvoyant force, an intangible belief fostered by hope.

Magoon, the slugger of the Phillies, slugged one against the left field
bleachers, but, being heavy and slow, he could not get beyond second
base.  Cless swung with all his might at the first pitched ball, and
instead of hitting it a mile as he had tried, he scratched a mean,
slow, teasing grounder down the third base line.  It was as safe as if
it had been shot out of a cannon.  Magoon went to third.

The crowd suddenly awoke to ominous possibilities; sharp commands came
from the players' bench.  The Philadelphia team were bowling and
hopping on the side lines, and had to be put down by the umpire.

An inbreathing silence fell upon stands and field, quiet, like a lull
before a storm.

When I saw young Burt start for the plate and realized it was his turn
at bat, I jumped as if I had been shot.  Putting my hand on Old
Well-Well's shoulder I whispered:  "Burt's at bat: He'll break up this
game!  I know he's going to lose one!"

The old fellow did not feel my touch; he did not hear my voice; he was
gazing toward the field with an expression on his face to which no
human speech could render justice.  He knew what was coming.  It could
not be denied him in that moment.

How confidently young Burt stood up to the plate!  None except a
natural hitter could have had his position.  He might have been Wagner
for all he showed of the tight suspense of that crisis.  Yet there was
a tense alert poise to his head and shoulders which proved he was alive
to his opportunity.

Duveen plainly showed he was tired.  Twice he shook his head to his
catcher, as if he did not want to pitch a certain kind of ball.  He had
to use extra motion to get his old speed, and he delivered a high
straight ball that Burt fouled over the grand stand.  The second ball
met a similar fate.  All the time the crowd maintained that strange
waiting silence.  The umpire threw out a glistening white ball, which
Duveen rubbed in the dust and spat upon.  Then he wound himself up into
a knot, slowly unwound, and swinging with effort, threw for the plate.

Burt's lithe shoulders swung powerfully.  The meeting of ball and bat
fairly cracked.  The low driving hit lined over second a rising
glittering streak, and went far beyond the center fielder.

Bleachers and stands uttered one short cry, almost a groan, and then
stared at the speeding runners.  For an instant, approaching doom could
not have been more dreaded.  Magoon scored. Cless was rounding second
when the ball lit.  If Burt was running swiftly when he turned first he
had only got started, for then his long sprinter's stride lengthened
and quickened.  At second he was flying; beyond second he seemed to
merge into a gray flitting shadow.

I gripped my seat strangling the uproar within me.  Where was the
applause?  The fans were silent, choked as I was, but from a different
cause. Cless crossed the plate with the score that defeated New York;
still the tension never laxed until Burt beat the ball home in as
beautiful a run as ever thrilled an audience.

In the bleak dead pause of amazed disappointment Old Well-Well lifted
his hulking figure and loomed, towered over the bleachers.  His wide
shoulders spread, his broad chest expanded, his breath whistled as he
drew it in.  One fleeting instant his transfigured face shone with a
glorious light.  Then, as he threw back his head and opened his lips,
his face turned purple, the muscles of his cheeks and jaw rippled and
strung, the veins on his forehead swelled into bulging ridges.  Even
the back of his neck grew red.

"Well!--Well!--Well!!!"

Ear-splitting stentorian blast!  For a moment I was deafened.  But I
heard the echo ringing from the cliff, a pealing clarion call,
beautiful and wonderful, winding away in hollow reverberation, then
breaking out anew from building to building in clear concatenation.

A sea of faces whirled in the direction of that long unheard yell.
Burt had stopped statue-like as if stricken in his tracks; then he came
running, darting among the spectators who had leaped the fence.

Old Well-Well stood a moment with slow glance lingering on the tumult
of emptying bleachers, on the moving mingling colors in the grand
stand, across the green field to the gray-clad players. He staggered
forward and fell.

Before I could move, a noisy crowd swarmed about him, some solicitous,
many facetious. Young Burt leaped the fence and forced his way into the
circle.  Then they were carrying the old man down to the field and
toward the clubhouse. I waited until the bleachers and field were
empty.  When I finally went out there was a crowd at the gate
surrounding an ambulance.  I caught a glimpse of Old Well-Well.  He lay
white and still, but his eyes were open, smiling intently. Young Burt
hung over him with a pale and agitated face.  Then a bell clanged and
the ambulance clattered away.









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