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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #52407 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52407)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Second Base Sloan, by Christy Mathewson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Second Base Sloan
-
-Author: Christy Mathewson
-
-Illustrator: E. C. Caswell
-
-Release Date: June 25, 2016 [EBook #52407]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SECOND BASE SLOAN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- SECOND BASE SLOAN
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: The White Boy, the Black Boy, and the Yellow Dog]
-
-
-
-
- Second Base Sloan
-
- BY
- CHRISTY MATHEWSON
-
- AUTHOR OF
- FIRST BASE FAULKNER,
- CATCHER CRAIG, ETC.
-
-
- ILLUSTRATED BY
- E. C. CASWELL
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- GROSSET & DUNLAP
- PUBLISHERS NEW YORK
-
- Made in the United States of America
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1917, by
- DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY, Inc.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I TWO BOYS AND A DOG 3
- II JUNE STRIKES A BARGAIN 13
- III THE SEARCH FOR WORK 28
- IV DISPOSSESSED 44
- V WAYNE PARTS WITH SAM 57
- VI THE NEW HOME 71
- VII THE LUCK CHANGES 84
- VIII WAYNE LOSES A JOB AND FINDS ONE 100
- IX BIG TOM MAKES AN OFFER 118
- X NEW FRIENDS 131
- XI THE CHENANGO CLUB 143
- XII MEDFIELD CELEBRATES 159
- XIII WAYNE BEATS OUT THE BALL 172
- XIV “A GENTLEMAN TO SEE MR. SLOAN” 186
- XV PATTERN GIVES ADVICE 198
- XVI OFF TO HARRISVILLE 210
- XVII TURNED DOWN! 225
- XVIII “BADGERS” VS. “BILLIES” 236
- XIX WAYNE LENDS A HAND 250
- XX JUNE GOES TO WORK 263
- XXI MR. MILBURN PROMISES 274
- XXII SECOND BASE SLOAN 287
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- The white boy, the black boy, and the yellow dog (Page 12)
- _Frontispiece_
-
- FACING
- PAGE
-
- Wayne’s cry was uttered involuntarily as he leaped forward 104
-
- Every other Medfield adherent made a joyful noise 182
-
- His conviction that he could hit that ball was still strong 296
-
-
-
-
-SECOND BASE SLOAN
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-TWO BOYS AND A DOG
-
-
-Two boys and a dog sat at the edge of a little wood and shiveringly
-watched the eastern sky pale from inky blue to gray. One of the boys
-was white and the other was black; and the dog was yellow. The white
-boy was seventeen years old, the black boy sixteen, and the yellow
-dog--well, no one knew just how old he was. The white boy’s name was
-Wayne Torrence Sloan, the black boy’s name was Junius Brutus Bartow
-Tasker, and the dog’s name was Sam. An hour ago they had been rudely
-awakened from their sleep in a box car and more rudely driven forth
-into cold and darkness and mystery. They had had no complaint to make,
-for they had lain undisturbed in the car ever since the middle of the
-previous afternoon; and between that time and an hour ago had rumbled
-and jolted over miles and miles of track, just how many miles there was
-no way of telling until, having learned their present whereabouts,
-Wayne should puzzle out the matter of distance on the frayed and
-tattered time-table in his pocket. Travelling as they had travelled,
-on foot or stealing rides when the chance offered, makes a philosopher
-of one, and instead of objecting to the fate that had overtaken them
-when a suspicious train hand had flashed his lantern into the gloomy
-recesses of the box car, they had departed hurriedly and in silence,
-being thankful that the exodus had not been forced on them long before.
-
-Minute by minute the sky brightened. The steely gray became softer in
-tone and began to flush with a suggestion of rose. The stars paled. A
-wan gleam of approaching daylight fell on one burnished rail of the
-track which lay a few rods distant. The trees behind them took on form
-and substance and their naked branches became visibly detailed against
-the sky. The dog whined softly and curled himself tighter in Wayne’s
-arms. Wayne stretched the corner of his gray sweater over the thin back
-and eased himself from the cramped position against the trunk of a
-small tree.
-
-“What would you do, June, if someone came along about now with a can of
-hot coffee?” he asked, breaking the silence that had lasted for many
-minutes. The negro boy aroused from his half doze and flashed the
-whites of his eyes in the gloom.
-
-“Mas’ Wayne,” he answered fervently, “I’d jus’ about love that Mister
-Man. M-m-mm! Hot coffee! Lawsy-y! You reckon it ever goin’ to get
-lightsome, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“I reckon we can start along pretty soon now, June. Whereabouts do you
-suspect we are?”
-
-“I reckon we must be gettin’ mighty nigh New York. How far was we
-yesterday?”
-
-“’Most two hundred and fifty miles. If we’d just kept right on going
-all night we might have been in New York right now, but that freight
-was standing still more times than it was moving, I reckon. Look
-yonder, June. Daylight’s surely coming, isn’t it?”
-
-Junius Brutus Bartow Tasker turned an obedient gaze toward the east,
-but his reply was pessimistic. A negro who is cold is generally
-pessimistic, and June was certainly cold. Unlike Wayne, he had no
-sweater under his shabby jacket, nor was there much of anything else
-under it, for the coarse gingham shirt offered little resistance to
-the chill of the March night, and June and undershirts had long been
-strangers. Early spring in southern Georgia is a different matter from
-the same season up North, a fact which neither boy had allowed for.
-
-“I reckon Christmas is comin’ too,” muttered June gloomily, “but it’s
-a powerful long way off. How come the nights is so long up here, Mas’
-Wayne?”
-
-“I reckon there isn’t any difference, not really,” answered Wayne.
-“They just seem like they were longer. Sam, you wake up and stretch
-yourself. We’re going to travel again pretty soon now. Go catch
-yourself a rabbit or something.”
-
-The dog obeyed instructions so far as stretching himself was concerned,
-and, after finding that he was not to be allowed to return to the
-warmth of his master’s lap, even set off in a half-hearted, shivering
-fashion to explore the surrounding world.
-
-“I reckon he can projeck ’roun’ a mighty long time before he starts a
-rabbit,” said June discouragedly. “It’s a powerful mean-lookin’ country
-up this way, ain’ it? What state you-all reckons we’s in, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-Wayne shook his head. Shaking his head was very easy because he only
-had to let the tremors that were agitating the rest of him extend above
-the turned-up collar of his jacket! “I reckon it might be Maryland,
-June. Somewheres around there, anyway.” He felt for the time-table in
-his pocket, but he didn’t bring it forth for it was still too dark to
-read. “I ’most wish I was back home, June,” he went on wistfully,
-after a minute’s silence. “I sure do!”
-
-“I done told you we hadn’t no business comin’ up this yere way. Ain’
-nothin’ up here but Northerners, I reckon. If we’d gone West like I
-said we’d been a heap better off.”
-
-“Nobody asked you to come, anyway,” responded Wayne sharply. “There
-wasn’t any reason for you coming. You--you just butted in!”
-
-As there was no denying that statement, June wisely chose to change
-the subject. “Reckon someone’s goin’ to give us some breakfast pretty
-soon?” he asked.
-
-But Wayne had a grievance now and, feeling a good deal more homesick
-than he had thought he ever could feel, and a lot colder and emptier
-than was pleasant, he nursed it. “I couldn’t stay there any longer and
-slave for that man,” he said. “I stuck it out as long as I could. Ever
-since mother died it’s been getting worse and worse. He hasn’t got any
-hold on me, anyway. Stepfathers aren’t kin. I had a right to run away
-if I wanted to, and he can’t fetch me back, not anyway, not even by
-law!”
-
-“No, sir, he can’,” agreed June soothingly.
-
-“But you didn’t have any right to run away, June. You----”
-
-“How come I ain’t” demanded the negro. “He ain’ no kin to me, neither,
-is he? I was jus’ a-workin’ for him. Mister Higgins ain’ got no more
-’sponsibility about me than he has about you, Mas’ Wayne.”
-
-“Just the same, June, he can fetch you back if he ever catches you.”
-
-“Can, can he? Let me tell you somethin’. He ain’ _goin’_ to catch me!
-Nobody ain’ goin’ to catch me! Coloured folkses is free an’ independent
-citizens, ain’ they? Ain’ they, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“Maybe they’re free,” answered his companion grimly, “but if you get to
-acting independent I’ll just about lick the hide off you! I ought to
-have done it back yonder and sent you home where you belong.”
-
-“I’se where I belong right now,” replied June stoutly. “Ain’ we been
-together ever since we was jus’ little fellers, Mas’ Wayne? Wasn’ my
-mammy your mammy’s nigger for years an’ years? How come I ain’ got no
-right here? Ain’ my mammy always say to me, ‘You Junius Brutus Tasker,
-you watch out for Young Master an’ don’ you ever let no harm come to
-him, ’cause if you do I’ll tan your hide’? Ain’ she always tell me that
-ever since I was so high? What you think I was goin’ to do, Mas’ Wayne,
-when I seen you sneakin’ off that night? Wasn’ but jus’ one thing _to_
-do, was there? How you ’spects I was goin’ to watch out for you like my
-mammy tells me if I didn’ go along with you? Huh? So I jus’ track along
-till you get to the big road, an’ then I track along till you get to
-Summitty, and then I track along----”
-
-“Yes, and you climbed into that freight car after me and the man saw
-you and we all got thrown out,” continued Wayne. “I reckon you meant
-all right, June, but what do you suppose I’m going to do with you up
-North here? I got to find work to do and it’s going to be hard enough
-to look after Sam here without having a pesky darkey on my hands. Best
-thing you can do is hike back home before you starve to death.”
-
-“Huh! I ain’ never starved to death yet, Mas’ Wayne, an’ I ain’ lookin’
-to. Jus’ like I told you heaps of times, you ain’ got to do no worryin’
-about June. I reckon I can find me a job of work, too, can’ I? Reckon
-folkses has to plough an’ plant an’ pick their cotton up here jus’ like
-they does back home.”
-
-“There isn’t any cotton in the North, June.”
-
-“Ain’ no cotton?” ejaculated the other incredulously. “What all they
-plant up here, then, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“Oh, apples, I reckon, and----”
-
-“I can pick apples, then. I done pick peaches, ain’ I? What else they
-plant?”
-
-“Why----” Wayne didn’t have a very clear notion himself, but it didn’t
-do to appear ignorant to June. “Why, they--they plant potatoes--white
-potatoes, you know--and--and peas and--oh, lots of things, I reckon.”
-
-June pondered that in silence for a moment. Then: “But how come they
-don’t plant cotton?” he asked in puzzled tones.
-
-“Too cold. It won’t grow for them up here.”
-
-June gazed rather contemptuously about the gray morning landscape and
-grunted comprehendingly. “Uh-huh. Reckon I wouldn’t neither if I was a
-cotton plant! It surely is a mighty--mighty _mean_-lookin’ place, ain’
-it?”
-
-Well, it really was. Before them ran the railroad embankment,
-behind them was the little grove of bare trees and on either hand
-an uncultivated expanse of level field stretched away into the gray
-gloom. No habitation was as yet in sight. The telegraph poles showed
-spectrally against the dawn, and a little breeze, rising with the
-rising sun, made a moaning sound in the clustered wires. Sam came back
-from his profitless adventures and wormed himself between Wayne’s legs.
-June blew on his cold hands and crooned a song under his breath. The
-eastern sky grew lighter and lighter and suddenly, like a miracle,
-a burst of rose glow spread upward toward the zenith, turning the
-grayness into the soft hues of a dove’s breast! Wayne sprang to his
-feet, with an exclamation of pain as his cramped and chilled muscles
-responded to the demand, and stretched his arms and yawned prodigiously.
-
-“Come along and let’s find that hot coffee, June,” he said almost
-cheerfully. “There must be a house somewhere around here, I reckon.”
-
-“Sure must!” replied the other, falling instantly into Wayne’s humour.
-“Lawsy-y, I can jus’ taste that coffee now! Which way we goin’, Mas’
-Wayne?”
-
-Wayne stamped his feet on the still frosty ground and considered. At
-last: “North,” he replied, “and north’s over that way. Come along!”
-
-He led the way back toward the track, followed by June and Sam,
-and after squeezing himself between the wires of a fence climbed
-the embankment and set off over the ties with a speed born of long
-practice. The rose hue was fast changing to gold now, and long rays of
-sunlight streamed upward heralding the coming of His Majesty the Sun;
-and against the glory of the eastern sky the three travellers stood
-out like animated silhouettes cut from blue-black cardboard as they
-trudged along--the white boy, the black boy, and the yellow dog.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-JUNE STRIKES A BARGAIN
-
-
-That they didn’t travel absolutely due north was only because the
-track chose to lead more westerly. By the time the sun was really in
-sight they had covered the better part of a half-mile and had caught a
-glimpse of a good-sized town in the distance. Tall chimneys and a spire
-or two pointed upward above a smoky haze. They crossed a big bridge
-beneath which flowed a broad and sluggish river, and had to flatten
-themselves against the parapet, Sam held tightly in Wayne’s arms, while
-a long freight train pounded past them on the single line of track.
-Beyond the bridge a “Yard Limit” sign met them, and the rails branched
-and switches stood up here and there like sentries and a roundhouse was
-near at hand. But they found their first habitation before that in a
-tiny white cottage set below the embankment, its gate facing a rambling
-clay road, rutted and pitted, that disappeared under a bridge. There
-was a path worn down the bank to the road, and Wayne and June and Sam
-descended it. A trail of smoke arose from the chimney of the house
-straight into the morning sunlight and suggested that the occupants
-were up and about.
-
-Wayne’s knock on the door was answered by a tall, thin, slatternly
-woman who scowled questioningly.
-
-“Good morning, ma’am,” began Wayne. “Could you give us a cup of coffee,
-please? We’ve been----”
-
-“Get out of my yard,” was the prompt response. “I don’t feed tramps!”
-
-“We aren’t tramps, ma’am. We’ll pay for the coffee----”
-
-“And steal the doormat! I know your sort!” There was no doormat in
-sight, but Wayne didn’t notice the fact. “Go on now before I call my
-man to you.” The door slammed shut.
-
-Wayne viewed June in surprise and the negro boy shook his head
-helplessly. “She surely is a powerful disgrumpled lady, Mas’ Wayne!
-Yes, sir! Reckon we better move along.”
-
-“Maybe she isn’t well,” said Wayne, as they left the inhospitable
-dwelling behind and again climbed to the track. “Just the same, she
-didn’t have any right to call us tramps, did she? I suppose we’d better
-keep on to the town, June. It isn’t much farther.”
-
-So they went on, past sidings laden with long lines of freight cars,
-past locomotives sizzling idly, past a crossing where eight burnished
-rails, aglow in the sunlight, crossed their path, under a big signal
-tower, their eyes very busy and their stomachs, since they had not
-eaten since early the preceding afternoon, very empty. A long freight
-shed was reached, and as they passed it one of the many doors slid
-slowly open and a brawny man stood revealed against the dimness beyond.
-He stretched his arms, yawned, caught sight of the passers and stood
-there, framed in the square opening, staring interestedly. Wayne
-stopped.
-
-“Howdy,” he said. “Can you tell me where I can get something to eat,
-sir?”
-
-“Sure! Cross over back of the yellow building and you’ll see a
-lunch-wagon. Maybe you’re looking for the hotel, though?”
-
-Wayne shook his head. “I reckon a lunch-wagon’s good enough. What is
-this place, please?”
-
-“Medfield, son. Aren’t lost, are you?”
-
-“No, sir. What--what state are we in?”
-
-“Pennsylvania. What state might you be looking for, son?”
-
-“New York. Is it very far?”
-
-“Second state on the right,” laughed the man. “What part of it are you
-aiming for?”
-
-“New York City, I reckon. How far would that be?”
-
-“About a hundred and fifty miles.”
-
-Wayne sighed. “I thought we were nearer than that. Thank you, sir.”
-
-“Say, hold on! Where’d you come from, anyway?”
-
-Wayne pointed a thumb over his shoulder. “Back there a ways,” he
-answered vaguely.
-
-“Tramping it?”
-
-“Yes, sir, some. Rode on the cars, too.”
-
-The big man in the doorway winked down at him. “When they didn’t see
-you, eh? You look like a smart kid. What are you beating your way
-around the country for? Why don’t you get a job and go to work?”
-
-“I’m looking for work,” answered Wayne eagerly. “Know where I can find
-some?”
-
-The man shrugged his shoulders. “I guess you won’t have to look very
-far, son, if you really want a job. The trouble with your sort is that
-you don’t _want_ to work. How far south do you come from?”
-
-“Georgia, sir. How’d you know?”
-
-“How’d I know!” laughed the man. “That’s a good one! What’s Friday’s
-name?”
-
-“What, sir?” asked Wayne, puzzled.
-
-The man nodded at Wayne’s companion. “What’s his name? Abraham Lincoln
-White?”
-
-“June,” answered Wayne, a trifle stiffly, beginning to suspect that the
-man was laughing at him.
-
-“June, eh? Say, he got North about three months too soon, didn’t he?
-Where’d you get the alligator hound? Don’t you ever feed him anything?”
-
-Wayne moved away, followed by his retinue, but the man in the door was
-blind to offended dignity. “All right, son!” he called after them.
-“Good luck! Tell Denny that Jim Mason sent you and that he’s to give
-you a good feed.”
-
-Wayne found the lunch-wagon without difficulty, but it didn’t seem
-to him that it deserved the name of wagon for it was set on a brick
-foundation in a weed-grown piece of land under the shadow of the big
-yellow factory and looked as though it had been there for many years.
-Still, there might be wheels hidden behind the bricks, he reflected.
-The words “Golden Star Lunch” were painted on the front. They climbed
-the steps and seated themselves on stools, while Sam searched
-famishedly about the floor for stray crumbs. The proprietor was a
-short, chunky youth with light hair slicked down close and a generous
-supply of the biggest and reddest freckles Wayne had ever seen. He
-observed June doubtfully.
-
-“We don’t generally feed niggers here,” he said. “You two fellers
-together?”
-
-“Yes,” answered Wayne. “If you don’t want to serve him we’ll get out.”
-He started to slide off the stool.
-
-“Oh, well, never mind,” said the white-aproned youth. “The rush is over
-now. What’ll you have?”
-
-“Coffee and two ham sandwiches, please.”
-
-“Mas’ Wayne,” said June, “I’d rather have a piece of that sweet-potato
-pie yonder, please, sir.”
-
-“That ain’t sweet-potato pie,” laughed the proprietor. “That’s squash,
-Snowball.”
-
-“Please, sir, Mister, don’t call me out of my name,” begged June
-earnestly. “My name’s Junius.”
-
-“All right, Junius.” The proprietor of the lunch-wagon grinned at Wayne
-and winked, but Wayne only frowned.
-
-“You’ll have a sandwich, June,” he said. “Pie isn’t good for you. Two
-ham sandwiches, please.”
-
-“All right, sir.”
-
-June watched wistfully while the knife slipped through the end of the
-ham, and at last hunger got the better of manners. “Mister Denny, sir,
-would you please, sir, just bear down a little heavier on that fat
-meat?” he requested.
-
-“Sure, you can have all the fat you want. How’d you know my name,
-though?”
-
-Wayne answered for him. “A man at the freight shed directed us.”
-
-“Yes, sir, and he said we was to tell you to give us a mighty good
-feed, Mister Denny,” added June. “But I reckon you-all goin’ to do that
-anyway, ain’ you?”
-
-The proprietor laughed as he covered two slices of buttered bread
-with generous slices of ham. “That’s right, Snow--I mean Junius,” he
-responded. “If that ain’t enough you come back. Want something for your
-dog?”
-
-“Thanks, I’ll give him some of my sandwich,” said Wayne, trying not to
-look impatient.
-
-“You don’t need to.” The man scooped up some trimmings from the ham
-on the blade of the broad knife, dumped them on a slice of bread and
-leaned over the counter. “Here you are, Bingo. Catch!” Sam caught as
-much as he could and it disappeared as though by magic. After that he
-licked up the few scraps that had got away from him, wagged his tail
-delightedly, and gazed inquiringly and invitingly up again. “Say, he’s
-a smart dog, ain’t he?” said the man. “What’s his name?”
-
-“Sam. Are those sandwiches ready, please?”
-
-“Huh? Gee, didn’t I serve you yet? What do you know about that? Coffee,
-you said, didn’t you? Here you are.” He went back to an appraisal of
-the dog while Wayne and June, side by side, drank deep draughts of the
-hot coffee and bit huge mouthfuls from the delicious sandwiches. “Guess
-some more breakfast wouldn’t bust him,” said the proprietor, cutting
-off another slice of bread and buttering it liberally. “Can he do any
-tricks?”
-
-“A few,” replied Wayne rather inarticulately by reason of having his
-mouth occupied by other things than words. “Sit up, Sam, and ask for
-it.”
-
-Sam sat up, a trifle unsteadily, and barked three shrill barks. The man
-laughed. “Good boy! Here you are, then!” The piece of bread disappeared
-instantly. “Say, he’s sure hungry! What kind of a dog is he?”
-
-“Reckon he’s just dog,” answered Wayne. “He don’t boast of his family
-much, Sam don’t, but he’s a good old chap.”
-
-“Man over yonder at the railroad called him a alligator hound,” said
-June resentfully. “That’s the best dog in Colquitt County, Mister
-Denny. Yes, sir!”
-
-“Where’s that, Junius?”
-
-“Colquitt? That’s where we lives at when we’re to home. Colquitt
-County’s the finest----”
-
-“Shut up, June. Don’t talk so much,” said Wayne. “Sam, stand up and
-march for the gentleman. Come on! Forward! March!”
-
-Sam removed his appealing gaze from the countenance of “Mister Denny,”
-sighed--you could actually hear that sigh!--reared himself on his
-slender hind legs and stepped stiffly down the length of the floor and
-back again.
-
-“Halt!” commanded Wayne, and Sam halted so suddenly that he almost
-went over backward. “Salute!” Sam’s right paw flopped up and down in a
-sketchy salute. “Fall out!” Sam came down on all-fours with alacrity,
-barked his relief and again took up his station under the good-natured
-“Mr. Denny.” The latter applauded warmly.
-
-“Some dog you’ve got there, kid!” he declared. “What’ll you take for
-him?”
-
-“I wouldn’t sell him,” answered Wayne, washing down the last of his
-sandwich with the final mouthful of coffee.
-
-“Give you ten dollars,” said the man.
-
-Wayne shook his head with decision.
-
-“Fifteen? Well, any time you do want to sell him, Mister, you give me
-first chance, will you? He’s going to have some more breakfast for that
-stunt.”
-
-“Mas’ Wayne,” said June softly, “I ain’ never eat any of that squash
-pie, an’ it surely does look powerful handsome, don’ it?”
-
-“You still hungry?” frowned Wayne.
-
-“I ain’ downright hungry,” answered June wistfully, “but I--I surely
-would act awful kind to a piece of that pie!”
-
-“All right,” said Wayne. “How much is pie, sir?”
-
-“Five cents. Want some?”
-
-“Please. A slice of the squash.”
-
-The proprietor, too busy with Sam to have heard the exchange, set the
-pie in front of Wayne, and the latter pushed it along to June.
-
-“Did you say two pieces?” asked the man, poising his knife.
-
-“No, thank you.”
-
-June looked uncertainly from the tempting yellow triangle on the plate
-before him to Wayne and back again. “Ain’ you-all goin’ to have no
-pie?” he asked. Wayne shook his head. June laid down the fork and
-sniffed doubtfully. “What kind of pie you say this is, Mister Denny?”
-he asked.
-
-“Huh? Squash pie.”
-
-“Uh-huh. I reckon I don’ care for it, thanky, sir. It don’ smell like I
-thought it would.”
-
-“Don’t be a fool!” whispered Wayne. “I don’t want any.”
-
-“Say you don’? I ain’ believin’ it, though. Please, Mas’ Wayne, you
-have a half of it. It’s a powerful big piece of pie.”
-
-“Lots more here,” said the proprietor. “Want another piece?”
-
-“No, thanks,” answered Wayne. “I--maybe I’ll take a bite of his.”
-
-The man’s reply to this was a quick slash of his knife and a second
-section of the squash pie slid across the counter. “My treat,” he said.
-“Try it. It’s good pie.”
-
-Wayne hesitated. “I don’t think I want any,” he muttered. “I’m not
-hungry.”
-
-“You eat it if you don’t want me to get mad at you,” said the other,
-levelling the knife at him sternly. “If you can’t eat it all give it to
-Sam. I’ll bet you he likes pie, eh, Sammy?”
-
-Wayne smiled and, to June’s vast relief, ate. Perhaps he wasn’t hungry
-and perhaps it was mere politeness that caused him to consume every
-last crumb, but he had the appearance of one in thorough enjoyment of
-his task. When both plates were cleaned up Wayne dug a hand into a
-pocket.
-
-“How much do we owe you, please?” he asked.
-
-“Twenty cents. The pie was on me.”
-
-“I’d rather--rather----” Wayne’s remark dwindled to silence and he
-began an anxious search of all his pockets, a proceeding that brought
-a look of suspicion into the good-natured face of the man behind the
-counter.
-
-“Lost your money?” asked the latter with a trace of sarcasm.
-
-Wayne nodded silently. “I reckon I must have,” he muttered, turning
-out one pocket after another and assembling the contents on the
-counter; the tattered time-table, a toothbrush, a pair of stockings,
-two handkerchiefs, a knife, a pencil, some string, and two-cent stamp
-vastly the worse for having laid crumpled up in a vest pocket for many
-weeks. “It--it’s gone,” said Wayne blankly. “I had nearly four dollars
-last night, didn’t I, June?”
-
-“Yes, sir, you certainly did, Mas’ Wayne, ’cause I seen it. Where you
-reckon you lost it?”
-
-“I don’t know,” answered the other boy miserably. “It was in this
-pocket. I reckon it must have come out in the freight car.”
-
-The proprietor of the lunch wagon frowned. It was an old game to him,
-but there was something apparently genuine in the troubled expressions
-of both boys and he was almost inclined to accept the story. At all
-events, it was only twenty cents, and he was good-hearted and the two
-youngsters looked rather down on their luck. “Well, never mind,” he
-said carelessly. “You can pay me some other time, kids.”
-
-But Wayne shook his head. “You--you haven’t any money, have you, June?”
-he faltered. June shook his head sadly.
-
-“I didn’t have but two bits, Mas’ Wayne, and I went an’ spent that long
-time ago.”
-
-“You see,” said Wayne, turning to the proprietor, “we don’t live here.
-We’re just--just passing through on our way to New York, and so we
-couldn’t very well pay you later.” He looked dubiously at the array of
-property before him. “I reckon there ain’t anything there worth twenty
-cents, is there?”
-
-“Not to me, I guess.”
-
-“Then--then you’ll just have to keep Sam until we can bring the money,”
-said Wayne desperately. “I reckon we can earn it somewhere. Will you
-please to do that, sir?”
-
-The man looked covetously at the dog, but shook his head. “Shucks,” he
-answered, “he’d only be unhappy. And so would you, I guess. You run
-along, fellers. It’s all right. I guess you’ll pay me when you can, eh?
-Only--say, now, honest, kid, did you really have that four dollars, or
-are you just stringing me?”
-
-Wayne flushed but met the man’s gaze squarely. “I had it,” he replied
-simply. “You haven’t any call to think I’m lying.”
-
-“All right! I believe you. Now, look here, do you really want to earn a
-half-dollar?”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“Ever washed windows?”
-
-Wayne shook his head. “No, but I reckon I could do it.”
-
-“Well, these windows need washing pretty badly. Generally I do it
-myself, but I’d rather take a lickin’. There’s eight of ’em and it
-ought to be worth five cents a window. That’s forty cents, but we’ll
-call it fifty. What do you say?”
-
-“I’ll do them, thanks, and mighty glad to,” answered Wayne eagerly.
-
-“Huh!” ejaculated June. “Go on away from here, Mas’ Wayne. You ain’
-never washed no window in your life. White man, point me out to water
-and rags and _let_ me to it. Mas’ Wayne ain’ never done no work like
-that an’ there ain’ no call for him to do any.” June paused and looked
-at the windows. “Mister Denny, them’s pretty big windows an’ they
-certainly is dirty, ain’ they?”
-
-“What’s the matter with you? Ain’t fifty cents enough?”
-
-“Well, sir,” answered June slowly, “it is an’ it ain’. Takin’ into
-estimation the size of them windows an’ the ’mount of washin’ required,
-sir, it seems like you might throw in two more cups of that yere
-coffee, sir!”
-
-“Junius, you’re all right!” laughed the man, turning to the gleaming
-coffee urn. “It’s a bargain. Drink your coffee and then get to work. If
-you do a good job I’ll throw in a sandwich when you’re through!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE SEARCH FOR WORK
-
-
-Two hours later the boys, followed by Sam, left the lunch-wagon,
-possessed of thirty cents in money and with all liabilities discharged.
-Wayne, declaring that, although he had never washed a window in his
-life, it was time he learned how, had, to June’s disgust, taken a
-hand in the work, and, while he had done only three windows to June’s
-five, had proved his ability. Afterward, Mr. Dennis Connor--for that,
-as they later learned, was his real name--had provided a collation of
-sandwiches and coffee and dismissed them with his good wishes and an
-invitation to drop in again when they were passing.
-
-It was mid-morning now, and the sunshine had warmed the early March
-day to a temperature more kindly than any they had experienced for a
-week. Wayne led the way to a sheltered nook in the lee of an empty
-shed near the railroad and seated himself on a discarded wheelbarrow.
-June followed suit and Sam began an excited search for rats. The town
-was wide-awake and very busy now. Smoke poured from neighbouring
-stacks and chimneys and the roar of machinery came to them from the big
-factory close by. Trains passed and locomotives shrieked and clanged
-their brazen bells. Drays and trucks moved noisily along the cobbled
-street in the direction of the freight yard, piled high with goods in
-bales and boxes.
-
-“Reckon,” said June, “this is a right smart town, Mas’ Wayne.”
-
-Wayne nodded. He was still regretting the loss of his money and now he
-reverted to the question of how and where he had parted from it. They
-discussed it at some length and eventually decided that it had somehow
-got out of his pocket last night in the freight car. To be quite, quite
-certain that it was really gone, Wayne once more emptied his pockets
-and turned them all inside out. But the money was not there and June
-shook his kinky head in silent sympathy. Sam gave up his rat hunt and
-threw himself, panting, in the sunlight at the boys’ feet.
-
-“Well, it’s gone,” said Wayne finally. “And there’s no use crying about
-it. But what I want to know is how we’re to get to New York on thirty
-cents. That man said it was about a hundred and fifty miles and I
-reckon it’ll take us ’most a week, don’t you?”
-
-“Depends,” said June. “If we’s lucky and gets plenty of free rides----”
-
-“They’re too particular around here,” interrupted Wayne sadly. “I
-reckon it’ll be mighty hard to get into freight cars after this, June.
-We’ll just have to foot it, and thirty cents won’t last long on the
-road. Folks ain’t awfully hospitable up North, I’ve heard, and we can’t
-depend on getting meals free. Anyway, I don’t want to. It’s too much
-like begging. That man as much as called us tramps, and that woman said
-we _were_ tramps. Well, we aren’t. We’ve paid for everything anyone
-would let us pay for, so far, excepting the rides we stole, and those
-don’t count, I reckon. Seems to me like the only thing to do now, June,
-is to stay right here and earn some money before we go any further.
-There’s no use trying to walk to New York with only thirty cents.”
-
-June agreed cheerfully enough to that proposition. After all, it made
-little difference to him. New York City or Medfield, it was all one. To
-be sure, they had started out for New York, but it was Wayne who had
-settled on that place as their destination, and June would have been
-just as well satisfied if Wayne had decided for Reykjavik, Iceland.
-Besides, it was now almost three weeks since they had stolen away from
-Sleepersville, Georgia, and June’s first enthusiasm for wandering had
-faded sadly. In short, the idea of remaining stationary in one place
-for a while struck him as being very attractive. And perhaps the same
-thought came to Wayne, for, having reached the decision, he sighed as
-if with relief. It may have been, probably was, merely a coincidence,
-but Sam, stretched flat on the ground at Wayne’s feet, echoed the sigh.
-
-Perhaps no better opportunity will present itself for a study of our
-hero and his companions and so we will make the most of it. Wayne Sloan
-was seventeen years old; to be exact, seventeen years and nineteen
-days. It had been the arrival of his seventeenth birthday that had
-decided him to cast off the yoke of thraldom and become his own master.
-He was a capable-looking youth, fairly large for his age. He had
-wide shoulders and carried himself straightly, a fact largely due, I
-fancy, to many hours spent in the saddle in his younger days. After
-the death of his mother, which had occurred four years ago, there had
-been neither saddle nor horse for him, nor, had there been a horse,
-would there have been opportunity for riding. His stepfather had his
-own notions regarding the proper occupations for a boy, notions that
-were at wide variance with Wayne’s. Handsome the boy was not, but you
-would have called him nice-looking. You’d have liked his eyes, which
-were so deeply brown that they seemed black, and the oval smoothness
-of his face which lacked the colourlessness of so many Southern faces.
-His hair was fully as dark as his eyes and as straight as an Indian’s,
-and just now, by reason of not having been cut for a month or so, was
-rather untidy about ears and neck. His nose was--well, it was just a
-plain, everyday affair, meriting no especial mention. And his mouth
-was no more remarkable. In fact, there was nothing to emphasise, from
-head to toes. He was just a nice-appearing, well-built Southern boy. At
-present his appearance was rather handicapped by his attire, for even
-the best of clothes will look shabby after nearly three weeks of dusty
-roads and dirty box cars, and Wayne’s apparel had not been anything
-to brag about in the beginning. A pair of gray trousers that only the
-most charitable would have called woolen, a vest of the same, a coat
-of blue serge, and a gray sweater comprised the more important part
-of his outfit. A black felt hat of the Fedora variety, ridiculously
-old-looking for the boyish face beneath, dark-blue cotton socks showing
-above a pair of rusty, dusty, scuffed-toed shoes, and a wispy blue
-string tie peering from under the wrinkled collar of a blue-and-white
-cotton shirt completed as much of his wardrobe as met the world’s gaze.
-
-But in the matter of wardrobe Wayne at least had the better of his
-companion. Junius Brutus Bartow Tasker was never a dandy. Just
-something to cover him up more or less was all June asked. His
-shoes, which had been new just before the beginning of the present
-pilgrimage, were the most presentable item of his attire. They only
-needed blacking. The other things he wore needed about everything,
-including patches, buttons, and cleaning! His cheap cotton trousers
-would have proved an embarrassment to anyone of a less philosophical
-nature, his shirt was sadly torn and his coat--well, that coat had been
-a wreck a year ago and had not improved any since! Between the tops of
-his shoes and the frayed bottoms of his trousers appeared a crinkled
-expanse of gray yarn socks, to the public all that socks should be,
-but to June only two hollow mockeries. Below his ankle bones lay ruin
-and desolation. On his kinky head was a brown felt, or what had once
-been a brown felt. It no longer deserved serious consideration as a
-head covering. But all this didn’t bother June much. As I have already
-hinted, he was a philosopher, and a cheerful one. You had only to
-look at him to realise that. He had a perfectly round face, as round
-as a cannon ball--and lots blacker--a pair of merry brown eyes which
-rolled ludicrously under the stress of emotion, a wide, vividly red
-mouth filled with startlingly white teeth, a nose no flatter than was
-appropriate to one of his race, and ears that stood out inquiringly at
-right angles. He looked and was intelligent, and, barring the colour of
-his skin, was not greatly different in essentials from the white boy
-beside him. June was sixteen, as near as he could tell; his mother’s
-memory for ages was uncertain, and June couldn’t consult his father on
-the question for the simple reason that his father had disappeared very
-soon after June’s arrival in the world. Besides, there were five other
-youthful Taskers, some older and some younger, and June’s mother might
-well be excused for uncertainty as to the exact age of any one of them.
-
-We have left only one member of the trio to be described, and his
-outward appearance may be told in few words. Sam was small, yellowish
-and alert. He had been intended for a fox terrier, perhaps, but had
-received the wrong colouring. In Missouri or Mississippi he would
-have been labelled “fice,” which is equivalent to saying that he was
-a terrier-like dog of no particular breed. But like many of his sort,
-Sam made up for his lack of aristocracy by possessing all the virtues
-that one demands in a dog. That small head of his contained a brain
-that must have felt absolutely crowded! I dare say that that is the
-way the Lord makes it up to little, no-account yellow dogs like Sam.
-He gives them big brains and big hearts, and so they get through life
-without ever feeling the want of blue ribbons on their collars. It
-would, I think, have been a frightful shock to Sam if anyone had tied
-a ribbon on him, blue or any other colour! He wouldn’t have approved
-a bit. In fact, he would have been most unhappy until he had gotten
-it off and tried the taste of it. So far no one had ever attempted
-such an indignity. Even a collar was something that Sam had his doubts
-about. When he had one he put up with it uncomplainingly, but you could
-see that it didn’t make him a bit happier. Just now he wore a leather
-strap about his neck. It had once been used to hold Wayne’s schoolbooks
-together, but Sam didn’t know that, and wouldn’t have cared if he had.
-I forgot to say that a perfectly good tail had been early sacrificed
-to the dictates of an inhuman fashion, and that now only a scant two
-inches remained. To see Sam wag that two inches made you realise what a
-perfectly glorious time he could have had with the whole appendage had
-it been left to him. Sometimes in moments of strong mental excitement
-his keen, affectionate brown eyes seemed trying to say something like
-that! But my few words have grown too many, and I find that I have
-devoted nearly as much space to Sam as to his master. But as Sam is not
-likely to receive much attention hereafter let us not begrudge it to
-him.
-
-Meanwhile Wayne had laid his plans. If thirty cents was not sufficient
-to finance the journey to New York, neither was it sufficient
-to provide food and lodging for them indefinitely in Medfield.
-Consequently, it behooved them to add to that sum by hook or by crook,
-and it was decided that they should begin right away and look for work
-to do. With that object in view they presently left the sunny side of
-the little shed and set off, Wayne and Sam in one direction and June
-in another, to reassemble at twilight. Wayne wanted June to take ten
-of the precious thirty cents to buy luncheon with, but June scoffed.
-“I don’t need no ten cents, Mas’ Wayne,” he declared. “I can find me
-somethin’ to eat without no ten cents. An’ I don’t need nothin’ else,
-anyhow, not before night. I’m jus’ plumb full of food now!”
-
-Wayne’s experiences that day were disheartening. Medfield was a town
-of nearly thirty thousand inhabitants, but not one of that number, it
-appeared, was in need of Wayne’s services, nor cared whether he lived
-or starved. He made his way to the centre of the town and visited store
-after store, and office after office, climbing many weary flights and
-knocking at many inhospitable doors while Sam waited outside in patient
-resignation. At noon Wayne lunched in a shabby and none-too-clean
-little restaurant on five cents’ worth of beef stew and two pieces of
-bread, feeling a bit panicky as he did so, because five from thirty
-left only what June would have called “two bits” and Wayne a quarter,
-and which, no matter what you called it, was a frighteningly small
-amount of money to have between you and nothing. But he felt a heap
-better after that stew and went back to his task with more courage. Sam
-felt better, too, for he had had a whole slice of bread dipped in gravy
-and a nice gristly bone.
-
-The trouble was that when, as happened very infrequently, to be sure,
-but did happen, he was asked what he could do he had to answer either
-“Anything” or “Nothing.” Of course he chose to say “Anything,” but
-the result was always disappointing. As one crabbed, much-bewhiskered
-man in a hardware store told him, “Anything means nothing.” After
-that Wayne boldly presented himself at the busy office of a dry-goods
-emporium and offered himself as a bookkeeper. It was more a relief than
-a disappointment when the dapper man in charge informed him, after a
-dubious examination of his attire, that there was no present vacancy.
-Wayne was conscious of the amused glances of the men at the desks as
-he hurried out. It was almost dusk when he finally gave up and turned
-his steps toward the deserted shed near the railway. He had trouble in
-finding it, walking many blocks out of his way and for a space fearing
-that darkness would overtake him before he reached it. In the end it
-was Sam who kept him from making a second mistake, for Wayne was for
-passing the shed a block away until the dog’s insistence on turning
-down a dim, cobble-paved street brought the search to an end.
-
-June was already on hand, squatting comfortably on the wheelbarrow
-and crooning to himself in the twilight. Sam showed his delight in
-the reunion by licking June’s face while Wayne discouragedly lowered
-himself to a seat at the darkey’s side.
-
-“Any luck?” he asked tiredly.
-
-“Nothin’ permanent, Mas’ Wayne, but I done earned us another two bits.
-This is a right smart town, this is. Nobody don’t have to go hungry in
-this town, no, sir!”
-
-Wayne tried to keep the envy out of his voice as he answered: “That’s
-great, June. How did you do it?”
-
-“Man was rollin’ barrels up a board to a wagon and every time he got a
-barrel half-way up the board his horses would start a-movin’ off an’
-he’d jus’ have to drop that barrel an’ run to their heads. I ask him,
-‘Please, sir, don’t you want me to hold ’em for you?’ An’ he ’lowed
-he did. An’ I say, ‘How much you goin’ to give me, sir?’ And he say
-if I hold ’em till he got his wagon loaded he’d give me a quarter.
-’Twan’t no time till he had the barrels on an’ I had his ol’ quarter
-in my jeans. Then I see a funny little man with gold rings in his ears
-sittin’ on a step sellin’ candy, an’ funny twisty pieces of bread
-an’ apples, an’ things. An’ I say to him, ‘How much are your apples,
-Boss?’ An’ he say, ‘They’re two for five cents.’ ‘Huh,’ I say, ‘they
-give ’em poor old apples away where I come from.’ An’ he want to know
-where was I come from, an’ I tell him, an’ we had a right sociable time
-a-talkin’ an’ all, an’ pretty soon he find a apple had a rotten spot
-on it an’ give it to me. An’ after a while I say, ‘Boss, what you-all
-call them funny, curly things you got on that stick?’ An’ he ’lows
-they’s--they’s----” June wrinkled his forehead until it had almost as
-many corrugations as a washboard--“I reckon I forget what he call them,
-Mas’ Wayne.”
-
-“What were they like, June?”
-
-“Well, sir, they was bow-knots made of bread, an’ they tasted mighty
-scrumptious. Seems like they was called ‘pistols’ or somethin’.”
-
-“Pretzels, June?”
-
-“That’s it! Pretzels! You know them things, Mas’ Wayne?” Wayne shook
-his head. “Well, sir, they’s mighty good eatin’.”
-
-“Did he give you one?” asked Wayne smiling.
-
-“Yes, sir, he surely did. I say I ain’ never eat one an’ he say if I
-have a penny I could have one. ‘Go long, Mister Man,’ I say, ‘I ain’
-got no penny. How come you ’spects I got all that money?’ An’ he laugh
-an’ say, ‘Well, maybe I give you one, Black Boy, if you don’ tell
-someone elses.’ He had funny way of talkin’, that man. So I say I won’t
-ever tell----”
-
-“But you have told,” laughed Wayne.
-
-June rolled his eyes. “That’s so! I plumb forget!”
-
-“Was that all the lunch you had?” asked Wayne.
-
-June nodded. “Was all I wanted,” he declared stoutly. “Apples is
-powerful fillin’ fruit, Mas’ Wayne. What-all did you have?”
-
-Wayne told him and June pretended to think very little of it. “That
-ain’ white man’s food,” he declared. “Old stewed-up beef ain’ fit
-rations for you. No, sir, ’tain’! Don’t you go insultin’ your stomach
-like that no more, Mas’ Wayne, ’cause if you do you’re goin’ to be sick
-an’ me an’ Sam’ll have to nurse you. Now you tell me what-all did you
-do, please.”
-
-Wayne soon told him and June shook his head and made sympathetic noises
-in his throat during the brief recital. “Don’t you mind ’em, Mas’
-Wayne,” he said when the other had finished. “Somebody’s goin’ to be
-powerful glad to give you a job tomorrow. You wait an’ see if they
-ain’.”
-
-“I can’t do anything, I’m afraid,” said Wayne despondently. “They all
-ask me what I can do and I have to tell them ‘Nothing.’ I can’t even
-wash windows decently!”
-
-“Who say you can do nothin’?” demanded June indignantly. “I reckon
-you’re a heap smarter than these yere Northerners! Ain’ you been to
-school an’ learn all about everythin’? Geography an’ ’rithmatic an’
-algebrum an’ all? What for you say you don’ know nothin’?”
-
-Wayne laughed wanly. “Arithmetic and those things aren’t much use to
-a fellow, it seems to me, when he’s looking for work. If I’d learned
-bookkeeping I might get a job.”
-
-“You done kep’ them books for your stepdaddy.”
-
-“That wasn’t real bookkeeping, June. Anyone could do that. The only
-things I can do aren’t much use up here; like ride and shoot a little
-and----”
-
-“An’ knock the leather off’n a baseball,” added June.
-
-“I guess no one’s going to pay me for doing that,” commented Wayne,
-with a smile. “Well, there’s no use borrowing trouble, I reckon. There
-must be something I can do, June, and I’ll find it sooner or later. I
-reckon I made a mistake in going around to the offices. If I’d tried
-the warehouses and factories I might have found something. That’s what
-I’ll do tomorrow.”
-
-“You goin’ to set yourself some mighty hard work, Mas’ Wayne, if you
-get foolin’ ’roun’ the factories. Better leave that kind of work for
-me, sir. That’s nigger work, that is.”
-
-“It’s white men’s work up here in the North, June. I’m strong enough
-and I’m willing, and I’m just going to find something tomorrow.
-Question now is, June, where are we going to get our supper and where
-are we going to sleep? Fifty cents will buy supper but it won’t buy
-beds, too.”
-
-“I been thinkin’ about that sleepin’ business,” answered June. “I
-reckon we can’ do no better than stay right where we is.”
-
-“Here?” asked Wayne. “Someone would come along and arrest us or
-something. Besides, a wheelbarrow----”
-
-“No, sir, I don’ mean out here. I mean in yonder.” June nodded toward
-the old shed beside them. “I was projeckin’ roun’ before you-all come
-back an’ there ain’ nothin’ wrong with this yere little house, Mas’
-Wayne.”
-
-“Oh,” said Wayne. “Is it empty?”
-
-“Yes, sir, it surely is empty. There ain’ nothin’ in there but empty.
-It ’pears like it used to be a store, ’cause there’s shelves up the
-walls. An’ there’s a floor, too.”
-
-“Do we sleep on the floor or the shelves?” asked Wayne.
-
-“Shelves is too narrow,” chuckled June. “If we jus’ had a blanket or
-two, now, I reckon we’d be mighty comfortable.”
-
-“Might as well wish for a bed with a hair mattress and pillows and
-sheets,” answered Wayne. “But I’d rather sleep under a roof tonight
-than outdoors, so we’ll just be glad of the shed, June. Now let’s go
-and find us some supper. Come on, Sam, you rascal!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-DISPOSSESSED
-
-
-If one is tired enough such luxuries as beds and blankets may be
-dispensed with. Wayne and June slept more uninterruptedly that night
-than for many nights past. Toward morning they were conscious of the
-cold, for Wayne’s coat and an old gunny-sack discovered in a corner of
-the shed were not sufficient to more than cover their feet and legs.
-Sam, curled up in Wayne’s arms, doubtless fared better than the boys.
-When morning came they were stiff and achy and were glad enough to get
-up at the first signs of sunrise and move around. The want of a place
-to wash resulted in the discovery of a veritable haven of warmth and
-rest, for Wayne, peering about from the front of the shed, descried the
-railroad station only a few blocks down the track, and toward that they
-made their way. They found the waiting-room door unlocked and warmth
-and comfort inside. After washing up they settled themselves on a bench
-removed from the sight of the ticket window and fairly luxuriated in
-the warmth. June fell asleep again and snored so loudly that Wayne
-had to arouse him for fear that someone would hear him and drive them
-out. Wayne himself didn’t actually slumber, but he leaned back in a
-half-doze that was almost as restful as sleep, and Sam, restraining his
-desire to investigate these new surroundings, presently slept, too.
-
-It was hunger that finally aroused them to action. The clock on the
-wall told them that it was almost half-past seven, and they left the
-waiting-room and passed out again into the chill of the March morning.
-But the sun was shining strongly now and there was a spring softness
-in the air that made June whistle gaily as they made their way back up
-the railroad in search of “Mister Denny’s” lunch-wagon. There they had
-some steaming hot coffee, and some crisp rolls and butter and, since
-there was still a nickel in the exchequer, three bananas which they
-consumed outside. To be sure, that left them penniless, but somehow
-that didn’t seem to matter so much this morning. There was something
-in the spring-like air that gave them courage and confidence. Besides,
-whatever happened, they had a home, such as it was, in the old shed.
-Presently they again set forth on their search for employment, agreeing
-to meet at five o’clock.
-
-But again it was June who prospered and Wayne who returned empty-handed.
-June proudly displayed forty cents in dimes and nickels which he had
-earned in as many capacities as there were coins in his hand. Not only
-had he earned that forty cents, but he had dined sumptuously on a pork
-chop, having traded a quarter of an hour of his time and labour for that
-delicacy at a little restaurant. For his part, Wayne had gone dinnerless
-and was thoroughly discouraged. Even the tattered but still useful horse
-blanket which June had picked up outside a flour mill across the town
-could not cheer Wayne’s spirits.
-
-“Reckon,” said June, spreading the blanket out proudly, “someone done
-lose that as didn’t mean to, Mas’ Wayne, ’cause it’s a powerful nice
-blanket, ain’ it?” Wayne listlessly agreed and June dropped it through
-the window which was their means of ingress and egress. “It’s goin’ to
-keep us fine an’ warm tonight, that little ol’ blanket is. Tomorrow I’m
-goin’ to find me a bed to go with it! You hungry enough to eat, Mas’
-Wayne?”
-
-Wayne shook his head. “I don’t want any supper,” he replied.
-
-“Don’ want no supper! How come? What-all you have for your dinner,
-please?”
-
-“I had enough,” answered Wayne. “You go ahead and have your supper,
-June.”
-
-June snorted. “Mighty likely, ain’ it?” he demanded scathingly. “Reckon
-you can see this nigger eatin’ all by his lonely. No, sir, Mas’ Wayne,
-you-all’s goin’ to eat, too. If you don’ there ain’ goin’ to be no
-supper for nobody.”
-
-“I tell you I’m not hungry,” replied Wayne irritably. “Besides, if you
-must know, I haven’t any money.”
-
-“Say you ain’? You’ve got forty cents. How come that ain’ enough money
-to buy us some supper?”
-
-“That’s your money, not mine,” said Wayne bitterly. “You earned it. I
-didn’t. I’m not going to live off you. You go get your supper and let
-me alone.”
-
-“I earned it for all of us,” said June earnestly. “Reckon you paid a
-heap of money to buy victuals for me, Mas’ Wayne, all the way up from
-Sleepersville, didn’ you, sir?”
-
-“That’s different,” muttered the other.
-
-“How come it’s different? Please, sir, don’ you be uppity an’ proud.
-Ever since we was little fellers together, Mas’ Wayne, you done give me
-money; two bits here, an’ two bits there, an’ a dime yonder. How come I
-can’ pay it back to you?”
-
-“A gentleman doesn’t--doesn’t do that,” returned Wayne stubbornly.
-
-“You mean ’cause you’re white an’ I’m black?”
-
-“Never mind what I mean. Anyway, I’m not hungry, so shut up.”
-
-June obeyed, scuffling his shoes in the cinders underfoot and staring
-sadly at the sunset glow beyond the factory roofs to the west. Sam had
-found a very old and very dry bone somewhere and was pretending that it
-was quite new and delicious. He even growled once or twice, although
-there was no other dog in sight, perhaps to convince himself that he
-really had discovered a prize. Minutes passed and the western sky faded
-from crimson to yellow, and from yellow to gray. Finally Wayne stole a
-look at June.
-
-“You’d better be going,” he growled.
-
-“I ain’ aimin’ to go, Mas’ Wayne,” replied June earnestly. “Reckon I
-ain’ no hungrier than you is.”
-
-“I don’t care whether you are or not,” declared the other angrily. “I
-say you’re to go and get some supper. Now you go.”
-
-June shook his head. “Not without you come along,” he answered.
-
-“You do as I tell you, June!”
-
-“I’m wishin’ to, Mas’ Wayne, but I jus’ can’, sir.”
-
-“Well, you just will! If you don’t start right along I’ll whale you,
-Junius!”
-
-“Yes, sir, Mas’ Wayne, you can do that, but you-all can’ make me eat no
-supper. That’s somethin’ you _can’_ do.”
-
-“If you can’t do as I tell you you’ll have to get out. You think just
-because you’re up North here you can do as you please. Well, I’ll show
-you. Are you going to obey me?”
-
-“Please, sir, Mas’ Wayne, I’m goin’ to do everythin’ just like you tell
-me, savin’ that! I jus’ can’ go an’ eat anythin’ ’less you come along.
-I’m powerful sorry, hones’ to goodness, Mas’ Wayne, but you can see how
-’tis.”
-
-Wayne muttered something that sounded far from complimentary, and
-relapsed into dignified silence. The white stars came out one by one
-and the chill of evening made itself felt. Sam tired of pretending and
-begged to be taken up by Wayne, but Wayne brushed his paws aside. June
-sat motionless on his end of the old wheelbarrow and made no sound.
-Now, when you haven’t had anything to eat since early morning and
-have tramped miles over city pavements pride is all very well but it
-doesn’t butter any parsnips. Besides, Wayne realised just as clearly
-as you or I, or almost as clearly, that he was making a mountain of a
-molehill and that if he wasn’t so tired and discouraged he wouldn’t
-have hesitated to share June’s earnings. But pride, even false pride,
-is always stubborn, and it was well toward dark before Wayne shrugged
-his shoulders impatiently and jumped up from his seat.
-
-“Oh, come on then, you stubborn mule,” he muttered. “If you won’t eat
-without me I reckon I’ll have to go along.”
-
-He stalked off into the twilight and June and Sam followed, the former
-with a little shuffling caper unseen of Wayne and the latter with an
-ecstatic bark.
-
-In the morning, when they had again breakfasted none too grandly, at
-the lunch-wagon, they were once more reduced to penury. Not only that,
-but both boys were discovering that forty or fifty cents a day, while
-sufficient to keep them from starvation, was not enough to satisfy two
-healthy appetites. Neither made mention of his discovery, but Wayne,
-again encouraged by food and rest, told himself resolutely that today
-must end the matter, that he would find something to do before he
-returned to the little shed, and June as resolutely determined to try
-harder and earn more money. What Sam’s thoughts were I don’t know. Sam
-didn’t seem to care much what happened so long as he could be with
-Wayne.
-
-But all the good resolutions in the world and all the grim determination
-sometimes fail, and again Fortune turned a deaf ear to Wayne’s
-petitions. The nearest he came to landing a place was when a foreman at
-a rambling old factory at the far end of the town offered him a job
-packing spools if he could produce a union card. Wayne not only couldn’t
-produce such a thing but didn’t know what it was until the foreman
-impatiently explained, assuring him that there was no use in his seeking
-work in the factories unless he first became a member of a union. This
-was something of an exaggeration, as Wayne ultimately learned, but for
-the present it was sufficient to just about double his load of
-discouragement. He confined his efforts to shops and places of retail
-business after that but had no luck, and returned to the shed when the
-street lights began to appear, hungry and tired and ready to give up, to
-find that Fate was not yet through with him for that day.
-
-For once June had fared almost as sadly as Wayne and only a solitary
-ten-cent piece was the result of his efforts. June was apologetic and
-would have recited his experiences at length, but Wayne didn’t have
-the heart to listen. “It doesn’t matter, June,” he said listlessly.
-“It wasn’t your fault. At that, you made ten cents more than I did. I
-reckon there’s only one thing to do now.”
-
-“What’s that, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“Buy a stamp with two cents of that ten and write back to Mr. Higgins
-for money to get home with. I reckon we’re just about at the end of the
-halter, June.”
-
-“Don’ you believe that, Mas’ Wayne,” replied June stoutly. “An’ don’
-you go writin’ no letter to that old skinflint stepdaddy of yours.
-Jus’ you give me another chance an’ see what I goin’ to bring home
-tomorrow! We’ll go get us a cup of coffee an’ then we’ll feel a heap
-perkier, yes, sir! An’ then we’ll jus’ go to sleep an’ get up in the
-mornin’ feelin’ fine an’ start right out an’ lan’ somethin’. Don’ you
-go gettin’ discouraged, Mas’ Wayne. We’s goin’ to be livin’ on the fat
-of the lan’ in two-three days!”
-
-“There’s another town, bigger than this, June, about twenty miles from
-here. Maybe we’d better mosey along over there and see if things are
-any better. Seems to me I’ve been in most every place in this town
-asking for work now, and I’m beginning to forget which ones I’ve been
-to and which ones I haven’t.”
-
-“Well, I don’ know,” answered June. “Sometimes it seems like it’s the
-wisest thing to stay right to home an’ not go projeckin’ ’roun’. We’s
-got a comfor’ble place to sleep here, Mas’ Wayne, an’ there ain’ no
-tellin’ what would happen to us if we went totin’ off to this other
-place, is there? ’Spose you an’ me goes an’ has that coffee first.
-Seems like I can always think a heap better after meals.”
-
-“A cup of coffee isn’t much of a meal,” objected Wayne, “but I reckon
-it’s going to taste mighty good to me. We’ll go to the lunch-wagon for
-it. You get better coffee there than the other places we’ve been to.”
-
-The lunch-wagon was crowded and they had to wait for several minutes
-before they could get waited on by Mr. Connor. He always seemed glad
-to see them and still took a great interest in Sam, but usually there
-were too many others there to allow of much conversation. Tonight he
-only nodded and smiled as he passed the cups to them, and they retired
-to the side of the wagon and drank the beverage gratefully, wishing
-there was more of it and trying hard to keep their gaze from the viands
-displayed beyond the long counter. Fortunately for Sam, he had already
-become acquainted with a number of the regular patrons of the Golden
-Star Lunch and was almost always certain of food. The men who took
-their meals there, workers in the nearby factories and railroad hands,
-were for the most part rough but kindly and many crusts of bread and
-scraps of meat went to Sam, who, duly grateful and willing to show
-his few tricks in return for the favours bestowed on him, allowed no
-familiarities. When anyone other than Wayne or June tried to pat him
-he backed away, politely but firmly.
-
-The coffee did the boys good, although it felt awfully lonesome where
-they put it, and they returned to the shed in a more cheerful frame
-of mind. It was still too early to go to bed, but the station was
-several blocks away and there was no nearer place to resort to, and so
-presently they stretched themselves out on the floor of the shed, drew
-the horse blanket over them, and were soon asleep. How much later it
-was when Wayne awoke with a blinding glare of light in his eyes there
-was no way of telling.
-
-For a moment he blinked dazedly, his brain still fogged with sleep.
-Then he sat up, and Sam, disturbed, sniffed and broke into shrill
-barking. June, a sounder sleeper, still snored when a gruff voice came
-from the direction of the light which Wayne now realised was thrown by
-a lantern.
-
-“What are you doing in here? Come on now! Get out!” said the voice.
-
-Wayne scrambled to his feet, commanding Sam to be still, and June
-groaned and snorted himself awake. The light was thrown aside and,
-framed in the window, Wayne could see the form of a policeman.
-
-“We aren’t doing any harm, sir,” said the boy. “Just sleeping here.”
-
-“Sleeping here, eh? Haven’t you got a home? How many are there of you?”
-
-“Two, sir. We are on our way to New York and we didn’t have any other
-place to sleep, so we came in here.”
-
-“Hoboes, eh? Well, you’d better beat it before the lieutenant lamps
-you. He’s down on you fellows this spring.”
-
-“We aren’t hoboes, sir. We’re looking for work.”
-
-“Yes, I know,” was the ironical response. “Well, come on out of it.”
-
-“But we haven’t any other place, sir. We aren’t doing any harm and----”
-
-“It doesn’t matter about that. What’s your name and where’d you come
-from?” Wayne told him and the officer grunted. Then: “Get the other
-fellow up,” he ordered, and, when June had crawled sleepily to his
-feet, “Hello, a nig, eh? Travelling together, are you?”
-
-“Yes, sir,” answered Wayne. “We’re going to New York, but our money
-gave out and we’ve been trying to earn enough to go on with.”
-
-“That straight goods?”
-
-“Yes, sir, it’s the truth, really.”
-
-“Well, all right. Stay where you are tonight, kids, but you’ll have
-to get out tomorrow. This is private property and I can’t have you
-trespassing. You’d be welcome to stay as long as you liked if I had
-the say, but I haven’t. So don’t let me find you here tomorrow night or
-I’ll have to run you in. Good night, boys.”
-
-The lantern’s glare vanished and the policeman’s steps went crunching
-off on the cinders.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-WAYNE PARTS WITH SAM
-
-
-There was no breakfast the next morning other than copious draughts of
-water from the tank in the station waiting-room. At least, there was
-none for the boys; Sam found an ancient crust of bread along the track
-and made the most of it. At a little after eight they parted, agreeing
-to meet uptown at noon so that should one or the other have earned any
-money they might eat. Wayne’s ill luck stayed with him and at a little
-after twelve he sought the corner near the post office and found June
-already on hand. June had the enormous sum of twenty cents, earned by
-carrying a drummer’s sample cases from store to store for a period of
-well over an hour, and it took the boys something less than two minutes
-to find a lunch-room and climb to a couple of stools. Wayne was for
-conserving half their fortune, but when June’s eyes rolled covetously
-at the good things displayed, and June earnestly assured him of his
-ability to earn more money that afternoon, Wayne recklessly consented
-to the spending of the whole amount. The fact that he was every bit as
-hungry as June had a good deal to do with his change of mind.
-
-That lunch tasted awfully good. Also, as June remarked wistfully, it
-tasted “moreish.” But their money was exhausted and they parted again
-at the lunch-room door and went their separate ways. How many flights
-of stairs he climbed that afternoon, how many doors he opened, how many
-blocks of hard pavement he trod, Wayne didn’t know, but even Sam showed
-evidences of exhaustion when, at twilight, downhearted and despairing,
-boy and dog returned to the shed by the railroad track.
-
-“I reckon,” Wayne confided, “you and I are hoodooed, Sam. Reckon
-there isn’t anything for us to do but just slink back home the best
-way we can, old chap.” And Sam, trotting along beside him, raised
-understanding eyes and wagged the stump of his tail sympathetically.
-
-June was downcast and woe-begone and self-accusing. Not a cent had
-he accumulated since noon. Luck had fairly deserted him. Every offer
-of services had been refused and a big, red-faced man had chased him
-out of a butcher shop with upraised cleaver when June had tried to
-negotiate for “a little ol’ piece o’ meat.” Hunger again faced them,
-and, to make matters worse, they were homeless. Wayne slumped down
-on the wheelbarrow and studied the situation from all angles, while
-June kept a sharp and nervous watch for that troublesome policeman. At
-length Wayne arose with a look of settled determination on his face.
-
-“Come on,” he said. “We’ve got to eat, June. If we don’t we can’t look
-for work. Mr. Connor wants Sam and----”
-
-June let out a wail. “You ain’ goin’ to sell Sam, Mas’ Wayne! Please
-don’ you do that! Why, I ain’ hungry scarcely at all yet! Why, I don’
-reckon you got any _right_----”
-
-“I’m not going to sell him,” interrupted Wayne impatiently, even
-indignantly. “I’m going to ask Mr. Connor to take him and let us have
-our meals until we can pay him and get Sam back. That’s fair, isn’t it?
-Sam won’t mind--much. He’ll be warm and have plenty to eat and--and
-all.”
-
-“He ain’ goin’ to be happy,” replied June, shaking his head sorrowfully,
-“but I reckon he won’ mind a awful lot if you kind of explains to him
-jus’ how it is, Mas’ Wayne. But you reckon Mister Denny goin’ to do it?”
-
-“I mean to ask him, anyway,” answered Wayne stoutly. “He can’t do any
-more than refuse. So come along before the place fills up.”
-
-Fortunately they found the lunch-wagon empty save for the presence of
-Mr. Connor himself and one tattered individual consuming coffee and
-doughnuts at a far end of the counter. Denny was reading the evening
-paper under a light beside the glistening, sizzing coffee urn. “Hello,
-boys,” he greeted cordially. “And how’s the world using you these days?
-You wasn’t in this morning, was you?”
-
-“No, sir,” answered Wayne. “I--could I speak to you a minute, Mr.
-Connor?”
-
-“Sure.” Denny laid the paper down and followed Wayne out of earshot of
-the lone patron. “What is it, my boy?”
-
-In a low voice Wayne confided their predicament and made his proposal.
-Denny was sympathetic, and interjected, “I want to know!”, “Think of
-that now!”, and similar remarks during the narrative, and when Wayne
-had finished turned instantly and slid two cups and saucers toward the
-coffee urn.
-
-“Here,” he exclaimed, “you fellers put this down before you do any more
-jabbering. There’s the sugar forninst you, Junius. What’ll you have to
-eat, now? Beef stew, corned beef hash, ham, eggs----” He ran an eye
-down the placard on the wall. “What’ll it be, boys?”
-
-“Then you don’t mind doing it?” asked Wayne. “I’ll be awfully much
-obliged to you, Mr. Connor. I don’t know just when I can pay you back,
-but it won’t be very long, I reckon, and----”
-
-“Ah, go on!” replied Denny gruffly. “Eat what you want. I don’t want
-your dog, kid!”
-
-But Wayne was firm, even with the fragrant odour of that coffee in his
-nostrils, while June, already on a stool, was rolling longing eyes at
-the pies and cakes standing in rows on the shelves. “If you won’t take
-Sam for--for security,” said Wayne earnestly, “I won’t do it, sir. He
-won’t be any trouble and he doesn’t eat very much. I reckon you’d have
-to keep him tied up for a couple of days, because he might try to get
-away and follow me, but he’d soon get used to you, sir.”
-
-Denny frowned thoughtfully from Wayne to Sam. “That’s all right,” he
-said at last, “only suppose I get fond of him, eh? I got an awful weak
-heart for dogs, kid. Look here, I tell you what. Sam can be security,
-do you see, and you can keep him just the same. Then if you don’t pay
-up, do you see, I’ll take him. Now what’s it going to be? That corned
-beef hash is pretty good tonight, and if you put a couple of eggs on
-it----”
-
-“That’s silly,” interrupted Wayne. “Suppose we left town?”
-
-“Oh, I’d have to risk that. You wouldn’t, though. Sure, I know you’re a
-straight lad.”
-
-Wayne shook his head, sighed, and pushed the untasted coffee away.
-“Come on, June,” he said resolutely. “We’ve got to be travelling.”
-
-“Huh?” queried June dismayedly. “Ain’ we goin’ to eat nothin’?”
-
-“Not here. Mr. Connor doesn’t like our plan, June.”
-
-“Don’ like it? How come he don’ like it? Look here, Mister Denny, that
-Sam dog’s the smartest, knowin’est dog as is, yes, sir! You can’ make
-no mistake if you takes him, sir. He’s got the cutest tricks----”
-
-“I guess I’ve got to take him,” said Denny ruefully. “But I don’t see
-why you ain’t satisfied if I am. Oh, all right. Get on a stool there
-and feed your face, kid. You win. What about that hash now?”
-
-Half an hour later, almost painfully replete with food and coffee,
-the boys left the Golden Star Lunch. Sam, tied with a cord behind the
-counter, sent wails of anguish after them, and Wayne hurried his steps
-and finally broke into a run. Only when a corner of a building along
-the track had shut off the lugubrious sounds did Wayne slow down again.
-After that they traversed a block in silence. Then it was June who
-spoke.
-
-“Dogs is awful human folks, ain’ they?” he asked subduedly.
-
-Wayne nodded but didn’t answer. Presently, though, he broke out
-defiantly with: “We’ve got to redeem him, June! He isn’t going to be
-happy there, Sam isn’t. He--he’s going to be mighty lonesome.” Then:
-“So am I,” he added gruffly.
-
-“Yes, sir, I reckon he’s goin’ to be powerful mis’able at firs’,”
-agreed June. “We jus’ got to get to work an’ get him back, ain’t we,
-Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“We surely have,” agreed Wayne decidedly. “And I’m going to find a job
-tomorrow or--or bust!”
-
-They stayed in the waiting-room, the object of deep suspicion on the
-part of the station policeman, who, fortunately, was not the officer
-who had ordered them away from the little shed, until the eleven-twelve
-express had pulled out. Then, when the baggage-man went through and
-put out most of the lights and the ticket seller closed and locked the
-door of his office and started for home, they exchanged the warmth of
-the waiting-room for the chill of outdoors and sleepily sought a place
-to spend the rest of the night. It wasn’t difficult. An empty box car
-on a sidetrack invited them with a half-opened door and they clambered
-in, closed the door behind them, and settled in a corner, drawing
-the horse blanket which June had carried around with him all evening
-over their tired bodies. They lay awake for a good while, talking,
-planning, wondering about Sam. At intervals an engine would roll past
-with clanking wheels, sometimes throwing red gleams from the open door
-of its fire box through the cracks of the box car. Later an express
-thundered by, shaking the earth. But that was after they had fallen
-asleep, and the roar only half awakened Wayne and disturbed June not a
-particle.
-
-They awoke late the next morning, stiff-limbed but rested, and dropped
-from the car and went back to the station for a wash-up. Then came hot
-coffee and fried eggs and rolls at the lunch-wagon, but no reunion with
-Sam, for Denny explained that he had taken Sam home with him and that
-he was at that moment tied to a leg of the kitchen table.
-
-“He howled a good deal during the night,” said Denny philosophically,
-“but I guess he didn’t keep anyone awake. He seemed a bit easier in his
-mind this morning, though, and the missis gave him a good breakfast and
-when I left he was licking the baby’s face. I guess he’s going to be
-all right in a day or two, but if the kid gets fond of him and I get
-fond of him----” Denny shook his head. “You haven’t changed your mind
-about selling him, have you?”
-
-Wayne said no, and the proprietor of the lunch-wagon sighed. “Well, I
-was only thinking maybe that would make it a lot easier for all hands.
-But I won’t be urging you, kid. He’s a nice little dog and he sure is
-fond of you. Any time you want to see him you go around to the house
-and tell the missis who you are, see? No. 28 Grove Street’s the place.
-Ring the second bell. Well, so long, fellers. Good luck!”
-
-Perhaps it was Denny’s wish that influenced Fortune that day, for when
-the two met at noon June proudly displayed two quarters and Wayne was
-happy over the possibility of securing work in a livery stable. “He
-said I was to come back in the morning,” explained Wayne as they sought
-the little lunch-room that they had patronised the previous day. “I
-reckon he means to take me, June. Wouldn’t that be great?”
-
-“It surely would, Mas’ Wayne. What-all he want you to do?”
-
-“Drive a carriage, one of the closed carriages that take passengers
-from the station. That’s something I can do, June, drive!”
-
-“Yes, sir, you surely can drive. But that ain’ scarcely fit work for a
-gen’leman like you is, Mas’ Wayne.”
-
-“I reckon what you do doesn’t matter much, June,” replied Wayne. “I
-reckon you can be a gentleman and drive a carriage, too. Anyway, I’d
-rather be earning some money. Just being a gentleman doesn’t get you
-anything as far as I can see.”
-
-June shook his head at that but didn’t dispute it. He had something
-on his mind, and as soon as they were seated at the lunch-counter he
-broached it. “We got to fin’ a place to live, ain’ we, Mas’ Wayne?”
-he began. Wayne agreed, and June went on. “Yes, sir. Then let me tell
-you.” What he told amounted to this. His search for the illusive
-two-bit piece had taken him farther afield than usual and he had
-plodded to the outskirts of the town where there was a stamping works
-and a dyehouse and a few other small factories. His journey had brought
-him no recompense in money but he had discovered their future domicile.
-It was, he explained, an old street car which had at some time been
-pulled out into a meadow beyond the factories. “I reckon it was a horse
-car, like they used to have in Sleepersville, Mas’ Wayne, before the
-trolleys done come. Mos’ of the windows is knocked out, but we could
-easy board ’em up. An’ one of the doors don’ shut tight. But it’s got
-a long seat on both its sides an’ we could sleep fine on them seats.
-An’ there’s a little old stove at one end that someone done left there,
-an’ a stovepipe astickin’ out through the roof. I ask a man at the tin
-factory an’ he say no one ain’ live in it for a long time. An’ there’s
-a branch close by it, too; mighty nice tastin’ water, Mas’ Wayne; an’
-some trees an’ no one to ask you no questions, an’ everythin’!”
-
-“That sounds great, June,” said Wayne eagerly. “How far is it?”
-
-“Must be a good two miles, I reckon. You go down this away and you bear
-over yonder-like an’ you follow the railroad right straight till you
-come to it.”
-
-“It must be near where we got put off the train the other night,” said
-Wayne.
-
-“No, sir, ’tain’, it’s in the other direction; other side of town.”
-
-“Oh, that’s right. Well, now look here, June. We’ve got thirty cents
-left and that’s enough to keep us going until tomorrow, and I’m pretty
-sure to get that job in the morning. Why don’t we go out there now and
-have a look at the place?”
-
-“Yes, sir, that’s what I was thinkin’. We could find some boards,
-maybe, an’ fix up them windows, an’ get some wood for a fire----”
-
-“We’d better take that blanket out, though, in case we decided to stay
-there, June. There wouldn’t be any use coming back to town, would
-there?”
-
-June looked dubious. “How about some supper?” he asked.
-
-“I forgot that. But, look here, if there’s a stove there----”
-
-“Yes, sir! Get us some coffee an’ bread----”
-
-“And cook our own supper!” concluded Wayne triumphantly.
-
-“Ain’ that fine? You take this yere money, Mas’ Wayne, an’ buy them
-things, an’ I’ll run back an’ fetch that blanket.” June grinned from
-ear to ear, displaying a wealth of glistening white teeth.
-
-“You’re sure no one owns that car, though, June? We don’t want to get
-settled down there and then be put out the way they put us out of the
-little shed.”
-
-“Huh, ain’ no police ever gets aroun’ there, I reckon,” answered June.
-“Man said it didn’ belong to no one, too.”
-
-“All right. You get the blanket and I’ll buy what I can and meet you at
-the post office in fifteen minutes or so.”
-
-June disappeared, and Wayne paid the two cheques and set out to find a
-grocery store. When he had completed his purchasing just one lonesome
-nickel remained in his pocket, but he had acquired a modest amount of
-cheap coffee, five cents’ worth of butter, a loaf of bread, a can of
-condensed milk and some sugar. Five minutes later they were footing it
-down the main street of Medfield, Wayne bearing the provisions and
-June the horse blanket which was a load in itself. It seemed that June
-had not underestimated the distance a particle, nor the difficulties
-of travel, for after they had traversed the poorer part of town their
-road stopped abruptly and they were forced to take to the railroad
-track and, since trains were coming and going frequently, make their
-way along by the little path on the side of the embankment. Coal
-yards, lumber yards, a foundry, vacant lots heaped with cinders and
-rubbish, and, at last, the open country, dotted here and there with
-small factories which, possibly because of lower land values, had been
-set up on the outskirts of town. June explained that he had found his
-way there in the morning by the road, but that the road was “way over
-yonder an’ a heap longer.” Presently he pointed out the stamping works,
-or tin factory, as he called it, and then directed Wayne’s gaze further
-and to the right.
-
-“See that bunch of trees, Mas’ Wayne? See somethin’ jus’ other side of
-’em? That’s it, sir!”
-
-“Oh! But it’s a long ways from town, June.”
-
-“It’s a right smart walk, yes, sir, but the rent’s mighty cheap!” And
-June chuckled as he led the way down the embankment, through a fence
-and into a boggy meadow. Further away a sort of road wound in the
-direction of the stamping works, and toward this June proceeded. The
-road scarcely deserved the name, but it was drier than the meadow.
-It appeared to have been constructed of a mixture of broken bricks,
-ashes, and tin cuttings and the latter glowed in the afternoon sunlight
-like bits of gold. They left the road at the stamping works, through
-whose open windows came the hum and clash of machinery, skirted a huge
-pile of waste tin, and went on across the field, choosing their way
-cautiously since every low spot held water. By now the abandoned horse
-car stood before them in all its glory of weather-faded yellow paint,
-broken windows, rusted roof, and sagging platforms. At one end some
-two feet of stovepipe protruded at a rakish angle from the roof. Wayne
-looked, saw, and was dubious. But when June asked proudly, “What you
-think of her, Mas’ Wayne?” he only said, “Fine, June!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE NEW HOME
-
-
-And when, having slid back the crazy door at the nearer end of the car,
-they entered it and seated themselves on the benches, it didn’t look
-nearly so unpromising. There was a good, stout floor underfoot and a
-reasonably tight roof overhead. Wayne began to see possibilities.
-
-The car was only about twelve feet long and of the usual width. At some
-time a matched-board partition had divided it into two compartments,
-but this had nearly all disappeared. Every pane of glass, and there
-had been eighteen in all, counting those in the doors, were either
-smashed or totally missing. Over one window at each end and over three
-of the six windows at each side boards had been nailed. The remains
-of a flimsy curtain hung over the glass of the forward door. From the
-roof two lamp fixtures still depended, but the lamps were gone. The
-floor was littered with trash, including newspaper and tin cans and
-cracker boxes and scraps of dried bread, indicating that the place had
-been used for picnic purposes. In a corner at the farther end a small
-“air-tight” stove was set on a board placed on the seat. It was badly
-rusted, the upper door hung by one hinge, the mica was broken out, and
-the interior was filled with ashes and charred embers. Between stove
-and ceiling there was no pipe. Wayne tried the door at that end, but it
-was jammed so tightly that he couldn’t budge it.
-
-An inspection of the outside followed. The trucks had been discarded
-and the body of the car rested on four six-inch sills, two running
-lengthwise and two across. An attempt had apparently been made to set
-fire to the car, for at one side the woodwork was scorched and the end
-of a sill burned away for nearly a foot. The inscription, “Medfield
-Street Railway Co.,” in faded brown letters against the faded yellow
-body, was still legible, as was the figure 6, preceding and following
-it.
-
-“I’d like to know what number 1 looks like,” said Wayne, “if this is
-number 6!”
-
-Everything of value in the way of metal had been removed, even to the
-brass hand rails and sill plates. The only glass that had escaped
-destruction consisted of a number of long and narrow panes in the roof,
-of which less than half remained intact. As Wayne discovered later,
-these were set in hinged frames that could be opened for ventilating
-purposes. On the front platform--they designated it the front merely
-because it seemed natural to call one front and one back, and that was
-the one outside the jammed door--a dozen sticks of wood suggested the
-location of the fuel pile at some time. Ashes had been disposed of by
-merely emptying them over the front dash. June discovered the missing
-stovepipe lying a few yards away, but it was so rusted that it came to
-pieces when he tried to lift it from the ground. Other untidy evidences
-of former occupation and more recent vandalism lay around: an iron
-skillet with the handle broken off, a bent and twisted toaster, many
-empty cans, a worn and sodden rope doormat, a length of rotted clothes
-line of which one end was tied to a ten-foot pole set some six yards
-away.
-
-“I wonder,” mused Wayne, “who lived here. And why they went away. And
-I wonder most of all, June, how they got this thing out here in the
-middle of this marsh.”
-
-But June was ready with a quite feasible explanation, which was that
-the car had been loaded onto a truck and hauled there. “Reckon in the
-summer this yere field is all dried up, Mas’ Wayne.”
-
-As it was getting on toward the middle of the afternoon by now it
-behooved them to set about preparing the domicile for occupation. They
-discarded their coats and set to work and in an hour had accomplished
-marvels. The floor was cleared of rubbish, Wayne requiring June to
-carry it well away from the vicinity of the car before disposing of it,
-dust was obliterated with the fragment of curtain, some loose boards
-were nailed back into place over the windows--the broken skillet served
-as a hammer--the stove door was rehung with a bent nail, ashes were
-removed, and the refractory rear door was coaxed into obedience by
-digging away the dirt beneath it with a pocket knife.
-
-After that the principal demands were stovepipe and covering for the
-broken windows. They thought later of many other things that were
-sorely needed, but just now those wants took precedence. It was out
-of the question to find stovepipe nearer than town, unless, as June
-suggested, some rubbish dump supplied it, and so they tackled the
-matter of covering the windows. For that they needed boards, or some
-other material, and nails. And a hammer would have helped a lot,
-although the skillet did fairly well in the emergency. There was enough
-of the partition left to supply boards for one window, but they had no
-nails, and a search through the ash pile failed to provide more than
-four bent and rusted ones. So it was decided that June should walk
-back to the stamping works and see if he could find, beg, or borrow
-some. Also, he was to be on the lookout for anything that might be used
-in making the new home weather tight. In the meanwhile Wayne was to
-“projeck ’roun’,” as June phrased it, and collect anything useful that
-could be found.
-
-June went off, whistling blithely, and Wayne began his search. The new
-abode stood about two hundred yards from the railroad embankment, at
-this point a good eight feet above the meadow, and possibly half again
-as far from the nearest building which was the stamping works. Beyond
-the latter were a number of other factories, puffing steam or smoke
-into the afternoon sunlight, and beyond these began the town. Standing
-on the front porch, which was the term ultimately applied to the rear
-platform, the view to the left ended at the railroad embankment, but
-to the right Wayne could see for nearly a mile. A few scattered houses
-indicated the dirt road in that direction and beyond the houses was
-some tilled land, and, finally, a fringe of trees. In front lay the
-edge of the town, with the town itself, overhung by a haze of smoke,
-a good mile beyond. On the fourth side, visible when Wayne stepped
-off the “porch” to the soggy ground, the meadow continued for another
-hundred yards to a rail fence. Beyond the fence was a ploughed field
-which sloped off and up to meet the blue March sky. Between car and
-railroad a group of trees attracted Wayne’s attention, and he set out
-for it across the _squishy_ meadow. Half-way to it he caught sight of
-water and recalled June’s mention of a “branch.” It proved to be a
-tiny brook that, emerging from a culvert under the tracks, wandered
-as far as the tiny grove and then curved off to the rail fence and
-followed it across the fields in the direction of the road. The water
-was clear and cold and tasted very good to the boy. Just now the brook
-was overflowing its bed in places, but the little knoll on which the
-cluster of trees grew was high and dry underfoot.
-
-The brook offered treasure-trove in the shape of a number of short
-planks and pieces of boxes rudely nailed together, doubtless
-representing the efforts of some boy to construct a raft. Wayne doubted
-its seaworthiness after he had experimentally pushed it back into the
-water and tried his weight on it. He floated it along to the nearest
-point to the car, getting his feet thoroughly wet in the process, and
-then, not without much panting and frequent rests, dragged it the
-balance of the way. After that he ranged the field in all directions,
-returning several times with his loads of wood for fuel or window
-repairs. He had quite a respectable pile on the front platform by the
-time June returned.
-
-The darkey brought a whole pocketful of nails and a number of sheets
-of tin of various sizes which he had salvaged from the waste heap.
-Few were larger than fifteen or sixteen inches in any direction, but
-together they would turn the wind and rain at one window at least.
-The nails had been given him by a man in the office. He had, he said,
-requested a hammer, too, but the man’s generosity had balked there.
-They set to work with the materials at hand and inside of the next hour
-accounted for four windows and part of a fifth, leaving six still open
-to the winds of Heaven. They made a systematic search for more boards,
-but failed to find any. Foiled, they entered their new home and sat
-down for a brief rest.
-
-The sight of the groceries presented a new quandary to Wayne. “Look
-here, June,” he exclaimed. “We’ve got coffee and milk and sugar, and we
-know where there’s water, but we haven’t anything to boil it in!”
-
-“My goodness!” said June. “Ain’ that a fac’? What we-all goin’ to do,
-Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-Wayne shook his head helplessly. “I don’t know,” he answered. “I reckon
-that skillet wouldn’t do, would it?”
-
-It wouldn’t, as an examination proved, for when the handle had broken
-off it had taken a generous piece of the skillet with it. June studied
-the situation hard, cupping his chin in his hands and gazing at the
-scuffed toes of his shoes. “I reckon,” he said finally, “we jus’ got
-to _eat_ that coffee. ’Sides,” he continued, “how we goin’ to boil it,
-anyway, without no fire?”
-
-“We could build a fire outside,” answered Wayne. “For that matter,
-we could build one in the stove. I reckon the smoke wouldn’t bother
-us much seeing half our windows are open! But we’ve got to have a
-coffee-pot or a pan or something. We surely were chumps, June,” he
-ended sadly.
-
-“How come we didn’ think of that, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“There’s something else we didn’t think of,” replied the other. “We
-didn’t think of anything to drink it out of, either!”
-
-“I ain’ botherin’ so much about that,” said June. “Jus’ you cook me
-that coffee an’ see! But we surely has got to have somethin’ to----”
-He stopped abruptly. “How much money we got, Mas’ Wayne?” he asked
-eagerly.
-
-“Five cents. You can’t get a coffee-pot for five cents, I reckon.”
-
-“Give me he,” said June, jumping up. “I’ll go on back yonder an’ ask
-that man in the tin factory to sell me a five-cent kettle or somethin’,
-Mas’ Wayne. He’s a nice man an’ I reckon when I tell him we can’ get no
-supper without he sells it to us he goin’ do it. Jus’ you wait, Mas’
-Wayne.”
-
-“All right,” laughed Wayne. “And ask him to throw in two tin cups and a
-candle and a blanket or two and----”
-
-“No, sir, I ain’ goin’ to ask no imposs’bilities,” replied June,
-showing his teeth in a broad grin, “but I certainly am goin’ to projeck
-mightily aroun’ that tin pile. I reckon there’s a heap more pieces like
-I done fetched if I can fin’ ’em.”
-
-“Maybe I’d better go along,” said Wayne, giving June the nickel.
-
-“No, sir, you stay right here an’ rest yourself, Mas’ Wayne. I can
-’tend to that man without no help. Jus’ you get them victuals ready----
-What’s the matter, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“Oh, nothing,” groaned Wayne, setting down the paper bag he had untied.
-“Only I forgot to ask them to grind the coffee, June!”
-
-“Lawsy-y-y!”
-
-They gazed dejectedly at each other for a moment. Then June chuckled.
-“I reckon I’ll jus’ have to ask that Mister Man to throw in a coffee
-grinder, too!” he said. “Ain’ there no way to make coffee out of that,
-Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“There must be,” was the answer. “If we can’t do it any other way,
-we’ll grind it with our teeth! You run along and see what you can find,
-June, and I’ll try to think up a way of grinding the coffee.”
-
-So June departed again and Wayne faced his problem, and when, some
-twenty minutes later, the darkey returned in triumph with a tin
-coffee-pot, a tin dish, a tin spoon, and several more sheets of the
-metal dug from the waste heap enough coffee for the evening meal was
-ready and Wayne was grinding the rest of their supply between two
-flat stones! “There’s more than one way to grind coffee,” he laughed,
-as June paused in the doorway to regard the proceeding in pardonable
-surprise. “I just remembered the way the Indians used to grind their
-corn. Or was it the Egyptians? Someone, anyhow. I had a dickens of a
-time finding these stones, though. There, that’s the last. It isn’t
-very fine, but I guess it will do well enough.”
-
-“Don’ it smell jus’ gran’?” asked June, sniffing the fragrance. “An’
-look what I fetched, please, Mas’ Wayne. Look yere! Ain’ that a pretty
-fine coffee-pot? An’ ain’ that a pretty fine little dish? An’ look yere
-at the spoon! All them for a nickel, Mas’ Wayne! That man certainly was
-good to me, yes, sir! I done tell him I ain’ got but a nickel an’ he
-say: ‘Nickel’s enough, nigger. What-all you wantin’?’ He say these yere
-things is ‘second,’ whatever he mean, but I reckon they goin’ to suit
-us all righty, ain’ they?”
-
-“They’re fine, June! You surely know how to get your money’s worth. But
-where are the blankets I told you to fetch?”
-
-“He goin’ to send them over in the mornin’,” replied June gravely.
-“Didn’ have none good enough, he say. How soon we goin’ to cook that
-coffee, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“Not for a long time yet,” said Wayne resolutely. “We aren’t going to
-have any supper at all until all these windows are fixed, June. It’s
-getting cold in here already and we’ll just naturally freeze tonight if
-we don’t get something over them. Come on and get to work. Where’s the
-tin?”
-
-It was almost twilight when they actually finished the undertaking. It
-is doubtful if they would have finished at all that evening if June
-hadn’t discovered a piece of tar paper nearly three yards long and
-a yard wide near the railroad embankment. It was torn and held some
-holes, but it was far better than nothing and it covered three windows,
-with the aid of a few pieces of wood found in the same locality. Those
-windows presented a strange appearance, but nobody cared about the
-looks of them. At least, when the door was closed and the stove was
-going, the car was warm enough for comfort even if the smoke did bring
-tears to their eyes. Until the coffee was boiled they kept the fire
-up, but after that they were very glad to let it go out. They had the
-equivalent of two cups of coffee apiece and finished most of the bread
-and butter. They were very hungry and it was so much easier to satisfy
-present appetites than to give thought to the morrow. The coffee was
-somewhat muddy, but, as June said ecstatically, “it certainly did taste
-scrumptuous!”
-
-After supper they sat huddled in a corner of the seat opposite the
-dying fire and talked. For some reason their thoughts tonight dwelt
-largely with Sleepersville, and Wayne wondered this and June that, and
-they decided that at the very first opportunity Wayne was to write back
-there and let his stepfather and June’s mother know that they were
-alive and well. And they wondered about Sam, too, and how he would
-like this new home. And presently they stretched themselves out on
-the seat, sharing the horse blanket as best they could, and slumbered
-soundly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE LUCK CHANGES
-
-
-The next day luck turned. Wayne went to work for Callahan’s Livery
-Stable, and June, happening into the Union Hotel with a drummer’s
-sample cases, witnessed the discharge of a bell boy, applied for the
-position, got it, was thrust into a dark-blue uniform and, half an hour
-later, was climbing stairs and answering calls as though he had done
-nothing else all his life. The wage was only three dollars a week, and
-out of that he was required to deposit ten dollars as security for the
-uniform, which meant that for three weeks he would get nothing from
-his employer. Ordinarily he would have had to deposit that ten dollars
-before starting to work, but the fact that his services were badly
-needed at the moment and the fact that he neither had ten dollars nor
-could get it, caused the proprietor to waive the rule. But June didn’t
-bother about that ten dollars, for he knew that it was tips and not
-wages that counted in his job, and he believed in his ability to get
-the tips. He didn’t return to the new home very rich that night, to be
-sure, for he hadn’t yet learned the ropes and his chances had been few,
-but it didn’t take him long to put his new position on a paying basis.
-At the end of three days everyone in the hotel knew June and liked
-him. He was always willing, always ready, and always cheerful. And he
-was always polite, a fact which made him a favourite with the guests,
-accustomed as they were to the half-sullen services of the other boys.
-Dimes and even quarters dropped into June’s pocket at a rate that
-astonished him. When, at the end of his second week of service, he
-counted up his wealth and discovered that it totalled the stupendous
-sum of nine dollars and eighty cents he rolled his eyes and confided to
-Wayne that he “didn’ know there was so much money in the whole world!”
-The main drawback to June’s work was that his period of duty began at
-six o’clock in the morning and lasted until four in the afternoon,
-necessitating a very early rising hour in the car. Wayne’s own duties
-didn’t begin until eight, and in consequence he had two hours on his
-hands that he didn’t know what to do with. Breakfast was always over by
-half-past five and a minute or two later June was streaking across the
-field to the railroad track. At about twenty-five minutes to six there
-was a milk train due and June had become an adept at swinging himself
-to a platform as it slowed down at the yard entrance. Just at first
-his presence, when discovered, was resented, but presently the train
-hands good-naturedly failed to see him and he rode into town huddled up
-on a car step. When, as infrequently happened, the train was late June
-was put to it to reach the hotel on time, but he always did it by hook
-or by crook even if he had to run most of the way over the uneven ties.
-
-Wayne’s job brought him seventy-five cents a day--when he worked. He
-didn’t always work, for it was only when one of the regular men was
-taken away to a drive at a funeral or a wedding that his services were
-required. But he had to report every morning, in any case, and it was
-rather surprising how many folks were married or buried in Medfield!
-He liked driving a carriage well enough, but waiting for fares at the
-station in all sorts of weather wasn’t pleasant. It was a sort of
-lazy job, too. On the whole, he was far from satisfied with it and
-continually kept his eyes open for something better. It was rather a
-blow to his pride to have June bring home four or five dollars each
-week while he almost never earned more than three. Still, he was
-thankful for what he got, for it enabled them to live very comfortably
-in their novel home.
-
-One of the first things Wayne did was to recover Sam. Denny Connor
-parted with the dog reluctantly, but consoled himself with the fact
-that as Sam had been with him only four days and hadn’t got used to the
-change he wouldn’t miss him as much as he might have.
-
-“You see,” he confided, “it ain’t as if you slept a lot better for
-having a dog howl all night in the kitchen!”
-
-Sam took to the new home at once. He approved of it enthusiastically.
-Perhaps the freedom of the country appealed to him after the
-confinement of town. At all events, he had a perfectly delirious
-time the first hour, running around the field, barking at everyone
-who passed along the railroad track and searching for rats under the
-car. His big adventure came later, though, when, after disappearing
-frenziedly and at full speed into the woods he returned a quarter of
-an hour after much chastened and with his muzzle bleeding profusely
-from several deep scratches. What his adversary had been they never
-knew. June offered the theory that Sam had been in mortal combat with
-a catamount. I don’t think June knew just what a catamount was, but
-he liked the word. Wayne said he guessed it was a “cat” without the
-“mount.” In any event, Sam displayed a strong dislike of the woods for
-weeks afterward. Wayne tried taking him to work with him at first,
-but Mr. Callahan objected to having the dog in the carriage and made
-Wayne tie him in an empty stall in the stable. That didn’t please Sam a
-mite and he said so very loudly and continuously, so heartily, in fact,
-that the edict went forth that “that fool dog” was not to be brought
-there again. After that Wayne shut him up in the car when he left
-at half-past seven and was pursued for a quarter of a mile by Sam’s
-lamentations. Eventually the dog learned that he was not to follow,
-that his duty was to remain behind and guard the domicile, and he
-became reconciled.
-
-“Carhurst,” as Wayne dubbed the new home, was slowly but steadily
-rehabilitated. Now that there was money for the purpose the boys set
-out to turn the abandoned horse car into a real place of residence.
-Every day witnessed some improvement. The missing stovepipe was early
-replaced with two sections purchased at a junk dealer’s emporium and
-with a five-cent can of blacking June made stove and pipe shine like
-a new beaver hat. Red builder’s paper superseded the boards across
-the window frames, giving the car quite a cheerful appearance from
-without even if it added little to the lighting within. Sooner or
-later they meant to reglaze two windows on each side, and to that end
-June brought back a fine big lump of putty one afternoon which he had
-wheedled out of a painter at work in the hotel. After that, as Wayne
-complacently remarked, all they needed were points, a putty knife, and
-some glass! They put shelves up for their groceries, cooking utensils,
-and tableware, all largely augmented with returning prosperity, set a
-box on the more shaded platform to serve as an ice-chest, invested in
-four blankets and, in short, surrounded themselves with all sorts of
-luxuries!
-
-June solved the fuel problem very simply. Wood soon became scarce and
-they were forced to go far afield to find enough to cook meals with,
-while having a fire for the mere purpose of keeping warm on some
-of those raw nights of early spring was an extravagance not to be
-considered. Not, that is to say, until June had his brilliant idea.
-He disappeared one afternoon with the basket that they used to bring
-provisions home in and returned half an hour later bearing it on his
-head and filled to the brim with coal. The railroad tracks were black
-with it, he reported, and all they had to do was gather it up. Wayne
-found that a slight exaggeration, but it wasn’t at all a difficult
-matter to fill a basket without going out of sight of home. After that,
-when the weather was cold or rainy, they kept a fire going all day and
-night in the tiny stove, which, in spite of some infirmities, served
-them faithfully and cheerfully and consumed little fuel.
-
-They had a few leaks to contend with when the rain drove against the
-car, leaks that simply refused to be located when the weather was dry
-and Wayne, armed with pieces of tin, and tacks, and a hammer went
-searching for them. But even more expensive houses leak, and it was a
-simple enough matter to move away from the trickles. To be sure, it
-wasn’t so pleasant when they awoke one very stormy night toward the
-first of April to find that the trough-shaped seat upon which they were
-reposing had turned itself into a reservoir for the collection of the
-rain driving in at a corner of the car. They had to open the draughts
-of the little stove and dry their blankets before they could go to
-sleep again on the opposite seat. And they had difficulties with the
-windows, too, occasionally, for the paper had a mean habit of breaking
-loose under the combined assaults of wind and rain. At such times the
-old horse blanket, now discarded as an article of bedding, was used as
-a temporary shutter. Wayne threatened to varnish or shellac the paper
-so that it would turn the rain, but he never carried out the threat.
-
-June was the cook and a very good one. He had a positive talent for
-coffee and could really do wonders with a frying pan. They never
-attempted ambitious feats of cookery, but they lived well, if simply,
-and had all they wanted. Only breakfast and supper, the latter a rather
-hearty meal, were eaten at “Carhurst.” The midday meal was taken in the
-town. Wayne went to the Golden Star Lunch when he had opportunity, at
-other times patronising the counter in the station. June skirmished his
-lunches in the hotel kitchen, and, since everyone there from the chef
-to the scullery maid liked him, fared well. Sam ate twice a day to the
-boys’ knowledge and, it was suspected, levied toll at noon hour on the
-employees of the stamping works. If there hadn’t been so many chipmunks
-and squirrels and, possibly, worthier game to chase he would have waxed
-fat and lazy at this period of his history.
-
-They had been living at “Carhurst” something over three weeks when,
-quite unexpectedly, almost overnight, spring arrived. Of course, if
-they were to believe the almanac, spring had really been there some
-time, but they would never have suspected it. Some days there had been
-a mildness in the air that had seemed to presage the lady’s appearance,
-but it wasn’t until they awoke that April morning to the knowledge
-that the fire in the stove, as low as it was, was “super’ogatory”--the
-word is June’s, and one he was extremely fond of--and stuck their
-heads outdoors to find out why, that it seemed to them she had really
-arrived. It was like May rather than April. Although it was still only
-five o’clock in the morning, there was an unaccustomed warmth in the
-air and the east was rosy with the coming sun. It was after June had
-scudded off and Wayne had washed the few breakfast dishes and hung the
-dishcloth--yes, they had even attained to the luxury of a dishcloth by
-then!--over the platform rail and had seated himself on the step with
-Sam in his arms that the desire that affects almost all of us on the
-first warm morning of spring came to him. He wanted to grow something!
-
-At first glance the prospect of growing anything at “Carhurst” was not
-encouraging. The meadow was still soft and sodden with the spring rains
-and here and there little pools of water showed between the hummocks of
-turf. But when one becomes really possessed with the longing to have
-a garden it takes a great deal to discourage one. Wayne set Sam down
-and walked around the car and frowned intently over the problem. After
-all, he didn’t need a very big patch for his garden, and by filling in
-a few low places along the sunny side of the car and digging out the
-turf--turning it under would be better, but it entailed more labour
-than he felt capable of that lazy-feeling morning--he could have a
-patch about four yards long by a yard wide, quite big enough for his
-needs. He had no idea of raising such useful things as vegetables. His
-soul sighed for foliage and flowers. He wondered, though, what kinds
-of flowers grew up here in the North. He would, he decided, have to
-consult someone as to that. Probably the man he bought his seeds of
-would tell him. Anyhow, at the back of the bed, where it would shade
-the car in hot weather, he would have something tall. And in front he
-would grow pretty things with lots of colour. He talked it over all
-the while with Sam, and Sam indicated quite plainly that he considered
-it a perfectly glorious idea, following Wayne around and around with
-his tail never for an instant still. Finally, Wayne drew forth the
-little leather bag in which he kept his money and viewed the contents
-doubtfully. Two dollars didn’t seem a great deal, but it would probably
-do if only he could borrow a shovel and rake and not have to buy them.
-All the way to town his mind dwelt on the project and he became so
-absorbed that he sometimes forgot to keep on walking and came very near
-to being late at the stable.
-
-It was June who solved the problem of shovel and rake by borrowing both
-these necessary implements, as well as a hoe, at the stamping works.
-June had many friends there by that time and there was no difficulty
-at all. Wayne bought eight packages of flower seed--they were far
-cheaper than he had dared hope--and one afternoon the boys began the
-preparation of the garden. June was less enthusiastic than Wayne, but
-he lent willing assistance. June advocated the growing of useful things
-like corn and beans and “tomatuses,” but acknowledged that the ground
-at their disposal was rather too small in area for much of a crop.
-Wayne compromised by agreeing to set out some tomato plants since they
-were, while not exactly flowers, attractive when in fruit. The job
-was a good deal harder than they had expected, for that turf had been
-growing there a long while and resented being displaced. Sam tried to
-help, but his digging was merely spasmodic and seldom in the right
-place.
-
-They spent four evenings getting the plot of ground cleared of grass
-and graded up, and Wayne went to bed that fourth evening very tired but
-cheered by the anticipation of planting his garden the next morning.
-When morning came, however, a cold east wind was blowing across the
-field, the sun was hidden and it seemed as though Miss Spring must
-have drawn her flimsy garments about her and gone shivering back to
-the Southland. Instead of planting his seeds, Wayne spent the time
-between June’s departure and his own in sitting disgustedly in front
-of the stove and trying to get warm. He had awakened some time in the
-night to find himself uncomfortably chilly, his cover having fallen to
-the floor, and he hadn’t so far succeeded in driving away the little
-shivers that coursed up and down his back. He even sneezed once or
-twice and sniffed a good deal, and was sorry when the time came for
-him to go to work. He felt strangely disinclined for exertion and the
-thought of the walk along the tracks to town quite dismayed him. But
-he put his sweater on and started out and felt better by the time he
-had been in the air awhile. The station platform was a rather exposed
-place and sitting beside it on the front seat of a carriage was not a
-very grateful occupation today. Wayne sneezed at intervals and blew
-his nose between sneezes and by noon had reached the conclusion that
-he had a cold. He wasn’t used to them and resented this one every time
-he had to drag his handkerchief out. There were few arrivals today and
-Wayne had little to do. When he took his horse back to the stable at
-twelve-thirty for his feed he climbed into an old hack in a far corner
-of the carriage-room and spent an uncomfortable three-quarters of an
-hour there. He didn’t want any lunch, although he had a dim notion that
-a cup of hot coffee would taste good. But that meant exertion, and
-exertion was something he had no liking for today.
-
-He was back at the station for the two-twenty-four and picked up two
-passengers for the hotel. He hoped that June would come out for the
-luggage, but it was another boy who attended to the arrivals and Wayne
-drove off again without seeing June. It got no warmer as the afternoon
-progressed and Wayne was shivering most of the time. When the five
-o’clock express was in and he had satisfied himself that there were no
-fares for his conveyance he drove back to the stable as fast as the
-horse would trot, unharnessed, and set out for home. That walk seemed
-interminable and he thoroughly envied a gang of track workers who,
-having eaten their supper, were sitting at ease around a stove in an
-old box car which had been fitted up for living purposes. It was all
-Wayne could do to drag a tired and aching and shivering body past that
-stove!
-
-It was almost dusk when he finally crept down the embankment, squirmed
-between the wires of the fence and, with the light from “Carhurst”
-guiding him, floundered across the field. June had a fine fire going
-in the stove and when Wayne had pushed the door half open and squeezed
-through he simply slumped onto the seat and closed his eyes, immensely
-thankful for warmth and shelter. June viewed him at first with
-surprise and then with misgiving.
-
-“What’s the matter with you, Mas’ Wayne?” he asked.
-
-Wayne shook his head and muttered: “Just tired, June.” Then he had
-a spasm of shivering and reached for a blanket. June observed him
-anxiously for a moment. Then:
-
-“You got a chill, that’s what you got,” he said decisively. “You lay
-yourself right down there an’ I’ll cover you up. My sakes!”
-
-The last exclamation was called forth by a sudden fit of sneezing that
-left Wayne weak and with streaming eyes.
-
-“Lawsy-y-y, child, but you got a cold sure enough!” said June.
-“What-all you been doin’, I like to know? You fix yourself for bed this
-yere minute. My goodness, ’tain’ goin’ to do for you to go an’ get
-sick, Mas’ Wayne!”
-
-June bustled around and brewed a pot of tea, a cup of which he insisted
-on Wayne’s swallowing while it was still so hot that it almost
-burned the latter’s mouth. After that June piled all the blankets on
-the invalid and sternly told him to go to sleep. Rather to Wayne’s
-surprise, he found that, as tired and played out as he was, sleep
-wouldn’t come. He had aches in queer places and his head seemed due
-to burst apart almost any moment. With half-closed eyes he lay and
-watched June cook and eat his supper. Now and then he dozed for a
-minute or two. The warmth from the stove, the hot tea he had drank, and
-the piled-on blankets presently had their effect, and Wayne, muttering
-remonstrances, tried to throw off some of the cover. But June was after
-him on the instant.
-
-“Keep them blankets over you, Mas’ Wayne,” he commanded sternly. “You
-got to sweat that cold out.”
-
-“I’m hot,” protested Wayne irritably.
-
-“I know you is, an’ you goin’ to be hot! Jus’ you leave them blankets
-alone an’ go to sleep.”
-
-After a long while Wayne opened his eyes again. He had been sleeping
-hours, he thought. He felt horribly uncomfortable and wondered what
-time it was. Then his gaze fell on June hunched up near the stove with
-Sam on his knees, and sighed. If June was still awake it couldn’t be
-late, after all. Presently he fell again into a restless, troubled
-sleep. In the corner June nodded, roused himself, looked at the
-recumbent form on the seat, reached across and tucked a corner of a
-gray blanket in and settled back in his corner. The firelight, finding
-its way through cracks and crevices in the stove, made streaks and
-splotches of light on the wall and ceiling, and one ray fell fairly on
-June’s face. Perhaps it was that ray of light that did the business,
-for presently his eyelids slowly closed----
-
-Somewhere, afar off, a clock struck three.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-WAYNE LOSES A JOB AND FINDS ONE
-
-
-Wayne had the grippe, although as neither he nor June had ever had
-any experience of that complaint neither of them named it that. For
-four days he was a pretty sick boy, with fever and aches and inflamed
-eyes, and June was far more worried than he allowed the other to see.
-June had a mortal fear of “pneumony,” and there was scarcely an hour
-when he was at home when Wayne wasn’t required to assure him that his
-chest wasn’t sore and that it didn’t hurt him to breathe. Two of the
-four nights June got almost no sleep, only dozing for a few minutes at
-a time as he sat huddled in the corner by the stove. The first day of
-the illness he stayed at home, after walking to the nearest telephone
-and explaining his absence from duty to the Union Hotel. After that he
-took himself off each morning only because Wayne insisted, and was far
-from happy until he had got back again. He invested in three different
-varieties of patent medicine and administered them alternately in
-heroic doses, and one of Wayne’s chief interests was the attempt to
-decide which of the three was the nastiest. It was a difficult question
-to decide, for the last one taken always seemed the worst. June also
-attempted the concoction of some “yarb tea” such as he had so often
-seen his mother make, but while it smelled the place up in a most
-satisfactory manner, June was never quite certain that it contained
-all it should have, and distrusted it accordingly. There was one day,
-the second of the attack, when Wayne was in such agony with an aching
-head and body that June was all for finding a doctor and haling him
-posthaste to “Carhurst.” Wayne, however, refused to listen to the plan,
-declaring that he would be all right tomorrow. “Besides,” he added
-weakly, “you couldn’t get a doctor to come away out here, anyhow.”
-
-“Say I couldn’? Reckon if I tell a doctor man I got to have him and
-show him the money right in my fist, he goin’ to come where I say!”
-declared June sturdily. “Jus’ you let me fetch one, please, sir, Mas’
-Wayne.”
-
-But Wayne insisted on waiting a little longer, and June rubbed the
-lame and achy spots and doubled the doses and, sure enough, after a
-most wretched night, Wayne felt better in the morning. The nights were
-always the worst, for, while he slept for an hour now and then during
-the day, at night he was always wakeful. Illness always seems worse at
-night, anyway, and there was no exception in Wayne’s case. Poor June
-was driven nearly to his wits’ end some nights. Wayne was not, I fear,
-a very patient patient. He had never been as sick before in all his
-life and he resented it now forcibly and seemed inclined to hold June
-in some way accountable for it. But that was only when he had really
-begun to get better, and June was so thankful for his recovery that he
-bore the other’s crankiness quite cheerfully.
-
-All things come to an end, and one day--it happened to be a Sunday--Wayne
-got up for the first time and ate some real food. June had been trying
-to entice him with soup and gruel and similar things which Wayne
-unkindly termed “hog-wash” for two days with little success, but today
-Wayne consumed a lamb chop and two slices of toast and a cup of tea with
-gusto. And after it he went to sleep again and awoke in the afternoon
-quite himself, save for an astonishing wabbliness in his legs. The next
-day he was out on the “front porch” in the warm sunlight when June
-departed to town, and still later he walked around some, to Sam’s
-vociferous delight, and cooked some lunch for himself and discovered a
-returning interest in the garden. And the next day he reported to Mr.
-Callahan for work again and was curtly informed that his place had been
-given to someone else.
-
-As June had visited the stable and told the liveryman of Wayne’s
-illness as soon as it became evident that the latter couldn’t go
-to work, and as Mr. Callahan had given June to understand that the
-position would be kept open, Wayne was too astounded to even make a
-reply, and it wasn’t until he was a full block away that it occurred
-to him to be either indignant or disappointed. And then, as neither
-indignation nor disappointment promised any relief, he tried his best
-to swallow them and put his mind on the problem of finding other
-work. There was another livery stable in town that he knew of, and
-there might be still more that he didn’t know of, and, while driving
-a carriage wasn’t at all his idea of a satisfactory occupation, it
-brought money to his pocket and enabled him to live, and whereas he had
-not been particularly interested in living four days ago, today he was
-convinced that it was not only desirable but delightful. There is at
-least this to be said for an illness: after it is through with you it
-leaves you with a greater appreciation of life.
-
-Wayne visited the stable he knew of but received no encouragement. The
-foreman told him that they had all the men they needed and that they
-didn’t expect to have a vacancy in the near future. He directed Wayne
-to another livery, however, at the farther side of town, and Wayne set
-off. His course took him over the railroad about a block beyond the
-freight sheds. It was nearly nine by then and the scene about him was
-a very busy one. Cars were loading and unloading beside the long, high
-platforms, while, on the other side of the sheds, trucks and drays were
-coming and going along the cobbled street. A switch engine was tooting
-frantically for a switch and a long train of day coaches and sleepers
-sent Wayne scurrying out of the way. Then an impatient engine clanged
-up with a couple of gondolas laden with machinery and contemptuously
-jerked them onto a side-track, spurting off again as though vastly
-relieved to be rid of such trifling company. There were many tracks
-where Wayne crossed and one had to keep one’s eyes opened. When he was
-half-way over a pounding of the rails caused him to look down the line.
-A long train of empty box cars was backing toward him at a brisk speed,
-the locomotive out of sight at the far end. Wayne hurried his pace and
-reached an empty track in plenty of time, and was for paying no more
-heed to the string of empties until a shout behind him brought his
-head quickly around.
-
-On the roof of the first car a man was doing two things at once. He
-was yelling at the top of his voice and swinging himself over the
-end of the car to the ladder there as fast as he could. A few yards
-distant, squarely in the middle of the track, stood a boy of five or
-six years. Afterward Wayne wondered where he had come from, for surely
-he had not been in sight a moment before, but just now there was no
-time for speculation. The child, terrorised into immobility, stood as
-though rooted to the cinders between the rails. Wayne’s cry was uttered
-involuntarily as he leaped forward. Only one line of track separated
-him from the boy, but it seemed impossible for him to reach the latter
-before the bumper of the box car struck him.
-
-[Illustration: Wayne’s Cry Was Uttered Involuntarily as he Leaped
-Forward]
-
-As Wayne dashed forward with a horrified, sickening fear at his heart
-the brakeman dropped from the car ladder. But he staggered as his
-feet touched the ground, and had the boy’s safety depended on him he
-would never have escaped. It was Wayne who caught him up roughly and
-half lifted, half dragged him across the further rail to safety just
-as the end of the car swept over the spot on which he had stood. So
-close was the escape that the corner of the car struck Wayne’s hip
-and sent him reeling to fall on his knees against the end of the ties
-of the next track, the child sprawled beside him. Dazed, breathless,
-Wayne struggled to his feet, pulling the lad up with him. Twenty feet
-distant a switch engine had stopped with grinding brakes, and engineer
-and fireman were running toward him. The train of empty box cars rolled
-stolidly on, but in a moment began to slow down with much bumping and
-clatter of couplings, while back along the roofs sped the brakeman
-whose warning shout had alarmed Wayne. Just what happened during the
-next few minutes Wayne couldn’t recall afterward. The lad, his face
-crushed to Wayne’s worn coat, was sobbing hysterically. The engineer
-and fireman were there, and presently the brakeman dropped down beside
-them, and after that other men appeared as though by magic. Everyone
-talked at once and it was all very confused. Someone took the boy from
-Wayne and lifted him in arms and someone else propelled Wayne across
-toward the freight house. About that time the talk around him began to
-register itself on his brain.
-
-“’Tis Jim Mason’s kid,” said one. “’Twould have broke his heart
-entirely had the lad been hurted!”
-
-“Hurted!” scoffed another. “Sure, ’tis dead he’d be this minute save
-for this la-ad here! ’Twas a close shave at that, I’m telling you.
-Faith, I shut my eyes, I did so!” It was either the engineer or the
-fireman speaking. “Are you hurted, me boy?” This was to Wayne, and
-Wayne shook his head silently. “Your hands be cut a bit, but they’ll
-soon mend.”
-
-“You’d better wash the dirt out,” advised another as they climbed the
-steps at the end of the platform. “I’ve known lockjaw to come from
-less, and----”
-
-But just then they entered the dim twilight of the shed and Wayne,
-pushed ahead by his good-natured captors, lost the rest of the cheerful
-remark. Someone shouted for “Jim! Jim Mason!” and an answering hail
-came from further down the shed and a big man advanced toward them,
-illumined for a moment as he passed one of the wide, sunlit doorways.
-
-“What’s wanted?” he shouted.
-
-“’Tis your kid, Jim,” was the reply. “Nearly run over he was a minute
-back. All right, laddie, here’s your father comin’. Hush your cryin’
-now.”
-
-“_Terry!_” The big man’s voice held wonder and alarm and joy. He sprang
-across the intervening space and seized the child from the arms that
-held him. “Terry! Are you hurt, darling? What were you doing on the
-tracks? Don’t cry, son, it’s over now.” He turned questioningly to the
-sympathetic faces about him, faces that were grinning only because
-tears were so near the eyes. “How did it happen, fellows? Who saw it?”
-
-“Him and me,” answered one man, “and Larry there. Larry was riding the
-roof on a string of empties when he seen the boy on the track----”
-
-“Holy Saints, but I was scared stiff!” broke in the brakeman. “I gave a
-shout and tried to get down the ladder, but when I jumped I hit the end
-of a tie, Jim, and it was this fellow----”
-
-“Grabbed him up in the nick o’ time,” went on another. “I seen it from
-the cab window. There wasn’t the width of an eyelash between the car
-and the child when he got him. Sure, even then I thought it was good
-night to the pair of them. The car hit the fellow as he jumped and----”
-
-“So ’twas you?” said Jim Mason in his big, deep voice. “’Twas brave of
-you, sir, and God bless you for it.” He had the child on one big arm
-now and stretched his free hand toward Wayne. “I guess I don’t need to
-say I’m thankful to you. You know that, sir. I think a deal of this
-little kiddie, and as for his mother----” His voice trembled. “Heaven
-only knows what she would do if anything happened to him! She’ll thank
-you better than I can, but if there’s anything Jim Mason can do for
-you, why, you say it!”
-
-“It was nothing,” stammered Wayne. “I’m glad that--that I was there,
-and that I--was in time, sir.”
-
-“God be praised and so am I!” said the father fervently. “Hush your
-crying now, Terry. It’s your father that’s got you. Can you thank the
-brave lad for saving you?”
-
-But Terry couldn’t. Terry was as yet incapable of anything but sobs.
-Wayne, wanting to go, scarcely knew how. Mechanically he raised a
-bruised knuckle to his lips and Jim Mason was all solicitude.
-
-“You’ve cut your fist!” he exclaimed. “Come to the office with me till
-I fix it up for you. There’s dirt in it, likely. Larry, I’m thanking
-you, too, for what you did,” he added, turning to the brakeman. “I’ll
-not forget it.”
-
-“Sure, I did nothing,” laughed the brakeman embarrassedly, “only yell!”
-
-“It was his shout that drew my attention,” said Wayne. “He tried hard
-to get to him.”
-
-“What matter now?” muttered the brakeman. “’Tis all over, and ’twas you
-was Johnny-on-the-Spot, feller. ’Twas finely done, too, and no mistake!
-I take my hat off to you for a fine, quick-thinkin’ and quick-doin’
-laddie!”
-
-“Why, I know you now!” said Jim Mason at that moment. “I was thinking
-all the time I’d seen you before. You’re the kid--I mean the young
-gentleman--that spoke me one morning a couple of weeks ago. You had a
-nigger boy with you, and a dog. Ain’t I right?”
-
-“Yes, Mr. Mason, but it was more than two weeks ago,” answered Wayne.
-“I--I’m glad to see you again.”
-
-“Well, if you’re glad, what about me?” bellowed Jim Mason. “Thank you
-all, fellows. I’ll mend this gentleman’s hand now. Will you come with
-me, please?”
-
-Wayne followed the man to the farther end of the freight house where,
-occupying a corner that afforded a view down the long stretch of
-shining tracks, there was a cubby-hole of an office. A high desk, a
-correspondingly tall stool, a battered armchair, a straight-backed
-chair, a stove, and a small table made up the furnishings. The walls
-held many hooks on which were impaled various documents, a shelf
-filled with filing-cases, several highly-coloured calendars, a number
-of pictures cut from magazines and newspapers, and, over one of
-the two dusty-paned windows, a yard-long framed photograph of “The
-Lake-to-Coast Limited.” In spite of dust and confusion, a confusion
-which as Wayne later discovered was more apparent than real, the
-little office had a cosy, comfortable air, and the sunlight, flooding
-through the front window, made even the dust-motes glorious.
-
-Jim Mason set the child in a chair, produced a first-aid kit from some
-place of concealment, and proceeded to repair the damages wrought by
-the cinders. There was running water outside, and the wounds, none of
-them more than surface scratches, were first thoroughly cleaned. Then
-peroxide was liberally applied, the man grunting with satisfaction when
-the stuff bubbled. Finally surgeon’s tape was put on, and Wayne was
-discharged. During his administrations Jim Mason asked questions at the
-rate of a dozen a minute, and soon had Wayne’s history down to date.
-The liveryman’s callousness wrought him to gruff indignation.
-
-“Fired you because you was sick, did he, the pup? What do you know
-about that? Sit down and rest yourself, lad.” He perched himself on
-the stool and became busy with a pile of waybills on the desk, talking
-as he worked. “And so you’re out of a job again, are you? I suppose a
-smart lad like you can figure and write a good fist, maybe?”
-
-“I can figure,” replied Wayne, “but I don’t believe my writing’s much
-to boast of.”
-
-“Here, put your name and your address on that.” Jim pushed a slip of
-paper to the end of the desk and dipped a pen in ink.
-
-Wayne wrote and handed the result back. “‘Wayne Torrence Sloan,’” read
-Jim, “‘Carhurst, Medfield, Pennsylvania.’ That’s not so bad. But what
-might ‘Carhurst’ mean?”
-
-Wayne explained and the man chuckled. “It’s a fine-sounding name
-all right,” he said. “How’d you like a job here with me, Sloan? I
-been looking for a feller for a week. There’s a guy up to Springdale
-that wants the place, and he’s coming down this afternoon to see me,
-but--I don’t know.” Jim looked out the window and whistled a tune
-thoughtfully. “He mightn’t do at all,” he went on after a moment, “and
-if you say you want to try it----”
-
-“I do!” said Wayne promptly. “That is, if you think I could.”
-
-Jim turned and looked him over appraisingly. “I don’t see why not. If
-you can figure and write a bit and do as I tell you, you’d have no
-trouble. And you look like a strong, healthy lad, although your face
-is sort of pale. That comes of being sick, I guess. ’Tain’t all office
-work, for you’ll have to be out in the yard a good deal. You’d be here
-at eight in the morning--I’m here long before, but you wouldn’t need to
-be--and get off at five, with an hour for dinner. The pay ain’t much,
-only eight dollars, but if you got on there might be something better;
-maybe a place in the main office. Want to try it?”
-
-“Very much,” said Wayne.
-
-“All right then. Maybe I can head that feller at Springdale off and
-save him a trip.” He drew a telegram blank from a pigeonhole and wrote
-slowly and laboriously. “Maybe I’m taking a chance, lad, for I don’t
-know much about you, do you see, and you haven’t any references, but a
-feller that shows pluck like you did awhile ago can’t have much wrong
-with him, I’m thinking. There, I’ll put this on the wire. Be around at
-eight sharp in the morning, lad, and I’ll put you to work. Better come
-a bit before eight, though, so’s I can tell you what’s wanted before
-the rush starts. Got any money?”
-
-“A little, sir.”
-
-“Get yourself a suit of overalls; black like these. You’ll need ’em
-likely. Now I got to do something with this kid.” Jim turned and
-observed his offspring frowningly. Terry had at last stopped sobbing
-and was watching interestedly through the front window the operation
-of unloading a car. “How he came to be wandering about here I dunno.
-And maybe his mother’s worrying about him this minute. He ought to be
-home, but I don’t see how I can get him there.”
-
-“Let me take him home,” offered Wayne eagerly. “Just tell me where the
-house is, Mr. Mason.”
-
-The man’s face lightened. “Will you do it?” he exclaimed. “That’s fine,
-then. Will you go with the nice gentleman, Terry?”
-
-Terry looked doubtful, but when Wayne smiled down at him he nodded
-shyly and summoned a smile in return.
-
-“I live on Monmouth Street,” said Jim. “’Tis the fourth house from the
-corner of Railroad Avenue, the one with the sun-parlor on it.” There
-was pride in his voice when he mentioned the sun-parlor and Wayne was
-quite certain that it was the only sun-parlor on Monmouth Street. “Ask
-for Mrs. Mason and just tell her the kid was down to see me and I sent
-him home by you. Don’t tell her about what happened, lad. She’d be tied
-up in a knot. I’ll give her the story when I get home. Maybe you’d
-better go around to the back, for I dunno would she hear you knock,
-being busy in the kitchen likely. Do you want the nice gentleman to
-carry you, Terry, or will you walk along like a little man, eh?”
-
-“Want to be carried,” said Terry promptly. “I’m tired, daddy.”
-
-“’Tis a blessing you ain’t worse than tired, kiddie,” said his father
-feelingly. “How came it you were down here all alone, Terry?”
-
-Terry studied his shoes intently for a moment. At last: “Wanted to see
-choo-choos,” he answered.
-
-“Listen to me, Terry. Don’t you ever come around the choo-choos again
-without somebody’s with you. If you ever do I’ll whale you, kid.
-Remember that. Now go along with the gentleman and be a good boy.”
-
-Wayne carried Terry until they were across the tracks and then the
-child demanded to be set down. “You don’t carry Terry like daddy does,”
-he complained. “Want to walk?” So they went the rest of the way hand
-in hand, Terry, now most communicative, talking incessantly. Wayne had
-a very hazy idea as to the location of Monmouth Street and Terry’s
-directions were difficult to follow, so he had to ask his way several
-times. But he found the house eventually, easily identifying it by the
-sun-parlor which stood out at one end of a tiny front porch like a sore
-thumb. Mrs. Mason proved to be a comely, smiling-faced woman apparently
-some years Jim’s senior. Terry, she explained, as she wiped her hands
-on her apron in the back doorway, had been turned out to play in the
-yard, and he was a bad boy to run away like that. “You might have been
-killed,” she told the child severely, “and the Lord only knows why you
-wasn’t. Thank you, sir, for bringin’ him back, and I hope he was no
-trouble to you.”
-
-“Not a bit, Mrs. Mason. He behaved beautifully. Good-bye, Terry. Be a
-good boy now and don’t run off again.”
-
-“Good-bye,” answered Terry, politely but indifferently. “I got a hen,
-I have, an’ she’s going to have a lot of little chickens pretty soon.
-Want to see her?”
-
-“Not today, Terry, thanks,” laughed Wayne. “Maybe I’ll come and see her
-after the chickens are hatched.”
-
-“All right. Mama, can I have some bread and sugar?”
-
-Wayne left while that question was being debated and hurried off
-uptown, first to tell June the wonderful news and then to purchase that
-black jumper. There was a new quality in the April sunshine now and
-Wayne discovered for the first time that Medfield was an attractive
-place after all. The folks he passed on the street looked friendly,
-the clanging of the trolley car gongs fell pleasantly on his ear; in
-short, the world had quite changed since early morning and was now a
-cheerful, hopeful place, filled with sunshine and bustle and ambition.
-Wayne’s spirits soared like the billowing white clouds of steam above
-the buildings and he whistled a gay little tune as he went along.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-BIG TOM MAKES AN OFFER
-
-
-He spent the afternoon, after his return to “Carhurst,” in planting his
-garden and had the seeds all in by the time June came. He displayed
-the result proudly. Every row was marked with a little stick on which
-was perched the empty seed packet like a white nightcap. June admired
-flatteringly and then, for so it always happens, criticised.
-
-“Seems to me like you ought to put them rows ’tother way roun’, Mas’
-Wayne, ’cause the sun goin’ to shine this yere way. Back home they
-always set the rows with the sun.”
-
-“That’s so, June,” acknowledged Wayne. “I forgot that.” But he was in
-far too fine spirits to be worried by a little thing like that. He said
-he reckoned they’d grow just the same, and June agreed with him, but a
-trifle doubtfully. Then June questioned whether the planting had been
-done at the right time of the moon, and Wayne lost patience and told
-him to get busy and help carry stones for a border. They had to fairly
-dig for those stones and it was almost twilight by the time they had
-the bed neatly edged. Then June washed up and set about his culinary
-duties, leaving Wayne outside to admire his handiwork from various
-angles and try to picture mentally the appearance of that bed three
-months later.
-
-Wayne had brought home a slice of ham as a special delicacy and June
-fried it to a turn, after cutting it in three pieces to fit the
-diminutive pan, and made coffee, and cut bread, and opened a can of
-peaches, and, in brief, prepared a banquet fit for Luculus--or two very
-healthy and hungry boys, one of whom had been on short rations for a
-week! Afterward, by the light of a swinging lantern which had taken the
-place of the candles with which they had at first tried to illumine
-their abode, Wayne read from the newspapers that June picked up at the
-hotel and brought home with him. June had a weakness for such things
-as robberies, murders, fires, shipwrecks, and similar sensations,
-while Wayne always looked for the baseball news first. So, to be quite
-fair, he alternated, reading first, perhaps, the story of a Texas bank
-robbery and following with an interesting rumour regarding the trade
-of Catcher Moffet to the Pirates by the Braves. Toward the last of the
-news budget, especially if the robberies and train wrecks and such
-gave out, June usually fell asleep and snored unflatteringly, and Wayne
-finished his perusal in silence. But tonight the latter early exhausted
-the papers and the boys fell to a discussion of Wayne’s new job and to
-laying plans for the future.
-
-“Of course,” said Wayne, “if I get eight dollars a week it won’t be
-long before we can go on to New York.” He made the observation without
-apparent enthusiasm, however. For the past fortnight New York had
-slipped out of their conversation. June nodded, opened his mouth,
-closed it again without speaking and once more nodded. “It doesn’t
-cost us more than three dollars a week to live and so we’d have twenty
-dollars saved up in no time at all,” Wayne added.
-
-“That’s so,” agreed the other. “Reckon New York’s a mighty fine city,
-ain’ it?”
-
-“Wonderful, June.”
-
-“Uh-huh. Bigger’n Medfield consid’able?”
-
-“Medfield! Why, New York’s a thousand times bigger than Medfield, you
-silly!”
-
-“Say it is?” June digested that in silence for a moment. Then: “Must be
-a powerful big ol’ place, Mas’ Wayne,” he said dolorously. “Ain’ you
-afraid we’d get lost or somethin’. There was a feller I know got lost
-in Atlanta one time an’ he didn’ find hisself for days an’ days, no
-sir! An’ I ’spects New York’s a heap bigger’n Atlanta, ain’ it?”
-
-“Lots bigger. Atlanta’s just a village compared to New York.”
-
-“Uh-huh.” June remained silent this time for many minutes, and Wayne
-too seemed engrossed in thought. Finally, though, June said: “Mas’
-Wayne, what we-all got to go to New York for, sir? Why don’t we stay
-jus’ where we is? We’s both of us got jobs here, an’ goodness only
-knows what’s goin’ to happen to us in that big ol’ place! Why don’t we
-stay put, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“Well,” answered the other slowly, “we started for New York, June, you
-know.”
-
-“Yes, sir, we surely done started for it, but we don’t have to get
-where we started for, does we? Ol’ Eph Jennings, he started for the
-circus one day but he fotched up in the calaboose, Mas’ Wayne. Startin’
-an’ stoppin’s mighty different things, I reckon. Let’s us stay right
-here a little while longer, please, sir.”
-
-“All right, June. I--I guess I’d rather, anyway,” answered Wayne.
-
-The next morning he started at his new work, rather doubtful as to his
-ability to perform it satisfactorily but determined to try his very
-hardest. There were two reasons for that, one the necessity of earning
-money and the other a strong desire to please Jim Mason and prove that
-he had made no mistake in his choice of a helper. By evening of that
-first day, however, Wayne knew that the work was not beyond him, and he
-went home at dusk happy in the knowledge. Perhaps someone who had the
-interests of the boy less at heart might have made that first day in
-the freight house far from simple for him, for, of course, the duties
-were new and strange, but Jim was patient and explained everything
-clearly and in detail. Wayne found that his mathematical ability was
-more than enough to cope with such simple problems as fell to him. Most
-of that morning was occupied in filing away an accumulation of papers
-that had got far ahead of Jim during the time he had had no assistant.
-There were waybills to check after that, and once Wayne had to go
-up and down the yard on a vain search for a mislaid flat car loaded
-with two tractor engines. Jim, relieved of much of the clerical work,
-was busy outside most of the day, but he and Wayne ate their lunches
-together in the little office, Jim sharing the can of coffee he had
-brought.
-
-As the days went on Wayne’s tasks multiplied. He went errands to the
-main office down the track a block, he tacked waycards to freight cars,
-became an adept with lead seals and pincers, learned how to coax open
-a door that had “frozen,” became friends with most of the workers and
-truckmen--not a difficult task since the story of his timely rescue of
-little Terry Mason had gone the rounds and even got in the _Medfield
-Evening Star_, although Wayne didn’t learn of that until later and
-never read the account of his heroism--and got on very famously for
-a new hand. And he liked his work, which is always half the battle.
-Jim began to trust him with bigger things when he had been there a
-fortnight, and Wayne proved worthy of the trust. Perhaps the things
-weren’t so vastly important, after all, but they seemed so to Wayne;
-to Jim, too, for that matter, for Jim was extremely conscientious and
-took his work seriously. After a few days Wayne got to walking across
-the tracks and up the line a ways to the Golden Star Lunch. He was
-always sure of a welcome there, and sometimes, when the wagon wasn’t
-very full, he and “Mister Denny” had long and serious conversations on
-a variety of subjects. Denny had a fair education, was an omnivorous
-reader, a good listener and held views of his own. Moreover, he could
-put his views into words. They were sometimes unusual, but Wayne had a
-feeling that it was a heap better to have opinions and be able to state
-them, even if they were queer, than to merely agree with everyone else.
-
-There was one subject that never failed them as a conversational
-topic, and that was baseball. Denny was a “thirty-third degree fan”
-if ever there was one. Besides that he had some practical knowledge
-of the game, for he had played it from the time he was four feet high
-until he had bought the lunch-wagon and set up in business. Wayne’s
-command of baseball history and percentages was nothing like Denny’s,
-but he followed the news closely and there were some rare discussions
-at times in the Golden Star. Many of the freight handlers and truck
-drivers patronised Denny’s café and Wayne was surprised to find how
-much they knew of the national pastime and how intelligently they could
-talk of it. Quite frequently the lunch-wagon shook with the ardour of
-debate, for there were deep and hearty voices in the company. But a
-time shortly came when Wayne didn’t loiter in the Golden Star after his
-lunch was eaten, for he had found by then a better way to spend the
-remaining time.
-
-He had been in the freight house about a fortnight and May had come
-to the world, bringing ardent sunshine and soft breezes. Green leaves
-were unfolding and the meadows were verdant. It was sometimes a task in
-those first warm days to move, and the trucks that rolled incessantly
-from cars to platform and from platform to freight house moved more
-slowly. One noontime Wayne felt too languorous to walk even as far as
-Denny’s, and so he bought two sandwiches and some apples from a man who
-came around with a basket and joined the throng on the shaded platform
-where the trucks stood. After a while one of the younger fellows pulled
-a baseball from his pocket and soon a half-dozen were throwing and
-catching in the wide cobble-paved road behind the sheds. Wayne watched
-lazily and interestedly until a wild throw sent the ball rolling under
-a truck to his feet. He jumped down and rescued it and threw it back,
-choosing the man farthest distant and speeding the ball to him so hard
-and true that shouts of commendation rewarded him.
-
-“Come on out here, kid, and take a hand,” called one of the players,
-and Wayne, glad enough to do it, responded, forgetting that a quarter
-of an hour ago he had felt too lazy to walk two blocks. There was lots
-of fun to be had, for many of the players, Wayne amongst them, had not
-handled a ball since the summer before and the “hot ones” made them
-wince and yell, something that always brought laughter from the rest.
-Soon a dozen or so were at it and the ball passed from one to another,
-up and down the road. Occasionally a fly would go up and a mad scramble
-ensue in which hats fell off and the ball, as like as not, escaped
-them all. Wayne thoroughly enjoyed that half-hour and resolved to buy a
-baseball on his way home so that he and June could pass.
-
-A few days later someone produced a bran-new bat and the fun increased.
-At the end of a week or so they were playing “scrub” every noon-hour,
-and by common consent the truckmen left their vehicles at the far end
-of the platform so that there would be more room for playing. Even
-so the diamond was pretty narrow and the distance from first base to
-third was ludicrously short. A ball hit to right or left performed
-strange antics, bounding from wall or platform and landing almost
-anywhere in infield or out. Freight handlers, truckmen, clerks from the
-main office, switchmen, even “Big Tom” Maynard, who ran the Limited
-and laid over in Medfield twice a week, took part. And there was a
-slim, good-looking youth named Pattern who worked in the office of
-the coal company several blocks away and who could pitch a ball so
-that you couldn’t see it until it had passed you. With the exception
-of Pattern and possibly a truckman named Donovan, who had once played
-semi-professional ball on some team in New Jersey, Wayne was the star
-of the gatherings. He never failed of a hit save when Pattern was in
-the points, and even then was the only one who could come near to
-meeting that youth’s offerings, and fielded remarkably. So, at least,
-the less adept considered. “Big Tom,” who by virtue of having the best
-run on the road was accorded unusual respect, told Wayne he was wasting
-his time. It was a noon when a sudden shower had driven them to the
-shelter of the overhang.
-
-“If I had a wing like you’ve got, kid, I’d be training for the Big
-League. I surely would. You’re a natural-born ball player, son. I know
-a fellow up in Lebanon who’ll be glad to give you a try-out if you say
-the word.”
-
-“I reckon I’d better stick to what I’m sure of,” laughed Wayne. “I
-reckon I wouldn’t last very long up there.”
-
-“Sure you would,” said Big Tom earnestly. “And look at the money you’d
-be getting! They wouldn’t pay you a cent under twenty dollars, kid!”
-
-“But I’m getting thirty-five here, Mr. Maynard.”
-
-“You’re what? Thirty-five a week?”
-
-“No,” stammered Wayne, “thirty-five a month.”
-
-“What you talking about then? Twenty a week’s what they’d pay you up in
-Lebanon. Maybe a lot more. Tell you what I’ll do, kid; I’ll tell this
-fellow about you the next time I see him, eh?”
-
-But Wayne shook his head. “Thanks, but I reckon I’ll stick here,” he
-answered.
-
-Big Tom told him he was making a mistake and appealed for confirmation
-to Pattern who had joined them. Pattern laughed. “Twenty dollars, you
-say? What sort of a team is it, Maynard?”
-
-“It’s a corking good team, that’s what sort----”
-
-“I mean is it professional? Or semi or what?”
-
-“Why, I guess it’s a professional team. Sure it is. They play in the
-Central City League.”
-
-“I see. Well, I’d advise this fellow to keep out of it then. He’d be
-wasting his time with a bunch of pikers like that.” Pattern turned
-from Big Tom’s indignant countenance to Wayne. “When you think you’d
-like to play ball for a living, you tackle the manager of a real team.
-Tell him you want a try-out. He will give it to you if he’s any good.
-If he isn’t you don’t want to join him. These two-by-twice ball teams
-don’t get you anything but a lot of hard work and you can stay in one
-of them until you’re gray-headed without doing any better for yourself.
-I played with one of them one summer and I know something about them.
-When you aim, aim high. It pays.”
-
-“I wasn’t thinking of aiming at all,” said Wayne. “I don’t reckon I
-could play baseball good enough for a real team.”
-
-“Maybe you could and maybe you couldn’t,” replied Pattern. “Anyway,
-don’t throw up a good job on the off-chance of becoming a Ty Cobb or a
-Baker.”
-
-Big Tom took himself off, disgruntled and grumbling, and Pattern swung
-himself to the platform at Wayne’s side. “How old are you?” he asked,
-and raised his eyebrows when Wayne told him seventeen. “I’d have
-thought you were eighteen, anyway,” he said. “Played much?”
-
-“I played four years at home,” answered Wayne, “on my school team. And
-one summer with a team we got up in our town.”
-
-“That all? Well, some fellows are like that. Sort of born with the
-baseball knack. Comes naturally to them. My roommate in college was
-that sort. He didn’t have to learn, you might say. He was the shiftiest
-shortstop I ever saw outside professional teams. You sort of remind me
-of him the way you handle the ball.”
-
-“Do they really pay as much as twenty dollars a week?” asked Wayne. “I
-mean just for fielders. Of course I know that pitchers and star batters
-get lots of money, but I always thought most of it was just--just on
-paper.”
-
-“There are all sorts of salaries. You get somewhere near what you’re
-worth, as a general thing. Twenty a week is poor pay for a good
-fielder, my boy, even in the bushes. Thirty-five’s more like it.”
-
-“Thirty-five dollars a week!” exclaimed Wayne. “Why, that’s more than
-two hundred a month!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-NEW FRIENDS
-
-
-“Yes, I believe it figures out something like that,” laughed the
-other. “But, mind you, I’m not saying you could get that. Probably you
-couldn’t get anything yet. You’re a year or two too young. If I were
-you, and thought seriously of playing professional ball, I’d get on
-some amateur team this year and play with them for the practice.”
-
-“What’s the difference, please, between an amateur team and a
-professional?”
-
-“Money. On an amateur team you play for the love of playing and nothing
-else. On a professional team you play for the love of playing plus a
-fat salary.”
-
-“I see,” murmured Wayne. “But could I--I mean would you----”
-
-“Sure, if I needed the money,” was the answer. “I wouldn’t be a
-professional ball player and expect to stick at it all my life. You
-can’t do it. The pace is too hard. But if I had the ability and could
-command a good salary for playing ball I’d do it, and keep my eyes
-open for something better. I know a chap who played professional ball
-for six years and studied law in the winter and whenever he got a
-chance. Then he went into an office two winters. After that he quit
-baseball and now he’s doing well over in Trenton. Lots of folks think
-professional baseball is like highway robbery or something. They class
-professional ball players and prize fighters and thugs all together. I
-guess there was a time when some ball players were a roughish lot, but
-that’s gone by. Most of them are just like the rest of us nowadays.
-A lot of them lead cleaner lives than the folks who knock them. They
-have to, for one thing. Anyway, they do it. You can be a professional
-ball player now and be a gentleman, too. Most of them are. A great many
-are college fellows; practically all are educated. They don’t expect
-to make a life’s work of it, you see. They’ve got the gift of playing
-good ball and they turn it into money, just the same as a man who has
-the gift of teaching Greek turns it into money. It’s just a business
-proposition. Where your ball player has it on some of the rest of us is
-just here: he likes his work and we don’t!”
-
-Pattern knocked the ashes from his pipe against the edge of the
-platform and yawned. “I’ve got to get back,” he announced. “It’s nearly
-one. Think over what I said about joining an amateur team and getting
-practice, my boy. That’s your best move.” He nodded, smiled, and
-hurried away, leaving Wayne, for some reason, rather excited.
-
-He had never considered playing baseball for a living, had never taken
-his ability seriously. He had known since he was fourteen that he
-could field and throw and bat far better than his playmates, but he
-had accepted the fact without concern. They had made him captain of
-his school team in his last year and he had led them through a season
-of almost uninterrupted victories. And that summer he had played
-twice a week with the “White Sox,” a local aggregation formed by the
-young men and older boys in Sleepersville, holding down third base
-with phenomenal success and winning renown with his bat. But never
-until today had it occurred to him that he might perhaps earn money
-in such a simple way as playing a game he loved. It didn’t sound
-sensible, he thought. Why, he would be glad to play baseball for
-his board and lodging alone! Glad to do it for nothing if he could
-afford to! To receive thirty-five dollars a week, or even twenty, for
-doing it sounded absurd. But, of course, fellows did get paid for it,
-and--and--well, it was something to think over!
-
-He thought it over a good deal during the succeeding days. He had
-another talk with Pattern, waylaying him one evening on his return from
-the coal office. He had, he said, decided to follow the other’s advice
-about joining an amateur team, but he didn’t know how to do it, didn’t
-know where there was such a team.
-
-“There’s one here in Medfield,” replied Pattern. “Two, in fact. The
-Athletics have a pretty fair bunch, but I don’t believe they’d take you
-on. They’re rather a silk-stocking lot. The other team is the Chenango.
-Younger fellows mostly: the Y. M. C. A. bunch. By the way, you don’t
-belong to the Y. M. C. A., do you? Why don’t you join? It won’t cost
-you much of anything and will do you a lot of good all around. You’ll
-meet fellows, for one thing. I’ll get you an application, Sloan. It’s
-something you ought to do, my boy.”
-
-“I’d like to very much,” said Wayne. “But I’m afraid I wouldn’t have
-much time for playing ball. You see, I have to work until five every
-day.”
-
-“Most of the others do, too, I guess. They usually hold practice after
-that time. You’ll have your Saturday afternoons to yourself after
-the middle of June, and they only play on Saturdays. You join the
-Association, Sloan, and I’ll make you acquainted with some of the
-chaps there. You’ll find them a nice lot. And I guess you won’t have
-much trouble getting a chance to play.”
-
-Pattern--his full name was Arthur Pattern, as Wayne eventually
-learned--was as good as his word and four days later Wayne was a member
-of the Medfield Young Men’s Christian Association and had increased his
-list of acquaintances about two hundred per cent. The Association had a
-comfortable building in the new business district, with a well-equipped
-gymnasium, a small auditorium, reading, lounging, and game rooms, and
-a few bedrooms at the top of the building, one of which Arthur Pattern
-occupied. Pattern, Wayne learned, was not a native of Medfield, but
-had come there a year before from a small town in New Hampshire, where
-his folks still resided. Pattern preferred his room at the Y. M. C.
-A. to similar accommodation at a boarding-house. It was in Pattern’s
-little room that Wayne made a clean breast of his adventures for the
-past three months. His host, who had vouched for him to the Association
-without knowing any more about him than had been revealed to him in
-their few meetings in the freight yard, had asked no questions, but
-Wayne thought he owed some account of himself to his new friend.
-Pattern listened interestedly, and when Wayne had ended shook his head
-slowly.
-
-“It’s none of my business, Sloan,” he said, “and I don’t know what you
-were up against back home, but this thing of running away is usually a
-pretty poor business. However, that’s done now. One thing I would do if
-I were you, though, is write back and tell your stepfather where you
-are and how you are. I guess you owe him that much. Will you do that?”
-
-Wayne consented doubtfully. “I wouldn’t want him to come after me,
-though, and fetch me home with him,” he said.
-
-“I dare say he could do that, but I don’t believe he would. From what
-you’ve told me of him--or, maybe, from what you haven’t told me--I
-gather that he might be rather relieved to be rid of the expense of
-clothing and feeding you, Sloan. Anything in that?”
-
-“A heap, I reckon. I don’t mind his knowing where I am as long as he
-doesn’t make trouble.”
-
-“I don’t see what trouble he could make,” objected Pattern. “Anyway,
-you’d feel better for writing. I’d tell him why I left, that I was well
-and getting on and that I meant to make my own way.”
-
-“June wrote to his mother a little while after we got here, so I reckon
-Mr. Higgins knows I’m still alive. June didn’t tell where we were,
-though.”
-
-“Where did he mail his letter?” asked the other. “Here in Medfield?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then it seems to me he may have a suspicion,” laughed Pattern.
-
-“I never thought of that!” exclaimed Wayne, joining the laughter. “I
-reckon if he’d wanted me back he’d been after me before this, then.
-I’ll write tonight, before I go home.”
-
-“I would. What about this boy that’s with you? Why doesn’t he join
-here, too?”
-
-“June? Why, he--he’s coloured!”
-
-“So you said. What’s that got to do with it? Isn’t he a clean, decent
-boy?”
-
-“Why, yes, but--I thought----”
-
-“We don’t draw the colour line up here, Sloan. We’ve got more than
-a dozen coloured fellows in the Association right now. Some of them
-are mighty well liked, too. You’d better get your friend to come in.
-It’ll be good for him and good for us. We’re trying to get all the new
-members we can. See if you can’t persuade him.”
-
-“Oh, he will join if I tell him to,” responded Wayne carelessly. “But
-it seems--sort of funny----”
-
-“Yes, but you’re not down in Dixie now, my boy. Remember that.”
-
-For once, however, Wayne’s authority failed him. June firmly and
-respectfully declined to have anything to do with the Y. M. C. A.
-“Maybe it’s jus’ like you-all say, Mas’ Wayne, but I ain’ fixin’ to act
-like these yere Northern darkies, no, sir! I done watch ’em. They acts
-like they thought they was quality, Mas’ Wayne, dressin’ themselves up
-in store clothes an’ buttin’ white folks right off’n the sidewalk! If
-they was down in Colquitt County someone’d hit ’em over the head with a
-axe!”
-
-“But this isn’t Colquitt County, June. This is up North, and things are
-different here. Up here a coloured man is as good as a white man--at
-least they think he is.”
-
-“No, sir, Mas’ Wayne, they don’ think that, sir. They jus’ perten’ they
-thinks it. Don’ no white man sit down to a table with a nigger, does
-they? They lets you ride in the same car with the white folks, but you
-can’ go to white folkses hotel. It’s mighty mixed up, Mas’ Wayne, an’
-you don’ know where you is!”
-
-“But there are a lot of coloured fellows in the Y. M. C. A., June.
-Doesn’t that show that it’s all right for you to join it?”
-
-“Shows it’s all right for them, Mas’ Wayne, but it don’ prove nothin’
-to me! I jus’ wouldn’ care for it. White folks is white folks an’
-niggers is niggers, an’ there ain’ no gettin’ aroun’ it, Mas’ Wayne.
-No, sir, don’ you ask me to join no ’Sociation, Mas’ Wayne.”
-
-Secretly, Wayne was a little relieved at June’s decision, for he held
-the same views on the subject. He and June had been playmates when
-they were tiny, companions later, and friends always, but he had been
-brought up in the firm conviction that the negro was an inferior race.
-Whether he was right or wrong I don’t pretend to know.
-
-At all events, June remained firm. By this time he was flourishing
-exceedingly. His deposit had been paid and he was now getting three
-dollars every Monday from the proprietor of the hotel and earning
-an average of twice that amount in tips, all of which, it may be
-truthfully stated, he did his honest best to deserve. He was easily the
-most popular of the four bell boys employed at the hotel, and, since
-envy and malice are not confined to those with white skins, he had
-had his troubles. The head bell boy who, prior to June’s advent, had
-ruled the roost with a high hand, levying toll on the earnings of the
-other and younger boys, had not yielded his rule without a struggle.
-But he had run up against a Tartar in June, for the latter refused to
-either acknowledge the other’s right of dominion or give up any of his
-earnings to him. The eventual result was a decisive battle with fists
-in the furnace-room, a bout in which June, in spite of smaller size and
-weight, conclusively proved his superiority. The head bell boy retired
-from public life for the space of one whole day, and, when he returned,
-brought back with him a meek and respectful demeanour. June didn’t
-deceive himself into thinking that the other was any fonder of him for
-the beating he had received, but he was quite sure that thereafter he
-would be let alone.
-
-Meanwhile Wayne learned a little better every day how to make himself
-useful to Jim Mason and every day grew to find more interest in his
-work. He became a great favourite with the men around the freight yard,
-while Jim never missed an opportunity to do him any kindness in his
-power. Frequently Wayne was invited to the house with the sun-parlor
-for supper or Sunday dinner, and less frequently he accepted the
-invitation and went. He was always certain of good, well-cooked food
-which, if plain, was abundant. Mrs. Mason had long since learned of
-Wayne’s rescue of Terry and could never do enough for him. Terry, too,
-welcomed the visitor, evincing an almost embarrassing enthusiasm for
-his society. Wayne was duly introduced to the wonderful hen--whose
-name, strangely enough, proved to be Teddie--and to her even more
-wonderful brood of chickens, four in number.
-
-In consequence of new friends and new interests, Wayne naturally
-spent less time at “Carhurst” and saw less of June. But June, too,
-had found friends amongst his own race and was not lonesome. In fact,
-he confided to Wayne one evening after supper, while the latter was
-anxiously examining the growth of his plants and watering them from the
-dish pan, that he “liked this yere place right smart,” adding that he
-“reckoned it wasn’t never intended they should go to New York.” June
-had blossomed forth in new clothes which, while extremely inexpensive,
-made him look quite fine. Wayne tried to tease him by saying that he
-was just like a Northern nigger now, but June didn’t mind. “’Tain’ your
-clothes, Mas’ Wayne, that makes you ’spectable,” he said. “It’s the way
-you acts!”
-
-Wayne, too, had provided himself with new attire. It was Arthur Pattern
-who tactfully hinted at the advisability of enlarging his wardrobe,
-something that Wayne had had in mind for a fortnight and had been
-deterred from doing only by the realisation of the tremendous hole the
-outlay would make in his savings. When he did emerge from the clothing
-store carrying a neat blue serge suit in a big pasteboard box he was
-as near penniless as one could be and have a jingle left in his pocket!
-But the expenditure paid for itself if only in the comfortable feeling
-of being decently dressed when Wayne went to the Y. M. C. A. of an
-afternoon, as had become his custom. Usually Arthur Pattern stopped for
-him on his way past the freight house and they walked uptown together.
-Wayne saw his circle of acquaintances grow from day to day, thanks
-to Arthur, and it wasn’t long before he could truthfully echo June’s
-sentiments and say that he “liked this yere place right smart.” And
-finally, as May was drawing to its end, he secured what he had hoped
-for from the first, an invitation to join the Chenango Base-Ball Club
-squad and show what he could do.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE CHENANGO CLUB
-
-
-The club had already played several games by that time, but, as all
-the members were either attending high school or employed at work,
-one day’s line-up was seldom like another’s. Captain Taylor never
-knew until the last moment which of his team members would be able to
-play and in consequence he tried to have two good players for every
-position. Practice was held in a field on the edge of town leased by
-the Association. It wasn’t either very level or very spacious, but
-it sufficed. It had a board fence around it, contained a small grand
-stand, a shed which answered the purpose of dressing-room, a cinder
-track, one-eighth mile in circumference, and jumping pits. The practice
-hour was five o’clock, or as soon after as the fellows could reach the
-field, and they kept at it as long as daylight lasted or hunger would
-go unappeased.
-
-Wayne found some twenty-odd fellows in attendance the afternoon of his
-first appearance. All of them wore a uniform of some description or
-a portion of one. All, that is, save Wayne, who had given no thought
-to the matter of attire. Still, he was no worse off than Hoffman,
-whose regalia consisted of a pair of football trousers and stockings
-in combination with his usual street clothes. Hoffman was a catcher,
-and when he donned mask and protector he made a laughable appearance.
-His first name was Augustus, but he had been known as Gus until he had
-become a clerk in the office of the gas company. Now he was called
-“Gas” Hoffman. He was a fairly good catcher and a slugging batsman, as
-catchers so often are.
-
-Practice with the Chenangos was work very largely diluted with play.
-As a captain, Joe Taylor was anything but a martinet. Wayne, recalling
-his own strict discipline when he had captained his school team the
-year before, decided that Taylor erred on the side of laxity. Perhaps,
-however, the Chenango captain knew his business, for there was a very
-evident disinclination on the part of most of the candidates to take
-their occupation seriously. They were there for fun and meant to have
-it. Wayne had wondered that Arthur Pattern had not tried for the team
-until Arthur had explained that his playing on a semi-professional team
-in New Hampshire one summer had taken him out of the amateur class
-and that since the Chenango was a purely amateur club he would have no
-right there.
-
-The fellows at the field that afternoon averaged nineteen years of age.
-One or two were older, among them “Gas” Hoffman and Captain Taylor.
-Gas was twenty-three and Taylor twenty-one. To even the average, young
-Despaigne, who played shortstop very cleverly, was only seventeen,
-and Collins, a fielder, was scarcely older. Wayne suffered for lack
-of baseball shoes that day and made up his mind to buy a pair at the
-first opportunity. There was about twenty minutes of fielding and
-batting practice and then two teams were chosen and six innings were
-played. Wayne was put at third base on the second-string nine and
-made a good impression in spite of his lack of practice. At bat he
-failed ignominiously to hit safely even once, but, having waited out
-the pitcher in one inning, he got to first and gave a very pretty
-exhibition of base-stealing a moment later, reaching the coveted bag
-simultaneously with the ball but eluding it by a dexterous hook-slide
-that kept him far out of reach of the baseman’s sweep.
-
-It was all over at half-past six and the fellows walked back toward the
-centre of town together, still very full of spirits, disappearing one
-by one down side streets until at last only Hal Collins, a tall youth
-named Wheelock, and Wayne remained. Wheelock played first base and was
-thin and angular and wore glasses over a pair of pale, peering eyes.
-He was about nineteen, Wayne judged, and had a slow, drawling manner
-of speech and a dry humour. Collins was a quick, nervous youngster,
-inclined to be sarcastic. Wayne liked Jim Wheelock best, although
-for a while he was never sure whether Jim’s remarks were serious or
-otherwise. It was Jim who praised Wayne’s throws to first base as they
-tramped along Whitney Street.
-
-“You peg the ball across like you were looking where you were sending
-it,” drawled Jim. “Playing first would be a cinch if they all did that,
-Sloan.”
-
-“Jim’s idea of playing first,” said Hal Collins, “is to stand on the
-bag and pick ’em off his chest. He hates to reach for anything.”
-
-“My arms are four inches longer than they were before I started playing
-ball with this gang,” responded Jim, “and I’ve got joints in my legs
-that aren’t human!”
-
-“Don’t any of them look human to me,” said Hal. “Say, where was Harry
-Brewster today? Someone said he was sick or something.”
-
-“Yes, he’s got the sleeping disease,” answered Jim gravely. “Had it
-ever since he got his berth in the State National. That’s why they call
-it a berth when you get a job in a bank. They give you a column of
-figures to add up in the morning and if you’re not asleep by half-past
-ten they fire you. About four they go around with a pole and jab it
-through the cages. If you don’t wake up then they put a blanket over
-you and lock you in. They say Harry’s the best little sleeper they’ve
-got. Wouldn’t wonder if they made him president pretty soon.”
-
-“Oh, quit your kidding,” laughed Hal. “What _is_ the matter with him,
-Jim?”
-
-“Cold. Went to sleep on a New York draft yesterday.”
-
-“Sure it wasn’t counting coins? You can catch gold that way, you know.”
-
-“Yes, but it’s not so hard to check. Good-night, fellows.” Jim tramped
-off down a side street and Collins asked Wayne which way he went.
-
-“I go down the next street,” was the answer.
-
-“Boarding?”
-
-“No, I--we keep house. About two miles out.”
-
-“Oh! Well, see you again. Here’s my turn. Good-night.”
-
-It was nearly dark when Wayne reached “Carhurst” and June had supper
-ready and waiting. Sam was ready and waiting, too, but he forgot his
-hunger long enough to make a fuss over his master. Wayne narrated his
-experiences of the day while they plied busy knives and forks and
-then June brought the chronicle of his life down to date. But the most
-interesting item of information to Wayne was June’s announcement that
-one of the tomato plants had buds on it, and nothing would do but that
-Wayne had to jump up from “table” and rush forth in the twilight and
-see for himself. The garden was showing promise by that time, although
-nothing was more than a few inches high.
-
-Wayne was up early the next morning so as to do a half-hour’s gardening
-before he left for town. He had long since made the discovery that
-eradicating grass from a meadow is not a simple matter of removing
-the turf, for the grass was always threatening to choke his seedlings
-utterly, and it was only by watching and working that he was able to
-keep it down. When he wasn’t weeding he was poking up the dirt with a
-pointed stick in lieu of trowel. June called this “coaxin’ ’em,” and
-opined that “if they flowers don’ act pretty, Mas’ Wayne, ’twon’ be
-no fault o’ yourn!” But it was the tomato plants that interested June
-most, and he was forever estimating the crop to be picked later on from
-the six rather spindling plants that they had bought at the grocer’s.
-He declared that each one ought to yield fifteen “big, red, ripe, juicy
-tomatuses,” and that if they consumed only six a day the supply would
-provide for them only two weeks. It was June’s firm and oft reiterated
-conviction that they should have planted just three times as many!
-Tomatoes were a weakness with June.
-
-But two days later he found something besides the prospective tomato
-crop to interest his idle hours. At Wayne’s invitation he met the
-latter at the freight house one afternoon and accompanied him out to
-the Y. M. C. A. field to watch the doings. But just looking on never
-suited June very well and it wasn’t a quarter of an hour before he was
-on speaking terms with everyone there. The fellows enjoyed hearing
-his soft dialect and did their best to draw him out, punctuating his
-remarks with laughter. June was speedily established on the bench,
-and from just sitting idly there to presiding over the bats and the
-fortunes of the players was but a short step.
-
-“Jus’ you let me choose you a bat, Mister Cap’n. I goin’ put a conjur
-on this yere stick o’ wood, sir, an’ you-all’s goin’ to everlastin’ly
-lam that yere ball, yes, sir!”
-
-As it happened Joe Taylor did “everlastingly lam the ball,” sending
-it over left fielder’s head, and June’s reputation as a prophet, as
-well as his status as Keeper of the Bats, was firmly established. He
-was back again the next day, good-natured and smiling and anxious
-to serve, and was welcomed like a long-lost friend. June was never
-“fresh,” no matter how many opportunities were presented, nor would he
-accept the footing of equality that was offered him. He picked up the
-bat hurled aside by the man streaking to first and dropped it neatly in
-its place in front of the bench, soon knew which bat each player liked
-best and was ready with it, saw that the water pail was kept filled
-and, in brief, filled the office of general factotum so well that the
-question arose of how they had ever got along without him!
-
-It was Jim Wheelock who suggested June’s adoption as official club
-mascot. “No wonder we don’t win more’n half our games,” drawled Jim.
-“We’ve never had a mascot. Here’s our chance, fellows. That darkey
-was just created to be a mascot. You can see it written all over him.
-Here’s where our luck changes.”
-
-“We’ll stake him to a uniform,” suggested Joe Taylor, “and take him
-over to Ludlow Saturday. Guess we’ll have style if nothing else!”
-
-June was complacent, even proud. “Fetch along your uniform, Mister
-Cap’n,” he said. “Only don’ you put no stripes on it, please, sir.”
-When, however, June learned that he was required to take train with
-the fellows at two o’clock he was dubious. “Don’ know about that,
-gen’lemen. You see, I got a mighty ’portant position at the hotel an’
-I dunno will my boss let me off.”
-
-“We’ll ask him to, June,” replied Taylor. “He’s a regular baseball fan
-himself and never misses a home game, I guess. He won’t kick. You leave
-it to us.”
-
-“Yes, sir, jus’ as you says. I surely would love to ’company you-all. I
-reckon Mas’ Wayne won’ have no objection.”
-
-“Who? Sloan? What’s he got to say about it, June?” demanded Hal
-Collins. “He doesn’t own you, does he?”
-
-“Don’ nobody _own_ me,” replied June, “but Mas’ Wayne he got the
-say-so, yes, sir.”
-
-So Wayne was called into consultation and gave his permission, and
-on Saturday, when the team, fourteen strong as to players and half a
-hundred strong as to “rooters,” left Medfield they took with them one
-Junius Brutus Bartow Tasker radiantly attired in a bran-new suit of
-light gray flannel, with a pair of blue stockings and a jaunty cap.
-The shirt was a great joy to June, for on the left side was a big blue
-“C” surrounding an Indian’s head. Jim Wheelock told him the Indian was
-Mr. Chenango, after whom the club was named, and that he had been in
-his time a celebrated first baseman with the Susquehannock Club of the
-Passamaquoddy League. How much of that June believed I can’t say, but
-he certainly was proud of those baseball togs.
-
-They played the Ludlow Y. M. C. A. that afternoon and were beaten
-ingloriously, 14 to 4. The Chenangos relied on their second-best
-pitcher, and his work was nearer third-best on that occasion. Wayne
-got a chance in the eighth inning, pinch-hitting for Despaigne, who
-was never a strong batter, and subsequently going in at third when
-a substitute was wanted. Wayne did well enough in the infield but
-failed to hit, which was about the way with the others. Hitting was
-the Chenangos’ weak point that day. Pitching was another, however,
-scarcely less lamentable. As Jim Wheelock said on the way home, it
-would have taken eighteen fellows instead of nine to keep Ludlow from
-scoring her runs. Jordan, the substitute pitcher, was hit “fast, far,
-and frequent,” and the tiredest members of the visiting team were the
-outfielders.
-
-Several good-natured jibes were aimed at June on the return trip, but
-June didn’t mind them a bit. “Ain’ no mascot as ever was, gen’lemen,
-can change the luck for a team that ain’ hittin’. I done my mascotin’
-all right, but you gen’lemen didn’ give me no kind o’ support!”
-
-There was one thing about his companions that Wayne admired, and
-that was their good nature in defeat. He remembered that when his
-school team had returned from that disastrous contest with Athens High
-gloom thick enough to be cut with a knife had enveloped them. After
-all, playing ball was sport and not business, and why should they be
-downhearted over a defeat? Whether they should or not, they certainly
-were not. Even Jordan, who had so ignominiously failed in the box,
-seemed no whit upset, nor did the rest hold it against him. They had
-quite as merry a time of it returning home as they had had going to
-Ludlow.
-
-But it was apparent on Monday that Captain Taylor meant to do better
-the next time. Several substitutes were changed over into the first
-nine, and Wayne was amongst them. Wayne was bothered because he
-couldn’t hit the ball as he was capable of hitting it, but comforted
-himself with the assurance that practice would bring back his former
-skill. But it didn’t seem to. In the next four practice games he
-secured but one clean hit, a two-bagger, and a very doubtful “scratch.”
-He confided to June one evening that he was afraid he had forgotten how
-to hit. “That fellow Chase isn’t nearly as much of a pitcher as Ned
-Calhoun was, and I never had much trouble with Ned, did I?”
-
-“Mas’ Wayne,” said June, “I done been watchin’ you, sir, an’ I goin’
-to tell you-all jus’ what the trouble is.”
-
-“I wish you would,” sighed Wayne. “What is it?”
-
-“You-all’s too anxious. Anxiousness jus’ sticks out all over you when
-you goes to bat. Now the nex’ time, Mas’ Wayne, jus’ you go up there
-an’ tell you’self you don’ care ’tall if you hits or if you don’ hit.
-Jus’ you forget how anxious you is an’ watch that ol’ pill an’ hit it
-on the nose. If you does that, sir, you’s goin’ to see it travel, yes,
-sir!”
-
-Wayne thought it over and decided that perhaps June had really found
-the trouble. At all events, the advice sounded good and he determined
-to try to profit by it. The result wasn’t very encouraging the next
-day, but on Friday he had the satisfaction of getting two hard
-singles, and after that his return to form was speedy. Neither Chase,
-the Chenangos’ best twirler, nor Jordan, who was capable of pitching
-very decent ball when at his best, had any further terror for him. He
-lambasted them both impartially, much to June’s delight. “What did I
-done tell you, Mas’ Wayne?” he demanded as Wayne returned to the bench
-after turning his second hit into a run with the aid of Gas Hoffman’s
-single and a stolen base. “Ain’ nobody else got them two hits today
-yet, sir. Reckon you’s done come into your own again, Mas’ Wayne!”
-
-They went up against the Athletics, the team that Arthur Pattern had
-referred to as “a silk-stocking lot,” the next afternoon and scored a
-victory when, with the bases full in the seventh, Larry Colton banged
-a two-bagger down the alley into right. The three resulting runs put
-the Chenangos two tallies to the good and there they stayed in spite
-of the Athletics’ desperate efforts to score in the eighth and ninth.
-It was Wayne who cut off a run in the first of those two innings when
-he reached far above his head and brought down what was labelled “two
-bases” when it left the bat. A perfect peg to second caught the runner
-flat-footed and retired the side.
-
-That play, together with two singles and a base on balls in four times
-at bat, settled Wayne’s right to a position on the team. In fact, he
-was already spoken of as the best player in the infield, although to
-Wayne it seemed that no amateur could handle himself and the ball as
-Victor Despaigne did at shortstop. But Despaigne, while he fielded
-almost miraculously, was a more uncertain thrower, and only Jim
-Wheelock’s reach--and, possibly, those extra joints of which he had
-told--saved him from many errors.
-
-The regular second baseman was a chap named Tad Stearns. Tad played
-his position steadily if not spectacularly, and Captain Taylor was
-perfectly satisfied with him. It was Tad who almost invariably took
-Hoffman’s throws to the second bag and who was always a stumbling-block
-in the way of second-nine fellows seeking to win renown as
-base-stealers. When, some three weeks after Wayne’s connection with
-the team, Tad fell down an elevator shaft in the carpet factory where
-he was employed as shipping clerk and broke his left arm and otherwise
-incapacitated himself for either work or play for some two months
-to follow, Taylor was left in a quandary. Tad Stearns’ understudy,
-Herrick, was not good enough, and when the news reached the field one
-afternoon that Tad was out of the game for the rest of the summer
-there was a consultation that included everyone on hand. As frequently
-occurred, it was Jim Wheelock who offered the most promising solution.
-
-“Why don’t you let Sloan go to second,” he asked, “and put Whiteback at
-third? You want a good man on second.”
-
-“That might do,” answered Joe, “if Sloan can play second. Ever try it,
-Sloan?”
-
-“I’ve played second a little,” Wayne answered. “I’ll be glad to try it
-again if you like.”
-
-“Sure,” agreed Hoffman, swinging his mask, “that’s the best way out of
-it. Beat it down there, Sloan, and I’ll slip you a few throws. You and
-Vic ought to work together finely.”
-
-“All right,” said Captain Taylor, “we’ll try it that way. Billy White,
-you take third, will you? It’s just like Tad to fall down a shaft right
-in the middle of the season,” he ended grumblingly.
-
-“Yes,” said Jim drily, “he never did have any consideration for folks.
-Thoughtless, I call him.”
-
-Joe grinned. “Oh, well, I suppose he didn’t mean to do it,” he
-answered. “I must drop around this evening and see how he is. All
-right, fellows! Let’s get at it!”
-
-So that is how Wayne became a second instead of a third baseman. After
-two or three days in the position he decided, and all who watched him
-in action decided, that second was where he belonged. He took throws
-from the plate nicely and developed an almost uncanny ability to
-outguess the base-runner, and the way he blocked him off was good to
-see. He had to guard against over-throwing to first for a while, for
-the distance was strange, but it didn’t take him long to learn to snap
-instead of speeding them to Wheelock. The best thing of all, however,
-was the way in which he and Vic Despaigne fitted into each other. As
-Gas Hoffman had predicted, they worked together nicely and double plays
-began to be so frequent as to scarcely merit remark. At third, White
-got along very well, although he was scarcely as dependable as Wayne
-had been. He got better as the season progressed, however, and by the
-first of July the Chenango infield was about as good as they make them
-for amateur teams.
-
-Up to that time the club had played seven games, of which it had won
-three, lost three, and tied one. The Fourth of July contest was with
-the Toonalta A. A., and, since Toonalta had beaten Joe’s charges
-the year before and the year before that, Chenango was very anxious
-to score a victory. The game was to be played at Medfield, a fact
-calculated to favour the home team, and Joe and most of the others were
-quite hopeful. But Joe didn’t allow that to keep him from putting the
-nine through some very strenuous practice during the week preceding the
-contest.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-MEDFIELD CELEBRATES
-
-
-Medfield began her celebration of the Fourth about twenty-four hours
-ahead of time and gradually worked up to a top-notch of noise,
-eloquence, and patriotism at approximately one o’clock Tuesday
-afternoon, at which hour the observances in City Park were at their
-height. Everyone had turned out, in spite of the almost unbearable
-heat, and every club or association, from the Grand Army Post to the
-Medfield Women’s Civic Association, had marched in the procession that,
-headed by a platoon of police and a very stout Grand Marshal seated
-precariously on one of Callahan’s livery horses, had, in the words of
-the next day’s _Morning Chronicle_, “taken just forty-eight minutes to
-pass a given point.” The _Chronicle_ neglected, however, to mention the
-fact that the given point to which it referred was the Grand Street
-crossing where the procession had been held up quite ten minutes by an
-inconsiderate freight train! Still, it was a fine parade, any way you
-looked at it. The Fire Department made a glorious showing, the Sons of
-Veterans marched well in spite of the small boys who got under their
-feet, the High School Cadets displayed quite a martial appearance, and
-the various floats, from that of the Women’s Civic Association, which
-depicted a somewhat wabbly, Grecian-robed America accepting a liberty
-cap from General Washington, down to the clattering, tinkling wagon
-hung with tin pans and dippers and plates and dustpans that represented
-the Medfield Stamping Works, all added to the brilliance of the
-occasion!
-
-You may be certain that neither Wayne nor June missed that parade. On
-the contrary, they viewed it four separate and distinct times, dodging
-through side streets as soon as the tail end had passed and reaching a
-new point of vantage before the head of it appeared. June was frankly
-disappointed in that the Grand Marshal managed somehow to remain in the
-saddle until the very end and then left it of his own free will and,
-it is suspected, very thankfully. June remained hopeful to the last,
-but was doomed to disappointment. He had a wearied, sleepy appearance
-today, had June, explained by the fact that he had stayed up all last
-night with some of his cronies, doing his best to make the occasion
-memorable in the annals of Medfield, assisting at the lighting and
-nourishing of the bonfire on Tannery Hill, observing the firing of
-the cannon in the park at dawn, and finally returning to “Carhurst” at
-breakfast time with the look of one completely surfeited with pleasure.
-Wayne had been rather cross at first, but his anger had subsided at
-sight of June’s left hand. June, it seemed, had lighted a Roman candle
-and, unwisely obeying the instructions of an acquaintance, had held it
-by the business end. He hadn’t held it that way long, but long enough
-to burn the palm of his hand so badly that he had to wear a bandage for
-nearly a week.
-
-The two boys listened to the speeches and singing at the park, ate a
-hurried and fragmentary dinner at a downtown lunch-room, and then hied
-themselves to the Y. M. C. A. field. The game with Toonalta was to
-begin at half-past two, but owing to the fact that Joe Taylor and Jim
-Wheelock and one or two others had spent the noontime swaying about on
-top of the Association float and that it took them some time to change
-from Historical Personages to baseball players, it was nearly three
-when, before an audience that crowded the stand and flowed over on both
-sides of the field, Pete Chase wound up and sent the first delivery
-speeding across the plate for a strike.
-
-It was a sizzling hot afternoon, with scarcely a breath of air blowing
-across the diamond. The glare on the gray-brown dirt of the base path
-hurt the eyes, and Wayne, clad in almost immaculate, new baseball
-togs, felt the perspiration trickling down his back and from under
-the edge of his cap. Between him and the pitcher’s box heat waves
-danced and shimmered. His throwing hand was moist and he wiped it on
-a trouser leg. The Chenango infield was talking hearteningly to Chase
-and each other, Jim Wheelock’s drawl mingling with Vic Despaigne’s
-sharp staccato. There were two umpires that day and Wayne was wondering
-how the one on the bases stood the heat in his blue flannel attire,
-with his coat buttoned tightly from chin to waist. Chase wasted one
-and then put a second strike across. Medfield’s adherents cheered and
-the chatter in the field increased again. Then there was a _crack_ and
-Chase put up a lazy gloved hand, turned and tossed the ball to Jim. One
-out!
-
-After that, for several innings, Wayne forgot how hot he was. East, the
-Toonalta left fielder, also fell victim to Chase’s slants, but Burns,
-second baseman, slammed a hard one at Despaigne and that youth made
-his first error. Although he recovered his fumble like lightning, the
-runner, a fast chap on the dirt, was safe by the time the ball was in
-Jim Wheelock’s hands. A single past White sent the runner to second
-and placed the rival shortstop on first, but the trouble ended a few
-minutes later when Pete Chase scored his third strike-out in one inning.
-
-Joe Taylor had rearranged his line-up for today’s battle. Hal Collins,
-left fielder, led off and was followed by Wheelock, first baseman,
-Taylor, right fielder, Colton, centre fielder, White, third baseman,
-Hoffman, catcher, Sloan, second baseman, Despaigne, shortstop, and
-Chase, pitcher.
-
-The Toonalta pitcher, Ellis by name, was heralded as a wonder, and
-before the game started the team was undeniably in awe of him. But by
-the time the first inning was at an end the awe had disappeared. Nor
-did it return, for only one strike-out did Ellis have to his credit
-when the contest was over, and that the game went as it did was due
-rather to the Toonalta fielding than to the twirler’s science. It was a
-hitting game from first to last, a game in which slip-ups in fielding
-by either side would have spelled disaster at any moment. As for
-strike-outs, after the first inning Chase hung up but two more scalps,
-giving him, however, a creditable total of five for the game.
-
-It was Hal Collins who took the first jab at Ellis’ reputation as a
-pitcher. Hal failed to hit safely, but his fly to deep centre on the
-second ball pitched might easily have gone for three bags, and the
-fielder’s catch, made on the run, brought a salvo of applause from
-friend and foe alike. Jim Wheelock, with the score two-and-two, sent a
-sharp single down the first base line. Joe Taylor tried hard to land
-safely but only succeeded in dropping an easy one into shortstop’s
-glove and Colton brought the inning to an end by banging a low fly to
-right fielder. Jim never got beyond first, but as every man up had
-connected in some fashion with Ellis’ delivery the home team’s respect
-for his skill fell to zero.
-
-In Toonalta’s second things began to happen at once. The brown-stockinged
-first baseman hit between Wayne and Jim Wheelock for a base and only a
-fine stop and throw by Joe Taylor kept him from taking second. The next
-man hit to Wayne, and Wayne fielded to Despaigne, cutting off the first
-runner by a yard. There was, though, no chance for a double. With one
-on, Browne, Toonalta’s right fielder, let Chase work two strikes across
-before he found anything to his liking. Perhaps Chase held him too
-lightly. At all events the fourth offering was a perfectly straight,
-fast ball and the batsman leaned against it hard, so hard that the
-sphere cleared Chase’s head at a speed roughly estimated at a mile a
-minute, climbed up out of Wayne’s reach, and kept right on going. And
-when it finally did come to earth no one saw it, for it landed somewhere
-beyond the fence at the far end of the field! The handful of Toonalta
-“rooters” stood up and shouted themselves hoarse and blared through red,
-white, and blue megaphones and waved anything they could lay their hands
-on, while a deep and all-pervading silence rested over the Medfield
-forces. Two runs came across and things looked rather blue for the home
-team, or perhaps I should say brown, since brown was the Toonalta
-colour.
-
-The discredited Ellis fouled out to Gas Hoffman and the head of the
-visitors’ list was thrown out, Despaigne to Wheelock, and the trouble
-was over for the moment. For Chenango, Billy White led off with a
-safety to left and went to second a minute later when first baseman let
-Ellis’ throw go past him. Hoffman hit to Ellis, the pitcher spearing
-the ball with his gloved hand and holding White at second. Wayne
-produced the third safety of the game by trickling a slow one down the
-first base line, sending White to third and putting himself on first.
-Despaigne hit to second baseman and the latter hurled to the plate,
-getting Billy White. Wayne took second and Despaigne was safe at first.
-Chase worried Ellis for a pass and the bases were full. Medfield howled
-gleefully as Hal Collins stepped to the plate, for a hit would tie up
-the game. But there were two down and Ellis tightened up, and, with two
-balls and one strike on him, Collins bit at a bad one and it came down
-into third baseman’s waiting hands just over the foul line.
-
-But that inning encouraged the Chenangos, for, as Joe Taylor said
-confidently, if they kept on hitting Ellis as they had been hitting him
-something was sure to break lose sooner or later. June, presiding at
-the bats and lording it a bit in his fine uniform, predicted ruin and
-desolation for the enemy in the fifth inning. “Ain’ nothin’ goin’ to
-happen till then,” he declared, looking wise and rolling his eyes, “but
-when it do happen it’s goin’ to happen, yes, sir! You min’ my words,
-gen’lemen!” June wasn’t far wrong, either, as things turned out, for
-nothing did happen until the fifth and even if that inning didn’t prove
-quite as disastrous to the enemy as he had predicted, why, perhaps,
-that wasn’t his fault.
-
-Four men faced Chase in the third, the first getting a scratch hit,
-the second sacrificing him to the next bag and the other two proving
-easy outs. In the home team’s half, Jim Wheelock flied out to centre
-fielder, Joe Taylor to first baseman--it was a hot liner, but the
-chap held onto it--and Colton went out third to first. In the fourth,
-Toonalta started out with a walk, followed with a sacrifice hit, a fly
-to Collins in left field, another pass and still another one--three
-for the inning. Then Jordan was warming up over behind third and the
-infield was begging Chase to take his time and stop fooling, and,
-with bases filled, half a hundred seemingly insane spectators yelling
-like wild Indians, Gas Hoffman looking pretty set about the mouth and
-Pete Chase plainly slipping, hit a long fly to Collins and so ended
-as nerve-racking a quarter of an hour as the contest provided! When
-that ball settled into Hal Collins’ hands the shout that went up must
-certainly have been heard at the corner of Main and Whitney Streets,
-which is equivalent to saying a mile and a half away! Anyone who has
-played through that sort of a half-inning knows the vast and blessed
-relief that comes when the end arrives and the men on bases turn,
-grumbling, away and the team trots triumphantly in. They pounded each
-other’s backs and slapped Chase on the shoulder and shook hands with
-him quite as though he had not himself caused all the anxiety and
-suspense. June’s face was one big, white-toothed grin!
-
-“That’s their last chance!” proclaimed Captain Taylor. “They’ll never
-get another one like it. Now, then, fellows, let’s go in and cop this
-game right now!”
-
-But they didn’t. Billy White hit a weak one to Ellis and was out by a
-mile. Hoffman popped up a mean little foul to the catcher and Wayne,
-hitting safely to short left, obeyed instructions and tried to stretch
-the hit to two bases and was caught a foot off by a fine throw from
-left fielder.
-
-Again Toonalta secured a hit, her fifth, after one man was gone
-in the first half of the next inning. It was Gore, shortstop, who
-performed the feat, and it was Gore who gave as pretty an exhibition
-of base-stealing as one ever sees. He stole second when the Toonalta
-catcher struck out and blocked Hoffman’s throw and then stole third a
-moment later. Gas got the ball to White as quick as he could, but Gore
-was already sliding his cleats against the bag. Even Medfield cheered
-that exploit, realising the next instant that, even with two down,
-everything predicted another tally for the enemy. But once more Fortune
-favoured the Blues. Or perhaps the credit should go to Pete Chase. At
-least, Wayne didn’t deserve much of it, for the ball that came at him
-was breast-high and he didn’t have to move from his tracks to take it.
-Anyhow, it ended another anxious moment, and the Chenangos again went
-to bat.
-
-This was the last of the fifth, Toonalta was still two runs to the
-home team’s none and it was surely time to do something in the way
-of scoring if anything was to be done. When the other crowd is two
-runs to the good, and the game is just half over, you begin to count
-innings! Despaigne started out poorly enough, trickling a bunt to third
-and being thrown out easily. Chase did no better, being retired by
-second baseman to first. The home team’s hopes dwindled again and its
-supporters, human-like, began to grumble and make pessimistic remarks.
-But Hal Collins was hopefully applauded, nevertheless, when he stepped
-to the plate, looking, as it seemed, a little more determined than
-usual in spite of the smile that curled his lips. The smile was the
-result of June’s earnest plea to “Please, sir, Mister Collins, r’ar up
-an’ bust it!”
-
-Pitcher Ellis, with two gone, took Collins untroubledly. He tried to
-sneak the first one across for a strike, to be sure, failing narrowly,
-but after that he sent in two wide ones, and Hal would have had three
-balls to his credit had he not, for some reason, swung at the third
-delivery, missed it widely and made the score one-and-two. Ellis tried
-a drop then; Collins had fallen for it before; but it went unheeded
-and put him in the hole. There was nothing to do then but let Collins
-hit--or pass him--and Ellis wasn’t issuing many passes today. The next
-delivery was high and over the plate, and Collins fouled it into the
-stand. The next was lower and might have gone for a ball had not the
-batsman swung at it, met it fairly on the end of his bat, and sent it
-travelling down the field just over first baseman’s head and hardly
-more than a yard inside the foul line. It was good for two bases and
-Medfield cheered wildly.
-
-“Bring him in, Jim!” cried the Blue team as the Chenango first baseman
-accepted the bats that June proffered and strode to the plate, and
-“Here we go!” shouted a strong-voiced spectator. “Here we go! Hi! Hi!
-Hi! Hi! Hi!” A hundred others took up his chant and beat time to it
-with feet on planking or with clapping hands. Whether the pandemonium
-had its effect on Pitcher Ellis or not, certain it is that his first
-delivery was grooved if ever ball was grooved, and equally certain is
-it that Jim Wheelock drove it straight past the pitcher and out of the
-infield and that Hal Collins tore around from second, touched third
-with flying feet and slid into the plate well ahead of the ball!
-
-“There’s one of ’em!” shrieked Hoffman. “Let’s have another, Cap! Hit
-it out! Bust it!”
-
-Joe Taylor tried his best to bring Jim in from second, but failed,
-finally flying out to centre field and ending the rally.
-
-Still one to two was better than two to nothing, and the home team
-trotted hopefully out to their places for the beginning of the sixth.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-WAYNE BEATS OUT THE BALL
-
-
-Rider, the Browns’ third sack artist, waited out two offerings and then
-slammed the next down the base line to Billy White. Billy was having a
-bad day, and, although he knocked the ball down, he couldn’t heave it
-to Jim in time to get his man, and another black mark was set against
-Billy’s fair fame. This poor beginning was speedily remedied, though,
-when the Toonalta right fielder hit to Despaigne, and Vic, performing
-one of his circus stunts, grabbed the ball as it bounded past him well
-to the right and tossed it to Wayne as the latter sped to the bag.
-Still going, Wayne half turned and chucked underhand to Jim, completing
-as pretty a double play as one would wish to see. Medfield voiced
-delight and approval and relief very loudly and very long while Ellis
-walked to the plate and faced Chase, grimly determined to get a hit.
-But Chase knew his opponent’s weakness and toyed with him until the
-score stood two strikes and one ball. Then, however, Ellis managed to
-connect with the next delivery and send it high into the air behind
-first base. For a long moment it looked safe, but Wayne got under it
-after a hard run and squeezed it.
-
-For the Chenangos, Colton flied out to shortstop, Billy White hit to
-second and was out on a close decision that brought a howl of protest
-from the blue nine’s supporters and Hoffman made his first--and
-last--hit, a bounder over shortstop’s head. Wayne went up with the
-encouraging applause of the Medfield supporters in his ears and faced
-Ellis calmly. He had been twice up and had two hits to his credit, and
-he meant to keep his score perfect. But he was reckoning without Fate,
-for after Ellis had pitched a wide one on the supposition that Hoffman
-would steal on the first ball, and then had sneaked a low strike
-across--low ones constituted Wayne’s batting weakness, and he knew
-the fact and meant to profit by the knowledge--the hit-and-run signal
-came, Wayne swung at a high one on the inside, missed it and watched
-the ball hurtle down to shortstop and saw Gas put out at second. Wayne
-disappointedly tossed his bat to June and went back to the field.
-
-Toonalta started the seventh with the head of her batting-list up.
-This was Brook, her centre fielder, a player with some reputation for
-getting to first and for moving along afterward. So far, though, he
-had not lived up to that reputation, since in three times at the plate
-he had reached the initial sack but one, that being when Chase had
-passed him in the nerve-racking fourth. He was due now, as it proved,
-to sweeten his average, and at the expense of Billy White, for when
-he swung at Chase’s second delivery and slammed it straight at Billy
-the latter made his second error of the game. The ball went through
-him, and had Brook taken advantage of his chance he might easily have
-reached second. As it was, though, he hesitated at first and Collins,
-who had come in fast on the ball, pegged promptly to Wayne and Brook
-was forced to scuttle back to safety.
-
-East laid down a sacrifice bunt and retired, but, with only one man
-gone and the speedy Brook on second, Toonalta’s chance to pull the game
-up high and dry looked bright. But when Burns had hit to Jim Wheelock
-and Jim had trotted across the bag and then held Brook at third the
-visitors’ stock sank again. Gore ended the suspense by sending a high
-one to Hal Collins.
-
-Wayne was requested to “start it up” when he went to the plate for
-the last of the inning, and the audience loudly reminded him that
-this was the lucky seventh! But it wasn’t lucky for Wayne, since, in
-spite of his resolve to bat for a clean thousand, his attempt at
-a hit was only a roller to Ellis and he was out before he had gone
-half-way to first. Vic Despaigne fell victim to Ellis’ skill, yielding
-the Toonalta pitcher his first and only strike-out of the game, and
-Chase, after nine deliveries, four of which were fouls, found something
-to his liking and whanged it into right field. It was a long one and
-might easily have put him on third, but the redoubtable Browne, he of
-the home-run fame, raced back to the corner of the field and made a
-one-hand catch that moved even the enemy to wild acclaim.
-
-The eighth began with the Toonalta’s fifth batter facing Chase, but
-by the time it had ended five others had toed the rubber. That inning
-rivalled the fourth for hair-raising suspense. Hunt, the Toonalta
-catcher, began the trouble by hitting safely between Jim Wheelock
-and Wayne for one. The subsequent batsman was an easy out, popping
-a fly to Chase. Rider outwaited the pitcher and finally got a pass,
-advancing Hunt to second. With two on bases and the hard-hitting Browne
-coming up, the Blues’ chances might have been bought for a penny.
-To make things look more desperate, it was apparent that Pete Chase
-was weakening. Jordan was hurried out of his sweater and sent off to
-warm up and Hoffman and Chase met midway between plate and mound and
-conversed earnestly while the Toonalta “rooters” howled jeers and
-polite insults.
-
-“Play ball! Quit stalling!” “It’s got to happen! Get through with it!”
-“Good-night!” “He’s all in! Take him out! Take him out!” “Let him stay!
-We like him!” “Make ’em play ball, Mr. Umpire!”
-
-Chase was for passing Browne, but Hoffman wouldn’t consent. “Feed him
-high ones, Pete,” he muttered, “and cut the corners, but, for the love
-of Mike, don’t groove any!”
-
-Chase nodded none too confidently and went back to his place and Browne
-swung an eager bat above his shoulder. Possibly eagerness was Browne’s
-undoing, for he bit at the first one, which was almost shoulder high
-and far wide of the plate, but he only smiled when Gas asked him if
-he was practising and Medfield yelled its delight. The next offering
-was a ball that sent the batsman staggering back from the plate and
-brought hisses and cries of “He’s trying to hit him!” from the Toonalta
-bench. Gas, though, knew that Chase wasn’t trying anything of the
-sort, that the explanation was far simpler, that, in fact, Chase was
-rapidly pitching himself out and losing control. But he only spoke more
-confidently than ever.
-
-“Let him live, Pete! There aren’t any cigars in this game!”
-
-Browne scowled. “If he beans me the first thing you know’ll be a bat
-alongside your head, Fresh!”
-
-“I should worry,” answered Gas pleasantly, dropping to his knee to
-signal. “Come on, Pete! Make it good, old man! Don’t waste ’em on him!”
-
-Pete did waste one, though, for the ball passed wide of the plate.
-Browne laughed. “Got you scared, haven’t I?” he jeered.
-
-“Scared blue,” replied Gas. “Watch your head this time.”
-
-But the next one came with a hook and looked good and Browne let go
-at it. It wasn’t labelled “Home Run,” though, this time, for it went
-straight to Vic Despaigne, back of the goal path, and Vic took it
-neatly on the bound, studied the situation, and heaved to White. Hunt
-was two yards from the bag when the ball reached third base, and,
-although he made a clever slide, he should have been out. But, as
-before stated, this was not Billy’s day, and Hard Luck was still after
-him. Perhaps the throw was a trifle low, but Billy should have held it,
-nevertheless. But he didn’t, and while he was searching for it around
-his feet Hunt slid to safety, the bases were filled, and Toonalta was
-crazed with joy.
-
-Chase started badly with Ellis and put himself two in the hole at
-once. At third, Hunt was taking long leads and doing his utmost, ably
-assisted by the coacher there, to rattle the Blues’ pitcher, and it
-looked very much as though he was succeeding until Chase suddenly
-turned the tables on him by a quick peg to White, who had crept
-close to the bag unobserved. Caught two yards off, Hunt did the only
-possible thing and dug for the plate. But the ball was ahead of him
-and he doubled back again. Chase and Despaigne took a hand in the
-contest and in the end Hunt, making a despairing slide for the rubber,
-was ignominiously retired. Rider and Browne reached third and second
-respectively during the excitement, but, with two gone, the situation
-looked far brighter.
-
-Chase settled down to recover lost ground with Ellis and managed to
-get a strike across. But his next attempt failed and the score was
-one-and-three. Hoffman signalled for a straight one and held his big
-hands wide apart. “Put it over, Pete! Let him hit it!” he cried. And
-Pete earnestly endeavoured to oblige and failed miserably, and the
-umpire waved the Toonalta pitcher to first!
-
-Bases full again, two down and the head of the list coming to bat!
-Now if ever, it seemed, Chase should be derricked and the falling
-fortunes of the Chenangos entrusted to Jordan. The spectators demanded
-the change loudly, even rudely, but Joe Taylor, out in right field,
-was deaf to the inquiring looks sent him and made no sign. Even Chase
-showed a desire to quit; while, over behind third, Jordan was awaiting
-the summons. But the summons didn’t come, then or later, and Pete
-Chase, looking a bit bewildered, philosophically took up his task again
-and turned his attention to Brook.
-
-Now, Brook, in spite of his reputation, had so far failed to get a hit,
-and, as Joe explained later, it was on this that the latter based his
-calculations. Brook would, he thought, be so anxious to deliver that
-he would very probably fail altogether. Five times out of ten it is
-questionable policy to put a new pitcher in when bases are full and any
-sort of a hit means runs. As often as not such a procedure proves to be
-jumping from frying pan to fire. Had Toonalta chosen to substitute a
-pinch-hitter for Brook, Joe was ready to switch pitchers, but failing
-that he decided to trust to Chase and, more especially, perhaps,
-Hoffman. Whether Captain Taylor’s reasoning was good or bad, in the
-abstract, on this occasion it was vindicated. With one strike and two
-balls on him, Brook was offered one that was just above his knees and
-square over the base, and he went for it. And so did Hal Collins, and
-caught it almost in the shadow of left field fence, and another tragedy
-was averted!
-
-In their half of the eighth, the Chenangos went out in one, two, three,
-order, Collins flying to centre, Wheelock fouling to third, and Taylor
-being thrown out at first. In the ninth, Toonalta tried very hard
-to add to her score, but, when the first batsman was retired on an
-easy toss from Chase to Jim, she lost some of her ginger. Even Billy
-White’s fourth error, which put Burns on first and seemed to pave the
-way for a tally, failed to arouse the visitors to much enthusiasm.
-Probably they thought they could hold their opponents scoreless for
-another half-inning and were satisfied to call it a day. Gore, however,
-woke them up when he hit cleanly past Despaigne and advanced Burns to
-the second station, and the Browns’ coaches got busy again and once
-more things looked dark for the home nine. But Hunt fouled out to
-Hoffman--and the big catcher’s expression as he looked at the rival
-backstop was beautiful to see if you were a Chenango sympathiser!--and
-the Blues’ first baseman, who had played a star game all the afternoon,
-ended his services at the bat, and incidentally the inning, by fanning.
-Chase received an ovation for that strike-out as he returned to the
-bench, and he deserved it.
-
-Toonalta jogged into the field with a fine confidence, or an appearance
-of it. She had only to keep the adversary from crossing the plate
-to win, and since the fifth inning the Chenangos had failed to show
-anything dangerous. Perhaps the home team itself was more than doubtful
-of its ability to pluck that contest from the fire, although certainly
-Joe Taylor showed no sign of dejection. Joe insisted loudly and
-cheerfully that now was the appointed time, although he didn’t use just
-those words. What he really said was: “Now come on, Chenangos! Get at
-’em! Eat ’em up! Here’s where we start something! Hit it out, Larry!
-Let’s get this right now!”
-
-But Colton was a disappointment, for he only rolled one to the
-pitcher’s box when he tried to bunt down first base line and was out
-in his tracks. Billy White was called back once to make place for
-Brewster, but even as the pinch-hitter strode to the box Taylor changed
-his mind again and it was finally the unlucky Billy who stood up at
-the plate. Just how Billy managed to outguess Ellis was a mystery, but
-outguess him he did, and presently he was trotting down the path to
-first base while Vic Despaigne tried to stand on his head and every
-other Medfield adherent made a joyful noise!
-
-[Illustration: Every Other Medfield Adherent Made a Joyful Noise]
-
-Joy, however, gave place to gloom a few minutes later when Hoffman,
-after almost securing a two-bagger--the ball only went foul by two
-inches--sent a hot one straight into third baseman’s glove. As the ball
-went back to the pitcher the audience started its exodus, for with two
-down and the runner no further than first, the end was discernible--or
-so they thought. But what followed only proved again the famous adage
-that the game isn’t over until the last man’s out.
-
-Wayne got his bat from an anxious-faced June, a June too downhearted to
-even put a “conjur” on it, listened to Taylor’s instructions to “just
-meet it, Sloan, and try for the hole between first and second,” and
-took his place in the trampled dust of the box. Ellis was cautious and
-deliberate and was putting everything he had on the ball. Wayne let the
-first one go by and was sorry for it, since it cut the outer corner of
-the plate and went for a strike. Then Ellis tried him on a wide one,
-waist-high, and followed it with a second strike, a drop that fooled
-the batsman completely. Ellis attempted to sneak one over close in,
-but overdid it and the score was two-and-two, and Wayne realised that
-a whole lot depended on his judgment of the next offering. Possibly
-Ellis meant to fool Wayne with a change of pace, for what came next
-was a slow one that looked tempting. Wayne yielded to the temptation.
-Then he flung his bat aside and was streaking to first amidst the
-triumphant shouts of the spectators. At first, Taylor waved him on,
-and Wayne circled and dug out for second. Centre and left fielder
-were on the ball together and left fielder made the throw in, but it
-arrived only when Wayne was stretched in the dust with one toe on the
-bag. On third, Billy White was listening to excited instructions from
-Hoffman, while, from the sides of the field, came pæans of delight.
-Those spectators who had wandered from their seats or points of vantage
-fought their way back again, crowding and pushing and questioning. Joe
-Taylor was sending in Brewster for Despaigne, and Hunt, the Toonalta
-catcher, in spite of his confident reassurances to Ellis, looked
-disquieted.
-
-On second, Wayne, mechanically slapping the dust from his new togs,
-hoped hard for a hit. He knew nothing of Brewster’s batting prowess
-and wished with all his heart that Hal Collins or Jim Wheelock was
-up. A hit would bring him in from second, with White ahead of him,
-and win the game. Then he was off the base, watching the shortstop
-from the corner of his eye, listening for warnings from the coach at
-first, ready to speed ahead or dodge back. But, with an eager runner
-on third, Ellis was taking no chances. Nor was Hunt. Once the catcher
-bluffed a throw-down, but the ball only went to the pitcher, and
-neither White nor Wayne was fooled.
-
-Brewster looked nervous, but he didn’t act so. He judged the first
-offering correctly and let it go, started to swing at the next, changed
-his mind, and heard it called a strike and held back from the third,
-which dropped at the bag and almost got away from Hunt. The shouting
-of spectators and coaches was having its effect on Ellis at last. A
-third ball followed. The uproar increased. Even the base-runners added
-their voices to the pandemonium of sound. Ellis fumbled his cap, looked
-around the field, rubbed a perspiring hand in the dust, took the signal
-very deliberately, although it could mean but one thing unless Hunt had
-decided to pass the batsman, wound up slowly, and pitched.
-
-Perhaps it would have been the part of wisdom to have walked Brewster,
-under the circumstances, but Toonalta chose otherwise and so things
-happened as they did. The ball, fast and straight, went to the plate
-like a shot from a gun, but Brewster was ready for it. A fine,
-heartening crack sounded over the diamond, the ball sailed off toward
-left field, Billy White sprang into his stride and Wayne lit out for
-third. Left fielder came in on the run, got the ball on the first long
-bounce, set himself quickly, and plugged it home. It was a good throw
-and it reached Hunt only one stride from the plate. But that one stride
-was sufficient to bring victory to the Blues and defeat to the Browns,
-for when Hunt fell to his knee and swept the ball downward Wayne was
-stretched on his back with one scuffed, dust-covered shoe fairly on the
-rubber!
-
-After that, confusion, cheering, a grinning, white-toothed June pulling
-Wayne to his feet, an influx of shouting, happy Medfieldians, amongst
-them Arthur Pattern, and hands thumping Wayne on the back as he pushed
-his way toward the bench. He was breathless, dusty, and tired, as he
-added his feeble voice to the cheer for the defeated rival, but he was
-terrifically happy at the same time.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-“A GENTLEMAN TO SEE MR. SLOAN”
-
-
-There was a Fourth of July entertainment at the Y. M. C. A. that
-evening, and Wayne and June stayed in town for supper and afterward
-walked around to the Association building through the warm summer
-night. June still talked about that ninth inning. “Mas’ Wayne, that
-was surely one fine ol’ innin’,” he declared for the tenth time.
-“Lawsy-y-y, but I certainly was scared, yes, sir! When that yere Mister
-Brewster grab a bat an’ walk up to that yere plate I didn’ look for
-nothin’ but jus’ disappointment. But he delivered the goods, didn’ he?
-He certainly did! But I was mortal ’fraid you wasn’ goin’ get home
-before that ol’ ball!” June chuckled. “You surely did run _some_, Mas’
-Wayne!”
-
-They found most of the other players present when they reached the
-building and when it was time to adjourn to the hall they flocked in
-together, June accompanying them protestingly, and received a round of
-applause as they went to their seats. The entertainment was enjoyable
-but didn’t last long, and when it was over an impromptu reception took
-place in the big lounging-room and everyone flocked around and said
-nice things about the team and the game was played over again several
-times. It was difficult to decide who the real hero of the contest
-was, since so many had performed. Pete Chase came in for a good share
-of praise; for five strike-outs, three assists, and no errors was
-considered a fine record against as strong a team as the Toonaltas.
-The five passes that he had issued were easily pardoned since none had
-resulted in a score. In hitting, Toonalta stood seven for a total of
-ten bases and Chenango nine for a total of eleven.
-
-Brewster was lauded for his rescue hit, Jim Wheelock for his steady
-playing on base and at bat, Collins for a brilliant defence of left
-field and a timely two-base wallop, Hoffman for his heady catching, and
-Despaigne for his work at short. Even Billy White came in for a share
-of the compliments, for Billy had worked Ellis for a pass in the last
-inning and subsequently landed the tying run. But when all was said
-Wayne was really the star. He had fielded without an error, having
-three assists and two put-outs to his credit, had made three hits for a
-total of four bases in four appearances at the plate, and had tallied
-the winning run. In the batting line Jim Wheelock was his nearest
-competitor, Jim having two hits to his credit. In fielding Wayne had no
-competitor that day. Many kind things were said about him, and Arthur
-Pattern’s prediction that Wayne would make himself heard some day as
-a baseman was concurred in by all. Perhaps the Chenangos and their
-admirers were a bit too lavish with their praise that evening, but
-they felt exceptionally good over the victory and may be pardoned for
-indulging in what our English cousins would call “swank.”
-
-In the middle of the session of mutual admiration word came from the
-office that a gentleman was inquiring for Wayne, and Wayne wondered
-who it could be and decided that Jim Mason had at last accepted his
-oft-repeated invitation to the Association. But it wasn’t Jim who
-awaited him. The caller was a somewhat thick-set man of forty with
-a much wrinkled face from which a pair of shrewd, light-blue eyes
-peered forth from under heavy brows. He wore a suit of gray plaid,
-the coat a trifle tight across the big chest, a pair of wonderfully
-brilliant tan shoes, a heavy gold chain across his waistcoat, and a
-big diamond ring on one hand, and carried a soft straw hat adorned
-with a black-and-yellow scarf. Wayne didn’t observe all these details
-at first, for he was much too busy speculating as to the man’s
-errand, reflecting, as he crossed to meet him, that the letter to his
-stepfather had reached him well over a week ago, allowing plenty of
-time for him to set the law on his track. But the visitor didn’t quite
-look the part of Authority, for he had a genial smile and a ready
-expression of polite apology.
-
-“This Mr. Sloan?” he asked as Wayne reached him. Wayne acknowledged
-the fact. “My name’s Farrel, Chris Farrel. Maybe you’ve heard the
-name.” He held out the ringed hand and Wayne took it, shaking his head.
-“No? Well, I was before your time. I’m with the Harrisvilles, of the
-Tri-State League.”
-
-“Oh, baseball?” asked Wayne.
-
-“Sure! Say, isn’t there a place we can sit down a minute? I’ve got a
-proposition I’d like to make you, Mr. Sloan.”
-
-“I beg your pardon,” said Wayne. “I reckon we can find a corner in the
-game-room. There’s a crowd in the big room.” He led the way to a couch
-in a corner that was sufficiently removed from the few groups of chess
-and domino players. “You’re a ball player?” he asked as the caller
-cautiously lowered himself into place and dropped his hat to the floor
-beside him.
-
-“Do I look it?” inquired the other, with a chuckle. “Say, I weigh two
-hundred and eight right now. I’d make a hit, wouldn’t I, chasing
-around the gravel? No, I haven’t played for six years. I’m interested
-in the Badgers now. Own a little stock and do a bit of scouting for
-’em.”
-
-“The Badgers?”
-
-“Yes, that’s what they call the Harrisville team. John K. Badger, the
-Southern Pennsylvania Coal Company man, is the owner: him and Steve
-Milburn and me. Him owning ninety per cent, and me and Steve dividing
-the rest.” Mr. Farrel chuckled again. “Ever see our team play, Mr.
-Sloan?”
-
-“No, sir, I haven’t been up North very long.”
-
-“So a fellow was telling me. Said Georgia was your home, I think. Well,
-they grow peaches down there. Ty Cobb, for instance. Guess you’ve heard
-of him, haven’t you?”
-
-“Yes, a good many times, Mr. Farrel.”
-
-“Yup, he’s some player, Tyrus is. Well, say, we’ve got a pretty good
-little team over our way. Copped the pennant two years running and
-finished third last season. Had hard luck last season. Weak in the box,
-too. This year, though, we’re going nicely. Got a twelve-game lead
-right now and mean to hold it. There won’t be anyone else in it by the
-last of August. That’s a cinch.”
-
-“I hope so, I’m sure,” murmured Wayne politely.
-
-“We can’t miss it. We’ve got the pitchers and the fielders and the
-hitters. Ever hear of Nick Crane?” Wayne shook his head. “Thought
-maybe you had. Well, Nick’s with us this year. Got him sewed up for
-three seasons. And, say, that kid can certainly pitch! You ought to
-have seen him in the game with Damascus last Thursday. Not a hit off
-him until the eighth, and not a man got beyond second. Then we’ve got
-Herring--played with Syracuse two years ago--Nye, Cotton, Wainwright,
-and young Joe Casey. Six mighty good lads. And we’ve got a hitting
-team, too. Give me a good bunch of pitchers and five men who can hit
-the pill and I’ll guarantee to finish first two years out of three. We
-don’t go in for stars much. Can’t afford them, to be honest. What we
-try to get is a nice, well-rounded team. Do you get me?”
-
-“Yes, I think so,” responded Wayne. “But--but I’m afraid I don’t see
-what this has got to do with me, Mr. Farrel.”
-
-“Well, I was coming to that. Takes me some time to get moving, I’m so
-heavy, you see. Here’s the story.” Mr. Farrel lifted one ponderous
-leg over the other and dropped his voice to a confidential and husky
-rumble. “I’ve got a pal lives here. Maybe you know him. H. M. Breen,
-of the Sterling Spool Company. No? Well, him and me has been pals for
-a long time, and his daughter was married last night and I came over
-for the shindig. Today him and me went out and saw you fellows play
-ball. And, say, we saw a good game, too. I don’t mean it was so blamed
-scientific--those Toonalta guys made a lot of fool moves: they ought to
-have sewn that game up in the eighth--but it was fast and interesting.
-Well, I was just passing the time, you understand, Mr. Sloan. Wasn’t
-looking for any finds or nothing. Just enjoying a day off. Get me? But
-’long about the fourth inning I began to sit up and take notice of the
-fellow playing second for the Medfield bunch. ‘He ain’t so poor,’ says
-I. ‘He’s got a nice way of handling himself, he has, and he sure can
-biff the ball. Course, he needs training, but it looks to me like he
-had the goods.’ Well, I watched him close and I saw him dip in on a
-nice double play and push the pellet around for three hits, one of ’em
-a clean two-bagger, an’ I says to myself, ‘Chris, why don’t you look
-the young gentleman up and have a talk with him?’ I says, ‘Maybe he’d
-think well of a chance to get in good company and learn how to play
-real ball.’ So I inquired around and found you hung out up here a good
-deal and here I am.” Mr. Farrel smiled jovially, produced a cigar from
-a pocket, viewed it and replaced it with a sigh.
-
-“That’s very kind of you,” stammered Wayne. “Do you mean that--that
-you’ll give me a position on your team?”
-
-“Sure! That is, if you pan out like I think you will. That’s up to you,
-Mr. Sloan. You see, you’re young yet: can’t be more than eighteen, eh?”
-Wayne shook his head again. There was, he felt, no necessity of being
-more specific. “Well, I’ve seen fellows play rattling ball at eighteen
-and be no good at all when they were twenty. Seemed like they just
-outgrew it. I ain’t saying that’s your way. But it don’t do to promise
-too much just at first. And then again, Steve’s the man that has the
-last word. He’s manager, you see, and what Steve says goes. All I can
-do is send you up to him and tell him to give you a try-out. If he
-likes you he’ll treat you fair. If he don’t like you, why, there’s no
-harm done, is there?”
-
-“How long would he be finding out?” asked Wayne doubtfully. “You see,
-sir, I wouldn’t want to lose my job here and then get turned down.”
-
-“Two or three days. Say three, just to be on the safe side. You get
-your boss to let you off for that long, beat it over to Harrisville
-tomorrow night and report to Steve Thursday morning. If he says nothing
-doing you’ll be back here Saturday. It’s only a two-hour run on the
-train. How does that strike you?”
-
-“I don’t know,” replied Wayne. “If--if the manager liked me well enough
-to keep me would I play second?”
-
-“Maybe you would or maybe he’d put you somewhere else. Maybe you’d have
-to wait around awhile for a position. Our infield’s pretty good as it
-is and you ain’t had the experience you need, you see. But Steve will
-treat you right, take it from me.”
-
-“If I didn’t get on the team, though, would I get paid?”
-
-“Sure! Once you put your name to the contract you get paid every month
-regularly whether you play or just sit on the bench. That’s soft, ain’t
-it?”
-
-“I suppose it is, but I’d rather play, Mr. Farrel. How much--that
-is--what would I get?”
-
-“Salary? Oh, you and Steve would have to fix that up. He’s no piker,
-though. He’ll do the fair-and-square by you. Don’t you worry about
-that.”
-
-“Well, but, how much do you suppose?”
-
-“I don’t want to quote any figures, Mr. Sloan. That ain’t in my job.
-All I do is scout. When I see a likely looking chap I say just what I’m
-saying to you. ‘Go and report to Steve Milburn,’ I says. ‘He’ll talk
-salary with you when you’ve shown him what you can do.’ More than that
-I ain’t got the right to say, Mr. Sloan. But we pay good salaries as
-salaries go on the minors, and, what’s more, we _pay_ ’em! You don’t
-get promises and an order on the grocer. Old John K. is right there
-every month with the coin. He don’t waste his money, John K. don’t, but
-he pays his bills. Now what do you say, Mr. Sloan?”
-
-“Well, I’m much obliged to you and----”
-
-“Wait a minute! Tell you what I’ll do. I believe in you. I believe
-you’ll make good. Get me? So I’ll hand you over a ten-dollar bill right
-now. That’ll pay your expenses both ways. If you make good you can pay
-it back to me. If you don’t, forget it. That’s fair, ain’t it?”
-
-“Yes, sir, but I don’t know whether I want to--to do it. If I was sure
-of a chance to play and knew what I’d earn----”
-
-“You’re sure of a chance to play the very minute you show you can play.
-And whatever you get for a salary will be three or four times what they
-pay you in the freight house, at least.”
-
-It occurred to Wayne that Mr. Farrel had managed to learn quite a few
-particulars about him in the short space of four hours! Secretly he was
-overjoyed by the prospect of joining a real baseball team and earning
-money, but something whispered caution, and so, after a minute’s
-deliberation, he said: “I’ll think it over, Mr. Farrel, and let you
-know tomorrow if you’ll tell me where I can find you.”
-
-“That’s all right,” answered the other heartily enough, but there was
-a look on his face suggesting that he would have been better pleased
-had Wayne closed with the offer then and there. “I’ll be at the Union
-House until noon tomorrow. You think it over and let me know by twelve
-o’clock. I was going down to Philadelphia tonight, but I thought maybe
-I wouldn’t be around here again for a while and it mightn’t do me or
-you any harm if we had a little chat. Get me? But, say, Mr. Sloan, you
-take my advice and don’t talk much about this business. And don’t let
-anyone con you into signing a contract. A lot of these baseball scouts
-are regular thieves. That sounds like talking down my own business,
-don’t it? Well, there’s scouts and scouts, and some of ’em’ll sign you
-up hard and fast before you know what’s happened. And when you go to
-look over your contract you’re getting the core and the club’s got the
-apple. See me before you talk to anyone else, will you? Just give me an
-option on your services until tomorrow noon, eh?”
-
-“Why, yes, sir. I don’t expect anyone else will be after me, though.”
-
-“No, I guess not. I’m only playing it safe. You see, I’ve taken
-some trouble to talk with you about this, and missed an appointment
-in Philadelphia this evening, and it’s only fair for me to get the
-first chance, ain’t it? You see that yourself, I guess. Well, I’ll
-be moving. Don’t forget to come around by twelve tomorrow. Ask for
-Chris Farrel--F, a, r, r, e, l--in Room 28. I’ll be looking for you.
-Good-night, Mr. Sloan. Much obliged to you. Don’t trouble. I know the
-way out. S’long!”
-
-Mr. Chris Farrel, with a big, black cigar in a corner of his mouth at
-last, and searching for matches with an anxious hand, nodded and passed
-out, leaving Wayne a prey to excitement and incredulity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-PATTERN GIVES ADVICE
-
-
-Wayne wanted advice, and it was to Arthur Pattern that he went. A
-quarter of an hour after Mr. Farrel’s departure Wayne and Arthur were
-sitting on the steps of the State National Bank talking it over. Now
-and then the sound of exploding fireworks sounded and occasionally the
-sparks of a distant rocket lighted the sky beyond the roofs or red,
-white, and blue stars floated high against the purple darkness of the
-night, but the celebration was nearly over and the main street was
-nearly deserted.
-
-“I remember Chris Farrel,” Arthur Pattern was saying. “That is, I
-remember reading about him. He used to be a crackajack catcher some
-years ago. Played for a long time with one of the western clubs;
-Cincinnati, I think. Then he was with Washington and left them to
-manage some team like the Baltimores. Don’t think it was Baltimore,
-though. I don’t know much about this Harrisville outfit, but the
-Tri-State League’s been going for a good many years. It’s a six-club
-league. Harrisville and Doncaster in this state, Paterson and Trenton
-in New Jersey, and Utica and some other place in New York State.”
-
-“Damascus, I think he said.”
-
-“Yes, Damascus. Some of those are good baseball towns, and they ought
-to make money. Still, I don’t suppose they do much better than split
-even after expenses are paid. Saturdays and holidays are about the
-only times they draw big attendances, they charge about half what the
-big leagues charge for admission, and players’ salaries, travelling
-expenses, and so on count up fast. Men like this Mr. Badger own ball
-teams more for amusement than anything else, I guess. Some of them go
-in for steam yachts, some for trotting horses, and some for ball teams.
-I guess they net about the same on the investment,” ended Arthur drily.
-
-“Then you think this Harrisville team isn’t very good?” asked Wayne.
-
-“Better than some, not so good as others. If you’re going in for
-professional baseball playing, Wayne, you’ve got to get experience, and
-one team’s about the same as another, so long as you get your salary.
-You can’t afford to choose and pick, I guess, because it isn’t easy for
-a youngster like you to get a try-out. If a chance comes to you, grab
-it. After all, it doesn’t make much difference where you start. If
-you’re any good you won’t stay long in the bushes. The main question
-is: Do you want to be a ball player?”
-
-Wayne considered in silence for a long minute. Then: “Well, it’s like
-this, Arthur,” he answered slowly. “I wouldn’t want to play ball all
-my life. It isn’t good enough. But there isn’t much I can do--yet. It
-isn’t as though I’d been trained for something, like engineering or
-keeping books or--or farming. I’m not good for anything at all--yet.
-The only thing I can do half-way well is play baseball. So it seems to
-me that it’s a sensible thing for me to play ball and make some money
-so that I can learn to do something better. If I made some money in the
-summer I could go to school or college in the winter, couldn’t I?”
-
-“Yes, you could. What would you like to be?”
-
-“Well,” answered the other, smiling, “I used to think I wanted to be
-a locomotive engineer, but I reckon now I’d rather be a veterinary
-surgeon.”
-
-“What!” exclaimed Arthur. “A horse doctor?”
-
-Wayne nodded untroubledly. “Yes, that’s what they call them in the
-country,” he replied, “just as they call the doctor a ‘sawbones.’ Don’t
-you think curing sick animals is just as fine a profession as curing
-sick people?”
-
-“Hm. Do you?”
-
-“Finer. Seems to me it takes more skill. A person who is ill can help
-the doctor, you see, by telling him where the trouble lies, but an
-animal can’t. The doctor has got to depend on his knowledge altogether,
-hasn’t he?”
-
-“I suppose so. Still, up where I live we don’t class the vets and the
-physicians together, I’m afraid. The vets are generally rather ignorant
-old chaps, I guess. I remember hearing my father say once when I was a
-kid that old Nancy, the carriage horse, was dying and that he guessed
-it was time to call in the vet and let him have the credit for it.”
-
-“Did she die?” asked Wayne.
-
-Arthur thought a minute. Then: “By Jove, I don’t believe she did that
-time!” he laughed. “Perhaps old What’s-his-name was some good, after
-all!”
-
-“Doctor Kearny--he’s the veterinarian at home--says that the profession
-is making faster strides nowadays than any other,” said Wayne. “He says
-the day is past when the man who can’t make a living any other way can
-become a dentist or a veterinary surgeon. He says treating horses and
-cows and dogs and things is a heap harder than giving pills to persons.
-I’d rather cure a horse or a dog any day than a human being.”
-
-“It might depend on the human being, mightn’t it?” laughed the other.
-“Well, all right, old man, you be a vet if you want to. Perhaps it is
-a good deal finer trade than I’d thought. Anyway, what we’ve got to
-decide is whether you’re to join the Badgers, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yes. I wish he’d given me some idea what the salary would be. What do
-you think, Arthur?”
-
-“Well, I wouldn’t look for more than a hundred a month at first. You
-see, Wayne, you aren’t anything remarkable yet. You don’t mind my
-talking plain? This man Farrel is banking on you learning the game and
-turning out well in a couple of years. He thinks that if they can get
-hold of you now and sign you up at a small salary it’ll pay them to do
-it on the chance that you’ll be of real use later. I dare say there
-are lots of chaps who play just about the same sort of game that you
-do right now. Personally, I think you’ll make good. You sort of--sort
-of--well, I don’t just know how to say it, but you sort of _look_ good.
-There’s a certainty in the way you handle the ball and the way you
-handle yourself that’s promising. I guess it struck Farrel the same
-way. If he was sure he could come around two years from now and find
-you he wouldn’t have made a sound today, but he isn’t. He’s afraid that
-someone else will discover you and grab you. But don’t get it into
-your head that you’re a marvel, Wayne, because you aren’t. Not yet. If
-you do go over to Harrisville, old man, talk small and don’t let your
-hat hurt you.”
-
-“I won’t. I don’t think this has swelled my head any. What I’m afraid
-of is that this manager man won’t like me when he sees me.”
-
-“That’s possible, too. Better not hope too much. I dare say Farrel
-sends a lot of fellows over there who just turn around and go home
-again. But his offering to stake you to your fares looks as if he was
-pretty fairly certain in your case.”
-
-“Oh, I wouldn’t take that money,” said Wayne earnestly.
-
-“You will if you go. I’ll see that you do. It’s a business proposition,
-Wayne. Farrel’s paying you ten dollars for an option on you. If he
-takes you he gets his option money back. You mustn’t think, though,
-that being a minor league ball player is all roses. It’s no picnic.
-You’ll have to practice every morning, whether you get on or not,
-you’ll have to beat it around the country for weeks at a time, sleeping
-on the train or in punk hotels, you’ll get bawled out when you pull a
-boner and no one will say ‘Thank you’ when you make a star play: no
-one but the ‘fans,’ and they’ll be the first to hoot you the next day
-if you make one miscue. You’ll run up against some rough ones on the
-team who will probably make life a perfect misery for you at first, and
-you’ll get the short end of a lot of decisions until the umpires see
-that you are real. I don’t want you to think that minor league ball
-playing is all bread and treacle, Wayne.”
-
-“Maybe it’ll be hard,” was the response, “but any work is hard, isn’t
-it? And I’d rather do something hard that I like to do than something
-easy that I don’t. And I do like to play ball, Arthur. Besides, a
-hundred dollars a month is real money to me. If I stayed on the team
-three months I’d have three hundred dollars!”
-
-“Not quite, because you have to live meanwhile. Remember that the club
-only pays your bills while you’re travelling, and you’re travelling
-only about half the time.”
-
-“It wouldn’t cost me much, though, to live in Harrisville, would it? I
-reckon I could find a boarding-house pretty reasonable.”
-
-“I guess so. It’s a pretty big town. Look here, Wayne, suppose I go
-around there with you tomorrow and have a talk with Farrel. Maybe I
-could get him to promise something definite. Want me to?”
-
-“I wish you would,” said Wayne gratefully. “That is, if I decide to
-try it. I’m going to think it over tonight.”
-
-“Well, you want to start thinking pretty soon,” laughed Arthur, yawning
-as he arose, “because it’s nearly eleven now and there isn’t much night
-left for us slaves. You call me up at the office in the morning and let
-me know. Then I’ll take my lunch hour at eleven-thirty and we’ll go
-around to the hotel together. Good-night, Wayne.”
-
-It was close on midnight when Wayne left the railroad track and started
-across the meadow through the lush grass toward the dim orange glow
-from the windows and open door of the car. It suddenly came to him that
-he would be sorry to leave this queer retreat of theirs, for it had
-been more like a real home than any he had known for several years.
-And, with a genuine pang, he remembered the garden he had planted.
-He would never see the flowers blossom, never see the little green
-pellet, which had mysteriously appeared on one of the tomato plants a
-few days ago, grow and ripen! The thought of leaving that garden almost
-determined him then and there to think no more of Mr. Farrel’s offer,
-but to stay at home with June and be satisfied with his work and the
-new friends he had made.
-
-June was still awake when he approached, and hailed him across the
-starlit darkness. And Sam barked shrilly, at first with a challenge
-and then, as he scuttled to meet Wayne, with delight. The boy picked
-him up and snuggled him in his arms, and the dog licked his cheek with
-an eager pink tongue. “He done catch him a terrapin today,” announced
-June as Wayne seated himself tiredly on the step. “An’ he jus’ act
-disgusting he was so proud.”
-
-“I reckon the terrapin was just a plain, everyday mud turtle,” laughed
-Wayne. “Did you see it?”
-
-“Yes, sir, he brung it home an’ put it on its back so’s it couldn’t get
-away, an’ I ’most trod on it. What’s the diff’ence between a terrapin,
-Mas’ Wayne, an’ a mud turkle?”
-
-“About seventy-five cents, June.”
-
-“Say there is?” June was silent a minute. Then: “What done ’come o’ you
-this evenin’? I was waitin’ an’ waitin’ for you.”
-
-“I’m sorry, June. I wanted to see Arthur Pattern about something and
-we got to talking. I--I’m thinking about leaving here, June.” Then,
-sitting there in the star-sprinkled gloom, and fighting mosquitoes,
-Wayne told of Mr. Farrel and his proposition and of his talk with
-Arthur Pattern; and when he had finished June gave a joyous “Yip!” that
-startled Sam into barking.
-
-“Ain’ I always tol’ you, Mas’ Wayne, that you goin’ make you-all’s
-fortune up here? Ain’ I?” Wayne couldn’t recall having been told
-anything of the sort, but he didn’t say so. “Reckon we’s goin’ to be
-mighty ’portant folkses now!” the darkey went on. “How much money he
-goin’ to pay you?”
-
-“I don’t know yet. And I don’t know that I’ll go, June. Maybe Mr.
-Farrel isn’t really in earnest. I don’t see how he can be. I can’t play
-ball much, June. If I----”
-
-“Say you can’? Let me tell you, Mas’ Wayne, sir, you plays ball
-better’n any of those other gen’lemen, a heap better!”
-
-“But playing on a real league team is different, June. Suppose this
-manager doesn’t like me when I get there?”
-
-“He’s goin’ to like you! How far is this yere place, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“Harrisville? About eighty miles, I think. It’s a pretty big place,
-June, and maybe I wouldn’t like it as well as Medfield. I--I’ve got
-sort of fond of this place. If I do go, I want you to look after the
-garden, June. If you don’t I’m going to tan your hide for you.”
-
-“What you mean look after your garden, Mas’ Wayne? Ain’ I goin’ with
-you?”
-
-“Why, I don’t see how you can,” answered Wayne troubledly. “Maybe
-after I get ahead a little----”
-
-“Now look yere, Mas’ Wayne! My mammy done tell me to watch out for you,
-ain’ she? How you ’spects I’m goin’ watch out for you if I ain’ with
-you? No, sir, Mas’ Wayne, if you goes, I goes, an’ that’s all there is
-to it, sir!”
-
-“Well, we’ll see,” evaded Wayne. “I dare say I’ll be back by the end of
-the week, anyway. If I’m not, and you want to come, I’ll send you some
-money and you and Sam can follow.”
-
-“You don’ have to send no money,” said Wayne. “I got me ’most fifty
-dollars right now. How much you got, sir?”
-
-“Not a great deal,” owned Wayne ruefully. “I’ve had to buy so many
-things that I’ve been spending it about as fast as I’ve got it, June.”
-
-“Ain’ boughten anythin’ you ain’ needed, I reckon.” June stepped down
-and disappeared around the side of the car and when he came back he
-held a tin can in his hand. He rattled it proudly. “Reckon you better
-take this along with you,” he said, offering it to Wayne. “Jus’ you
-drap it in your pocket right now, sir, so’s you won’ forget it.”
-
-“Get out! I’m not going to take your money,” answered the other firmly.
-“I don’t need it, anyway. I’ve got twelve dollars, pretty near; and
-Mr. Farrel is going to pay my fare both ways.”
-
-“I know that, Mas’ Wayne, but ’twon’ do for you to walk in on them ball
-players over to this yere place with no little ol’ picayune twelve
-dollars in your pocket, no, sir! You got to put on a heap o’ dog, Mas’
-Wayne, ’cause if you don’t they’s goin’ to think you don’ amoun’ to
-nothin’ ’tall. Please, sir, you take it.”
-
-“No,” said Wayne firmly. “I’m much obliged, June, but I don’t need it.
-If they give me the position I’ll have money of my own, you see.”
-
-“Then you take half of it, Mas’ Wayne,” pleaded June.
-
-But Wayne was adamant and June had to hide his treasure again, and
-after a while they went to bed, June to slumber and Wayne to lie awake
-until the sky began to brighten in the east. It was only when the stars
-paled that sleep came to him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-OFF TO HARRISVILLE
-
-
-At a quarter to six the next afternoon Wayne sat in a red plush seat
-in the Harrisville train and watched the outskirts of Medfield drop
-behind. He had his ticket to Harrisville and return in his pocket and
-nearly eighteen dollars folded away in his old leather coin purse. His
-luggage reposed beside him in a small brown paper parcel, for he was
-travelling in light marching order. For some reason, June had failed
-to show up at the station to say good-bye, and Wayne was a little bit
-resentful. He thought June might have found the time to see him off.
-
-It had been a busy day. Rather to his surprise, he had awakened with
-the question fully decided. He would go to Harrisville and talk with
-the manager of the baseball team. Whether he stayed or not would depend
-on whether he made good and what salary was offered him. He would
-not, he told himself firmly, accept less than a hundred dollars a
-month. The talk with Chris Farrel had been fairly satisfactory. Arthur
-Pattern had failed to elicit any definite promise of engagement from
-the scout, but he had made Mr. Farrel agree to supplement the letter
-of introduction which Wayne was to deliver with another, to be posted
-then and there, presenting Wayne’s qualifications and advising his
-employment. After that Wayne had accepted the ten dollars, shaken hands
-with Mr. Farrel, and returned to the freight house to apply to Jim
-Mason for a three days’ leave of absence.
-
-Jim had given his permission quickly enough, but had shown little
-enthusiasm for the boy’s project. Playing baseball for a living did
-not, to his thinking, contrast at all favourably with working for the
-railroad, and he didn’t hesitate to say so. In fact, he was decidedly
-pessimistic and gloomy until Wayne reminded him that there was a
-strong possibility of his not securing the position after he reached
-Harrisville. Jim cheered up after that and chose to look on the three
-days’ absence as a sort of brief vacation, and virtually despatched
-Wayne with his blessing when closing time arrived.
-
-“Don’t you worry about me,” he said. “I’ll get on all right. It ain’t
-but two days and a half, anyway. Just you have a good time and enjoy
-yourself, son. Better come around for dinner Sunday and tell us about
-your trip.”
-
-Wayne promised to do this in the event of his return, shook hands with
-Jim, feeling a bit guilty and more than half hoping that the manager of
-the Harrisville Baseball Club would send him home again, and hurried
-off to the train. Arthur Pattern had promised to get down to see him
-off if he could do it, but evidently Arthur had had to stay late
-this evening. The train was in the open country now, running between
-wooded hills on which the long, slanting rays of the setting sun fell
-gloriously. He was a little lonesome and wished he had taken Sam with
-him. After all, Sam wouldn’t have been much trouble, and he was a heap
-of company. And just then the door at the front end of the car opened
-and in walked June with a squirming, excited Sam in his arms!
-
-June was grinning broadly, but there was something anxious and
-apologetic about that grin. After his first gasp of surprise, Wayne
-wanted to be stern and severe, but he just couldn’t because it was so
-good to have June and Sam there! And, anyway, you couldn’t frown or be
-cross with a delirious dog in your lap trying to lick your face and
-whine his delight at the same time! And so Wayne gave it up, and only
-smiled a trifle sheepishly, and June, seeing that he was not to be
-scolded, hugged himself, and grinned harder than ever.
-
-The conductor interrupted the reunion with a request for tickets and a
-demand that the dog be removed to the baggage car, and so the three of
-them made their way forward and Sam was once more secured to the handle
-of a trunk with a piece of cord and Wayne and June perched themselves
-alongside and so finished their journey. June, it seemed, had at no
-time entertained any notion of being left behind, but had thrown up his
-job at the hotel that morning, staying only long enough to break in one
-of his recently made friends, and had then gone back to the car to pack
-up. Wayne’s belongings were here in a pasteboard box and June’s tied
-up in paper. “I done fasten up the place,” said June, “an’ nail boards
-over the windows, an’ I reckon if we-all wants to go back there we’s
-goin’ to fin’ things jus’ the same like we left ’em. An’ I done water
-them tomatuses an’ everything too, Mas’ Wayne.”
-
-“But, June, if we don’t stay in Harrisville what will you do? You
-shouldn’t have thrown up your job.”
-
-June winked solemnly. “I done made a ’greement with that nigger, Mas’
-Wayne. If I comes back he’s goin’ to get out, yes, sir, an’ I gets my
-job back.”
-
-“Oh! But supposing he changes his mind by that time?”
-
-“Then,” answered the other solemnly, “I’se goin’ to change his face.”
-
-Just before it got too dark to see, the train began to run parallel
-with a broad river, and after that, at intervals, the big stream
-flashed into sight. The baggage-man was amiable and talkative and told
-them much about the country they were passing through and the city
-they were approaching, giving them directions for finding a cheap but
-satisfactory hotel near the station. As Harrisville contained about
-fifty thousand population the boys naturally expected to find a big
-place, but when, having alighted from the baggage-car by the simple
-expedient of jumping to a truck outside the wide door, and made their
-way through the crowded station to an equally crowded street, the city
-proved to be larger and far more confusing than their anticipation.
-Fortunately, though, the Bemis House was in plain sight across the way
-and they had soon secured a room. The Bemis House drew no colour line,
-nor did it object to a small dog if he was sort of smuggled upstairs
-and kept quiet, and so the three companions were speedily housed
-together in a small and shabby but comfortable enough bedroom.
-
-They didn’t stay in it long, however, for the city lights were calling
-them. They had some supper at a little restaurant near by and then,
-with Sam pulling ahead at the end of his improvised leash, they set
-forth on exploration bent. That was a most exciting evening, for they
-had traversed no more than a half-dozen squares when the lights and
-gaudy pictures of a moving-picture theatre brought them to a stop.
-June announced his intentions inside of two seconds, and Wayne, after
-discovering that a dime would purchase admittance, made no objections.
-For the subsequent hour and a half they were as happy as two boys could
-be, and when the “Good Night! Come Again” was flashed on the screen and
-the audience poured out June was all for seeing the show over again
-and had to be literally dragged away, Wayne assuring him that they
-could come again tomorrow evening. They saw some of the town then, but
-nothing short of a three-alarm fire would have snared their attention
-after the things they had witnessed on the screen, and so, being tired
-and sleepy, they went back to the little hotel and crawled into the
-beds.
-
-Wayne’s letter of introduction to Mr. Stephen Milburn bore the address
-of the Congress House, and inquiry elicited the information that the
-Congress House was far uptown and many blocks away from their lodgings.
-For fear that the club manager might get away before he could reach
-him, Wayne ate a hurried and sketchy breakfast at seven, entrusted
-Sam to June’s care, and hurried off on foot at about the time the
-retail section of the city through which his route lay was beginning to
-wake up. The distance was long and Wayne was horribly afraid that Mr.
-Milburn would have had his breakfast and be off and about the business
-of managing before he got to the hotel. Consequently, he was somewhat
-surprised when, on inquiring for the manager, he was told that Mr.
-Milburn never saw anyone until after breakfast.
-
-“After breakfast!” repeated Wayne blankly. “Well, what time is that,
-please?”
-
-The clerk at the desk looked speculatingly at the clock and yawned
-behind his hand. “He usually comes down about nine,” was the reply.
-“Come back at half-past and you’ll probably find him.”
-
-Wayne withdrew, wondering how Mr. Milburn ever found time to do
-anything after getting up at nine o’clock! For a while he occupied one
-of the extremely comfortable chairs in the hotel lobby and perused a
-newspaper that someone had discarded there, but the street outside was
-by this time humming and bustling, the morning was still cool and the
-temptation to see more of Harrisville was too strong for him. So he
-went out and joined the stream on the sidewalk and loitered along,
-looking into fascinating windows and missing little that went on. At a
-quarter to nine he was some distance from the hotel and so he turned
-back. But when he had walked as many squares as seemed necessary to
-bring him to his destination he failed to discover it. It dawned on him
-then that he had been walking at right angles to the street on which
-the hotel was situated, and he turned back and hurried along the way he
-had come. In the end he had to ask his way of a newsboy. Whether that
-young rascal purposely gave him the wrong direction or whether Wayne
-misunderstood him, the result was the same. He reached the Congress
-House at just twenty-five minutes to ten by the big round clock in the
-lobby and was met with the information that Mr. Milburn had breakfasted
-a little earlier than usual and had just gone out. The clerk, still
-yawning delicately, could not even hazard a guess as to the manager’s
-present whereabouts, and Wayne was turning disappointedly away from the
-desk when a bell boy came to his assistance.
-
-“Say, Mister, you can find Mr. Milburn at the ball park after half-past
-ten,” he said. “They practises then every day.”
-
-“Oh, thanks,” answered Wayne. “Which way is the park from here, please?”
-
-“Out Tioga Avenue. Take any blue car going north. The conductor’ll
-tell you where to get off. But you’ll see it yourself if you watch for
-it.”
-
-“Is it much of a walk?” Wayne asked.
-
-“No, not more’n a mile and a half. Mr. Milburn walks out there every
-morning. Go out Prentiss Street till you come to the armory and then
-turn left and follow the car tracks. You’ll find it.”
-
-“I surely will!” Wayne told himself as he thanked the boy and went out
-again. “But the next time I’ll know better than to let him get away
-from me like that. When you start to do anything, I reckon it’s a good
-plan to keep on doing it.”
-
-As it was still only a quarter to ten, Wayne assured himself that he
-had plenty of time. But he also assured himself that he wasn’t going
-to loiter for that reason. If he could intercept Mr. Milburn before he
-started to work it would, he thought, be better. So he set forth at a
-good, steady pace, asking his direction every few squares so that he
-would not again get lost, and presently found the armory and took the
-turn to the left as instructed. A square farther a blue car buzzed
-past him bearing the legend “Ball Grounds,” and Wayne knew that he was
-right. It was, however, a minute or two past the half-hour, when the
-enclosure came into sight, and Wayne decided that the bell boy had
-underestimated the distance, possibly from kindly motives.
-
-The park occupied two squares in a part of the city given over to
-small, thickly clustered dwellings. On one side the railroad tracks ran
-close to the high board fence and smoke from the engines--accompanied
-by cinders, as Wayne was to learn later--billowed over onto the
-field whenever the wind blew in the right--or, more accurately,
-wrong--direction. The place looked well cared for and the stands,
-visible above the fence, were of steel and concrete. The ticket windows
-and main entrances were closed and Wayne went nearly to the next corner
-before he found a means of ingress. And even then his way was barred
-by a man who sat beside the small door reading a paper until Wayne had
-exhibited his letter.
-
-“All right, Jack, help yourself,” replied the man on guard. “He’s in
-the house, I guess.”
-
-Wayne didn’t consider it worth while to waste his time telling the man
-that his name wasn’t Jack; which was just as well since Mike always
-called everyone Jack--except Mr. Milburn and one or two of the more
-important team members--and it wasn’t at all likely that he would have
-given serious consideration to the correction. Wayne passed through
-and found himself squarely behind first base, with a wide expanse of
-not very flourishing turf stretching away to the distant fences which
-were everywhere adorned with colourful advertisements of everything
-from smoking tobacco to suspenders. Beside him on his right was an open
-door leading into a structure built under one of the stands and which
-he presumed held the dressing quarters. At his left was another stand
-with a similar building beneath it. Over the door of the latter was the
-word “Visitors.”
-
-A tall, raw-boned youth of twenty-one or two emerged through the open
-door at that moment. He had the reddest hair Wayne had ever seen on
-a human being and was fearfully and wonderfully freckled. He was in
-uniform and held a ball in one hand and a glove in the other. As he
-almost ran into Wayne he could not help noticing him.
-
-“’Lo, Bill!” he said. “Lookin’ for someone?”
-
-“Yes, sir, Mr. Milburn.”
-
-The red-haired chap jerked the hand holding the ball over his shoulder.
-“Steve? He’s inside bawling ’em out. That’s why I beat it. If you want
-to sell him anything or strike him for a pass, kid, take my advice and
-don’t do it. Let him simmer down. Can you catch?”
-
-Wayne nodded. “I’ve got a letter to him,” he said uncertainly and
-questioningly.
-
-“Keep it, Bill, till he recovers,” advised the other. “Come on out and
-catch a few for me. I got a bum wing this morning for fair.”
-
-Doubtfully, Wayne followed the big chap around to the front of the
-stand. He didn’t like the idea of delaying his interview, but it seemed
-possible that the red-haired man knew best. The latter pointed to a
-scarred place in the turf in front of which a stone slab did duty for
-a plate. “Stand there, Bill. Haven’t got a glove, have you? Well, I’ll
-just toss ’em. I got to limber up or Steve’ll be riding me, too, in a
-minute.” He swung an arm up and sped the ball slowly and easily across
-the trampled grass to Wayne and Wayne tossed it back again.
-
-“Guess you’re a player, ain’t you?” asked the big pitcher. “Looking for
-a job, are you?”
-
-“Yes, Mr. Farrel sent me over here to see Mr. Milburn.”
-
-“So Chris is at it again, eh?” The red-haired one eyed Wayne with more
-interest as he waited for the ball to come back. “Where’d he find you,
-kid?”
-
-“Medfield, sir.”
-
-“Medfield? Have they got a club there? What league’s that? The Nile
-Valley?”
-
-“It’s just an amateur club,” replied Wayne. “It isn’t in any league.”
-
-“Oh, that’s it, eh? Well, say, Chris is catching ’em young, ain’t he?
-What was you doing when he caught you?”
-
-“I played second on the Chenango team and----”
-
-“On the _what_?”
-
-“On the Chenango team, sir.”
-
-“Think of that! You played second base for ’em, eh? Bet you they was
-the proud bunch!”
-
-Wayne coloured. “Maybe you’d better find someone else,” he said
-stiffly, rolling the ball back and turning away.
-
-“Oh, come on, kid!” called the pitcher, with a good-natured laugh.
-“Have a heart! I wasn’t saying anything, was I? Gee whiz, if you stay
-around here you’ll get a lot worse ragging than that, believe me! And
-if you know what’s what, Bill, you’ll take it smiling, ’cause if you
-don’t they’ll make it worse for you. Just hold a few more now, like a
-good feller. Dan’ll be out in a minute.”
-
-Wayne nodded and spread his hands again. This time the ball came in
-with a thud that almost staggered him and the pitcher grinned. “Too
-bad, kid,” he said. “I won’t do it again.” Wayne smiled, too.
-
-“You may if you’ll tell me before you do it,” he answered.
-
-“Say, I’ll bet you can hold down a sack all right, Bill,” replied the
-other. “Tell you what. You wait for me to give you the signal, see?
-When I see that Steve’s got his temper back I’ll pipe you off. But
-don’t you tackle him before. Here they come now. Thanks, kid. Keep out
-of the way awhile.”
-
-Wayne tossed the ball back, nodded and loitered aside as the
-players emerged from the dressing-room. Wayne thought them a very
-likely-looking lot as they made their way around to the bench, followed
-by a man lugging two big bat-bags. In age they ran from nineteen to
-thirty, he judged. One, a broad-shouldered and powerful-looking man,
-appeared even older than thirty and wore a heavy mustache, something
-that none of the others had. The big man looked decidedly cross, Wayne
-thought, and he wondered if he had been the principal object of Manager
-Milburn’s wrath. The manager himself Wayne failed to see. No one paid
-any attention to Wayne. All the players looked very grave and solemn,
-but Wayne caught one, a youth not much older than he, winking at a
-companion and concluded that the solemnity was largely assumed. It was
-the man with the mustache who took command of the situation just then.
-
-“Now show some pep!” he barked. “Get out there and act alive. Some of
-you stuffed sausages will be benched mighty quick if you don’t wake up,
-and I’m giving it to you square. Ten dollars a month would buy the lot
-of you if anyone made the offer!”
-
-Wayne awoke to the fact that the mustached man was Mr. Steve Milburn,
-something he had not suspected, since he had thought to find the
-manager in street clothes. Wayne viewed his angry countenance with
-sinking heart. The big pitcher was right, he concluded. This was
-no moment to approach Mr. Milburn with the expectation of getting
-a hearing. He made himself as small and inconspicuous as he might,
-finding a seat on the empty bench, and for the ensuing half-hour
-watched the Harrisville Badgers go through their morning practice.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-TURNED DOWN!
-
-
-The practice wasn’t much different from what the Chenangos were
-accustomed to. Harrisville showed more certainty and ease and speed in
-handling the ball, and there were fewer slip-ups, but, on the other
-hand, Wayne thought there was something rather perfunctory about the
-work. Manager Milburn was after his charges every minute, barking and
-snarling, and nothing appeared to please him the least bit in the
-world. Wayne began to wonder whether it would not be the part of wisdom
-to take himself off and let the interview wait until after dinner or
-even tomorrow. There came no sign from the red-haired pitcher--his name
-appeared to be Herring, according to the irate manager, and “Red,” if
-you believed the players--who was working out near by in company with
-three other twirlers and two catchers. Manager Milburn was behind the
-plate and the rest of the players, with the exception of two, were in
-the field. The two took turns at batting, laying down bunts, cracking
-out liners and arching long flies at the behest of the manager. A
-short, stocky youngster named Nye was pitching. It was interesting
-enough and Wayne would have enjoyed it had it not been for that letter
-in his pocket toward which his hand strayed every minute or two.
-
-After a while Nye gave way to one of the batters, who, it appeared,
-was also a pitcher, and retired to the bench beside Wayne. Several not
-over-clean towels draped an end of the seat and Nye seized one and
-patted the perspiration from his streaming face.
-
-“Getting hot,” he said to Wayne. The latter agreed. “Newspaper man?”
-asked the pitcher. Wayne shook his head. “Thought I didn’t know your
-face. What’s your line, friend?”
-
-“I’m after a place on the team,” replied the boy. “Mr. Farrel sent me.”
-
-“Honest? How old are you?”
-
-Wayne hesitated an instant. Finally, however, since he had a fondness
-for the truth, he told it. The pitcher raised his brows.
-
-“Well, if Steve asks you you’d better tack on a couple of years,” he
-advised. “You look like you might be eighteen, easy. Where do you play?”
-
-“Second, sir.”
-
-“Well, you aren’t likely to get there this season. Jones is as good as
-they make ’em. Seen him yet?”
-
-“Jones?”
-
-“No, Steve Milburn.”
-
-“No, sir, not yet. He didn’t seem to be in very good humour and so I
-thought maybe I’d better wait awhile.”
-
-“Hop” Nye chuckled. “You got it about right, kid. If I was you I’d beat
-it and come around tomorrow. He won’t get any better today, I guess.
-Not this morning, anyway.”
-
-“Is he always like--like he is now?” asked Wayne anxiously.
-
-“Steve? No, this is a little extra. Some of the boys went off to a
-picnic night before last and yesterday we got licked to a fare-ye-well
-by the ‘Billies.’ Oh, no, Steve has his fits now and again, but we
-don’t mind ’em much, and he gets over ’em. He’s a good sort--for a
-manager.”
-
-At that moment a stout man wearing a faded sweater whose alternate
-rings of red and white added to his apparent circumference and who
-walked with a rolling gait and chewed gum fast and furious, appeared on
-the scene and was instantly pounced on by Mr. Milburn.
-
-“Where have you been, Jimmy?” demanded the manager irately. “Had your
-dinner yet? Or are you just up from breakfast?”
-
-“It’s my usual time, Steve,” was the placid reply. “Got through with
-’em?”
-
-“Yes, I’m through with them.” The manager’s tone implied that he was
-vastly relieved. “Take them, and if you can do anything with them, do
-it for the love of mud!”
-
-“All right, Boss. Over to the net, boys. Bring them bats, some of you.
-Get a hustle on now. Some of you look like you was falling asleep on
-your pedals. Get goin’, get goin’!”
-
-The players moved off with more or less alacrity to the further side
-of the field where two batting nets were set, and the manager, after
-watching them a moment with the utmost contempt, turned toward the
-bench and caught sight of Wayne. The latter wished then that he had
-acted on Nye’s advice and left the field when he had had the chance.
-Steve Milburn strode up to him belligerently.
-
-“What are you doing in here?” he barked. “Who let you in? Don’t you
-know you fellows aren’t allowed in here without permission? Get out and
-stay out!”
-
-Wayne found himself on his feet. There was something extremely
-compelling in the manager’s voice and manner! But the next instant his
-fingers had closed around that letter and he was pulling it forth from
-his pocket. “I--I was sent to see you, sir----”
-
-“See me at the hotel then. You newspaper fellows make me sick, anyway.
-Who sent you?”
-
-“Mr. Farrel.”
-
-“Farrel? Who’s Farrel?”
-
-“Mr. Chris Farrel, sir. He told me--he gave me----”
-
-“Chris sent you? What have you got there?”
-
-“A letter.” Wayne offered it and the manager pulled it impatiently from
-his hand, tore open the envelope, and ran a quick and frowning gaze
-over the contents. Then he squeezed letter and envelope into a tight
-ball and tossed them under the bench.
-
-“He’s a fool! I don’t need infielders, and he knows it. Nothing doing,
-kid.”
-
-“But--he said you’d give me a try-out, sir,” exclaimed Wayne with a
-sinking heart.
-
-“He’d tell you anything. Look here, now, and get this. I don’t need
-infielders and wouldn’t sign one up if he was a Baker and a Collins all
-rolled into one. I told Chris to find me an outfielder who could hit
-and he goes and sends me a second baseman! And robs the nursery, too!
-The man’s crazy! You might as well beat it, kid. Back to the crib for
-yours.”
-
-“I’m old enough to play ball, sir,” answered Wayne.
-
-“Nothing doing,” replied the man wearily. “I can pick them up any day
-like you.”
-
-“But he said you’d give me a try-out, Mr. Milburn. He--he promised me
-that. He wrote another letter to you yesterday----”
-
-“He _said_ he did. He’d tell you anything. What would you expect of an
-idiot who will ship you a second baseman when you want an outfielder?
-Anyway, I haven’t got any letter. And it wouldn’t matter if he wrote me
-a dozen. I’ve got all the second baseman I want. So don’t stand there
-and argue about it. I know what I want, don’t I?”
-
-“I reckon you do,” answered Wayne, losing his temper at last. “And
-I know I was promised a try-out by your--your representative”--the
-manager sniffed audibly--“and I want it!”
-
-“What do I care what you want?” demanded the man loudly. “You won’t get
-any try-out from me, and I’m telling you right. I’m not responsible for
-Chris Farrel making a fool of himself. Anyway, you aren’t old enough.
-Come around next year and I’ll give you a try-out--for bat-boy!” Steve
-Milburn turned on his heel.
-
-Several retorts, none of which were either tactful or likely to aid
-his cause, sprang to Wayne’s lips, but he closed his teeth on them.
-Instead, he strode quickly after the manager, and the latter turned
-upon him scowlingly. “Listen to me, kid,” he said threateningly. “You
-beat it out of here before I throw you out. Get that?”
-
-“Yes, sir,” answered Wayne unflinchingly. “I’m going. Can I see you at
-your hotel this evening?”
-
-“You can not! I’ve said everything. Want me to sing it for you?”
-
-“No, sir, only I thought that maybe you’d feel different when you’d----”
-
-“When I’d what?”
-
-“When you’d got your--when you weren’t angry, sir.”
-
-“Angry? Who says I’m angry? I’m not angry. You can’t make me angry.”
-Mr. Milburn scowled alarmingly. “Anyway, wouldn’t a bunch of boneheads
-like those over there make anyone angry? I’d like to see anyone keep
-sweet-tempered with that bunch of ivory-domed, flat-footed, slab-sided
-cripples on his hands. There isn’t a ball player in the lot! Not a
-single, solitary one! They don’t know ball from beans, and they don’t
-want to! Angry! Great Scott----”
-
-“Well, don’t you want to hire a ball player, then, sir?” asked Wayne
-innocently.
-
-“Hire a----” Mr. Milburn sputtered and waved impotent hands about his
-head. Then: “_Get out!_” he bawled.
-
-Wayne went. There didn’t seem anything to be gained by driving the
-manager to new heights of frenzy. The last he saw of Steve Milburn that
-much-tried man was legging it across the field as fast as his feet
-would carry him. Wayne smiled. “I’m glad I’m not one of those fellows,”
-he thought as he turned to the gate.
-
-Mike, who had moved his chair into the shade and was dozing over his
-newspaper, looked up sleepily and nodded as Wayne passed through the
-fence. Outside, the smile faded from the boy’s face. The humour had
-quite gone from the situation now. He had failed and there was nothing
-to do but go back to Medfield. The thought didn’t please him. To be
-sure, he had prepared Jim Mason and the others for his return by a
-prediction that he wouldn’t make good, but it came to him now that he
-hadn’t believed in that prediction, that, deep down inside of him, he
-had all along expected to succeed. No, returning to Medfield didn’t
-appeal to him a bit.
-
-Presently, as he walked along in the full glare of a merciless noonday
-sun, anger ousted dejection. Steve Milburn had no right to turn him
-down like that. The club’s scout had guaranteed him a try-out and
-the manager ought to give it to him. Wayne told himself that several
-times, and the more often he said it, the more convinced he became of
-the truth of it, until, having reached the armory corner and turned
-toward the Bemis House, he was in a condition of perspiration and
-indignation. Sight of the Congress House crystallised the indignation
-into resolution. He had a right to a fair trial and he would have it.
-He would have it if he stayed in Harrisville all summer!
-
-From that verdict to reckoning up his money and comparing the amount to
-the requirements of a prolonged sojourn in the city was a short step.
-He had a little over ten dollars left, or would have when he had paid
-for his room at the hotel, and ten dollars would not, he reflected,
-keep two hungry boys and a dog from starvation very long. Then he
-remembered June’s savings and cheered up again. Using June’s money was
-something he didn’t like to do, something he wouldn’t do under ordinary
-circumstances, but this was no ordinary crisis. Wayne felt that justice
-and honour were involved. He was standing up for his rights. June’s
-money should be used, if necessary, for the Cause!
-
-He wondered whether it might not be well to apply to the law for
-assistance, but he abandoned that idea quickly. Lawyers were, as he
-had always heard, expensive helpers. And, besides, what was the good
-of a try-out if nothing came of it? And if he antagonised Mr. Milburn
-too much nothing would come of it. All the manager needed to do was to
-give him the try-out and say that he didn’t suit. Next Wayne thought of
-the owner of the club, Mr. John J. Badger. Or was it John K.? He might
-seek Mr. Badger and put the situation up to him. But then, that, too,
-would increase the manager’s ire and probably accomplish harm rather
-than good. No, what was to be done must be done tactfully, if firmly,
-he decided. He must persuade Mr. Milburn to give him the try-out of his
-own free will. Only, how?
-
-He was still confronted by that “How” when he reached the Bemis House
-and found June and Sam dozing in a tilted-back chair under the striped
-awning in front. Wayne dragged a chair alongside and, defeating Sam’s
-attempts to crawl into his arms, narrated the story of the morning’s
-encounter--and defeat. June was incredulous, outraged, indignant. He
-insisted that Wayne should revenge himself instantly on Mr. Milburn
-and the Harrisville Baseball Club by shaking the dust of the place
-from their feet and leaving manager and team to get along without his
-services. But Wayne said no to that.
-
-“We’re going to stay right here until I get what I came for,” he
-declared stoutly. “We’re going to find a place to live first of all.
-This is too expensive, I reckon. How much money have you got, June?”
-
-“I got forty-seven dollars an’ ninety-three cents,” replied June
-proudly. “I reckon that’ll keep us here mos’ all summer, Mas’ Wayne, if
-that fool man don’ give you that position before.”
-
-“All right, June. Now I’m going to write a letter. Then we’ll have some
-dinner and try to find a boarding-house afterward. You stay here, Sam.”
-
-The letter, written at one of the sloping desks that lined a wall in
-the little hotel lobby, was short but decided. It was addressed to Jim
-Mason and announced that Wayne would not be back to his job but was
-going to remain in Harrisville. It didn’t go into details at all and it
-ended up with thanks to Jim for his kindness and love to Mrs. Mason and
-Terry and a promise to see him the first time he returned to Medfield.
-He considered writing to Arthur Pattern, too, but decided to wait for
-a day or two longer. Then, having burned his bridges behind him, Wayne
-accompanied June to a nearby restaurant and ate a very satisfactory
-dinner.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-“BADGERS” VS. “BILLIES”
-
-
-They found a boarding-place without difficulty less than a square from
-the hotel. It was not very prepossessing and even June was inclined
-to turn up his nose at it. However, June’s nose was not shaped for
-turning-up purposes, and Wayne reminded him that they couldn’t expect
-much for two dollars and a half a week, and so he didn’t. They engaged
-a small and illy-lighted little apartment with one very grimy window
-that looked out into the rear premises of an iron foundry. The view,
-while not exactly inspiriting, was at least not monotonous, for the
-foundry provided movement and noise; to say nothing of smoke. Their
-landlady was frowsy and sleepy-looking and toddled away in evident
-relief the instant Wayne had deposited the first week’s board money
-in her hand, leaving them to debate whether the one small towel was
-intended to serve both occupants. The furniture consisted of two
-narrow cots pushed side by side, one chair, a decrepit bureau, and a
-metal washstand. There was a tattered rug on the floor and an equally
-tattered sash curtain at the lone window. (The rug was tossed into
-the hallway that night after Wayne had caught his foot in a hole and
-fallen against the bureau.) The cots looked ready to collapse of their
-own weight, but proved equal to the tasks set them, although they
-complained horribly every time Wayne or June turned over in them.
-
-But that was later. After settling their few belongings into place the
-boys, followed, you may be certain, by Sam, sallied forth again. It
-was mid-afternoon by that time and Wayne led the way hurriedly along
-the street in the direction of the distant ball park. To part with
-fifty cents of their combined fortunes seemed, on the face of it, pure
-recklessness, but Wayne soothed his conscience by telling himself that
-a fellow ought to know something about the ball team he was going to
-join. June’s conscience troubled him not a whit. June was as pleased
-as Punch at the idea of seeing a ball game. Sam--well, we don’t know
-what Sam thought about it. He seemed, however, perfectly willing to
-accompany the expedition.
-
-The game was well into the first half of the third inning when the two
-boys settled themselves in their places on the bleachers. There had
-been a trifle of difficulty in persuading the man at the gate to allow
-the passage of the dog, a difficulty which Sam had solved by taking
-the matter under his own control and trotting past. The ticket taker
-had threatened to have the dog removed, but his threat had seemed to
-lack conviction and the boys were not troubled. Wayne was surprised to
-note the smallness of the attendance. The reserved sections were merely
-sprinkled with spectators and more than half of the bleacher seats were
-empty. Possibly six hundred persons were on hand, but surely no more.
-
-The Doncaster Club, familiarly known as the “Billies,” were the
-opponents this afternoon, playing the third contest of a four-game
-series. The score-board showed Doncaster leading by two runs obtained
-in the first inning. Wayne squandered another five cents and bought
-a score-card which informed him of the batting order. A neighbour
-ended his doubt as to which of the three pitchers on the card was
-really performing by telling him over his shoulder that “Wainwright’s
-in the box and Linton’s catching. They worked him for a pass and a
-three-bagger in the first. Henderson and Coe’s the Billies’ battery.”
-Wayne thanked him and turned his attention back to the game in time to
-see the third Doncaster man thrown out at first.
-
-After that the game dragged for several innings, with neither team
-getting past second. Wayne recognised several of the players he had
-watched in the morning, notably O’Neill, the lanky, tow-headed left
-fielder, and a small, lithe youngster named Bennett who played third
-base as if he had a bunch of steel springs inside him. In spite of
-the distance to the bench, Wayne easily made out Steve Milburn and
-“Red” Herring and thought the smaller man next to “Red” was Nye. The
-crowd in the bleachers kept up an incessant, good-natured flow of
-comment and advice. O’Neill--Wayne learned before the game was over
-that his popular nickname was “Sailor”--was a great favourite with the
-bleacherites and frequently turned to wave a hand or shout a pat reply
-to some remark aimed at him. The bleacherites had other favourites
-as well: young Bennett and Nick Crane, the first-choice pitcher, and
-a swarthy, broad-shouldered, long-limbed first baseman named Morgan.
-And Wayne gathered in the course of the contest that Steve Milburn was
-held in the utmost respect as a manager and was personally popular to a
-degree.
-
-Wayne thought that the manager’s “bawling-out” that forenoon had done
-good, for the Harrisville team was certainly on its toes all the time
-and played with a snap. Only the total inability to hit the Billies’
-pitcher safely kept the home club from scoring. Henderson was slammed
-here, there, and everywhere, but there was always a man right on the
-spot to spoil the hit. However, the Badgers did manage to get a run
-across in the fifth when Cross, who played shortstop and captained the
-team, beat out a roller to first, was sacrificed to second, and won
-home on a long fly to right fielder. But Doncaster came back in the
-next inning and found Wainwright for two hits and a sacrifice and took
-back her lead of two tallies.
-
-June was having a fine time with a bag of peanuts, which he shared with
-Sam, and was already a violent partisan of the Harrisville Badgers.
-His comments, voiced for Wayne’s ear alone but audible to the nearby
-spectators, aroused much mirth. Wayne didn’t hear them all, for he was
-busy watching the players and their methods. He saw several tricks that
-were new to his experience. For instance, a Doncaster coach at third
-insisted that a runner who had reached that base should keep outside
-the foul line, something that the runner repeatedly neglected to do.
-That puzzled Wayne for the better part of two innings and wasn’t solved
-until a batter hit sharply to young Bennett, whereupon Wayne realised
-that had a runner been on fair ground he would probably have been hit
-by the ball and so been put out. By keeping on foul territory he was
-safe. He stored the fact away in his memory for future use. Most of
-all he watched the playing of Jones, the second baseman. Jones was
-short and a bit heavy-looking, but he seemed fast enough in action
-and certainly played a good, steady game. At bat he was not dangerous
-that afternoon, but, for that matter, none of the Badgers was. Wayne
-asked the man behind him, who had volunteered the information about the
-batteries, what sort of a hitter Jones was and the man pursed his lips
-and shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“Clover Jones? We-ell, he ain’t so bad as some. He bats better’n Tim
-Leary. I’ve seen Clover everlastingly wallop the ball an’ then again
-I’ve seen him go a week without making a hit. You can’t tell about
-Clover. He’s a good baseman, though. Ain’t anybody hitting today. That
-feller Henderson’s got a lot on the ball, I guess.”
-
-But even Henderson, who ranked high in the Tri-State League, couldn’t
-keep it up to the end, and when the eighth inning came Sailor
-O’Neill brought yelps of joy from the stands by leading off with the
-Badgers’ fourth safe hit of the game, a sharp liner that whizzed over
-shortstop’s head and let O’Neill reach second base by a hair’s breadth.
-Then Leary struck out. Linton, the catcher, laid down a bunt in front
-of the plate and the Billies’ backstop chose to head off O’Neill at
-third. But his hurried throw went wide, O’Neill scored and Linton slid
-into second. With but one down there was a fine chance of evening up
-the score or winning, and Wayne wasn’t surprised when the delay at the
-plate resulted in the arrival there of a pinch-hitter in the person
-of Fawcett, a substitute outfielder. Fawcett’s appearance was greeted
-joyfully by the bleachers and he received a deal of advice. Fawcett,
-however, failed to deliver the needed hit, for, after swinging at two
-good ones and missing them, he stood idle, while a third sailed across
-the plate. Bennett was the remaining hope, and Bennett came across
-nicely. He allowed Henderson to put him in the hole to the tune of
-two-and-one, refused a wide one and a drop, and then connected with
-the next offering and banged it hard at the hole between second and
-shortstop. The pitcher nearly reached it but failed, and the ball
-sailed serenely over the second bag and Linton scuttled home with the
-tying run.
-
-The inning ended when Briggs, centre fielder, flied out to first
-baseman, and with the score three to three the game went through
-the ninth and started the tenth. By this time ennui was no longer
-discernible in stands or bleachers. Leather-lunged “fans” were
-appealing wildly to the Fates for a victory. Cotton was the relief
-pitcher for the Badgers, and, although he was as wild as a hawk in the
-ninth, he got by with the aid of sharp fielding and settled down in
-the tenth very nicely. With two of the Billies gone, though, an error
-by Captain Cross gave a life to the Doncaster left fielder and a pass
-to the succeeding batsman put him on second. Then the first baseman
-succeeded where better batters had failed and lined one past third,
-allowing the left fielder to score and putting the next man on second.
-A fly to the outfield brought the end.
-
-But Doncaster again held the lead and it was up to Harrisville to get a
-run across. The bleacherites did all they could to help, and June’s was
-a conspicuous voice amongst them. Even Sam seemed to sense a desperate
-crisis, for he roused himself from the lethargy produced by a feast
-of peanuts and barked wildly. Cross went out, third to first. “Cob”
-Morgan, the dark-visaged first baseman, reached the initial station
-safely by reason of a fumble on the part of shortstop. Jones started to
-the plate but was recalled and LaCroix took his place. LaCroix was a
-thick-set, hook-nosed Canuck. Opinion in Wayne’s vicinity differed as
-to the advisability of putting “Nap” in, but it was generally conceded
-that Steve Milburn generally pulled the trick and that events might
-vindicate his judgment in this case. And events surely did.
-
-Nap LaCroix leaned against the first offering and hit to short right
-and there were two on. The Harrisville “rooters” cheered and yelped
-and, considering their scarcity, made a brave uproar. Possibly it had
-its effect on Henderson, for he wabbled for the first time in the
-proceedings and walked O’Neill. The bleacherites arose to their feet
-and waved hats and coats and newspapers madly. Wayne did his share,
-June yipped, and Sam, squirming in Wayne’s arms, barked frantically.
-Another pinch-hitter was sent in, this time in place of Leary.
-
-“O you Joe Casey!” bellowed the audience. “Hit it out, Joe!” “Remember
-yesterday, Joe!”
-
-The young pitcher, who Wayne gathered had been ingloriously hammered
-the preceding afternoon, didn’t look like a likely candidate to pull
-the game out of the fire, for he presented a very awkward appearance
-at the plate. But he didn’t have much chance to show his prowess for
-Henderson pitched two balls before he got a strike over and then
-followed with two more, forcing in the tying run and exiling himself
-to the showers. The audience shouted joy and relief and settled down
-to their seats again. But they still sat on the edges, for the game
-was still to win. Linton tried hard to deliver but only hit across the
-infield to shortstop and LaCroix was an easy out at the plate. The new
-pitcher for Doncaster was slow and heady and he was cutting the corners
-very nicely, it seemed, for he wafted two strikes over on Cotton before
-the Badgers’ box artist knew what was happening, and Harrisville saw
-her hopes descending. Still, in the end Cotton almost came through.
-With the score two-and-two, he met a straight one and lifted it
-gloriously against the sky for what looked like a circuit hit.
-Harrisville arose as one man and shouted hoarsely and triumphantly, for
-that ball looked exactly as though it meant to ride right on over the
-left field fence. The fielder hiked back on twinkling feet, looked over
-his shoulder, raced on again, turned, stepped back until his shadow
-loomed large against the boards behind him, and put up his hands. And
-that deceitful ball just came right down into them as though pulled
-there by an invisible string!
-
-Gloom and disgust possessed the stands!
-
-The sun was gone behind the hills in the west when the eleventh session
-opened and the heat of the afternoon was giving place to the coolness
-of evening. Coats which had laid across knees for ten long innings were
-donned again. Here and there a spectator arose, unwillingly, and, with
-long backward looks, took himself homeward. Cotton was pitching fine
-ball now and Doncaster had never a look-in during her half of the
-eleventh. But neither had Harrisville in her portion. If Cotton was
-going well, so was the rival twirler, and the nearest thing to a hit
-that either team evolved was a palpable scratch that placed Cross on
-first, from which sack he failed to move. In the twelfth the Billies
-caused consternation by working Cotton for a pass and advancing a man
-to third on a sacrifice and an error by LaCroix, playing second. But
-two strike-outs followed and averted calamity.
-
-Manager Milburn’s line-up was a rather patched affair by now, for he
-had staked all on that tenth inning crisis. Fawcett started off by
-flying out to left. O’Neill hit for one. LaCroix fouled out to catcher.
-O’Neill stole on the second pitch to Linton and was safe. Linton
-fouled twice behind third base, each time barely escaping being caught
-out, and then, with two strikes and two balls against him, waited and
-walked to base. With two on and Cotton at bat anything might happen--or
-nothing. For a while it looked like nothing, for Cotton, in spite of
-his eagerness to hit and the wild and weird manner in which he swung
-his bat around his head, for all the world like a joyous lad twirling
-a shillalah at Donnybrook Fair and daring an adversary to step up and
-have his head broken, the Billies’ pitcher managed to sneak them
-across in unexpected places until the score was two-and-two. Cotton was
-losing his temper now, and Wayne could hear Steve Milburn barking at
-him from the bench. A third ball went past. The bleachers stormed and
-railed at the Doncaster pitcher, Cotton squeezed his bat harder than
-ever and did a little dance in the box. The Billies’ twirler wound up,
-shot his arm forward and the ball sped to the plate. Perhaps Cotton
-mistook the ball for the pitcher’s head. At all events, he tried hard
-to break his bat on it and came near to doing it. Off whizzed the ball
-and off sped Cotton. But the long fly, while it started fair, soon
-broke to the left, and Cotton, pounding the turf between first and
-second with head down and legs twinkling, was stopped in his mad career
-and headed back to the plate. The audience groaned its disappointment
-and sat down again. Then an unlooked-for event occurred. Wayne was
-apprised of it first when a wild burst of delight broke from his
-neighbours in the bleachers. At the plate Cotton was walking sadly
-toward the bench, the umpire, mask off, was shouting something that
-Wayne couldn’t hear for the noise about him and a new figure strode to
-the batter’s box.
-
-“Who is it?” asked Wayne to the bleachers at large.
-
-“Steve himself!” was the answer. “Bust it, Steve! Knock the hide off
-it! Wow!”
-
-And sure enough it was Manager Milburn who faced the Doncaster pitcher
-now and who tapped a long black bat gently on the rubber, leaned it
-against his leg, moistened his hands and rubbed them together, took
-up the bat again and eyed the moundsman warily. In the outfield the
-players were stepping back and still back. The Harrisville rooters
-shouted and screeched, red of face, entreating of voice.
-
-One ball, far wide of the plate, that Steve Milburn only looked at as
-it sped by. A strike that caused him to turn and observe the umpire
-silently and derisively. Another ball, high and on the inside, that
-sent Steve’s head and shoulders jerking back from its path. The
-pandemonium increased. Another offering that would have cut the outer
-corner of the plate knee-high had not Manager Milburn’s bat been
-ready for it. A fine, heartening _crack_ of wood and leather, a gray
-streak cutting the shadows of the first base stands, cries, pounding
-feet, dust, confusion and--victory! The ball passed second baseman a
-yard from his outstretched fingers and went to right fielder on its
-first long bound. But right fielder never threw it. Instead, he merely
-trotted benchward. For O’Neill was throwing himself across the plate
-by that time and Milburn was on first and the game was over! And
-Harrisville had avenged yesterday’s defeat to the tune of four to three!
-
-The stands emptied, the players thronged to the dressing-rooms and
-Wayne and June journeyed across the trampled field of battle on their
-way to the gate as happy as though they themselves had won that
-victory. And Sam trotted behind with his pathetic stub of a tail
-wagging proudly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-WAYNE LENDS A HAND
-
-
-That evening Wayne went to the Congress House and inquired for Mr.
-Milburn. The clerk at the desk pushed a card toward him and he wrote
-his name on it. Five minutes later a bell boy returned with the
-message that the manager declined to see him. As Wayne had expected
-just that, he was not disappointed. Finding a vacant chair against a
-wall of the lobby, he went on watch. But, although he saw several of
-the Harrisville players come and go during the succeeding hour, the
-manager did not appear, and at half-past nine Wayne returned to the
-new lodgings. June, with Sam curled into a tight bunch on his chest,
-was stretched on his bed reading an evening paper. June was not a fast
-reader but he was most thorough, and one newspaper generally lasted him
-for several days. Wayne made him lay his paper aside for the present
-and produce what money he had. To it Wayne added his own wealth and
-they then counted it over. They had to count it thrice for the result
-was different the first two times. Fifty-five dollars and forty-one
-cents was what they finally made it. Then Wayne figured on the margin
-of June’s paper and, after much frowning and muttering, decided that by
-rigid economy they could live just about five weeks on their capital.
-
-“Fifteen cents apiece is enough for breakfast and supper,” said Wayne,
-“and we can get a good dinner for thirty cents. That comes to one
-dollar and twenty cents a day, or eight-forty a week. Then two and
-a half for the room makes it ten-ninety, and ten-ninety goes into
-fifty-five forty five times and leaves ninety cents over.”
-
-“That’s so,” assented June, “but we’d better leave us enough to get
-home on, Mas’ Wayne.”
-
-“We’re home now,” replied Wayne firmly.
-
-“Is we?”
-
-“We are! We’re going to stay right here, June. If I don’t get on the
-baseball team I’ll find a job somewhere. And you can do the same.”
-
-“Yes, sir, but what’s to hinder me from gettin’ me a job right now?”
-asked June.
-
-Wayne considered. Finally he shook his head. “No,” he answered, “I
-don’t want you working if I’m not. We’ve got enough to last us five
-weeks; four, anyway; and when we get toward the end of the money we can
-begin to look for something to do. If Mr. Milburn gives me a try-out
-and I make good, why, you won’t have to work.”
-
-“Say I won’? How come, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“You’ll keep house for me, June, and look after Sam. And you can go to
-school again. We’ll find a couple of rooms where we can get our own
-meals. How would you like that?”
-
-“With a real cook stove, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“Yes, a real, sure-enough one, June. And we’ll buy a whole outfit of
-pans and dishes and everything. And there’ll be a pantry with all sorts
-of things in it: canned soup and flour and sugar and----”
-
-“Molasses?” asked June eagerly.
-
-“Of course. Everything we want.”
-
-“Lawsy-y-y!” crooned June, hugging himself tightly and rolling his
-eyes. “Jus’ like quality, Mas’ Wayne! Say, I goin’ to cook a big mess
-of pork an’ cabbage the very firs’ thing! I ain’ had none of that for a
-mighty long ol’ time, I’m tellin’ you.”
-
-“That’s ‘if’,” reminded Wayne. “Maybe it won’t happen, though.”
-
-“Mas’ Wayne,” said June earnestly, “it’s jus’ got to happen, yes, sir!
-If that yere Mister Manager don’ give you that yere job I goin’ pesker
-the life out’n him! ’Deed I is, yes, sir! I’m goin’ make him pow’ful
-mis’able.”
-
-“I’m going to do a little ‘peskering’ myself,” responded Wayne grimly.
-“And I’m going to begin tomorrow morning. Now, though, I’m going to
-sleep.”
-
-In the morning they found a little restaurant within a block of their
-new lodgings and had breakfast there. It wasn’t a very attractive
-place, and the tablecloths were likely to be soiled, but the food was
-satisfactory and the prices well within the limit Wayne had decided on.
-Also, the proprietor, a little man with a pronounced squint who talked
-in broken English, took a liking to Sam and neither of the boys had to
-stint his appetite to provide for the dog. After that first morning
-Sam trotted at once to the door at the back and stood there with an
-inquiring gaze and slowly wagging tail until the expected chop bone or
-other delicacy came his way.
-
-After breakfast June and Sam were left to their own devices and Wayne
-set forth for the ball park. Summer had come to Harrisville in its
-full intensity now and that long walk through the city and out beyond
-where there were neither buildings nor trees to mitigate the ferocity
-of the sun left the boy rather limp. As on the first occasion, Mike
-held him up at the door, but, recognising him the next instant, passed
-him through unsuspectingly. Today practice was in full swing when
-he entered the enclosure. Mr. Milburn was batting grounders to the
-infield and the portly trainer was knocking up flies. No one paid any
-attention to Wayne, and he crossed to the bench in the shade of the
-right base stand and settled himself to watch. Perhaps yesterday’s
-victory had restored the manager’s good-humour, for he was quite a
-different despot this morning. He didn’t hesitate to criticise or find
-fault, but his criticisms were just, and his fault-finding excusable.
-And he was quite as quick to praise as blame today. The players seemed
-in a merry mood and jokes and sallies passed from one to another across
-the diamond. Wayne’s first acquaintance, “Red” Herring, was limbering
-up his long arm, in company with the rest of the pitchers, at the other
-side of the field; Linton and Young catching. In deep right field, two
-painters, seated on a swinging scaffold, were dividing their attention
-between the sign they were at work on and the practice.
-
-Both Mr. Milburn and Mr. Slattery, the trainer, caught the balls as
-they were returned to them from the fielders, and now and then one
-got away from them. Presently a ball thrown to the trainer went wide
-and rolled nearly to the fence at the entrance. Being nearer than Mr.
-Slattery, Wayne went after it and tossed it back. The trainer accepted
-it without comment, swung his bat and sent it flying out into the
-field again. When it came in again, however, it passed well out of
-the trainer’s reach and that individual, turning with an exclamation
-of disgust, saw it, to his surprise, bound into the hands of Wayne.
-Unseen of the trainer, Wayne had signalled to the fielder with
-upraised hand. Mr. Slattery grunted, accepted the ball and sent it
-sailing forth again. After that it was Wayne who caught the throw-in
-each time, taking it on the bound, and who tossed it lightly to the
-batter. The latter accepted the service silently, doubtless glad to
-have it performed for him and not troubling about the performer’s
-identity. But, looking across to the plate once, Wayne found Manager
-Milburn observing him curiously, perhaps wondering where he had seen
-him before. That the manager did not remember him seemed evident a few
-minutes later when the players were called in and someone reported that
-the second base bag had broken away. Mr. Milburn called to the trainer.
-
-“Jimmy, send in and get a new strap for the second base bag,” he
-directed. “Jones says it’s broken.” And when Jimmy Slattery turned to
-waddle back to the dressing-room he added: “Send your helper, Jimmy,
-and you take them over to the nets.”
-
-“This feller?” asked Jimmy viewing Wayne doubtfully. “You know where
-they are?” he inquired.
-
-“I’ll find them, sir,” said Wayne.
-
-“Well, get one, then, like a good feller,” said Jimmy, “and slip it on
-the second bag.”
-
-Wayne entered the shed and looked around. There was a table in the
-first half-lighted room, and a half-dozen ticket boxes in a row on
-the floor. The table held a telephone instrument, some newspapers, a
-blotting-pad that looked as though it had been unchanged for many years
-and a litter of miscellaneous articles. But there were no base straps
-there and Wayne penetrated to the next apartment. This was evidently
-the dressing-room, for one side was lined with wooden lockers, most of
-them open and displaying the street costumes of the players, and on
-the other side were half a dozen showers. Two bare tables occupied the
-centre. Three wooden benches about completed the furnishings. One of
-the benches held a pile of towels and a box which, containing bottles
-and rolls of tape and gauze, exhaled a strong odour of liniment. But
-still there were no straps and Wayne returned to the outer room and was
-about to acknowledge defeat when his eyes fell on a closet. Although
-its door was closed, the key was in the lock, and when he had pulled
-it open he found what he was after. There were all sorts of things in
-that closet: base bags, bats, boxes of balls, masks, chest protectors,
-boxes whose contents he could only guess at, and, finally, a lot of
-straps depending from a nail. Wayne took one of the latter, closed the
-door as he had found it and went out again.
-
-Everyone had crossed to the further side of the field where the
-batting-nets stood, and Wayne took the strap down to second base and
-proceeded to fix it in place. When he had finished and had secured the
-bag to its spike he went over to Jimmy Slattery, who was coaching the
-batters at the nearer net, and held out the broken strap. “What shall I
-do with this?” he asked.
-
-“Huh?” asked Jimmy. “Oh, throw it away, kid. Want a job?”
-
-“Yes,” answered Wayne truthfully.
-
-“Get out there then and chase some of those balls,” directed the other.
-
-So Wayne went down the field, discarded his jacket and placed it
-against the fence and got to work. It was work, too, for only three of
-the players were fielding and they were quite content to let Wayne run
-after the hits that went over their heads or got past them. Now and
-then Wayne had the fun of trying for a fly. When he did he usually got
-it, although he started out with a muff that brought ironical remarks
-from the others.
-
-“Open your mouth and let it fall in,” called Fawcett.
-
-“Put your hands up,” advised Briggs facetiously, “and see will the ball
-hit ’em, kid!”
-
-But Wayne only smiled as he trotted after the elusive sphere and threw
-it to the nearer fielder. The next time the ball did hit his hands and,
-moreover, stayed in them, and Briggs was ready with a cheerful “’Ata
-boy! Squeeze it!” After that, by common consent, a fly that passed over
-the heads of the three players was left to Wayne undisputed.
-
-“Say, Win,” called Briggs once, “you’ll be losing your job first thing
-you know. The kid’s clever!”
-
-At first Wayne threw to Briggs or Fawcett or the third fielder, Leary,
-and let them peg the ball back to the pitcher, but presently, when he
-had stopped a grounder well in, he took courage and threw the ball in
-himself and threw it so well that Fawcett turned and regarded him with
-new interest.
-
-“Can you do that every time, stranger?” inquired the substitute
-outfielder. “’Cause, if you can, you’d better strike the boss for a
-job!”
-
-After a while Fawcett, Briggs, and Leary went in to take their turns at
-the net and a new trio came out to field. One was “Sailor” O’Neill, the
-left fielder, and “Sailor,” sauntering out toward Wayne, observed him
-curiously.
-
-“Where’d you come from, kid?” he asked.
-
-“Medfield,” replied Wayne.
-
-“Steve signed you on, has he?”
-
-“Not yet.”
-
-“Is he going to? Are you the fellow ‘Red’ was telling me about?”
-
-“I reckon so,” was the answer. “Mr. Farrel sent me here for a try-out,
-but Mr. Milburn says he don’t need me.”
-
-“Huh! One of Chris’ finds, eh? Well, he picks a good ’un now and then;
-about once in three years. Keep after him, kid. He’ll come across all
-right.”
-
-Further conversation was interrupted by a sizzling grounder that
-reminded “Sailor” of his duties.
-
-The morning’s work-out ended with practice on the bases and Wayne
-went back to the bench. He didn’t have it to himself now, for Jimmy
-Slattery, very warm and puffing from his recent exertions, was
-there, as were four of the pitching staff, “Hop” Nye amongst them.
-“Hop” recognised Wayne and nodded. The others viewed him with mild
-curiosity. Only Jimmy challenged his presence there.
-
-“How do you happen to be in here, kid?” he asked when Wayne had seated
-himself on the bench.
-
-“I’m waiting for a try-out,” answered the boy as casually as he could.
-“Mr. Farrel sent me.”
-
-“Oh.” But the trainer was still evidently puzzled. After a minute,
-spent in surreptitious examination of the boy, he inquired with a trace
-of sarcasm: “And what might you be? A pitcher or a catcher or what?”
-
-“Infielder, sir. Second baseman, for choice.”
-
-“Huh! You’ve got a choice, have you? That’s fine! What’s the boss say?”
-
-“He hasn’t decided yet.”
-
-Nye, who had overheard the conversation, leaned forward and spoke to
-the trainer. “He’s all right, Jimmy,” said “Hop.” “Chris sent him up
-and Steve won’t give him a look-over. _Says_ he won’t, anyway. What’s
-your name, kid?”
-
-“Sloan, sir.”
-
-“Well, Sloan, you take my advice and keep right after him. You’ll have
-to if you want to get anything out of him. Ain’t that so, Jimmy?”
-
-“It’s true as true, my boy. I don’t see, though, what for Chris Farrel
-sent us an infielder. Can you hit the ball any?”
-
-“I--yes, sir, a little.”
-
-“A little won’t get you anything, my boy. What the boss is lookin’ for
-is fellers as can swing on ’em hard. Still and all, I ain’t saying you
-mightn’t develop if Steve’ll take you on. Who was you playing with
-last?”
-
-“Medfield,” answered Wayne.
-
-“Medfield? I never heard of them,” pondered the trainer.
-
-“It’s an amateur team, sir.”
-
-“Ah, that’s it, eh? You’re one o’ them gentlemen amachoors, are you?
-Well, Joe, here, was one o’ them things himself till I found him. ’Twas
-me that rescued him from a life of crime.”
-
-Joe Casey turned a tanned countenance and grinned along the bench.
-“When you found me, Jimmy,” he said, “I was playin’ with a bunch that
-knew baseball, take it from me. That team could give us two runs an
-inning and beat us without trying.”
-
-“Yah!” said Jimmy disdainfully. “Listen to him, fellers! When I first
-set my eyes on that guy he was playing toss with a bunch of these here
-Willie Boys, and all dolled up in fancy togs like a moving-picture
-hero! Wore a silk shirt, he did! And every time he steps gracefully to
-the box a lot of his sissy friends waves little pink flags and cheers
-right out loud for him! Say, believe me, fellers, it was killing!”
-
-“That’s all right,” responded Casey, with a laugh. “That same bunch
-of Willie Boys could play ball some! We were the champs three years
-running, old scout!”
-
-“I know, but them girls’ schools is easy to beat,” replied Jimmy, with
-a wink at Wayne. The others on the bench laughed and Jimmy pulled
-himself to his feet. “Kid,” he said, “if you want a try-out you’ve got
-to make the boss think you’re good. Tell him you fielded for a thousand
-and batted for seven hundred. He won’t believe you, but he might be
-curious to see how you stack up. And keep after him, laddie.”
-
-“Thank you,” answered Wayne. “I mean to.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-JUNE GOES TO WORK
-
-
-But Wayne did not approach Manager Milburn that day. Somehow the
-occasion failed to present itself, and, while determined to overcome
-the other’s resistance by perseverance, he did not want to start out by
-making a nuisance of himself. Save that he became slightly acquainted
-with several other members of the Harrisville Club that morning, he
-could not be said to have made much progress. He wanted very much to
-see that final game with Doncaster in the afternoon, but it meant the
-price of two dinners approximately, since it didn’t even occur to him
-to go without June. He had to be satisfied with reading about it in
-the late edition of the evening paper and was vastly disappointed when
-he learned that the Billies had fallen on Joe Casey in the eighth and
-driven him to cover, scoring four hits and two runs and securing a lead
-that the home team had been unable to overcome. Herring had finished in
-the box for Harrisville and had held the opponent safe, but the damage
-had been done by that time and the final score read 7 to 6. Doncaster
-had, consequently, split even on the series and incidentally reduced
-Harrisville’s lead in the league standing to eight games. Damascus had
-won again that day from Utica and slipped into second place. Wayne
-concluded that it would be well to wait until Harrisville had won her
-next game before presenting himself again to Mr. Milburn.
-
-A single line under the caption “With the Amateur Clubs” announced:
-“At Medfield; Chenango, 14, Atlas A. A., 2.” Something rather like a
-pang of homesickness went through him then and he almost wished himself
-back in Medfield. He wrote a letter to Arthur Pattern that night before
-going to bed and sent his new address.
-
-Sunday was a quiet and rather dull day for the boys. They went for a
-walk in the afternoon and explored the city pretty well, but the only
-incident of interest occurred when Sam made the mistake of underrating
-the fighting ability of a large gray cat and returned sadder and
-wiser after an encounter in an alley. Tabby had clawed his nose most
-thoroughly and Sam had to whimper a little and be sympathised with
-before the journey continued. By getting up late that morning and
-dressing very leisurely they managed to make breakfast and dinner
-suffice in the way of meals, thus saving twenty cents. (The saving
-would have been thirty cents had not June fallen victim to the
-fascination of a chocolate éclair and Wayne squandered another nickel
-on a Sunday paper.)
-
-On Monday Wayne went back to the ball park and again served as
-utility man, catching throw-ins for Jimmy Slattery and backing up the
-fielders during batting practice. He was rapidly becoming an accepted
-feature of the morning work and the players, most of whom had by this
-time heard his story, were very friendly toward him, “Red” Herring
-especially. Practice lacked vim this morning, and the manager, while
-he gave no such exhibition of temper as he had displayed Friday, was
-plainly disgruntled. Wayne took pains to keep out of his way, but he
-was haunted by a feeling that Mr. Milburn’s lack of recognition was
-only assumed. Once Wayne surprised the manager observing him with an
-expression that, while not unfriendly, was decidedly ironical. He
-wondered then whether Mr. Milburn had recognised him Saturday. Somehow
-he rather thought he had!
-
-Practice again ended without any apparent advancement of Wayne’s
-fortunes, for he had by now determined that when he again broached the
-subject of that try-out to the manager it should be after Harrisville
-had won a game and while Mr. Milburn was in the best of humours. To
-bring the matter up at the wrong moment might, he suspected, result
-disastrously. Although Wayne was unacquainted with the phrase, it was
-the psychological moment that he waited for. Besides, there was another
-thing that he was banking on, and that was the return to Harrisville
-of Chris Farrel. It seemed to him that Chris could easily secure that
-try-out if only he would put in his appearance. But inquiry that
-morning of Jimmy Slattery was not encouraging. Jimmy didn’t know when
-Chris would get back. He had heard that the scout was working his way
-south as far as Maryland. He might be back tomorrow or next week. He
-came and went about as he saw fit, a fact which Jimmy, for some reason
-not apparent to Wayne, seemed to resent.
-
-Damascus had no trouble winning that Monday game. Herring started in
-the box for the Badgers but lasted only three innings and was succeeded
-by Tommy Cotton. In the seventh Cotton resigned and Nick Crane took
-up the task. Harrisville played rather poorly, Wayne learned from the
-evening paper. At all events, Damascus gathered in the contest to the
-tune of 4 to 0.
-
-Tuesday’s work-out went with a new dash and vigour, and the batting
-practice lasted twice as long as usual. It was freely given out that
-Mr. Milburn intended to win a majority of those four games, which
-meant that the Badgers must take the remaining three. That afternoon
-“Red” Herring again started the performance and this time he went
-through without a hitch, and, although the home club failed again to
-win renown with their sticks, the game went to the Badgers 2 to 1.
-Wayne was tempted to try his fortunes with Mr. Milburn that evening,
-but discretion held him back. If the Badgers took tomorrow’s game
-perhaps he would risk it. Or maybe it would be still safer to wait
-until the Badgers had secured their three out of four. That is, if
-they did. They had got back their eight-game lead again, but Doncaster
-had won both games of a double header with Trenton and was now tied
-for second place, and it was no secret that Manager Milburn feared the
-Billies more than the Damascus club.
-
-Wayne got a reply from Jim Mason that afternoon. Jim was all for having
-Wayne give up and come back to his job. Perhaps he had read more in the
-boy’s letter than Wayne had intended him to. “I haven’t got any new
-fellow in your place yet,” wrote Jim, “and I won’t if you say you’re
-coming back. I can get along for another week I guess but you better
-write and say you are coming back so I will know whether to expect you
-or not. The missis is well and so is Terry. He sends you his love and
-says please come back to see him. We are not very busy right now but
-last week they dumped a string of foreigns on me and I had a tough time
-getting shut of them. Terry says tell you the chicken with the twisted
-leg up and died on him the other day. So no more at present.”
-
-Wayne was strongly tempted after reading Jim’s letter to see Mr.
-Milburn then and there and, if he still refused, to go back to Medfield
-on the first train in the morning. Perhaps it was a chance remark of
-June’s, as much as anything else, that kept him from yielding to that
-temptation.
-
-“I sure does like this yere Ha’isville,” declared June that evening at
-supper. “Wouldn’ go back to that little ol’ Medfield if they ask me,
-no, sir!”
-
-“You wouldn’t?” asked Wayne. “Why, June?”
-
-“’Cause this is a regular white man’s town, Mas’ Wayne. Livin’s cheap
-an’ fine, an’ folkses is fine, an’ there’s somethin’ goin’ on all the
-time. An’ if I wanted to, Mas’ Wayne, I could get me a job in no time
-at all, I could so, yes, sir.”
-
-“What kind of a job, June?”
-
-June waved a fork vaguely but grandly. “Anythin’ at all,” he answered.
-“I met up with a nigger blacks boots at that yere Congress House
-you-all was tellin’ about an’ he say he can get me a job there tomorrow
-if I wants it, yes, sir.”
-
-“As bell boy?”
-
-“Yes, sir, an’ it don’ cost me but four bits.”
-
-“Who gets the four bits, June?”
-
-“This yere nigger I’m tellin’ you about. That’s his commission.”
-
-“Oh, he wants a half-dollar for getting you the job, you mean?” Wayne
-was silent a moment. Then: “June, that’s where Mr. Milburn lives,” he
-said thoughtfully.
-
-“Yes, I ’member you tellin’ me that.”
-
-“I wonder----” Wayne’s voice dwindled off again to silence. At last:
-“Would you like to take that job, June?” he asked.
-
-“Not if you-all don’ want me to, Mas’ Wayne. I ain’ complainin’ none.
-’Course, ain’ much to do ’cept hang aroun’----”
-
-“You go there tomorrow and grab it,” said Wayne.
-
-“Hones’? You ain’ mindin’ if I do?”
-
-“No, I’d rather you did, June. You might--I don’t see how you could,
-exactly--but you might----”
-
-“Yes, sir, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“Well, you just _might_ be able to help me, June, if you were at the
-Congress House. Suppose, for instance, I wanted to see Mr. Milburn,
-and the clerk wouldn’t let me up. If you sort of made his acquaintance
-and got friendly with him----”
-
-“Lawsy-y-y! Ain’ that the truth? Mas’ Wayne, I goin’ make that yere
-Mister Manager jus’ love me, yes, sir! I goin’ be so nice an’ ’tentive
-to him----”
-
-“Go ahead,” laughed Wayne. “Make him love you so much that he will give
-me a place on the team, June.”
-
-“That’s jus’ what I’m aimin’ to do,” replied June, showing all his
-teeth in a broad grin. “You jus’ wait till I gets me acquainted with
-that Mister Man. I--I goin’ put a conjur on him, yes, sir!”
-
-The next morning June departed, armed with his “four bits” and his
-ingratiating smile in the direction of the Congress House and Wayne saw
-him no more until supper time. Wayne spent the forenoon at the ball
-grounds making himself useful. Today his duties included catching “Red”
-again. Linton did not show up and as Young couldn’t attend to more than
-three of the pitchers Herring found a mitt for Wayne and towed him
-across to the third base side of the field and ranged him alongside
-Catcher Young.
-
-“You take the other fellers, Dan,” said “Red.” “I got me a catcher.”
-
-Wayne was a little embarrassed and awkward at first, but by the time
-“Red” was getting warmed up and putting speed into the ball he was so
-interested that he forgot all self-consciousness. “Red” was feeling
-in fine form this morning, possibly as a result of yesterday’s game,
-and some of his deliveries were hard to judge. There was a “jump ball”
-in particular that always caused Wayne anxiety until it had settled
-into his mitten. Crane, Nye, and Cotton, who were pitching to Young,
-and Young, too, for that matter, observed the emergency catcher with
-interest. It was “Hop” who asked presently: “You and Steve got together
-yet, kid?”
-
-“Not yet,” replied Wayne cheerfully, rolling the ball from mitt to hand
-and tossing it back to Herring. “There’s no hurry, I reckon.”
-
-“Better not leave it too long,” advised Cotton. “Chris Farrel’ll be
-sending another rookie along first thing anyone knows. He’s a great one
-for that sort of thing.”
-
-“Oh, Chris is all right,” said Herring. “He discovered Cob Morgan and
-Bee Bennett, didn’t he? And I sort of guess they ain’t so poor.”
-
-“Chris makes about one lucky guess in ten,” observed Pitcher Crane,
-“but maybe that’s a good average. I don’t know.”
-
-“You twirling this afternoon, Nick?” asked Herring.
-
-“I guess so. The boss is crazy to cop the next two games.”
-
-“Don’t look like it,” said Cotton innocently. “You’d think he’d put a
-good pitcher in today.”
-
-Crane only smiled. Nick, in the words of the Harrisville baseball
-scribes, was the “dean of the pitching corps,” and didn’t have to
-answer such aspersions. Just then Manager Milburn summoned Herring to
-take Casey’s place on the mound and Wayne was for removing his mitt.
-Young, however, suggested his taking Nye off his hands and Wayne
-assented. “Hop” was easy after Herring, for he used straight balls a
-good deal and although they came like lightning they were far easier
-to judge than “Red’s” eccentric slants. Later, when the players moved
-to the nets, Wayne encountered another of Manager Milburn’s sarcastic
-glances, but he didn’t mind. As long as the manager didn’t object
-to his being on the field during practice Wayne was for the present
-satisfied.
-
-That afternoon he received a letter, forwarded from Medfield, that
-brought his heart into his mouth as he read the postmark and recognized
-the writing. It was from his stepfather, and for a moment Wayne
-hesitated to open it, fearing that it was a summons home. But it
-wasn’t. Mr. Higgins was brief and decided. “Understand,” he wrote,
-“that this is your doing and not mine. Don’t come home here expecting
-me to take you in again for I won’t. And don’t apply to me for money.
-You won’t get any. You will have to get along by your own efforts. I
-hope you will do so, but nothing I have ever seen of you leads me to
-expect it.”
-
-“It sounds a heap like him,” murmured Wayne, thrusting the letter back
-into its envelope. “He never did think I was any good, anyway. But
-I’ll show him. And he needn’t be afraid of my going back or asking
-him for money, because I wouldn’t, not if I was starving to death!”
-Wayne clenched his hands tightly and frowned at the letter. Then the
-frown faded and gave place to a satisfied smile. “Anyway,” he said to
-himself, “he isn’t going to try to get me back, and that’s a load off a
-fellow’s mind!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-MR. MILBURN PROMISES
-
-
-June took a shining half-dollar from his pocket and slipped it along
-the counter. Wayne examined it questioningly.
-
-“Mister Milburn done give me that,” chuckled June. “An’ all I done was
-jus’ fetch him some seegars from the news-stand.”
-
-“You mean he tipped you a whole half-dollar for that?” marvelled Wayne.
-
-June nodded. “Yes, sir, that’s all I done. He say, ‘Boy, fetch me two
-seegars from the news-stand. Tell them they’s for Mister Milburn an’
-they’ll know what you want.’ An’ he give me a dollar bill an’ they was
-seventy-five cents change an’ he say, ‘Where you come from? I ain’
-seen you before, has I?’ An’ I say, ‘No, sir, you ain’. I’m the new
-bell boy, sir, an’ anytime you wants anythin’ done partic’lar jus’ you
-asks for June.’ He sorter laughed an’ say as how he’s goin’ remember,
-an’ asks me where did I come from, an’ I tell him I come from Colquitt
-County, Georgia, an’ he say he knows Colquitt County ’cause he was to a
-trainin’ camp down thataway once.” June paused long enough to transfer
-some of the contents of his plate to his mouth, and then, heedful of
-his companion’s mandate regarding conversation and a full mouth, waited
-another moment before continuing. “We got on fine, him an’ me, Mas’
-Wayne. He’s a right sociable gen’leman, yes, sir.”
-
-Wayne laughed. “I reckon that half-dollar was for your conversation,
-June, and not for the errand. Did you tell him you came here from
-Medfield?”
-
-June shook his head innocently. “He ain’ ask me that.”
-
-“Well, you made a good start. Do you like the work, June?”
-
-“Yes, sir, it’s a right promisin’ place. Lot’s o’ free-spendin’
-gen’lemen at that yere hotel. Reckon I’m goin’ do better’n I did at
-the Union. I gets four dollars a week. They works you longer, though,
-’cause I got to get there at six in the mornin’ an’ I don’ get through
-till six in the evenin’.”
-
-“Why, that’s twelve hours, June!”
-
-“Yes, sir, but the more I’m aroun’ there the more I’m goin’ to put
-in my jeans. I made a dollar an’ ten cents today, Mas’ Wayne; an’
-I’d a done better’n that if them other boys hadn’ tried to friz me
-out. There’s four of them, an’ one’s a big yaller boy with a mean
-disposition. I reckon,” June added thoughtfully, “I’ll jus’ have to lam
-him good before he quits foolin’ with me!”
-
-“You’d better not,” cautioned Wayne. “This isn’t Medfield, and they
-might fire you if they found you fighting.”
-
-“They ain’ goin’ to fin’ me. I’m goin’ do it where they won’ know
-nothin’ about it. How come them other gen’lemen pesker us like they
-done today, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“What other gentlemen? Oh, you mean the Damascus club. We just couldn’t
-hit them any more than they could hit us, June. You see Mr. Milburn
-pitched Nick Crane and so the Damascus manager put in Woodworth, their
-best man, and it was a pitchers’ battle right through the whole eleven
-innings. If Bennett hadn’t stolen home from third with two out in the
-eleventh I reckon they’d be playing yet. I’d like to have seen that
-steal. It must have been a dandy!”
-
-“Sure must! That gives us three games to their two, don’ it? Reckon
-we’ll win the one tomorrow, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“I don’t know. I heard that they’re going to use a fellow named Ripley,
-and they say he’s almost as good as Woodworth. He’s a spit-ball
-pitcher.”
-
-“I am’ never see nobody pitch one of them yere spit-balls,” said June.
-“Who goin’ pitch for us, sir?”
-
-“I suppose it will be Nye. It’s his turn, I think. Either Nye or
-Cotton. I reckon if Damascus plays the way she played today tomorrow’s
-game is going to be worth seeing.”
-
-“Why don’ you-all go an’ see it, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“Can’t afford it, June. We’ve been here a week now and----”
-
-“You ain’ got to ’ford it,” chuckled June. “Mister Milburn say if I
-want to see a game jus’ let him know an’ he goin’ pass me in. I’ll ask
-him about it tomorrow an’ you can take the ticket.”
-
-“He wouldn’t want you to give it to anyone else, June. Maybe I’ll try
-walking in past Mike at the players’ gate. I don’t believe he would
-stop me, and I don’t believe anyone would mind, because I’ve helped a
-good deal out there in the mornings, June.”
-
-“Sure you has, Mas’ Wayne! You got a perfec’ly good right to see them
-games, yes, sir.”
-
-Wayne exhibited his stepfather’s letter then and June, after he had
-slowly puzzled through it, snorted with disgust. “Ain’ that like him,
-Mas’ Wayne, sir? Ain’ it jus’ _like_ him? Firs’ thing he thinks of is
-money! I can’ ever say jus’ what I thinks of that gen’leman ’cause
-he’s a sort o’ relation o’ yours, Mas’ Wayne, but I certainly does do a
-heap o’ thinkin’!”
-
-“Anyway, he intends to let me alone, June, and that’s what I wanted.
-As for money, why, he will have to give me some when I’m twenty-one
-because mother left me almost twelve hundred dollars and he only has it
-in trust.”
-
-“Reckon he ain’ wishin’ for you-all to remember that,” replied June,
-shaking his head. “An’ if I was you, Mas’ Wayne, I’d write to Lawyer
-Ackerman an’ tell him to keep a mighty sharp watch on that yere
-stepdaddy of yours, yes, sir!”
-
-“He can’t very well run off with the farm, June,” laughed Wayne, “and
-as long as that’s there I reckon I can always get my money.”
-
-June was passing along the second floor corridor of the Congress House
-the next morning, laden with a number of empty ice-water pitchers and
-crooning a song, when a door opened and Mr. Milburn confronted him.
-
-“Boy! Run down and get me a Philadelphia paper. Any one will do. Oh, is
-that you, January?”
-
-“No, sir, Mister Milburn, I ain’ January yet, sir; I’m jus’ June.”
-
-“Well, all right, June,” chuckled the manager. “Hustle up that paper.
-I’ve got a dime here that’s looking for a home.”
-
-“Yes, sir, don’ you do nothin’ with it till I returns,” answered June,
-sprinting for the stairs.
-
-When he came back and knocked on the door and was told to enter Mr.
-Milburn was seated at a table clipping things from various newspapers
-and pasting them in a huge scrapbook. “That’s the boy,” he said, “and
-here’s your dime, June. How did they come to call you June, eh?”
-
-“’Tain’ really June, sir, it’s Junius; Junius Brutus Bartow Tasker is
-my full name, Mister Milburn.”
-
-“‘Full’ is good! Going out to see my boys play today, Junius Brutus
-And-so-forth?”
-
-“I can’ get off today, sir, but I got a friend that would like powerful
-much to see that game.”
-
-“Oh, I’m not proposing to supply your friends with tickets, boy. Hasn’t
-this friend got a quarter?”
-
-“Yes, sir, but he’s needin’ all the quarters he’s got, jus’ like me,
-sir.”
-
-“Oh, all right.” Mr. Milburn produced a slip of paper and scrawled a
-hurried signature on it. “There you are. Tell him to show that to the
-man at the ticket office and he will fix him out. Haven’t you seen my
-club play yet?”
-
-“Once, Mister Milburn. We seen ’em lick those Billies last--last
-Friday, I reckon it was. An’ we seen some ball playin’! Yes, sir, we
-surely did so!”
-
-“Who are ‘we’? You and this friend of yours?”
-
-“Yes, sir. He ain’ exac’ly a friend, though.”
-
-“Isn’t he?” Mr. Milburn turned the pages of the paper June had brought
-him and hurriedly scanned them. “Isn’t an enemy, is he?”
-
-“No, sir, he’s--he’s my boss.”
-
-“Your boss? What do you mean by that?” The manager dropped the paper to
-the floor, glanced at his watch and turned an amused gaze on the boy.
-
-“Well, sir, he’s Mas’ Wayne Sloan, sir, an’ the Sloans is quality down
-in Colquitt County. You see, Mas’ Wayne’s mother she up an’ die ’bout
-three-four years ago an’ this yere stepdaddy of his ain’ no earthly
-’count, no, sir, he ain’. He jus’ pesker Mas’ Wayne somethin’ fierce
-till him an’ me we jus’ lit out an’ come up North here.”
-
-“Sloan?” inquired Mr. Milburn. “He’s a white boy, then?”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“Sloan, eh? Look here, that isn’t the kid that Farrel sent to me for a
-try-out, is it? A dark-haired chap with----”
-
-“Yes, sir, that’s Mas’ Wayne. How come you-all ain’ given him that
-yere try-out yet, sir?”
-
-“Because he’s an infielder, June, and we don’t need infielders. I told
-him that days ago, but he’s still hanging around, I see.”
-
-“Yes, sir, we’re waitin’.”
-
-“Well, I’m afraid waiting won’t do him any good, June. You’d better
-tell him so. I like the kid’s perseverance, but he’s wasting his time.
-If he was a couple of years older and could play a little I’d give him
-a chance.”
-
-“Yes, sir, an’ I reckon he’s goin’ be a couple years older if you-all
-don’ hurry up!” June’s grin robbed the statement of offence. “Mister
-Milburn, please, sir, can I tell you somethin’?”
-
-“Go ahead, June.”
-
-“Well, sir, Mas’ Wayne’s surely one fine ball player,” said June
-earnestly, “an’ you-all ain’ actin’ sensible if you don’ grab him, sir.”
-
-“Oh, that’s just your idea of him, June,” was the good-natured reply.
-“We get dozens like him every spring, fellows fresh from high school or
-college who think that if they can hold a ball when it’s thrown to them
-they’re regular Big Leaguers.”
-
-“How come this yere Mr. Farrel done send him over here, sir?”
-
-“Oh, Farrel plays it safe, June. He has instructions to pick up
-anything that looks good and ship him over for me to see. But he isn’t
-supposed to rob the nurseries. We can’t use them until they’re grown
-up.”
-
-“Well, sir, seems like this yere Mister Farrel ain’ actin’ jus’ right.
-He done tell Mas’ Wayne how you goin’ give him a try-out an’ all, an’
-Mas’ Wayne he give up his position in Medfield an’ now ain’ nothin’
-’tall come of it. It don’ seem jus’ right, sir, does it? Mas’ Wayne he
-’lows we’s goin’ stay right here till he gets that yere try-out, yes,
-sir, but we ain’ got but about fifty dollars an’ that ain’ goin’ to
-last forever, is it? Please, sir, Mister Milburn, I wish you’d jus’
-give him that ol’ try-out, sir, an’ then, if he don’ act good, we knows
-where we’re at! Couldn’ you jus’ do that, please, sir?”
-
-The manager frowned impatiently, slapped the scrapbook shut, opened it
-again, and once more looked at his watch. June observed him anxiously
-but continued to smile. Perhaps it was that smile that decided the
-question, for Mr. Milburn saw it and the corners of his own mouth began
-to go up, and presently he laughed.
-
-“All right, June,” he said. “He shall have his try-out. Maybe tomorrow.
-By the first of the week, anyway. You can tell him so. And you can tell
-him he owes it to you. Mostly, at any rate.” The manager arose. “Maybe
-I’d have given it to him anyhow sooner or later, just to get rid of
-him!” he added grumblingly. He turned with pretended ferocity on June.
-“You got that dime, didn’t you?” he demanded.
-
-“Yes, sir, thanky, sir.”
-
-“Well, what are you waiting for then? Beat it! Get out of here before
-you think up any more hard-luck stories! Here, give me that pass!”
-
-June yielded it and the manager tore it in half and dropped the pieces
-on the floor. “Tell Sloan I said he was to go in the players’ gate. I
-guess he’s earned the right to see one game. Now get out of here, you
-black nuisance!”
-
-“Yes, sir,” replied June, grinning from ear to ear. “Thanky, sir. Hope
-you wins your game, sir.”
-
-“Hope you get your wish, June! You don’t happen to own a rabbit’s foot,
-do you? One of the lucky sort, I mean.”
-
-“No, sir, I ain’ got no rabbit’s foot, but you-all’s goin’ win today,
-Mister Milburn, yes, sir! I goin’ put a conjur on that yere game!”
-
-“You and your conjurs!” laughed the other. “We’ll see, though, and if
-we don’t win--well, you’d better keep out of my reach, boy.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” chuckled June from the doorway, “if we don’ win I’m goin’
-give you the whole sidewalk!”
-
-June, however, had no chance to give Mr. Milburn’s message to Wayne,
-for Wayne did not come around to the hotel and June’s duties prevented
-him from seeking him at noon hour. June got his dinners at the hotel,
-which meant a saving of thirty cents a day, but he wasn’t allowed
-much time to eat them in. Consequently it was with the intention of
-walking boldly past Mike, the gate-man, that Wayne started out for the
-field that afternoon. Yesterday’s close contest, and the fact that
-today’s encounter was the last with the Damascus club at Harrisville
-until after the home team’s swing around the circle which began next
-week, had combined to awaken a more than usual amount of interest in
-the afternoon’s game and the cars that buzzed and clanged their way
-past Wayne were filled to the running-boards. It was evident that the
-attendance at the park today would assume holiday proportions, and,
-too, that the railway company had, in spite of extra cars, failed to
-accommodate all who wanted to ride. Wayne had started early, hoping
-to get there about the time the players went in and trusting to the
-good offices of “Red” Herring or some other acquaintance to gain him
-admittance should Mike prove obdurate, but the players had passed him
-long ago in their car and it lacked but twenty minutes of starting time
-when he got within distant sight of the park.
-
-It was then that he noticed that the trolley cars were blocked
-somewhere ahead. The passengers were jumping off and starting the
-rest of the journey afoot, but Wayne thought nothing of it until the
-imperative clang of an ambulance bell sounded on his ears and he turned
-to watch the vehicle dash hurriedly past, scattering pedestrians to
-right and left. Before Wayne had covered the next two squares, the
-ambulance passed again, speeding now in the direction of town, with a
-white-garbed doctor swaying on the steps.
-
-“Reckon someone got smashed up,” reflected Wayne, walking a little
-faster. The folks about him were audibly conjecturing on the accident
-but no one seemed to know anything about it, and it was not until
-Wayne had reached the corner of an intersecting street a square from
-the ball grounds that he learned the facts. The brakes on one of the
-cars had failed to work and, since there was a down-grade just here,
-it had crashed into the rear of a car ahead. The two cars were there
-for evidence, both badly crushed as to vestibules. A motorman and two
-passengers had been badly injured, Wayne heard, but no one had been
-killed. Several others had been shaken up, but, as Wayne’s informant
-added, with a smile, they had gone on into the ball game and so
-probably weren’t dangerously injured! That reminded Wayne of his own
-purpose and, after pushing his way forward for a curious view of the
-damaged cars, he hurried on again and sought the players’ gate. By now
-he had determined to see the game in any event. After walking all the
-way from town in the hot sun it would be silly to turn back, he told
-himself, and he jingled the few coins in his pocket reassuringly.
-
-The door in the high fence was closed but yielded readily to pressure
-and Wayne, looking as nonchalant as he knew how, stepped inside. Mike
-was standing a few yards away, talking with one of the ground-keepers
-and didn’t turn until he heard the creaking of the door as it went shut
-on its rusty hinges. When he did turn, though, Wayne saw an expression
-of lively interest on his face and paused irresolutely, so certain was
-he that Mike meant to deny him admittance. But Mike’s greeting was
-startlingly different from what Wayne expected. The door tender took a
-step toward him and jerked an impatient thumb over his shoulder.
-
-“Hurry up an’ get in there,” he said. “The boss is lookin’ for you!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-SECOND BASE SLOAN
-
-
-The succeeding quarter-hour was always strangely confused and
-indistinct in Wayne’s memory. Damascus was warming up on the diamond
-and Herring’s brilliant thatch showed above the corner of the stand as
-the boy’s gaze swept hurriedly toward the field ere he turned in at the
-dressing-room door. Doubtless others of the pitching staff were out
-there with “Red,” but most of the players were still standing around
-the office when Wayne entered. For the moment none saw.
-
-“This is what comes of keeping your salary list down!” Manager Milburn
-was declaring heatedly. “Lose two men and you’re shot to pieces! How
-does he expect me to win games with only enough players to cover the
-field? We have a right to twenty-two and he gives me nineteen! LaCroix,
-you take first. You’ll have to play third, Jones, and Dan will play
-second. Hold on! You catch Nye, don’t you? That won’t do then. I’d
-better take second myself. Hustle out now, fellows. We’ve just got to
-do the best we can and----”
-
-“Here’s your man now, Steve!” exclaimed someone, and Wayne, pausing
-doubtfully inside the doorway, embarrassedly found himself the target
-of all eyes. But it was for an instant only. The next thing he knew
-Steve Milburn had him by the arm and was dragging him forward.
-
-“Where have you been?” he was demanding irately. “I told that nigger
-boy of yours to send you out! Jimmy, hustle a uniform! Someone find me
-a contract form in the closet! Yellow box on the shelf!” He turned to
-Wayne. “Now, Sloan, you wanted a try-out and you’re going to get it,”
-he said grimly. “Jimmy’ll give you a uniform. Pile into it and--can you
-play third? Where have you played?”
-
-“Second, sir.”
-
-“Take it then! That lets me out!”
-
-“I can’t find any forms here, Boss,” sung out Briggs from the closet.
-
-“Never mind! This’ll do!” The manager dropped into the chair by the
-littered table, opened a drawer and pulled out a pad of paper and wrote
-hurriedly for a moment. And as he wrote he stabbed at Wayne with short
-sentences. “You got your chance! Show what you know, youngster! Make
-good and I’ll treat you white! Cap here will give you the dope. Do as
-he tells you. Now sign your name here. Witness this, Cap.”
-
-“Hurry up, kid, and climb into these,” called Jimmy Slattery from the
-dressing-room doorway.
-
-Wayne neither knew then nor later what he signed. Had there been time
-to read the half-dozen lines he could scarcely have done so, for Mr.
-Milburn’s writing was not the sort to be deciphered offhand. But he
-hardly tried. The manager pushed a pen into his hand, Captain Cross
-waited at his elbow and in thirty seconds he was hurrying toward the
-armful of togs that the trainer impatiently dangled at the door. Jimmy
-helped him change, or tried to help, and all the time dealt out advice
-freely, none of which Wayne afterward recalled. Five minutes later he
-was trotting out at the trainer’s heels, conscious of a thumping heart
-and of the fact that the shoes on his feet were at least a size too
-large for him. Then he was around the corner of the stand and Jimmy
-Slattery was pushing him in the general direction of second base.
-
-“Go ahead, kid, and good luck to you!” said Jimmy. “Keep your nerve!”
-
-But that was far easier said than done. The stands were crowded and a
-fringe of enthusiasts stood, three and four deep, inside the rope that
-had been stretched along the left field side of the enclosure. Balls
-were travelling back and forth, from base to base and base to plate,
-bewilderingly, while overhead the long flies arched to the outfield. As
-he passed in front of LaCroix, at first, the lantern-jawed, hook-nosed
-giant grinned as he speared a high throw, and almost in the same motion
-tossed it underhand to Wayne.
-
-“Chuck it in, Bill,” he directed.
-
-But if he thought to find Wayne asleep he was disappointed, for the boy
-wheeled and caught the descending ball and threw it to the plate. The
-throw was short and Steve Milburn barked across at him: “Keep ’em up,
-Sloan!” Captain Cross met him and walked back with him to the trampled
-ground behind the base line. “I’ll take the throws from the plate,
-Sloan, but if I can’t get in for them it’s up to you. Anything’s yours
-this side of the bag, but don’t crowd LaCroix too much. I’ll give you
-the signals on the runners. Just keep steady and you’ll do all right,
-kid. Come on now! Get into it!”
-
-Five minutes of fielding followed, Manager Milburn batting them out;
-hard liners that brought Wayne up standing when they slammed into his
-glove, slow rollers that sent him speeding nearly to the pitcher’s
-box, pop-flies that lost themselves for a moment in the glare of the
-sky, bounders that brought all his baseball instinct into play. On
-the whole, he did none too well during that practice. More than one
-ball went past him or dribbled out of his hands. Once he muffed a fly
-miserably. Twice he overthrew to first. After the muffled fly he caught
-the dubious expression on Captain Cross’ face and felt his heart sink.
-Here, he thought, was the chance he had waited and longed for, and now
-he was going to throw it away! But in the next moment he was gritting
-his teeth and thumping fist into glove determinedly. He wouldn’t! He
-could play far better than he had been playing! It was only the crowd
-and the unnerving knowledge that so much depended on this afternoon’s
-performance that accounted for his fumbles. If only they had let him
-practice just one morning, instead of thrusting him like this into a
-game at a moment’s notice! And then the bell sounded and they were
-trotting in to the bench.
-
-Manager Milburn beckoned to him and Wayne crossed to where he was
-standing in front of the little press box. Steve looked him over
-critically while Wayne, red-faced, dripping perspiration, waited.
-Finally: “How did it go?” asked the manager.
-
-Wayne smiled wanly. “Not very well, sir. I--I reckon I’m sort of
-nervous.”
-
-“Of course you are! You’ll forget that, though. Don’t take it too
-hard, Sloan, or you’ll pull a boner, sure as shooting. Keep cool,
-that’s the main thing. Use your head all the time. I’m not expecting
-miracles, son,” he added kindly. “Just do your best. That’s all I’m
-asking of you. Can you hit?”
-
-“I--yes, sir. I mean, I have hit some, but----”
-
-“All right. We’ll soon see. Better try to wait him out the first time.
-Watch his pitching and try to make him give you what you can hit after
-that. All right, fellows! On the run!”
-
-Then the game started, Nye in the box for the Badgers, Dan Young
-catching, LaCroix on first in place of Morgan, Jones playing third
-for Bennett, and an unknown at second. The umpire had announced the
-latter’s name as Sloan, or something like that, but no one had ever
-seen him before or heard of him. He was a well-set-up youngster and,
-in spite of the spills he had made during practice, carried himself
-like a ball player. The “fans” watched him and reserved judgment,
-asking each other how Steve had managed to get hold of him at less
-than a half-hour’s notice. For it had been five minutes past three
-when the accident had happened that had sent three of the Badgers’
-best players to the hospital, Bennett, as was learned later, with a
-broken leg, Morgan with three ribs caved in, and Pitcher Cotton with
-enough contusions to keep him out of the game for a week at least.
-Morgan, said that evening’s paper, would be back at work in a fortnight
-possibly, but young Bennett was out of it for the rest of the year.
-
-Ripley occupied the mound for Damascus that afternoon, and was
-discouragingly effective. After “Hop” Nye had escaped punishment in
-the first half of the initial inning by the skin of his teeth, a fine
-stop of a possible two-bagger by Cross and a phenomenal catch of a long
-fly by O’Neill warding off disaster, Harrisville went in to be mowed
-down one, two, three by the elongated spit-ball artist of the visiting
-club. No one got the ghost of a hit in that inning or any other while
-Ripley was in the box; no one on the home team, that is. Damascus had
-better luck, touching up Nye for three hits with a total of five bases,
-but failing to score for all of that. The game went to the sixth a
-pitcher’s battle pure and simple, with Ripley getting the long end of
-it, both teams working like beavers and not a runner passing second.
-
-Wayne’s opportunities to distinguish himself were few, for strike-outs
-were numerous. Four chances were accepted by him in the first five
-innings, but none was difficult. At the bat, he followed Manager
-Milburn’s advice the first time up and tried his best to work a pass.
-But Ripley was not generous that way and Wayne soon walked back to the
-bench with the umpire’s “He’s out!” in his ears. In the last of the
-fifth, with LaCroix on first base and none out, he had a second trial
-at the plate and, after getting in the hole, landed on a straight ball
-and smacked it squarely into third baseman’s hands.
-
-It was in the sixth inning that the ice was broken by Damascus. Before
-anyone realised it she had filled the bases with only one out. Nye was
-plainly wabbling and “Red” Herring and Nick Crane were warming up back
-of third. The Damascus left fielder landed on the first pitch and Cross
-got it on the bound and hurled it to the plate. But the throw was wide
-and, although Young made the catch, the runner was safe and Damascus
-had scored. She scored again a minute later when the following batsman
-flied out to short left, for the best “Sailor” O’Neill could do was to
-hold the next runner at third. With two gone, a hit out of the infield
-was imperative and the Damascus catcher tried his best to get it. That
-he didn’t was no one’s fault but Wayne’s, for he started the ball off
-his bat at a mile a minute and streaked down the base path, while the
-other bags emptied like magic. Four yards to the left of first base
-sped the ball, ascending as it went. LaCroix stabbed at it and missed
-it by inches and it was Wayne, who had started with the sound of the
-hit, who leaped into the air behind LaCroix and brought joy to the
-stands and sorrow to Damascus. That circus catch, for it was scarcely
-less, started Wayne on the road to fame, a fame at present presaged by
-cheers and hand-clapping as, somewhat embarrassed, he walked back to
-the bench.
-
-“Lift your cap,” chuckled Cross as he and Wayne neared the first base
-stand. “Where’s your manners, kid?”
-
-Wayne obeyed sketchily and dropped onto the bench aware of the amused
-glances of his team mates. From the other end Mr. Milburn nodded to
-him. “Good stop, Sloan,” he said. But that was all.
-
-Harrisville again failed to hit or score and the seventh began. Nye was
-derricked when he had passed the first man up and “Red” Herring ambled
-to the mound. “Red” was wild for a few minutes but then settled down
-and, after Young’s clever peg to Cross had retried the man from first,
-the inning was virtually over. A long fly to right and a stop and throw
-by Jones settled matters.
-
-The seventh witnessed a change of fortunes. “Sailor” O’Neill led off
-with a clean single and LaCroix advanced him to second and reached
-first safely. Ripley retired then and a left-hander named Marks took
-his place. Marks was a man of wide curves and slow delivery. Wayne
-tried desperately to get a hit but fanned, which, considering that
-his advance to the plate had been greeted by applause, was horribly
-humiliating. But Leary found Marks for one, scoring O’Neill and putting
-LaCroix on third. Young flied out to deep centre and LaCroix scored,
-Leary advancing. Herring smashed a liner to shortstop too hot to handle
-and Leary beat out the subsequent throw to the plate by inches. Cross
-hit safely but was doubled up with Briggs a few minutes later.
-
-Damascus came back in the first of the eighth and added another run,
-tying the score at three each. Herring passed the first man up and
-although he struck out the next two, a momentary let-down paved the
-way for a two-bagger and sent the tying tally across. A moment later a
-quick peg from Herring caught the runner at second a foot off the bag
-and brought relief to the anxious audience.
-
-Jones started the last of the eighth for Harrisville by flying out to
-pitcher. O’Neill, undaunted, waited until the score was two-and-three
-and then busted the next offering through the infield for a long
-rolling hit that placed him on second and wrought the spectators to a
-frenzy of delight. LaCroix was up next and Wayne followed LaCroix.
-Wayne was wondering anxiously whether he would have better success
-this time. Already four hits had been made off Marks, proving that he
-was far from formidable, and yet when Wayne, swinging his bats between
-bench and plate, saw LaCroix match his wits against Marks’ and come off
-second best in the contest it seemed futile for him to hope to succeed.
-LaCroix swung at one and missed it, judged two balls wisely, fouled
-into the first base stand for a second strike and then let go at one
-and popped it nicely into shortstop’s glove. Wayne dropped one of the
-two bats he had been swinging and stepped to the rubber.
-
-Two out, a man on second and a run needed to break the tie! A hit,
-nothing less, was expected of Wayne, and he realised it. At first the
-thought was horribly disturbing. He heard the applause from the stands,
-less hearty this time, since he had failed them before, and it added to
-his tremors. He felt himself absurdly young and inexperienced and--yes,
-actually scared! He wished himself back on the bench, any place save
-where he stood, facing the pitcher with the muscles at the back of his
-legs trembling! They were talking to him and at him, his own side and
-the enemy, but what they said was confused and meaningless, and it was
-not until the Damascus catcher called down to his pitcher to “Fan the
-kid, Walt!” that any words registered on his brain.
-
-“Fan the kid!” That meant him. He didn’t mind being called a kid by
-his fellow players, but the catcher’s tone was a veiled insult, and
-something very much like anger welled up in Wayne’s breast. He tugged
-down his visor, seized the bat more firmly, and determined to show them
-that a kid could hit! He made up his mind then and there to forget
-everything but the task in front of him, to even forget that there were
-already two out and that so much depended on him, and suddenly, why he
-couldn’t have told, the certainty that he _could_ hit possessed him
-firmly.
-
-Marks looked him over. He leaned forward to get the catcher’s signal.
-Then he stood for an instant and Wayne knew that he was undecided what
-to offer him. “I’ll have a good look at the first one,” Wayne told
-himself, “no matter what it is!”
-
-And when it came it was well worth looking at, for it was a nice curve
-over the corner of the plate and was a strike.
-
-“’Ata, boy!” called the Damascus catcher. “You’ve got him beaten,
-Walt.” But Wayne paid no heed. His conviction that he could hit that
-ball was still strong. He had watched the first offering all the way
-and had had no trouble keeping it in sight. Marks evidently thought
-his curve ball, an outcurve to a right-handed batter, had fooled the
-latter once and that he had better try it again. Wayne was ready for it
-and meant to try very hard to hook it low into right field. His guess
-was correct, for what came was the same sort of delivery. But it was a
-little lower and Wayne missed it and heard the second strike called on
-him.
-
-[Illustration: His Conviction that he Could Hit that Ball Was Still
-Strong]
-
-But even yet he was confident. With two strikes against him he still
-felt certain of getting that hit. It surely looked as if Marks had him
-in a hole, but Wayne somehow knew that he hadn’t. Followed then two
-wide ones, just outside the plate, and Wayne, expecting them, made
-no offer. He knew that Marks was tempting him to bite at them and
-resolutely held back. And then came the fifth delivery.
-
-It looked good as it left the pitcher’s hand. It was coming to Wayne
-about waist-high and he thought it would break toward him and drop a
-trifle. As it neared the plate he stepped to meet it, and when it broke
-he put all his strength into the lunge and tried to send it between
-first baseman and the bag. He met it hard and started with the crack of
-the bat. He saw the ball shooting low inside the foul line, saw first
-baseman leap toward it, and, digging harder than ever, saw the ball
-strike the bag and go bounding out into the field!
-
-He knew then that he was safe, knew that he had done what was expected
-of him, and was terrifically glad. As he turned first he saw second
-baseman standing idle and heard the voice of Steve Milburn in the
-coaching box yelling him on, and he legged it hard for second. He saw
-the ball coming in then, but the throw was to the plate and he slid to
-second unchallenged. As he got to his feet again he was fairly dismayed
-by the pandemonium that arose from the stands, and then, for the first
-time since he had determined to forget everything save the business of
-hitting the ball, he remembered O’Neill!
-
-Anxiously he looked to third. He was not there. But of course not!
-He had either scored or been put out at the plate! He turned to the
-Damascus shortstop. “Did you get him?” he asked.
-
-“No,” was the disgusted reply. “He was safe by a mile!”
-
-And then Wayne understood why the stands were cheering and roaring!
-Harrisville had scored! The Badgers were one run to the good!
-
-Gradually the babel of sound died away. Leary was at bat. Wayne led
-off, danced back again, keeping an eye on the shortstop, watching the
-pitcher as well, listening to warnings from the coachers. If only Leary
-would come through! But Leary failed. A sharp crack, a sudden leaping
-dive by second baseman as Wayne sped along the path, a left-hand toss
-to first and the inning was over, and Wayne, turning disappointedly
-back to his position, heard the cheers and clapping break forth afresh,
-and wondered!
-
-It was all over ten minutes later, all over, that is, but the shouting,
-and that didn’t last long after the Harrisville players scuttled from
-field to dressing-room. In the doorway, smiling broadly now, stood Mr.
-Milburn, and as Wayne pushed through with the rest the manager’s arm
-shot out and seized on his shoulder and dragged him aside.
-
-“I’m going to tear up that contract, Sloan,” he said.
-
-“Tear it up!” faltered Wayne.
-
-“Yes.” The manager’s eyes twinkled. “It wasn’t any good, anyway!
-Tomorrow I’ll have a new one ready for you. I’m going to sign you on to
-play second base, Sloan, at a hundred and ten a month. That suit you?”
-
-Wayne only nodded, but the expression on his face was answer enough.
-Mr. Milburn laughed and pushed him good-naturedly on. “All right! Sign
-up tomorrow morning, and----”
-
-But his remark was never finished, for just then there was an excited
-barking outside and a little yellow dog burst through the doorway and
-leaped at the boy. And following Sam appeared the grinning face of June.
-
-“Mas’ Wayne, sir, I hear down to the hotel as you-all’s playin,” panted
-June, “an’ I jus’ nachally had to come, sir! I reckon I done lose my
-job, but I ain’ carin’!”
-
-“Never mind your job,” laughed Wayne, as he picked Sam up in his arms.
-“You’ve got a new job after today, June.”
-
-“Say I is? What I goin’ do, Mas’ Wayne?”
-
-“You’re going to look after me, June; and Sam. We’re going to find
-those rooms tomorrow and go to keeping house. We--we’re going to live
-like white folks again!”
-
-“Lawsy-y-y!” cried June.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes:
-
- --Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_); text in
- bold by “equal” signs (=bold=).
-
- --Punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently corrected.
-
- --Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.
-
- --Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Second Base Sloan, by Christy Mathewson
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Second Base Sloan, by Christy Mathewson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Second Base Sloan
-
-Author: Christy Mathewson
-
-Illustrator: E. C. Caswell
-
-Release Date: June 25, 2016 [EBook #52407]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SECOND BASE SLOAN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
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-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="600" height="893" alt="cover" title="cover" />
-<div class="caption">Transcriber's Note: The cover image was created from the title
-page by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p class="noic">SECOND BASE SLOAN</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 416px;">
-<a id="image01">
- <img src="images/image01.jpg" width="416" height="600" alt="" title="" />
-</a><br />
-<div class="caption"><a href="#Page_12">The White Boy, the Black Boy, and the Yellow Dog</a></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h1>Second Base Sloan</h1>
-
-<p class="p2 noic">BY</p>
-
-<p class="noi subtitle">CHRISTY MATHEWSON</p>
-
-<p class="p2 noi works">AUTHOR OF</p>
-
-<p class="noic">FIRST BASE FAULKNER,<br />
-CATCHER CRAIG, <span class="smcap">Etc.</span></p>
-
-<p class="p6 noi works">ILLUSTRATED BY</p>
-
-<p class="noi author">E. C. CASWELL</p>
-
-<div class="pad4">
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 95px;">
-<img src="images/logo.jpg" width="95" height="80" alt="logo" title="logo" />
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noic"><span class="author">GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP</span><br />
-PUBLISHERS      NEW YORK</p>
-
-<p class="p2 noi works">Made in the United States of America</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p class="noic"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1917, by<br />
-DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY, Inc.</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
-<col style="width: 20%;" />
-<col style="width: 70%;" />
-<col style="width: 10%;" />
-<tr>
- <th class="smfontr">CHAPTER</th>
- <th class="tdl"></th>
- <th class="smfontr">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">I</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">TWO BOYS AND A DOG</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">II</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">JUNE STRIKES A BARGAIN</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">13</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">III</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">THE SEARCH FOR WORK</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">28</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">IV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">DISPOSSESSED</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">44</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">V</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">WAYNE PARTS WITH SAM</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">57</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">THE NEW HOME</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">71</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">THE LUCK CHANGES</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">84</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">WAYNE LOSES A JOB AND FINDS ONE</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">100</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">IX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">BIG TOM MAKES AN OFFER</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">118</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">X</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">NEW FRIENDS</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">131</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">THE CHENANGO CLUB</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">143</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">MEDFIELD CELEBRATES</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">159</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">WAYNE BEATS OUT THE BALL</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">172</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">“A GENTLEMAN TO SEE MR. SLOAN”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">186</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">PATTERN GIVES ADVICE</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">198</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">OFF TO HARRISVILLE</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">210</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">TURNED DOWN!</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">225</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">“BADGERS” VS. “BILLIES”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">236</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">WAYNE LENDS A HAND</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">250</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">JUNE GOES TO WORK</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">263</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXI</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">MR. MILBURN PROMISES</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">274</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXII</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">SECOND BASE SLOAN</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">287</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" summary="Illustrations">
-<col style="width: 80%;" />
-<col style="width: 20%;" />
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#image01">The white boy, the black boy, and the yellow dog</a> (Page 12)</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><i>Frontispiece</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="smfontr">FACING<br />PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#image02">Wayne’s cry was uttered involuntarily as he leaped forward</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">104</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#image03">Every other Medfield adherent made a joyful noise</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">182</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#image04">His conviction that he could hit that ball was still strong</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">296</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="noi title">SECOND BASE SLOAN</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</a><br />
-<small>TWO BOYS AND A DOG</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Two boys and a dog sat at the edge of a little
-wood and shiveringly watched the eastern sky
-pale from inky blue to gray. One of the boys
-was white and the other was black; and the dog
-was yellow. The white boy was seventeen years
-old, the black boy sixteen, and the yellow dog—well,
-no one knew just how old he was. The white
-boy’s name was Wayne Torrence Sloan, the black
-boy’s name was Junius Brutus Bartow Tasker,
-and the dog’s name was Sam. An hour ago they
-had been rudely awakened from their sleep in
-a box car and more rudely driven forth into cold
-and darkness and mystery. They had had no
-complaint to make, for they had lain undisturbed
-in the car ever since the middle of the previous
-afternoon; and between that time and an hour
-ago had rumbled and jolted over miles and miles
-of track, just how many miles there was no way
-of telling until, having learned their present<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-whereabouts, Wayne should puzzle out the matter
-of distance on the frayed and tattered time-table
-in his pocket. Travelling as they had travelled,
-on foot or stealing rides when the chance offered,
-makes a philosopher of one, and instead of objecting
-to the fate that had overtaken them when a
-suspicious train hand had flashed his lantern into
-the gloomy recesses of the box car, they had departed
-hurriedly and in silence, being thankful
-that the exodus had not been forced on them long
-before.</p>
-
-<p>Minute by minute the sky brightened. The
-steely gray became softer in tone and began to
-flush with a suggestion of rose. The stars paled.
-A wan gleam of approaching daylight fell on one
-burnished rail of the track which lay a few rods
-distant. The trees behind them took on form
-and substance and their naked branches became
-visibly detailed against the sky. The dog whined
-softly and curled himself tighter in Wayne’s arms.
-Wayne stretched the corner of his gray sweater
-over the thin back and eased himself from the
-cramped position against the trunk of a small
-tree.</p>
-
-<p>“What would you do, June, if someone came
-along about now with a can of hot coffee?” he
-asked, breaking the silence that had lasted for
-many minutes. The negro boy aroused from his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-half doze and flashed the whites of his eyes in
-the gloom.</p>
-
-<p>“Mas’ Wayne,” he answered fervently, “I’d
-jus’ about love that Mister Man. M-m-mm! Hot
-coffee! Lawsy-y! You reckon it ever goin’ to
-get lightsome, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon we can start along pretty soon now,
-June. Whereabouts do you suspect we are?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon we must be gettin’ mighty nigh New
-York. How far was we yesterday?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Most two hundred and fifty miles. If we’d
-just kept right on going all night we might have
-been in New York right now, but that freight was
-standing still more times than it was moving, I
-reckon. Look yonder, June. Daylight’s surely
-coming, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>Junius Brutus Bartow Tasker turned an
-obedient gaze toward the east, but his reply was
-pessimistic. A negro who is cold is generally
-pessimistic, and June was certainly cold. Unlike
-Wayne, he had no sweater under his shabby
-jacket, nor was there much of anything else under
-it, for the coarse gingham shirt offered little resistance
-to the chill of the March night, and June
-and undershirts had long been strangers. Early
-spring in southern Georgia is a different matter
-from the same season up North, a fact which
-neither boy had allowed for.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I reckon Christmas is comin’ too,” muttered
-June gloomily, “but it’s a powerful long way off.
-How come the nights is so long up here, Mas’
-Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon there isn’t any difference, not really,”
-answered Wayne. “They just seem like they were
-longer. Sam, you wake up and stretch yourself.
-We’re going to travel again pretty soon now.
-Go catch yourself a rabbit or something.”</p>
-
-<p>The dog obeyed instructions so far as stretching
-himself was concerned, and, after finding that
-he was not to be allowed to return to the warmth
-of his master’s lap, even set off in a half-hearted,
-shivering fashion to explore the surrounding
-world.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon he can projeck ’roun’ a mighty long
-time before he starts a rabbit,” said June discouragedly.
-“It’s a powerful mean-lookin’ country
-up this way, ain’ it? What state you-all reckons
-we’s in, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne shook his head. Shaking his head was
-very easy because he only had to let the tremors
-that were agitating the rest of him extend above
-the turned-up collar of his jacket! “I reckon it
-might be Maryland, June. Somewheres around
-there, anyway.” He felt for the time-table in
-his pocket, but he didn’t bring it forth for it was
-still too dark to read. “I ’most wish I was back<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-home, June,” he went on wistfully, after a
-minute’s silence. “I sure do!”</p>
-
-<p>“I done told you we hadn’t no business comin’
-up this yere way. Ain’ nothin’ up here but
-Northerners, I reckon. If we’d gone West like
-I said we’d been a heap better off.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody asked you to come, anyway,” responded
-Wayne sharply. “There wasn’t any
-reason for you coming. You—you just butted
-in!”</p>
-
-<p>As there was no denying that statement, June
-wisely chose to change the subject. “Reckon
-someone’s goin’ to give us some breakfast pretty
-soon?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>But Wayne had a grievance now and, feeling a
-good deal more homesick than he had thought he
-ever could feel, and a lot colder and emptier than
-was pleasant, he nursed it. “I couldn’t stay there
-any longer and slave for that man,” he said. “I
-stuck it out as long as I could. Ever since mother
-died it’s been getting worse and worse. He hasn’t
-got any hold on me, anyway. Stepfathers aren’t
-kin. I had a right to run away if I wanted to, and
-he can’t fetch me back, not anyway, not even by
-law!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, he can’,” agreed June soothingly.</p>
-
-<p>“But you didn’t have any right to run away,
-June. You——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“How come I ain’t” demanded the negro.
-“He ain’ no kin to me, neither, is he? I was jus’
-a-workin’ for him. Mister Higgins ain’ got no
-more ’sponsibility about me than he has about
-you, Mas’ Wayne.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just the same, June, he can fetch you back if
-he ever catches you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can, can he? Let me tell you somethin’. He
-ain’ <em>goin’</em> to catch me! Nobody ain’ goin’ to
-catch me! Coloured folkses is free an’ independent
-citizens, ain’ they? Ain’ they, Mas’
-Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe they’re free,” answered his companion
-grimly, “but if you get to acting independent
-I’ll just about lick the hide off you! I
-ought to have done it back yonder and sent you
-home where you belong.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’se where I belong right now,” replied June
-stoutly. “Ain’ we been together ever since we
-was jus’ little fellers, Mas’ Wayne? Wasn’ my
-mammy your mammy’s nigger for years an’
-years? How come I ain’ got no right here? Ain’
-my mammy always say to me, ‘You Junius
-Brutus Tasker, you watch out for Young Master
-an’ don’ you ever let no harm come to him, ’cause
-if you do I’ll tan your hide’? Ain’ she always
-tell me that ever since I was so high? What you
-think I was goin’ to do, Mas’ Wayne, when I seen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-you sneakin’ off that night? Wasn’ but jus’ one
-thing <em>to</em> do, was there? How you ’spects I was
-goin’ to watch out for you like my mammy tells
-me if I didn’ go along with you? Huh? So I
-jus’ track along till you get to the big road, an’
-then I track along till you get to Summitty, and
-then I track along——”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and you climbed into that freight car
-after me and the man saw you and we all got
-thrown out,” continued Wayne. “I reckon you
-meant all right, June, but what do you suppose
-I’m going to do with you up North here? I got
-to find work to do and it’s going to be hard enough
-to look after Sam here without having a pesky
-darkey on my hands. Best thing you can do is
-hike back home before you starve to death.”</p>
-
-<p>“Huh! I ain’ never starved to death yet, Mas’
-Wayne, an’ I ain’ lookin’ to. Jus’ like I told you
-heaps of times, you ain’ got to do no worryin’
-about June. I reckon I can find me a job of work,
-too, can’ I? Reckon folkses has to plough an’
-plant an’ pick their cotton up here jus’ like they
-does back home.”</p>
-
-<p>“There isn’t any cotton in the North, June.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’ no cotton?” ejaculated the other incredulously.
-“What all they plant up here, then, Mas’
-Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, apples, I reckon, and——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I can pick apples, then. I done pick peaches,
-ain’ I? What else they plant?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why——” Wayne didn’t have a very clear
-notion himself, but it didn’t do to appear ignorant
-to June. “Why, they—they plant potatoes—white
-potatoes, you know—and—and peas and—oh,
-lots of things, I reckon.”</p>
-
-<p>June pondered that in silence for a moment.
-Then: “But how come they don’t plant cotton?”
-he asked in puzzled tones.</p>
-
-<p>“Too cold. It won’t grow for them up here.”</p>
-
-<p>June gazed rather contemptuously about the
-gray morning landscape and grunted comprehendingly.
-“Uh-huh. Reckon I wouldn’t neither if
-I was a cotton plant! It surely is a mighty—mighty
-<em>mean</em>-lookin’ place, ain’ it?”</p>
-
-<p>Well, it really was. Before them ran the
-railroad embankment, behind them was the little
-grove of bare trees and on either hand an uncultivated
-expanse of level field stretched away into
-the gray gloom. No habitation was as yet in
-sight. The telegraph poles showed spectrally
-against the dawn, and a little breeze, rising with
-the rising sun, made a moaning sound in the
-clustered wires. Sam came back from his profitless
-adventures and wormed himself between
-Wayne’s legs. June blew on his cold hands and
-crooned a song under his breath. The eastern sky<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-grew lighter and lighter and suddenly, like a
-miracle, a burst of rose glow spread upward
-toward the zenith, turning the grayness into the
-soft hues of a dove’s breast! Wayne sprang to
-his feet, with an exclamation of pain as his
-cramped and chilled muscles responded to the
-demand, and stretched his arms and yawned
-prodigiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Come along and let’s find that hot coffee,
-June,” he said almost cheerfully. “There
-must be a house somewhere around here, I
-reckon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure must!” replied the other, falling instantly
-into Wayne’s humour. “Lawsy-y, I can
-jus’ taste that coffee now! Which way we goin’,
-Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne stamped his feet on the still frosty
-ground and considered. At last: “North,” he
-replied, “and north’s over that way. Come
-along!”</p>
-
-<p>He led the way back toward the track, followed
-by June and Sam, and after squeezing himself
-between the wires of a fence climbed the embankment
-and set off over the ties with a speed
-born of long practice. The rose hue was fast
-changing to gold now, and long rays of sunlight
-streamed upward heralding the coming of His
-Majesty the Sun; and against the glory of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-eastern sky the three travellers stood out like
-animated silhouettes cut from blue-black cardboard
-as they trudged along—<a href="#image01">the white boy, the
-black boy, and the yellow dog</a>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</a><br />
-<small>JUNE STRIKES A BARGAIN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>That they didn’t travel absolutely due north
-was only because the track chose to lead more
-westerly. By the time the sun was really in sight
-they had covered the better part of a half-mile
-and had caught a glimpse of a good-sized town in
-the distance. Tall chimneys and a spire or two
-pointed upward above a smoky haze. They
-crossed a big bridge beneath which flowed a broad
-and sluggish river, and had to flatten themselves
-against the parapet, Sam held tightly in Wayne’s
-arms, while a long freight train pounded past
-them on the single line of track. Beyond the
-bridge a “Yard Limit” sign met them, and the
-rails branched and switches stood up here and
-there like sentries and a roundhouse was near
-at hand. But they found their first habitation
-before that in a tiny white cottage set below the
-embankment, its gate facing a rambling clay road,
-rutted and pitted, that disappeared under a
-bridge. There was a path worn down the bank to
-the road, and Wayne and June and Sam descended<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-it. A trail of smoke arose from the chimney of
-the house straight into the morning sunlight and
-suggested that the occupants were up and about.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne’s knock on the door was answered by a
-tall, thin, slatternly woman who scowled questioningly.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, ma’am,” began Wayne.
-“Could you give us a cup of coffee, please? We’ve
-been——”</p>
-
-<p>“Get out of my yard,” was the prompt
-response. “I don’t feed tramps!”</p>
-
-<p>“We aren’t tramps, ma’am. We’ll pay for the
-coffee——”</p>
-
-<p>“And steal the doormat! I know your sort!”
-There was no doormat in sight, but Wayne didn’t
-notice the fact. “Go on now before I call my
-man to you.” The door slammed shut.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne viewed June in surprise and the negro
-boy shook his head helplessly. “She surely is a
-powerful disgrumpled lady, Mas’ Wayne! Yes,
-sir! Reckon we better move along.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe she isn’t well,” said Wayne, as they
-left the inhospitable dwelling behind and again
-climbed to the track. “Just the same, she didn’t
-have any right to call us tramps, did she? I
-suppose we’d better keep on to the town, June.
-It isn’t much farther.”</p>
-
-<p>So they went on, past sidings laden with long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-lines of freight cars, past locomotives sizzling
-idly, past a crossing where eight burnished rails,
-aglow in the sunlight, crossed their path, under a
-big signal tower, their eyes very busy and their
-stomachs, since they had not eaten since early the
-preceding afternoon, very empty. A long freight
-shed was reached, and as they passed it one of the
-many doors slid slowly open and a brawny man
-stood revealed against the dimness beyond. He
-stretched his arms, yawned, caught sight of
-the passers and stood there, framed in the
-square opening, staring interestedly. Wayne
-stopped.</p>
-
-<p>“Howdy,” he said. “Can you tell me where
-I can get something to eat, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! Cross over back of the yellow building
-and you’ll see a lunch-wagon. Maybe you’re looking
-for the hotel, though?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne shook his head. “I reckon a lunch-wagon’s
-good enough. What is this place,
-please?”</p>
-
-<p>“Medfield, son. Aren’t lost, are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir. What—what state are we in?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pennsylvania. What state might you be looking
-for, son?”</p>
-
-<p>“New York. Is it very far?”</p>
-
-<p>“Second state on the right,” laughed the man.
-“What part of it are you aiming for?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“New York City, I reckon. How far would that
-be?”</p>
-
-<p>“About a hundred and fifty miles.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne sighed. “I thought we were nearer than
-that. Thank you, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, hold on! Where’d you come from, anyway?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne pointed a thumb over his shoulder.
-“Back there a ways,” he answered vaguely.</p>
-
-<p>“Tramping it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, some. Rode on the cars, too.”</p>
-
-<p>The big man in the doorway winked down at
-him. “When they didn’t see you, eh? You look
-like a smart kid. What are you beating your way
-around the country for? Why don’t you get a
-job and go to work?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m looking for work,” answered Wayne
-eagerly. “Know where I can find some?”</p>
-
-<p>The man shrugged his shoulders. “I guess you
-won’t have to look very far, son, if you really
-want a job. The trouble with your sort is that
-you don’t <em>want</em> to work. How far south do you
-come from?”</p>
-
-<p>“Georgia, sir. How’d you know?”</p>
-
-<p>“How’d I know!” laughed the man. “That’s
-a good one! What’s Friday’s name?”</p>
-
-<p>“What, sir?” asked Wayne, puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>The man nodded at Wayne’s companion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-“What’s his name? Abraham Lincoln
-White?”</p>
-
-<p>“June,” answered Wayne, a trifle stiffly, beginning
-to suspect that the man was laughing at
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“June, eh? Say, he got North about three
-months too soon, didn’t he? Where’d you get the
-alligator hound? Don’t you ever feed him anything?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne moved away, followed by his retinue, but
-the man in the door was blind to offended dignity.
-“All right, son!” he called after them. “Good
-luck! Tell Denny that Jim Mason sent you and
-that he’s to give you a good feed.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne found the lunch-wagon without difficulty,
-but it didn’t seem to him that it deserved
-the name of wagon for it was set on a brick
-foundation in a weed-grown piece of land under
-the shadow of the big yellow factory and looked
-as though it had been there for many years.
-Still, there might be wheels hidden behind the
-bricks, he reflected. The words “Golden Star
-Lunch” were painted on the front. They climbed
-the steps and seated themselves on stools, while
-Sam searched famishedly about the floor for stray
-crumbs. The proprietor was a short, chunky
-youth with light hair slicked down close and a
-generous supply of the biggest and reddest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-freckles Wayne had ever seen. He observed June
-doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“We don’t generally feed niggers here,” he
-said. “You two fellers together?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” answered Wayne. “If you don’t want
-to serve him we’ll get out.” He started to slide
-off the stool.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, never mind,” said the white-aproned
-youth. “The rush is over now. What’ll you
-have?”</p>
-
-<p>“Coffee and two ham sandwiches, please.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mas’ Wayne,” said June, “I’d rather have a
-piece of that sweet-potato pie yonder, please, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“That ain’t sweet-potato pie,” laughed the
-proprietor. “That’s squash, Snowball.”</p>
-
-<p>“Please, sir, Mister, don’t call me out of my
-name,” begged June earnestly. “My name’s
-Junius.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Junius.” The proprietor of the
-lunch-wagon grinned at Wayne and winked, but
-Wayne only frowned.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll have a sandwich, June,” he said.
-“Pie isn’t good for you. Two ham sandwiches,
-please.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>June watched wistfully while the knife slipped
-through the end of the ham, and at last hunger got
-the better of manners. “Mister Denny, sir, would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-you please, sir, just bear down a little heavier on
-that fat meat?” he requested.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, you can have all the fat you want.
-How’d you know my name, though?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne answered for him. “A man at the
-freight shed directed us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, and he said we was to tell you to give
-us a mighty good feed, Mister Denny,” added
-June. “But I reckon you-all goin’ to do that
-anyway, ain’ you?”</p>
-
-<p>The proprietor laughed as he covered two
-slices of buttered bread with generous slices of
-ham. “That’s right, Snow—I mean Junius,” he
-responded. “If that ain’t enough you come back.
-Want something for your dog?”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, I’ll give him some of my sandwich,”
-said Wayne, trying not to look impatient.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t need to.” The man scooped up
-some trimmings from the ham on the blade of the
-broad knife, dumped them on a slice of bread and
-leaned over the counter. “Here you are, Bingo.
-Catch!” Sam caught as much as he could and it
-disappeared as though by magic. After that he
-licked up the few scraps that had got away from
-him, wagged his tail delightedly, and gazed inquiringly
-and invitingly up again. “Say, he’s a
-smart dog, ain’t he?” said the man. “What’s his
-name?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Sam. Are those sandwiches ready, please?”</p>
-
-<p>“Huh? Gee, didn’t I serve you yet? What do
-you know about that? Coffee, you said, didn’t
-you? Here you are.” He went back to an appraisal
-of the dog while Wayne and June, side
-by side, drank deep draughts of the hot coffee and
-bit huge mouthfuls from the delicious sandwiches.
-“Guess some more breakfast wouldn’t bust him,”
-said the proprietor, cutting off another slice of
-bread and buttering it liberally. “Can he do any
-tricks?”</p>
-
-<p>“A few,” replied Wayne rather inarticulately
-by reason of having his mouth occupied by other
-things than words. “Sit up, Sam, and ask for
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>Sam sat up, a trifle unsteadily, and barked three
-shrill barks. The man laughed. “Good boy!
-Here you are, then!” The piece of bread disappeared
-instantly. “Say, he’s sure hungry!
-What kind of a dog is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Reckon he’s just dog,” answered Wayne.
-“He don’t boast of his family much, Sam don’t,
-but he’s a good old chap.”</p>
-
-<p>“Man over yonder at the railroad called him a
-alligator hound,” said June resentfully. “That’s
-the best dog in Colquitt County, Mister Denny.
-Yes, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s that, Junius?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Colquitt? That’s where we lives at when
-we’re to home. Colquitt County’s the finest——”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut up, June. Don’t talk so much,” said
-Wayne. “Sam, stand up and march for the
-gentleman. Come on! Forward! March!”</p>
-
-<p>Sam removed his appealing gaze from the
-countenance of “Mister Denny,” sighed—you
-could actually hear that sigh!—reared himself on
-his slender hind legs and stepped stiffly down the
-length of the floor and back again.</p>
-
-<p>“Halt!” commanded Wayne, and Sam halted so
-suddenly that he almost went over backward.
-“Salute!” Sam’s right paw flopped up and down
-in a sketchy salute. “Fall out!” Sam came down
-on all-fours with alacrity, barked his relief and
-again took up his station under the good-natured
-“Mr. Denny.” The latter applauded warmly.</p>
-
-<p>“Some dog you’ve got there, kid!” he declared.
-“What’ll you take for him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t sell him,” answered Wayne, washing
-down the last of his sandwich with the final
-mouthful of coffee.</p>
-
-<p>“Give you ten dollars,” said the man.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne shook his head with decision.</p>
-
-<p>“Fifteen? Well, any time you do want to sell
-him, Mister, you give me first chance, will you?
-He’s going to have some more breakfast for that
-stunt.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Mas’ Wayne,” said June softly, “I ain’ never
-eat any of that squash pie, an’ it surely does look
-powerful handsome, don’ it?”</p>
-
-<p>“You still hungry?” frowned Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’ downright hungry,” answered June
-wistfully, “but I—I surely would act awful kind
-to a piece of that pie!”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said Wayne. “How much is pie,
-sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“Five cents. Want some?”</p>
-
-<p>“Please. A slice of the squash.”</p>
-
-<p>The proprietor, too busy with Sam to
-have heard the exchange, set the pie in front
-of Wayne, and the latter pushed it along to
-June.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you say two pieces?” asked the man,
-poising his knife.</p>
-
-<p>“No, thank you.”</p>
-
-<p>June looked uncertainly from the tempting
-yellow triangle on the plate before him to Wayne
-and back again. “Ain’ you-all goin’ to have no
-pie?” he asked. Wayne shook his head. June
-laid down the fork and sniffed doubtfully. “What
-kind of pie you say this is, Mister Denny?” he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Huh? Squash pie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Uh-huh. I reckon I don’ care for it, thanky,
-sir. It don’ smell like I thought it would.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be a fool!” whispered Wayne. “I don’t
-want any.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say you don’? I ain’ believin’ it, though.
-Please, Mas’ Wayne, you have a half of it. It’s
-a powerful big piece of pie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lots more here,” said the proprietor. “Want
-another piece?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, thanks,” answered Wayne. “I—maybe
-I’ll take a bite of his.”</p>
-
-<p>The man’s reply to this was a quick slash of his
-knife and a second section of the squash pie slid
-across the counter. “My treat,” he said. “Try
-it. It’s good pie.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne hesitated. “I don’t think I want any,”
-he muttered. “I’m not hungry.”</p>
-
-<p>“You eat it if you don’t want me to get mad at
-you,” said the other, levelling the knife at him
-sternly. “If you can’t eat it all give it to Sam.
-I’ll bet you he likes pie, eh, Sammy?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne smiled and, to June’s vast relief, ate.
-Perhaps he wasn’t hungry and perhaps it was
-mere politeness that caused him to consume every
-last crumb, but he had the appearance of one in
-thorough enjoyment of his task. When both
-plates were cleaned up Wayne dug a hand into a
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“How much do we owe you, please?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Twenty cents. The pie was on me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I’d rather—rather——” Wayne’s remark
-dwindled to silence and he began an anxious
-search of all his pockets, a proceeding that
-brought a look of suspicion into the good-natured
-face of the man behind the counter.</p>
-
-<p>“Lost your money?” asked the latter with a
-trace of sarcasm.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne nodded silently. “I reckon I must
-have,” he muttered, turning out one pocket after
-another and assembling the contents on the
-counter; the tattered time-table, a toothbrush, a
-pair of stockings, two handkerchiefs, a knife, a
-pencil, some string, and two-cent stamp vastly
-the worse for having laid crumpled up in a vest
-pocket for many weeks. “It—it’s gone,” said
-Wayne blankly. “I had nearly four dollars last
-night, didn’t I, June?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, you certainly did, Mas’ Wayne,
-’cause I seen it. Where you reckon you lost it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” answered the other boy
-miserably. “It was in this pocket. I reckon it
-must have come out in the freight car.”</p>
-
-<p>The proprietor of the lunch wagon frowned. It
-was an old game to him, but there was something
-apparently genuine in the troubled expressions of
-both boys and he was almost inclined to accept
-the story. At all events, it was only twenty cents,
-and he was good-hearted and the two youngsters<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-looked rather down on their luck. “Well, never
-mind,” he said carelessly. “You can pay me
-some other time, kids.”</p>
-
-<p>But Wayne shook his head. “You—you haven’t
-any money, have you, June?” he faltered. June
-shook his head sadly.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t have but two bits, Mas’ Wayne, and
-I went an’ spent that long time ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” said Wayne, turning to the proprietor,
-“we don’t live here. We’re just—just
-passing through on our way to New York, and so
-we couldn’t very well pay you later.” He looked
-dubiously at the array of property before him.
-“I reckon there ain’t anything there worth twenty
-cents, is there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not to me, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then—then you’ll just have to keep Sam until
-we can bring the money,” said Wayne desperately.
-“I reckon we can earn it somewhere. Will
-you please to do that, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>The man looked covetously at the dog, but shook
-his head. “Shucks,” he answered, “he’d only be
-unhappy. And so would you, I guess. You run
-along, fellers. It’s all right. I guess you’ll pay
-me when you can, eh? Only—say, now, honest,
-kid, did you really have that four dollars, or are
-you just stringing me?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne flushed but met the man’s gaze<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-squarely. “I had it,” he replied simply. “You
-haven’t any call to think I’m lying.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right! I believe you. Now, look here, do
-you really want to earn a half-dollar?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ever washed windows?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne shook his head. “No, but I reckon I
-could do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, these windows need washing pretty
-badly. Generally I do it myself, but I’d rather
-take a lickin’. There’s eight of ’em and it ought
-to be worth five cents a window. That’s forty
-cents, but we’ll call it fifty. What do you say?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll do them, thanks, and mighty glad to,”
-answered Wayne eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Huh!” ejaculated June. “Go on away from
-here, Mas’ Wayne. You ain’ never washed no
-window in your life. White man, point me out to
-water and rags and <em>let</em> me to it. Mas’ Wayne ain’
-never done no work like that an’ there ain’ no call
-for him to do any.” June paused and looked at
-the windows. “Mister Denny, them’s pretty big
-windows an’ they certainly is dirty, ain’ they?”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with you? Ain’t fifty cents
-enough?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir,” answered June slowly, “it is an’ it
-ain’. Takin’ into estimation the size of them
-windows an’ the ’mount of washin’ required, sir,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-it seems like you might throw in two more cups
-of that yere coffee, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>“Junius, you’re all right!” laughed the man,
-turning to the gleaming coffee urn. “It’s a bargain.
-Drink your coffee and then get to work.
-If you do a good job I’ll throw in a sandwich when
-you’re through!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</a><br />
-<small>THE SEARCH FOR WORK</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Two hours later the boys, followed by Sam, left
-the lunch-wagon, possessed of thirty cents in
-money and with all liabilities discharged. Wayne,
-declaring that, although he had never washed a
-window in his life, it was time he learned how, had,
-to June’s disgust, taken a hand in the work, and,
-while he had done only three windows to June’s
-five, had proved his ability. Afterward, Mr.
-Dennis Connor—for that, as they later learned,
-was his real name—had provided a collation of
-sandwiches and coffee and dismissed them with
-his good wishes and an invitation to drop in again
-when they were passing.</p>
-
-<p>It was mid-morning now, and the sunshine had
-warmed the early March day to a temperature
-more kindly than any they had experienced for
-a week. Wayne led the way to a sheltered nook
-in the lee of an empty shed near the railroad
-and seated himself on a discarded wheelbarrow.
-June followed suit and Sam began an excited
-search for rats. The town was wide-awake and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-very busy now. Smoke poured from neighbouring
-stacks and chimneys and the roar of machinery
-came to them from the big factory close
-by. Trains passed and locomotives shrieked and
-clanged their brazen bells. Drays and trucks
-moved noisily along the cobbled street in the
-direction of the freight yard, piled high with
-goods in bales and boxes.</p>
-
-<p>“Reckon,” said June, “this is a right smart
-town, Mas’ Wayne.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne nodded. He was still regretting the loss
-of his money and now he reverted to the question
-of how and where he had parted from it. They
-discussed it at some length and eventually decided
-that it had somehow got out of his pocket last
-night in the freight car. To be quite, quite certain
-that it was really gone, Wayne once more emptied
-his pockets and turned them all inside out. But
-the money was not there and June shook his kinky
-head in silent sympathy. Sam gave up his rat
-hunt and threw himself, panting, in the sunlight
-at the boys’ feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s gone,” said Wayne finally. “And
-there’s no use crying about it. But what I want
-to know is how we’re to get to New York on thirty
-cents. That man said it was about a hundred and
-fifty miles and I reckon it’ll take us ’most a week,
-don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Depends,” said June. “If we’s lucky and gets
-plenty of free rides——”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re too particular around here,” interrupted
-Wayne sadly. “I reckon it’ll be mighty
-hard to get into freight cars after this, June.
-We’ll just have to foot it, and thirty cents won’t
-last long on the road. Folks ain’t awfully hospitable
-up North, I’ve heard, and we can’t depend
-on getting meals free. Anyway, I don’t want to.
-It’s too much like begging. That man as much
-as called us tramps, and that woman said we
-<em>were</em> tramps. Well, we aren’t. We’ve paid for
-everything anyone would let us pay for, so far,
-excepting the rides we stole, and those don’t count,
-I reckon. Seems to me like the only thing to
-do now, June, is to stay right here and earn
-some money before we go any further. There’s
-no use trying to walk to New York with only
-thirty cents.”</p>
-
-<p>June agreed cheerfully enough to that proposition.
-After all, it made little difference to him.
-New York City or Medfield, it was all one. To
-be sure, they had started out for New York, but
-it was Wayne who had settled on that place as
-their destination, and June would have been just
-as well satisfied if Wayne had decided for Reykjavik,
-Iceland. Besides, it was now almost three
-weeks since they had stolen away from Sleepersville,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-Georgia, and June’s first enthusiasm for
-wandering had faded sadly. In short, the idea of
-remaining stationary in one place for a while
-struck him as being very attractive. And perhaps
-the same thought came to Wayne, for, having
-reached the decision, he sighed as if with relief.
-It may have been, probably was, merely a coincidence,
-but Sam, stretched flat on the ground at
-Wayne’s feet, echoed the sigh.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps no better opportunity will present itself
-for a study of our hero and his companions
-and so we will make the most of it. Wayne
-Sloan was seventeen years old; to be exact,
-seventeen years and nineteen days. It had been
-the arrival of his seventeenth birthday that had
-decided him to cast off the yoke of thraldom and
-become his own master. He was a capable-looking
-youth, fairly large for his age. He had wide
-shoulders and carried himself straightly, a fact
-largely due, I fancy, to many hours spent in the
-saddle in his younger days. After the death of
-his mother, which had occurred four years ago,
-there had been neither saddle nor horse for him,
-nor, had there been a horse, would there have been
-opportunity for riding. His stepfather had his
-own notions regarding the proper occupations for
-a boy, notions that were at wide variance with
-Wayne’s. Handsome the boy was not, but you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-would have called him nice-looking. You’d have
-liked his eyes, which were so deeply brown that
-they seemed black, and the oval smoothness of
-his face which lacked the colourlessness of so
-many Southern faces. His hair was fully as dark
-as his eyes and as straight as an Indian’s, and
-just now, by reason of not having been cut for
-a month or so, was rather untidy about ears and
-neck. His nose was—well, it was just a plain,
-everyday affair, meriting no especial mention.
-And his mouth was no more remarkable. In fact,
-there was nothing to emphasise, from head to
-toes. He was just a nice-appearing, well-built
-Southern boy. At present his appearance was
-rather handicapped by his attire, for even the
-best of clothes will look shabby after nearly three
-weeks of dusty roads and dirty box cars, and
-Wayne’s apparel had not been anything to brag
-about in the beginning. A pair of gray trousers
-that only the most charitable would have called
-woolen, a vest of the same, a coat of blue serge,
-and a gray sweater comprised the more important
-part of his outfit. A black felt hat of the Fedora
-variety, ridiculously old-looking for the boyish
-face beneath, dark-blue cotton socks showing
-above a pair of rusty, dusty, scuffed-toed shoes,
-and a wispy blue string tie peering from under
-the wrinkled collar of a blue-and-white cotton<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-shirt completed as much of his wardrobe as met
-the world’s gaze.</p>
-
-<p>But in the matter of wardrobe Wayne at least
-had the better of his companion. Junius Brutus
-Bartow Tasker was never a dandy. Just something
-to cover him up more or less was all June
-asked. His shoes, which had been new just before
-the beginning of the present pilgrimage, were the
-most presentable item of his attire. They only
-needed blacking. The other things he wore needed
-about everything, including patches, buttons, and
-cleaning! His cheap cotton trousers would have
-proved an embarrassment to anyone of a less
-philosophical nature, his shirt was sadly torn and
-his coat—well, that coat had been a wreck a year
-ago and had not improved any since! Between
-the tops of his shoes and the frayed bottoms of
-his trousers appeared a crinkled expanse of gray
-yarn socks, to the public all that socks should
-be, but to June only two hollow mockeries. Below
-his ankle bones lay ruin and desolation. On his
-kinky head was a brown felt, or what had once
-been a brown felt. It no longer deserved serious
-consideration as a head covering. But all this
-didn’t bother June much. As I have already
-hinted, he was a philosopher, and a cheerful one.
-You had only to look at him to realise that. He
-had a perfectly round face, as round as a cannon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-ball—and lots blacker—a pair of merry brown
-eyes which rolled ludicrously under the stress of
-emotion, a wide, vividly red mouth filled with
-startlingly white teeth, a nose no flatter than was
-appropriate to one of his race, and ears that stood
-out inquiringly at right angles. He looked and
-was intelligent, and, barring the colour of his skin,
-was not greatly different in essentials from the
-white boy beside him. June was sixteen, as near
-as he could tell; his mother’s memory for ages
-was uncertain, and June couldn’t consult his
-father on the question for the simple reason that
-his father had disappeared very soon after June’s
-arrival in the world. Besides, there were five
-other youthful Taskers, some older and some
-younger, and June’s mother might well be excused
-for uncertainty as to the exact age of any
-one of them.</p>
-
-<p>We have left only one member of the trio to be
-described, and his outward appearance may be
-told in few words. Sam was small, yellowish and
-alert. He had been intended for a fox terrier,
-perhaps, but had received the wrong colouring.
-In Missouri or Mississippi he would have been
-labelled “fice,” which is equivalent to saying that
-he was a terrier-like dog of no particular breed.
-But like many of his sort, Sam made up for his
-lack of aristocracy by possessing all the virtues<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-that one demands in a dog. That small head of
-his contained a brain that must have felt absolutely
-crowded! I dare say that that is the way the
-Lord makes it up to little, no-account yellow dogs
-like Sam. He gives them big brains and big
-hearts, and so they get through life without ever
-feeling the want of blue ribbons on their collars.
-It would, I think, have been a frightful shock to
-Sam if anyone had tied a ribbon on him, blue or
-any other colour! He wouldn’t have approved a
-bit. In fact, he would have been most unhappy
-until he had gotten it off and tried the taste of it.
-So far no one had ever attempted such an indignity.
-Even a collar was something that Sam had
-his doubts about. When he had one he put up with
-it uncomplainingly, but you could see that it
-didn’t make him a bit happier. Just now he
-wore a leather strap about his neck. It had once
-been used to hold Wayne’s schoolbooks together,
-but Sam didn’t know that, and wouldn’t have
-cared if he had. I forgot to say that a perfectly
-good tail had been early sacrificed to the dictates
-of an inhuman fashion, and that now only a scant
-two inches remained. To see Sam wag that two
-inches made you realise what a perfectly glorious
-time he could have had with the whole appendage
-had it been left to him. Sometimes in moments
-of strong mental excitement his keen, affectionate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-brown eyes seemed trying to say something like
-that! But my few words have grown too many,
-and I find that I have devoted nearly as much
-space to Sam as to his master. But as Sam is
-not likely to receive much attention hereafter let
-us not begrudge it to him.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Wayne had laid his plans. If thirty
-cents was not sufficient to finance the journey to
-New York, neither was it sufficient to provide
-food and lodging for them indefinitely in Medfield.
-Consequently, it behooved them to add to that
-sum by hook or by crook, and it was decided that
-they should begin right away and look for work
-to do. With that object in view they presently
-left the sunny side of the little shed and set off,
-Wayne and Sam in one direction and June in
-another, to reassemble at twilight. Wayne
-wanted June to take ten of the precious thirty
-cents to buy luncheon with, but June scoffed. “I
-don’t need no ten cents, Mas’ Wayne,”
-he declared. “I can find me somethin’ to eat
-without no ten cents. An’ I don’t need nothin’
-else, anyhow, not before night. I’m jus’ plumb
-full of food now!”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne’s experiences that day were disheartening.
-Medfield was a town of nearly thirty
-thousand inhabitants, but not one of that number,
-it appeared, was in need of Wayne’s services,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-nor cared whether he lived or starved. He made
-his way to the centre of the town and visited store
-after store, and office after office, climbing many
-weary flights and knocking at many inhospitable
-doors while Sam waited outside in patient resignation.
-At noon Wayne lunched in a shabby and
-none-too-clean little restaurant on five cents’ worth
-of beef stew and two pieces of bread, feeling a bit
-panicky as he did so, because five from thirty left
-only what June would have called “two bits” and
-Wayne a quarter, and which, no matter what you
-called it, was a frighteningly small amount of
-money to have between you and nothing. But
-he felt a heap better after that stew and went
-back to his task with more courage. Sam felt
-better, too, for he had had a whole slice of bread
-dipped in gravy and a nice gristly bone.</p>
-
-<p>The trouble was that when, as happened very
-infrequently, to be sure, but did happen, he was
-asked what he could do he had to answer either
-“Anything” or “Nothing.” Of course he chose
-to say “Anything,” but the result was always
-disappointing. As one crabbed, much-bewhiskered
-man in a hardware store told him, “Anything
-means nothing.” After that Wayne boldly presented
-himself at the busy office of a dry-goods
-emporium and offered himself as a bookkeeper.
-It was more a relief than a disappointment when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-the dapper man in charge informed him, after a
-dubious examination of his attire, that there was
-no present vacancy. Wayne was conscious of the
-amused glances of the men at the desks as he
-hurried out. It was almost dusk when he finally
-gave up and turned his steps toward the deserted
-shed near the railway. He had trouble in finding
-it, walking many blocks out of his way and for a
-space fearing that darkness would overtake him
-before he reached it. In the end it was Sam who
-kept him from making a second mistake, for
-Wayne was for passing the shed a block away
-until the dog’s insistence on turning down a dim,
-cobble-paved street brought the search to an end.</p>
-
-<p>June was already on hand, squatting comfortably
-on the wheelbarrow and crooning to himself
-in the twilight. Sam showed his delight in the
-reunion by licking June’s face while Wayne discouragedly
-lowered himself to a seat at the
-darkey’s side.</p>
-
-<p>“Any luck?” he asked tiredly.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’ permanent, Mas’ Wayne, but I done
-earned us another two bits. This is a right smart
-town, this is. Nobody don’t have to go hungry in
-this town, no, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne tried to keep the envy out of his voice
-as he answered: “That’s great, June. How did
-you do it?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Man was rollin’ barrels up a board to a wagon
-and every time he got a barrel half-way up the
-board his horses would start a-movin’ off an’ he’d
-jus’ have to drop that barrel an’ run to their
-heads. I ask him, ‘Please, sir, don’t you want me
-to hold ’em for you?’ An’ he ’lowed he did. An’
-I say, ‘How much you goin’ to give me, sir?’
-And he say if I hold ’em till he got his wagon
-loaded he’d give me a quarter. ’Twan’t no time
-till he had the barrels on an’ I had his ol’ quarter
-in my jeans. Then I see a funny little man with
-gold rings in his ears sittin’ on a step sellin’
-candy, an’ funny twisty pieces of bread an’
-apples, an’ things. An’ I say to him, ‘How much
-are your apples, Boss?’ An’ he say, ‘They’re two
-for five cents.’ ‘Huh,’ I say, ‘they give ’em poor
-old apples away where I come from.’ An’ he
-want to know where was I come from, an’ I tell
-him, an’ we had a right sociable time a-talkin’ an’
-all, an’ pretty soon he find a apple had a rotten
-spot on it an’ give it to me. An’ after a while I
-say, ‘Boss, what you-all call them funny, curly
-things you got on that stick?’ An’ he ’lows they’s—they’s——”
-June wrinkled his forehead until
-it had almost as many corrugations as a washboard—“I
-reckon I forget what he call them,
-Mas’ Wayne.”</p>
-
-<p>“What were they like, June?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir, they was bow-knots made of bread,
-an’ they tasted mighty scrumptious. Seems like
-they was called ‘pistols’ or somethin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretzels, June?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it! Pretzels! You know them things,
-Mas’ Wayne?” Wayne shook his head. “Well,
-sir, they’s mighty good eatin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did he give you one?” asked Wayne smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, he surely did. I say I ain’ never eat
-one an’ he say if I have a penny I could have
-one. ‘Go long, Mister Man,’ I say, ‘I ain’ got no
-penny. How come you ’spects I got all that
-money?’ An’ he laugh an’ say, ‘Well, maybe I
-give you one, Black Boy, if you don’ tell someone
-elses.’ He had funny way of talkin’, that
-man. So I say I won’t ever tell——”</p>
-
-<p>“But you have told,” laughed Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>June rolled his eyes. “That’s so! I plumb
-forget!”</p>
-
-<p>“Was that all the lunch you had?” asked
-Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>June nodded. “Was all I wanted,” he declared
-stoutly. “Apples is powerful fillin’ fruit, Mas’
-Wayne. What-all did you have?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne told him and June pretended to think
-very little of it. “That ain’ white man’s food,”
-he declared. “Old stewed-up beef ain’ fit rations
-for you. No, sir, ’tain’! Don’t you go insultin’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-your stomach like that no more, Mas’ Wayne,
-’cause if you do you’re goin’ to be sick an’ me an’
-Sam’ll have to nurse you. Now you tell me
-what-all did you do, please.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne soon told him and June shook his head
-and made sympathetic noises in his throat during
-the brief recital. “Don’t you mind ’em, Mas’
-Wayne,” he said when the other had finished.
-“Somebody’s goin’ to be powerful glad to give
-you a job tomorrow. You wait an’ see if they
-ain’.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t do anything, I’m afraid,” said Wayne
-despondently. “They all ask me what I can do
-and I have to tell them ‘Nothing.’ I can’t even
-wash windows decently!”</p>
-
-<p>“Who say you can do nothin’?” demanded
-June indignantly. “I reckon you’re a heap
-smarter than these yere Northerners! Ain’ you
-been to school an’ learn all about everythin’?
-Geography an’ ’rithmatic an’ algebrum an’ all?
-What for you say you don’ know nothin’?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne laughed wanly. “Arithmetic and those
-things aren’t much use to a fellow, it seems to me,
-when he’s looking for work. If I’d learned bookkeeping
-I might get a job.”</p>
-
-<p>“You done kep’ them books for your stepdaddy.”</p>
-
-<p>“That wasn’t real bookkeeping, June. Anyone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-could do that. The only things I can do aren’t
-much use up here; like ride and shoot a little
-and——”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ knock the leather off’n a baseball,” added
-June.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess no one’s going to pay me for doing
-that,” commented Wayne, with a smile. “Well,
-there’s no use borrowing trouble, I reckon. There
-must be something I can do, June, and I’ll find it
-sooner or later. I reckon I made a mistake in
-going around to the offices. If I’d tried the warehouses
-and factories I might have found something.
-That’s what I’ll do tomorrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“You goin’ to set yourself some mighty hard
-work, Mas’ Wayne, if you get foolin’ ’roun’ the
-factories. Better leave that kind of work for me,
-sir. That’s nigger work, that is.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s white men’s work up here in the North,
-June. I’m strong enough and I’m willing, and
-I’m just going to find something tomorrow.
-Question now is, June, where are we going to
-get our supper and where are we going to sleep?
-Fifty cents will buy supper but it won’t buy beds,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>“I been thinkin’ about that sleepin’ business,”
-answered June. “I reckon we can’ do no better
-than stay right where we is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here?” asked Wayne. “Someone would come<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-along and arrest us or something. Besides, a
-wheelbarrow——”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, I don’ mean out here. I mean in
-yonder.” June nodded toward the old shed beside
-them. “I was projeckin’ roun’ before you-all
-come back an’ there ain’ nothin’ wrong with this
-yere little house, Mas’ Wayne.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” said Wayne. “Is it empty?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, it surely is empty. There ain’ nothin’
-in there but empty. It ’pears like it used to be a
-store, ’cause there’s shelves up the walls. An’
-there’s a floor, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do we sleep on the floor or the shelves?”
-asked Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>“Shelves is too narrow,” chuckled June. “If
-we jus’ had a blanket or two, now, I reckon we’d
-be mighty comfortable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Might as well wish for a bed with a hair
-mattress and pillows and sheets,” answered
-Wayne. “But I’d rather sleep under a roof tonight
-than outdoors, so we’ll just be glad of the
-shed, June. Now let’s go and find us some supper.
-Come on, Sam, you rascal!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</a><br />
-<small>DISPOSSESSED</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>If one is tired enough such luxuries as beds and
-blankets may be dispensed with. Wayne and June
-slept more uninterruptedly that night than for
-many nights past. Toward morning they were
-conscious of the cold, for Wayne’s coat and an
-old gunny-sack discovered in a corner of the shed
-were not sufficient to more than cover their feet
-and legs. Sam, curled up in Wayne’s arms, doubtless
-fared better than the boys. When morning
-came they were stiff and achy and were glad
-enough to get up at the first signs of sunrise and
-move around. The want of a place to wash resulted
-in the discovery of a veritable haven of
-warmth and rest, for Wayne, peering about from
-the front of the shed, descried the railroad station
-only a few blocks down the track, and toward
-that they made their way. They found the waiting-room
-door unlocked and warmth and comfort
-inside. After washing up they settled themselves
-on a bench removed from the sight of the ticket
-window and fairly luxuriated in the warmth.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-June fell asleep again and snored so loudly that
-Wayne had to arouse him for fear that someone
-would hear him and drive them out. Wayne himself
-didn’t actually slumber, but he leaned back
-in a half-doze that was almost as restful as sleep,
-and Sam, restraining his desire to investigate
-these new surroundings, presently slept, too.</p>
-
-<p>It was hunger that finally aroused them to
-action. The clock on the wall told them that it
-was almost half-past seven, and they left the
-waiting-room and passed out again into the chill
-of the March morning. But the sun was shining
-strongly now and there was a spring softness in
-the air that made June whistle gaily as they made
-their way back up the railroad in search of
-“Mister Denny’s” lunch-wagon. There they had
-some steaming hot coffee, and some crisp rolls and
-butter and, since there was still a nickel in the
-exchequer, three bananas which they consumed
-outside. To be sure, that left them penniless, but
-somehow that didn’t seem to matter so much this
-morning. There was something in the spring-like
-air that gave them courage and confidence. Besides,
-whatever happened, they had a home, such
-as it was, in the old shed. Presently they again
-set forth on their search for employment, agreeing
-to meet at five o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>But again it was June who prospered and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-Wayne who returned empty-handed. June
-proudly displayed forty cents in dimes and nickels
-which he had earned in as many capacities as
-there were coins in his hand. Not only had he
-earned that forty cents, but he had dined sumptuously
-on a pork chop, having traded a quarter
-of an hour of his time and labour for that delicacy
-at a little restaurant. For his part, Wayne had
-gone dinnerless and was thoroughly discouraged.
-Even the tattered but still useful horse blanket
-which June had picked up outside a flour mill
-across the town could not cheer Wayne’s spirits.</p>
-
-<p>“Reckon,” said June, spreading the blanket out
-proudly, “someone done lose that as didn’t mean
-to, Mas’ Wayne, ’cause it’s a powerful nice
-blanket, ain’ it?” Wayne listlessly agreed and
-June dropped it through the window which was
-their means of ingress and egress. “It’s goin’
-to keep us fine an’ warm tonight, that little ol’
-blanket is. Tomorrow I’m goin’ to find me a bed
-to go with it! You hungry enough to eat, Mas’
-Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne shook his head. “I don’t want any
-supper,” he replied.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’ want no supper! How come? What-all
-you have for your dinner, please?”</p>
-
-<p>“I had enough,” answered Wayne. “You go
-ahead and have your supper, June.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>June snorted. “Mighty likely, ain’ it?” he demanded
-scathingly. “Reckon you can see this
-nigger eatin’ all by his lonely. No, sir, Mas’
-Wayne, you-all’s goin’ to eat, too. If you don’
-there ain’ goin’ to be no supper for nobody.”</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you I’m not hungry,” replied Wayne
-irritably. “Besides, if you must know, I haven’t
-any money.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say you ain’? You’ve got forty cents. How
-come that ain’ enough money to buy us some
-supper?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s your money, not mine,” said Wayne
-bitterly. “You earned it. I didn’t. I’m not
-going to live off you. You go get your supper
-and let me alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“I earned it for all of us,” said June earnestly.
-“Reckon you paid a heap of money to buy victuals
-for me, Mas’ Wayne, all the way up from Sleepersville,
-didn’ you, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s different,” muttered the other.</p>
-
-<p>“How come it’s different? Please, sir, don’
-you be uppity an’ proud. Ever since we was little
-fellers together, Mas’ Wayne, you done give me
-money; two bits here, an’ two bits there, an’ a
-dime yonder. How come I can’ pay it back to
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“A gentleman doesn’t—doesn’t do that,” returned
-Wayne stubbornly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“You mean ’cause you’re white an’ I’m black?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind what I mean. Anyway, I’m not
-hungry, so shut up.”</p>
-
-<p>June obeyed, scuffling his shoes in the cinders
-underfoot and staring sadly at the sunset glow
-beyond the factory roofs to the west. Sam had
-found a very old and very dry bone somewhere
-and was pretending that it was quite new and
-delicious. He even growled once or twice, although
-there was no other dog in sight, perhaps
-to convince himself that he really had discovered
-a prize. Minutes passed and the western sky
-faded from crimson to yellow, and from yellow to
-gray. Finally Wayne stole a look at June.</p>
-
-<p>“You’d better be going,” he growled.</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’ aimin’ to go, Mas’ Wayne,” replied
-June earnestly. “Reckon I ain’ no hungrier than
-you is.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care whether you are or not,” declared
-the other angrily. “I say you’re to go and get
-some supper. Now you go.”</p>
-
-<p>June shook his head. “Not without you come
-along,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p>“You do as I tell you, June!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m wishin’ to, Mas’ Wayne, but I jus’ can’,
-sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you just will! If you don’t start right
-along I’ll whale you, Junius!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, Mas’ Wayne, you can do that, but
-you-all can’ make me eat no supper. That’s
-somethin’ you <em>can’</em> do.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you can’t do as I tell you you’ll have to get
-out. You think just because you’re up North
-here you can do as you please. Well, I’ll show
-you. Are you going to obey me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Please, sir, Mas’ Wayne, I’m goin’ to do
-everythin’ just like you tell me, savin’ that! I
-jus’ can’ go an’ eat anythin’ ’less you come
-along. I’m powerful sorry, hones’ to goodness,
-Mas’ Wayne, but you can see how ’tis.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne muttered something that sounded far
-from complimentary, and relapsed into dignified
-silence. The white stars came out one by one and
-the chill of evening made itself felt. Sam tired of
-pretending and begged to be taken up by Wayne,
-but Wayne brushed his paws aside. June sat
-motionless on his end of the old wheelbarrow and
-made no sound. Now, when you haven’t had anything
-to eat since early morning and have tramped
-miles over city pavements pride is all very well
-but it doesn’t butter any parsnips. Besides,
-Wayne realised just as clearly as you or I, or
-almost as clearly, that he was making a mountain
-of a molehill and that if he wasn’t so tired and
-discouraged he wouldn’t have hesitated to share
-June’s earnings. But pride, even false pride, is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-always stubborn, and it was well toward dark
-before Wayne shrugged his shoulders impatiently
-and jumped up from his seat.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, come on then, you stubborn mule,” he
-muttered. “If you won’t eat without me I reckon
-I’ll have to go along.”</p>
-
-<p>He stalked off into the twilight and June and
-Sam followed, the former with a little shuffling
-caper unseen of Wayne and the latter with an
-ecstatic bark.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning, when they had again breakfasted
-none too grandly, at the lunch-wagon, they
-were once more reduced to penury. Not only that,
-but both boys were discovering that forty or fifty
-cents a day, while sufficient to keep them from
-starvation, was not enough to satisfy two healthy
-appetites. Neither made mention of his discovery,
-but Wayne, again encouraged by food and
-rest, told himself resolutely that today must end
-the matter, that he would find something to do
-before he returned to the little shed, and June as
-resolutely determined to try harder and earn
-more money. What Sam’s thoughts were I don’t
-know. Sam didn’t seem to care much what happened
-so long as he could be with Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>But all the good resolutions in the world and
-all the grim determination sometimes fail, and
-again Fortune turned a deaf ear to Wayne’s petitions.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-The nearest he came to landing a place
-was when a foreman at a rambling old factory at
-the far end of the town offered him a job packing
-spools if he could produce a union card. Wayne
-not only couldn’t produce such a thing but didn’t
-know what it was until the foreman impatiently
-explained, assuring him that there was no use in
-his seeking work in the factories unless he first
-became a member of a union. This was something
-of an exaggeration, as Wayne ultimately learned,
-but for the present it was sufficient to just about
-double his load of discouragement. He confined
-his efforts to shops and places of retail business
-after that but had no luck, and returned to the
-shed when the street lights began to appear,
-hungry and tired and ready to give up, to find
-that Fate was not yet through with him for that
-day.</p>
-
-<p>For once June had fared almost as sadly as
-Wayne and only a solitary ten-cent piece was the
-result of his efforts. June was apologetic and
-would have recited his experiences at length, but
-Wayne didn’t have the heart to listen. “It doesn’t
-matter, June,” he said listlessly. “It wasn’t your
-fault. At that, you made ten cents more than I
-did. I reckon there’s only one thing to do now.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“Buy a stamp with two cents of that ten and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-write back to Mr. Higgins for money to get home
-with. I reckon we’re just about at the end of the
-halter, June.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’ you believe that, Mas’ Wayne,” replied
-June stoutly. “An’ don’ you go writin’ no letter
-to that old skinflint stepdaddy of yours. Jus’
-you give me another chance an’ see what I goin’
-to bring home tomorrow! We’ll go get us a cup
-of coffee an’ then we’ll feel a heap perkier, yes,
-sir! An’ then we’ll jus’ go to sleep an’ get up in
-the mornin’ feelin’ fine an’ start right out an’ lan’
-somethin’. Don’ you go gettin’ discouraged, Mas’
-Wayne. We’s goin’ to be livin’ on the fat of the
-lan’ in two-three days!”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s another town, bigger than this, June,
-about twenty miles from here. Maybe we’d better
-mosey along over there and see if things are any
-better. Seems to me I’ve been in most every
-place in this town asking for work now, and I’m
-beginning to forget which ones I’ve been to and
-which ones I haven’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’ know,” answered June. “Sometimes
-it seems like it’s the wisest thing to stay
-right to home an’ not go projeckin’ ’roun’. We’s
-got a comfor’ble place to sleep here, Mas’ Wayne,
-an’ there ain’ no tellin’ what would happen to us
-if we went totin’ off to this other place, is there?
-’Spose you an’ me goes an’ has that coffee first.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-Seems like I can always think a heap better after
-meals.”</p>
-
-<p>“A cup of coffee isn’t much of a meal,” objected
-Wayne, “but I reckon it’s going to taste
-mighty good to me. We’ll go to the lunch-wagon
-for it. You get better coffee there than the other
-places we’ve been to.”</p>
-
-<p>The lunch-wagon was crowded and they had to
-wait for several minutes before they could get
-waited on by Mr. Connor. He always seemed glad
-to see them and still took a great interest in
-Sam, but usually there were too many others
-there to allow of much conversation. Tonight he
-only nodded and smiled as he passed the cups to
-them, and they retired to the side of the wagon
-and drank the beverage gratefully, wishing there
-was more of it and trying hard to keep their gaze
-from the viands displayed beyond the long
-counter. Fortunately for Sam, he had already
-become acquainted with a number of the regular
-patrons of the Golden Star Lunch and was almost
-always certain of food. The men who took their
-meals there, workers in the nearby factories and
-railroad hands, were for the most part rough but
-kindly and many crusts of bread and scraps of
-meat went to Sam, who, duly grateful and willing
-to show his few tricks in return for the favours
-bestowed on him, allowed no familiarities. When<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-anyone other than Wayne or June tried to pat
-him he backed away, politely but firmly.</p>
-
-<p>The coffee did the boys good, although it felt
-awfully lonesome where they put it, and they returned
-to the shed in a more cheerful frame of
-mind. It was still too early to go to bed, but the
-station was several blocks away and there was
-no nearer place to resort to, and so presently they
-stretched themselves out on the floor of the shed,
-drew the horse blanket over them, and were soon
-asleep. How much later it was when Wayne
-awoke with a blinding glare of light in his eyes
-there was no way of telling.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment he blinked dazedly, his brain still
-fogged with sleep. Then he sat up, and Sam,
-disturbed, sniffed and broke into shrill barking.
-June, a sounder sleeper, still snored when a gruff
-voice came from the direction of the light which
-Wayne now realised was thrown by a lantern.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing in here? Come on now!
-Get out!” said the voice.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne scrambled to his feet, commanding Sam
-to be still, and June groaned and snorted himself
-awake. The light was thrown aside and, framed
-in the window, Wayne could see the form of a
-policeman.</p>
-
-<p>“We aren’t doing any harm, sir,” said the boy.
-“Just sleeping here.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Sleeping here, eh? Haven’t you got a home?
-How many are there of you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Two, sir. We are on our way to New York
-and we didn’t have any other place to sleep, so
-we came in here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hoboes, eh? Well, you’d better beat it before
-the lieutenant lamps you. He’s down on you
-fellows this spring.”</p>
-
-<p>“We aren’t hoboes, sir. We’re looking for
-work.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know,” was the ironical response.
-“Well, come on out of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But we haven’t any other place, sir. We
-aren’t doing any harm and——”</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t matter about that. What’s your
-name and where’d you come from?” Wayne told
-him and the officer grunted. Then: “Get the other
-fellow up,” he ordered, and, when June had
-crawled sleepily to his feet, “Hello, a nig, eh?
-Travelling together, are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” answered Wayne. “We’re going
-to New York, but our money gave out and we’ve
-been trying to earn enough to go on with.”</p>
-
-<p>“That straight goods?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, it’s the truth, really.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, all right. Stay where you are tonight,
-kids, but you’ll have to get out tomorrow. This is
-private property and I can’t have you trespassing.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-You’d be welcome to stay as long as you
-liked if I had the say, but I haven’t. So don’t let
-me find you here tomorrow night or I’ll have to
-run you in. Good night, boys.”</p>
-
-<p>The lantern’s glare vanished and the policeman’s
-steps went crunching off on the cinders.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</a><br />
-<small>WAYNE PARTS WITH SAM</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>There was no breakfast the next morning other
-than copious draughts of water from the tank in
-the station waiting-room. At least, there was
-none for the boys; Sam found an ancient crust
-of bread along the track and made the most of it.
-At a little after eight they parted, agreeing to
-meet uptown at noon so that should one or the
-other have earned any money they might eat.
-Wayne’s ill luck stayed with him and at a little
-after twelve he sought the corner near the post
-office and found June already on hand. June had
-the enormous sum of twenty cents, earned by
-carrying a drummer’s sample cases from store
-to store for a period of well over an hour, and it
-took the boys something less than two minutes to
-find a lunch-room and climb to a couple of stools.
-Wayne was for conserving half their fortune, but
-when June’s eyes rolled covetously at the good
-things displayed, and June earnestly assured him
-of his ability to earn more money that afternoon,
-Wayne recklessly consented to the spending of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-the whole amount. The fact that he was every
-bit as hungry as June had a good deal to do with
-his change of mind.</p>
-
-<p>That lunch tasted awfully good. Also, as June
-remarked wistfully, it tasted “moreish.” But
-their money was exhausted and they parted again
-at the lunch-room door and went their separate
-ways. How many flights of stairs he climbed that
-afternoon, how many doors he opened, how many
-blocks of hard pavement he trod, Wayne didn’t
-know, but even Sam showed evidences of exhaustion
-when, at twilight, downhearted and despairing,
-boy and dog returned to the shed by the railroad
-track.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon,” Wayne confided, “you and I are
-hoodooed, Sam. Reckon there isn’t anything for
-us to do but just slink back home the best way we
-can, old chap.” And Sam, trotting along beside
-him, raised understanding eyes and wagged the
-stump of his tail sympathetically.</p>
-
-<p>June was downcast and woe-begone and self-accusing.
-Not a cent had he accumulated since
-noon. Luck had fairly deserted him. Every offer
-of services had been refused and a big, red-faced
-man had chased him out of a butcher shop with
-upraised cleaver when June had tried to negotiate
-for “a little ol’ piece o’ meat.” Hunger again
-faced them, and, to make matters worse, they were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-homeless. Wayne slumped down on the wheelbarrow
-and studied the situation from all angles,
-while June kept a sharp and nervous watch for
-that troublesome policeman. At length Wayne
-arose with a look of settled determination on his
-face.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on,” he said. “We’ve got to eat, June.
-If we don’t we can’t look for work. Mr. Connor
-wants Sam and——”</p>
-
-<p>June let out a wail. “You ain’ goin’ to sell
-Sam, Mas’ Wayne! Please don’ you do that!
-Why, I ain’ hungry scarcely at all yet! Why, I
-don’ reckon you got any <em>right</em>——”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not going to sell him,” interrupted Wayne
-impatiently, even indignantly. “I’m going to ask
-Mr. Connor to take him and let us have our
-meals until we can pay him and get Sam back.
-That’s fair, isn’t it? Sam won’t mind—much.
-He’ll be warm and have plenty to eat and—and
-all.”</p>
-
-<p>“He ain’ goin’ to be happy,” replied June,
-shaking his head sorrowfully, “but I reckon he
-won’ mind a awful lot if you kind of explains to
-him jus’ how it is, Mas’ Wayne. But you reckon
-Mister Denny goin’ to do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean to ask him, anyway,” answered Wayne
-stoutly. “He can’t do any more than refuse. So
-come along before the place fills up.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Fortunately they found the lunch-wagon empty
-save for the presence of Mr. Connor himself and
-one tattered individual consuming coffee and
-doughnuts at a far end of the counter. Denny was
-reading the evening paper under a light beside the
-glistening, sizzing coffee urn. “Hello, boys,” he
-greeted cordially. “And how’s the world using
-you these days? You wasn’t in this morning,
-was you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir,” answered Wayne. “I—could I speak
-to you a minute, Mr. Connor?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure.” Denny laid the paper down and followed
-Wayne out of earshot of the lone patron.
-“What is it, my boy?”</p>
-
-<p>In a low voice Wayne confided their predicament
-and made his proposal. Denny was sympathetic,
-and interjected, “I want to know!”,
-“Think of that now!”, and similar remarks during
-the narrative, and when Wayne had finished
-turned instantly and slid two cups and saucers
-toward the coffee urn.</p>
-
-<p>“Here,” he exclaimed, “you fellers put this
-down before you do any more jabbering. There’s
-the sugar forninst you, Junius. What’ll you have
-to eat, now? Beef stew, corned beef hash, ham,
-eggs——” He ran an eye down the placard on
-the wall. “What’ll it be, boys?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you don’t mind doing it?” asked Wayne.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-“I’ll be awfully much obliged to you, Mr. Connor.
-I don’t know just when I can pay you back, but
-it won’t be very long, I reckon, and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, go on!” replied Denny gruffly. “Eat
-what you want. I don’t want your dog, kid!”</p>
-
-<p>But Wayne was firm, even with the fragrant
-odour of that coffee in his nostrils, while June,
-already on a stool, was rolling longing eyes at the
-pies and cakes standing in rows on the shelves.
-“If you won’t take Sam for—for security,” said
-Wayne earnestly, “I won’t do it, sir. He won’t
-be any trouble and he doesn’t eat very much. I
-reckon you’d have to keep him tied up for a couple
-of days, because he might try to get away and
-follow me, but he’d soon get used to you, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>Denny frowned thoughtfully from Wayne to
-Sam. “That’s all right,” he said at last, “only
-suppose I get fond of him, eh? I got an awful
-weak heart for dogs, kid. Look here, I tell you
-what. Sam can be security, do you see, and you
-can keep him just the same. Then if you don’t
-pay up, do you see, I’ll take him. Now what’s it
-going to be? That corned beef hash is pretty good
-tonight, and if you put a couple of eggs on it——”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s silly,” interrupted Wayne. “Suppose
-we left town?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’d have to risk that. You wouldn’t,
-though. Sure, I know you’re a straight lad.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Wayne shook his head, sighed, and pushed the
-untasted coffee away. “Come on, June,” he said
-resolutely. “We’ve got to be travelling.”</p>
-
-<p>“Huh?” queried June dismayedly. “Ain’ we
-goin’ to eat nothin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not here. Mr. Connor doesn’t like our plan,
-June.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’ like it? How come he don’ like it?
-Look here, Mister Denny, that Sam dog’s the
-smartest, knowin’est dog as is, yes, sir! You can’
-make no mistake if you takes him, sir. He’s
-got the cutest tricks——”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess I’ve got to take him,” said Denny
-ruefully. “But I don’t see why you ain’t satisfied
-if I am. Oh, all right. Get on a stool there and
-feed your face, kid. You win. What about that
-hash now?”</p>
-
-<p>Half an hour later, almost painfully replete
-with food and coffee, the boys left the Golden Star
-Lunch. Sam, tied with a cord behind the counter,
-sent wails of anguish after them, and Wayne hurried
-his steps and finally broke into a run. Only
-when a corner of a building along the track had
-shut off the lugubrious sounds did Wayne slow
-down again. After that they traversed a block in
-silence. Then it was June who spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Dogs is awful human folks, ain’ they?” he
-asked subduedly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Wayne nodded but didn’t answer. Presently,
-though, he broke out defiantly with: “We’ve got
-to redeem him, June! He isn’t going to be happy
-there, Sam isn’t. He—he’s going to be mighty
-lonesome.” Then: “So am I,” he added gruffly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, I reckon he’s goin’ to be powerful
-mis’able at firs’,” agreed June. “We jus’ got to
-get to work an’ get him back, ain’t we, Mas’
-Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“We surely have,” agreed Wayne decidedly.
-“And I’m going to find a job tomorrow or—or
-bust!”</p>
-
-<p>They stayed in the waiting-room, the object of
-deep suspicion on the part of the station policeman,
-who, fortunately, was not the officer who had
-ordered them away from the little shed, until the
-eleven-twelve express had pulled out. Then, when
-the baggage-man went through and put out most
-of the lights and the ticket seller closed and locked
-the door of his office and started for home, they
-exchanged the warmth of the waiting-room for
-the chill of outdoors and sleepily sought a place
-to spend the rest of the night. It wasn’t difficult.
-An empty box car on a sidetrack invited them
-with a half-opened door and they clambered in,
-closed the door behind them, and settled in a
-corner, drawing the horse blanket which June
-had carried around with him all evening over their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-tired bodies. They lay awake for a good while,
-talking, planning, wondering about Sam. At intervals
-an engine would roll past with clanking
-wheels, sometimes throwing red gleams from the
-open door of its fire box through the cracks of
-the box car. Later an express thundered by,
-shaking the earth. But that was after they had
-fallen asleep, and the roar only half awakened
-Wayne and disturbed June not a particle.</p>
-
-<p>They awoke late the next morning, stiff-limbed
-but rested, and dropped from the car and went
-back to the station for a wash-up. Then came
-hot coffee and fried eggs and rolls at the lunch-wagon,
-but no reunion with Sam, for Denny explained
-that he had taken Sam home with him and
-that he was at that moment tied to a leg of the
-kitchen table.</p>
-
-<p>“He howled a good deal during the night,” said
-Denny philosophically, “but I guess he didn’t
-keep anyone awake. He seemed a bit easier in
-his mind this morning, though, and the missis gave
-him a good breakfast and when I left he was licking
-the baby’s face. I guess he’s going to be all
-right in a day or two, but if the kid gets fond of
-him and I get fond of him——” Denny shook
-his head. “You haven’t changed your mind about
-selling him, have you?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne said no, and the proprietor of the lunch-wagon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-sighed. “Well, I was only thinking maybe
-that would make it a lot easier for all hands. But
-I won’t be urging you, kid. He’s a nice little dog
-and he sure is fond of you. Any time you want to
-see him you go around to the house and tell the
-missis who you are, see? No. 28 Grove Street’s
-the place. Ring the second bell. Well, so long,
-fellers. Good luck!”</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it was Denny’s wish that influenced
-Fortune that day, for when the two met at noon
-June proudly displayed two quarters and Wayne
-was happy over the possibility of securing work
-in a livery stable. “He said I was to come back
-in the morning,” explained Wayne as they sought
-the little lunch-room that they had patronised the
-previous day. “I reckon he means to take me,
-June. Wouldn’t that be great?”</p>
-
-<p>“It surely would, Mas’ Wayne. What-all he
-want you to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Drive a carriage, one of the closed carriages
-that take passengers from the station. That’s
-something I can do, June, drive!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, you surely can drive. But that ain’
-scarcely fit work for a gen’leman like you is, Mas’
-Wayne.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon what you do doesn’t matter much,
-June,” replied Wayne. “I reckon you can be a
-gentleman and drive a carriage, too. Anyway,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-I’d rather be earning some money. Just being a
-gentleman doesn’t get you anything as far as
-I can see.”</p>
-
-<p>June shook his head at that but didn’t dispute
-it. He had something on his mind, and as soon as
-they were seated at the lunch-counter he broached
-it. “We got to fin’ a place to live, ain’ we, Mas’
-Wayne?” he began. Wayne agreed, and June
-went on. “Yes, sir. Then let me tell you.” What
-he told amounted to this. His search for the illusive
-two-bit piece had taken him farther afield
-than usual and he had plodded to the outskirts
-of the town where there was a stamping works
-and a dyehouse and a few other small factories.
-His journey had brought him no recompense in
-money but he had discovered their future domicile.
-It was, he explained, an old street car which
-had at some time been pulled out into a meadow
-beyond the factories. “I reckon it was a horse
-car, like they used to have in Sleepersville, Mas’
-Wayne, before the trolleys done come. Mos’ of
-the windows is knocked out, but we could easy
-board ’em up. An’ one of the doors don’ shut
-tight. But it’s got a long seat on both its sides
-an’ we could sleep fine on them seats. An’ there’s
-a little old stove at one end that someone done left
-there, an’ a stovepipe astickin’ out through the
-roof. I ask a man at the tin factory an’ he say<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-no one ain’ live in it for a long time. An’ there’s
-a branch close by it, too; mighty nice tastin’
-water, Mas’ Wayne; an’ some trees an’ no one to
-ask you no questions, an’ everythin’!”</p>
-
-<p>“That sounds great, June,” said Wayne
-eagerly. “How far is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Must be a good two miles, I reckon. You go
-down this away and you bear over yonder-like an’
-you follow the railroad right straight till you come
-to it.”</p>
-
-<p>“It must be near where we got put off the train
-the other night,” said Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, ’tain’, it’s in the other direction; other
-side of town.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s right. Well, now look here, June.
-We’ve got thirty cents left and that’s enough to
-keep us going until tomorrow, and I’m pretty sure
-to get that job in the morning. Why don’t we go
-out there now and have a look at the place?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, that’s what I was thinkin’. We could
-find some boards, maybe, an’ fix up them windows,
-an’ get some wood for a fire——”</p>
-
-<p>“We’d better take that blanket out, though, in
-case we decided to stay there, June. There
-wouldn’t be any use coming back to town, would
-there?”</p>
-
-<p>June looked dubious. “How about some supper?”
-he asked.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I forgot that. But, look here, if there’s a
-stove there——”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir! Get us some coffee an’ bread——”</p>
-
-<p>“And cook our own supper!” concluded Wayne
-triumphantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’ that fine? You take this yere money,
-Mas’ Wayne, an’ buy them things, an’ I’ll run
-back an’ fetch that blanket.” June grinned from
-ear to ear, displaying a wealth of glistening white
-teeth.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re sure no one owns that car, though,
-June? We don’t want to get settled down there
-and then be put out the way they put us out of
-the little shed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Huh, ain’ no police ever gets aroun’ there, I
-reckon,” answered June. “Man said it didn’
-belong to no one, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. You get the blanket and I’ll buy
-what I can and meet you at the post office in
-fifteen minutes or so.”</p>
-
-<p>June disappeared, and Wayne paid the two
-cheques and set out to find a grocery store. When
-he had completed his purchasing just one lonesome
-nickel remained in his pocket, but he had
-acquired a modest amount of cheap coffee, five
-cents’ worth of butter, a loaf of bread, a can of
-condensed milk and some sugar. Five minutes
-later they were footing it down the main street<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-of Medfield, Wayne bearing the provisions and
-June the horse blanket which was a load in itself.
-It seemed that June had not underestimated the
-distance a particle, nor the difficulties of travel,
-for after they had traversed the poorer part of
-town their road stopped abruptly and they were
-forced to take to the railroad track and, since
-trains were coming and going frequently, make
-their way along by the little path on the side of
-the embankment. Coal yards, lumber yards, a
-foundry, vacant lots heaped with cinders and
-rubbish, and, at last, the open country, dotted here
-and there with small factories which, possibly
-because of lower land values, had been set up on
-the outskirts of town. June explained that he had
-found his way there in the morning by the road,
-but that the road was “way over yonder an’ a
-heap longer.” Presently he pointed out the
-stamping works, or tin factory, as he called it, and
-then directed Wayne’s gaze further and to the
-right.</p>
-
-<p>“See that bunch of trees, Mas’ Wayne? See
-somethin’ jus’ other side of ’em? That’s it, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! But it’s a long ways from town, June.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a right smart walk, yes, sir, but the rent’s
-mighty cheap!” And June chuckled as he led the
-way down the embankment, through a fence and
-into a boggy meadow. Further away a sort of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-road wound in the direction of the stamping
-works, and toward this June proceeded. The road
-scarcely deserved the name, but it was drier than
-the meadow. It appeared to have been constructed
-of a mixture of broken bricks, ashes, and
-tin cuttings and the latter glowed in the afternoon
-sunlight like bits of gold. They left the road
-at the stamping works, through whose open windows
-came the hum and clash of machinery,
-skirted a huge pile of waste tin, and went on
-across the field, choosing their way cautiously
-since every low spot held water. By now the
-abandoned horse car stood before them in all its
-glory of weather-faded yellow paint, broken windows,
-rusted roof, and sagging platforms. At one
-end some two feet of stovepipe protruded at a
-rakish angle from the roof. Wayne looked, saw,
-and was dubious. But when June asked proudly,
-“What you think of her, Mas’ Wayne?” he only
-said, “Fine, June!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</a><br />
-<small>THE NEW HOME</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>And when, having slid back the crazy door at the
-nearer end of the car, they entered it and seated
-themselves on the benches, it didn’t look nearly so
-unpromising. There was a good, stout floor underfoot
-and a reasonably tight roof overhead.
-Wayne began to see possibilities.</p>
-
-<p>The car was only about twelve feet long and of
-the usual width. At some time a matched-board
-partition had divided it into two compartments,
-but this had nearly all disappeared. Every pane
-of glass, and there had been eighteen in all, counting
-those in the doors, were either smashed or
-totally missing. Over one window at each end
-and over three of the six windows at each side
-boards had been nailed. The remains of a flimsy
-curtain hung over the glass of the forward door.
-From the roof two lamp fixtures still depended,
-but the lamps were gone. The floor was littered
-with trash, including newspaper and tin cans and
-cracker boxes and scraps of dried bread, indicating
-that the place had been used for picnic purposes.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-In a corner at the farther end a small
-“air-tight” stove was set on a board placed on
-the seat. It was badly rusted, the upper door
-hung by one hinge, the mica was broken out, and
-the interior was filled with ashes and charred
-embers. Between stove and ceiling there was no
-pipe. Wayne tried the door at that end,
-but it was jammed so tightly that he couldn’t
-budge it.</p>
-
-<p>An inspection of the outside followed. The
-trucks had been discarded and the body of the
-car rested on four six-inch sills, two running
-lengthwise and two across. An attempt had apparently
-been made to set fire to the car, for at
-one side the woodwork was scorched and the end
-of a sill burned away for nearly a foot. The inscription,
-“Medfield Street Railway Co.,” in faded
-brown letters against the faded yellow body, was
-still legible, as was the figure 6, preceding and
-following it.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to know what number 1 looks like,”
-said Wayne, “if this is number 6!”</p>
-
-<p>Everything of value in the way of metal had
-been removed, even to the brass hand rails and
-sill plates. The only glass that had escaped
-destruction consisted of a number of long and
-narrow panes in the roof, of which less than half
-remained intact. As Wayne discovered later,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-these were set in hinged frames that could be
-opened for ventilating purposes. On the front
-platform—they designated it the front merely because
-it seemed natural to call one front and one
-back, and that was the one outside the jammed
-door—a dozen sticks of wood suggested the location
-of the fuel pile at some time. Ashes had been
-disposed of by merely emptying them over the
-front dash. June discovered the missing stovepipe
-lying a few yards away, but it was so rusted
-that it came to pieces when he tried to lift it from
-the ground. Other untidy evidences of former occupation
-and more recent vandalism lay around:
-an iron skillet with the handle broken off, a bent
-and twisted toaster, many empty cans, a worn and
-sodden rope doormat, a length of rotted clothes
-line of which one end was tied to a ten-foot pole
-set some six yards away.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder,” mused Wayne, “who lived here.
-And why they went away. And I wonder most
-of all, June, how they got this thing out here in
-the middle of this marsh.”</p>
-
-<p>But June was ready with a quite feasible explanation,
-which was that the car had been loaded
-onto a truck and hauled there. “Reckon in the
-summer this yere field is all dried up, Mas’
-Wayne.”</p>
-
-<p>As it was getting on toward the middle of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-afternoon by now it behooved them to set about
-preparing the domicile for occupation. They discarded
-their coats and set to work and in an hour
-had accomplished marvels. The floor was cleared
-of rubbish, Wayne requiring June to carry it well
-away from the vicinity of the car before disposing
-of it, dust was obliterated with the fragment
-of curtain, some loose boards were nailed back
-into place over the windows—the broken skillet
-served as a hammer—the stove door was rehung
-with a bent nail, ashes were removed, and the refractory
-rear door was coaxed into obedience by
-digging away the dirt beneath it with a pocket
-knife.</p>
-
-<p>After that the principal demands were stovepipe
-and covering for the broken windows. They
-thought later of many other things that were
-sorely needed, but just now those wants took precedence.
-It was out of the question to find stovepipe
-nearer than town, unless, as June suggested,
-some rubbish dump supplied it, and so they
-tackled the matter of covering the windows. For
-that they needed boards, or some other material,
-and nails. And a hammer would have helped a
-lot, although the skillet did fairly well in the
-emergency. There was enough of the partition
-left to supply boards for one window, but they
-had no nails, and a search through the ash pile<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-failed to provide more than four bent and rusted
-ones. So it was decided that June should walk
-back to the stamping works and see if he could
-find, beg, or borrow some. Also, he was to be on
-the lookout for anything that might be used in
-making the new home weather tight. In the meanwhile
-Wayne was to “projeck ’roun’,” as June
-phrased it, and collect anything useful that could
-be found.</p>
-
-<p>June went off, whistling blithely, and Wayne
-began his search. The new abode stood about
-two hundred yards from the railroad embankment,
-at this point a good eight feet above the
-meadow, and possibly half again as far from the
-nearest building which was the stamping works.
-Beyond the latter were a number of other factories,
-puffing steam or smoke into the afternoon
-sunlight, and beyond these began the town.
-Standing on the front porch, which was the term
-ultimately applied to the rear platform, the view
-to the left ended at the railroad embankment, but
-to the right Wayne could see for nearly a mile.
-A few scattered houses indicated the dirt road in
-that direction and beyond the houses was some
-tilled land, and, finally, a fringe of trees. In front
-lay the edge of the town, with the town itself,
-overhung by a haze of smoke, a good mile beyond.
-On the fourth side, visible when Wayne stepped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-off the “porch” to the soggy ground, the meadow
-continued for another hundred yards to a rail
-fence. Beyond the fence was a ploughed field
-which sloped off and up to meet the blue March
-sky. Between car and railroad a group of trees
-attracted Wayne’s attention, and he set out for it
-across the <em>squishy</em> meadow. Half-way to it he
-caught sight of water and recalled June’s mention
-of a “branch.” It proved to be a tiny brook that,
-emerging from a culvert under the tracks, wandered
-as far as the tiny grove and then curved
-off to the rail fence and followed it across the
-fields in the direction of the road. The water
-was clear and cold and tasted very good to
-the boy. Just now the brook was overflowing
-its bed in places, but the little knoll on which
-the cluster of trees grew was high and dry
-underfoot.</p>
-
-<p>The brook offered treasure-trove in the shape
-of a number of short planks and pieces of boxes
-rudely nailed together, doubtless representing the
-efforts of some boy to construct a raft. Wayne
-doubted its seaworthiness after he had experimentally
-pushed it back into the water and tried
-his weight on it. He floated it along to the nearest
-point to the car, getting his feet thoroughly wet
-in the process, and then, not without much panting
-and frequent rests, dragged it the balance of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-the way. After that he ranged the field in all
-directions, returning several times with his loads
-of wood for fuel or window repairs. He had quite
-a respectable pile on the front platform by the
-time June returned.</p>
-
-<p>The darkey brought a whole pocketful of nails
-and a number of sheets of tin of various sizes
-which he had salvaged from the waste heap. Few
-were larger than fifteen or sixteen inches in any
-direction, but together they would turn the wind
-and rain at one window at least. The nails had
-been given him by a man in the office. He had,
-he said, requested a hammer, too, but the man’s
-generosity had balked there. They set to work
-with the materials at hand and inside of the next
-hour accounted for four windows and part of
-a fifth, leaving six still open to the winds of
-Heaven. They made a systematic search for
-more boards, but failed to find any. Foiled, they
-entered their new home and sat down for a brief
-rest.</p>
-
-<p>The sight of the groceries presented a new
-quandary to Wayne. “Look here, June,” he
-exclaimed. “We’ve got coffee and milk and
-sugar, and we know where there’s water, but we
-haven’t anything to boil it in!”</p>
-
-<p>“My goodness!” said June. “Ain’ that a fac’?
-What we-all goin’ to do, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Wayne shook his head helplessly. “I don’t
-know,” he answered. “I reckon that skillet
-wouldn’t do, would it?”</p>
-
-<p>It wouldn’t, as an examination proved, for when
-the handle had broken off it had taken a generous
-piece of the skillet with it. June studied the situation
-hard, cupping his chin in his hands and
-gazing at the scuffed toes of his shoes. “I
-reckon,” he said finally, “we jus’ got to <em>eat</em> that
-coffee. ’Sides,” he continued, “how we goin’
-to boil it, anyway, without no fire?”</p>
-
-<p>“We could build a fire outside,” answered
-Wayne. “For that matter, we could build one in
-the stove. I reckon the smoke wouldn’t bother us
-much seeing half our windows are open! But
-we’ve got to have a coffee-pot or a pan or something.
-We surely were chumps, June,” he ended
-sadly.</p>
-
-<p>“How come we didn’ think of that, Mas’
-Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s something else we didn’t think of,”
-replied the other. “We didn’t think of anything
-to drink it out of, either!”</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’ botherin’ so much about that,” said
-June. “Jus’ you cook me that coffee an’ see!
-But we surely has got to have somethin’ to——”
-He stopped abruptly. “How much money we got,
-Mas’ Wayne?” he asked eagerly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Five cents. You can’t get a coffee-pot for
-five cents, I reckon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Give me he,” said June, jumping up. “I’ll go
-on back yonder an’ ask that man in the tin factory
-to sell me a five-cent kettle or somethin’, Mas’
-Wayne. He’s a nice man an’ I reckon when I
-tell him we can’ get no supper without he sells
-it to us he goin’ do it. Jus’ you wait, Mas’
-Wayne.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” laughed Wayne. “And ask him to
-throw in two tin cups and a candle and a blanket
-or two and——”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, I ain’ goin’ to ask no imposs’bilities,”
-replied June, showing his teeth in a broad
-grin, “but I certainly am goin’ to projeck
-mightily aroun’ that tin pile. I reckon there’s a
-heap more pieces like I done fetched if I can fin’
-’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe I’d better go along,” said Wayne,
-giving June the nickel.</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, you stay right here an’ rest yourself,
-Mas’ Wayne. I can ’tend to that man without
-no help. Jus’ you get them victuals ready——
-What’s the matter, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, nothing,” groaned Wayne, setting down
-the paper bag he had untied. “Only I forgot to
-ask them to grind the coffee, June!”</p>
-
-<p>“Lawsy-y-y!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>They gazed dejectedly at each other for a
-moment. Then June chuckled. “I reckon I’ll
-jus’ have to ask that Mister Man to throw
-in a coffee grinder, too!” he said. “Ain’
-there no way to make coffee out of that, Mas’
-Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“There must be,” was the answer. “If we can’t
-do it any other way, we’ll grind it with our teeth!
-You run along and see what you can find, June,
-and I’ll try to think up a way of grinding the
-coffee.”</p>
-
-<p>So June departed again and Wayne faced his
-problem, and when, some twenty minutes later,
-the darkey returned in triumph with a tin coffee-pot,
-a tin dish, a tin spoon, and several more
-sheets of the metal dug from the waste heap
-enough coffee for the evening meal was ready
-and Wayne was grinding the rest of their supply
-between two flat stones! “There’s more than
-one way to grind coffee,” he laughed, as June
-paused in the doorway to regard the proceeding
-in pardonable surprise. “I just remembered the
-way the Indians used to grind their corn. Or was
-it the Egyptians? Someone, anyhow. I had a
-dickens of a time finding these stones, though.
-There, that’s the last. It isn’t very fine, but I
-guess it will do well enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’ it smell jus’ gran’?” asked June, sniffing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-the fragrance. “An’ look what I fetched,
-please, Mas’ Wayne. Look yere! Ain’ that a
-pretty fine coffee-pot? An’ ain’ that a pretty fine
-little dish? An’ look yere at the spoon! All
-them for a nickel, Mas’ Wayne! That man certainly
-was good to me, yes, sir! I done tell him I
-ain’ got but a nickel an’ he say: ‘Nickel’s enough,
-nigger. What-all you wantin’?’ He say these
-yere things is ‘second,’ whatever he mean, but
-I reckon they goin’ to suit us all righty, ain’
-they?”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re fine, June! You surely know how to
-get your money’s worth. But where are the
-blankets I told you to fetch?”</p>
-
-<p>“He goin’ to send them over in the mornin’,”
-replied June gravely. “Didn’ have none good
-enough, he say. How soon we goin’ to cook that
-coffee, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not for a long time yet,” said Wayne resolutely.
-“We aren’t going to have any supper at
-all until all these windows are fixed, June. It’s
-getting cold in here already and we’ll just naturally
-freeze tonight if we don’t get something over
-them. Come on and get to work. Where’s the
-tin?”</p>
-
-<p>It was almost twilight when they actually
-finished the undertaking. It is doubtful if they
-would have finished at all that evening if June<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-hadn’t discovered a piece of tar paper nearly
-three yards long and a yard wide near the railroad
-embankment. It was torn and held some
-holes, but it was far better than nothing and it
-covered three windows, with the aid of a few
-pieces of wood found in the same locality. Those
-windows presented a strange appearance, but
-nobody cared about the looks of them. At least,
-when the door was closed and the stove was going,
-the car was warm enough for comfort even if the
-smoke did bring tears to their eyes. Until the
-coffee was boiled they kept the fire up, but after
-that they were very glad to let it go out.
-They had the equivalent of two cups of coffee
-apiece and finished most of the bread and butter.
-They were very hungry and it was so much easier
-to satisfy present appetites than to give thought
-to the morrow. The coffee was somewhat muddy,
-but, as June said ecstatically, “it certainly did
-taste scrumptuous!”</p>
-
-<p>After supper they sat huddled in a corner of
-the seat opposite the dying fire and talked. For
-some reason their thoughts tonight dwelt largely
-with Sleepersville, and Wayne wondered this and
-June that, and they decided that at the very first
-opportunity Wayne was to write back there and
-let his stepfather and June’s mother know that
-they were alive and well. And they wondered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-about Sam, too, and how he would like this new
-home. And presently they stretched themselves
-out on the seat, sharing the horse blanket as best
-they could, and slumbered soundly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</a><br />
-<small>THE LUCK CHANGES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The next day luck turned. Wayne went to work
-for Callahan’s Livery Stable, and June, happening
-into the Union Hotel with a drummer’s
-sample cases, witnessed the discharge of a bell
-boy, applied for the position, got it, was thrust
-into a dark-blue uniform and, half an hour later,
-was climbing stairs and answering calls as though
-he had done nothing else all his life. The wage
-was only three dollars a week, and out of that he
-was required to deposit ten dollars as security for
-the uniform, which meant that for three weeks he
-would get nothing from his employer. Ordinarily
-he would have had to deposit that ten dollars before
-starting to work, but the fact that his services
-were badly needed at the moment and the fact
-that he neither had ten dollars nor could get it,
-caused the proprietor to waive the rule. But June
-didn’t bother about that ten dollars, for he knew
-that it was tips and not wages that counted in his
-job, and he believed in his ability to get the tips.
-He didn’t return to the new home very rich that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-night, to be sure, for he hadn’t yet learned the
-ropes and his chances had been few, but it didn’t
-take him long to put his new position on a paying
-basis. At the end of three days everyone in the
-hotel knew June and liked him. He was always
-willing, always ready, and always cheerful. And
-he was always polite, a fact which made him a
-favourite with the guests, accustomed as they
-were to the half-sullen services of the other boys.
-Dimes and even quarters dropped into June’s
-pocket at a rate that astonished him. When, at
-the end of his second week of service, he counted
-up his wealth and discovered that it totalled the
-stupendous sum of nine dollars and eighty cents
-he rolled his eyes and confided to Wayne that he
-“didn’ know there was so much money in the
-whole world!” The main drawback to June’s
-work was that his period of duty began at six
-o’clock in the morning and lasted until four in the
-afternoon, necessitating a very early rising hour
-in the car. Wayne’s own duties didn’t begin until
-eight, and in consequence he had two hours on
-his hands that he didn’t know what to do with.
-Breakfast was always over by half-past five and
-a minute or two later June was streaking across
-the field to the railroad track. At about twenty-five
-minutes to six there was a milk train due and
-June had become an adept at swinging himself to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-a platform as it slowed down at the yard entrance.
-Just at first his presence, when discovered, was
-resented, but presently the train hands good-naturedly
-failed to see him and he rode into town
-huddled up on a car step. When, as infrequently
-happened, the train was late June was put to it to
-reach the hotel on time, but he always did it by
-hook or by crook even if he had to run most of the
-way over the uneven ties.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne’s job brought him seventy-five cents a
-day—when he worked. He didn’t always work, for
-it was only when one of the regular men was taken
-away to a drive at a funeral or a wedding that his
-services were required. But he had to report every
-morning, in any case, and it was rather surprising
-how many folks were married or buried in Medfield!
-He liked driving a carriage well enough, but
-waiting for fares at the station in all sorts of
-weather wasn’t pleasant. It was a sort of lazy job,
-too. On the whole, he was far from satisfied with it
-and continually kept his eyes open for something
-better. It was rather a blow to his pride to have
-June bring home four or five dollars each week
-while he almost never earned more than three.
-Still, he was thankful for what he got, for it
-enabled them to live very comfortably in their
-novel home.</p>
-
-<p>One of the first things Wayne did was to recover<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-Sam. Denny Connor parted with the dog reluctantly,
-but consoled himself with the fact that
-as Sam had been with him only four days and
-hadn’t got used to the change he wouldn’t miss
-him as much as he might have.</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” he confided, “it ain’t as if you slept
-a lot better for having a dog howl all night in the
-kitchen!”</p>
-
-<p>Sam took to the new home at once. He approved
-of it enthusiastically. Perhaps the freedom
-of the country appealed to him after the
-confinement of town. At all events, he had a
-perfectly delirious time the first hour, running
-around the field, barking at everyone who passed
-along the railroad track and searching for rats
-under the car. His big adventure came later,
-though, when, after disappearing frenziedly and
-at full speed into the woods he returned a quarter
-of an hour after much chastened and with his
-muzzle bleeding profusely from several deep
-scratches. What his adversary had been they
-never knew. June offered the theory that Sam
-had been in mortal combat with a catamount.
-I don’t think June knew just what a catamount
-was, but he liked the word. Wayne said he
-guessed it was a “cat” without the “mount.”
-In any event, Sam displayed a strong dislike of
-the woods for weeks afterward. Wayne tried<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-taking him to work with him at first, but Mr.
-Callahan objected to having the dog in the carriage
-and made Wayne tie him in an empty stall
-in the stable. That didn’t please Sam a mite and
-he said so very loudly and continuously, so
-heartily, in fact, that the edict went forth that
-“that fool dog” was not to be brought there
-again. After that Wayne shut him up in the car
-when he left at half-past seven and was pursued
-for a quarter of a mile by Sam’s lamentations.
-Eventually the dog learned that he was not to
-follow, that his duty was to remain behind and
-guard the domicile, and he became reconciled.</p>
-
-<p>“Carhurst,” as Wayne dubbed the new home,
-was slowly but steadily rehabilitated. Now that
-there was money for the purpose the boys set out
-to turn the abandoned horse car into a real place
-of residence. Every day witnessed some improvement.
-The missing stovepipe was early replaced
-with two sections purchased at a junk dealer’s
-emporium and with a five-cent can of blacking
-June made stove and pipe shine like a new beaver
-hat. Red builder’s paper superseded the boards
-across the window frames, giving the car quite a
-cheerful appearance from without even if it added
-little to the lighting within. Sooner or later they
-meant to reglaze two windows on each side, and
-to that end June brought back a fine big lump of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-putty one afternoon which he had wheedled out
-of a painter at work in the hotel. After that, as
-Wayne complacently remarked, all they needed
-were points, a putty knife, and some glass! They
-put shelves up for their groceries, cooking utensils,
-and tableware, all largely augmented with returning
-prosperity, set a box on the more shaded platform
-to serve as an ice-chest, invested in four
-blankets and, in short, surrounded themselves
-with all sorts of luxuries!</p>
-
-<p>June solved the fuel problem very simply.
-Wood soon became scarce and they were forced
-to go far afield to find enough to cook meals with,
-while having a fire for the mere purpose of keeping
-warm on some of those raw nights of early
-spring was an extravagance not to be considered.
-Not, that is to say, until June had his brilliant
-idea. He disappeared one afternoon with the
-basket that they used to bring provisions home in
-and returned half an hour later bearing it on his
-head and filled to the brim with coal. The railroad
-tracks were black with it, he reported, and all they
-had to do was gather it up. Wayne found that a
-slight exaggeration, but it wasn’t at all a difficult
-matter to fill a basket without going out of sight
-of home. After that, when the weather was cold
-or rainy, they kept a fire going all day and night
-in the tiny stove, which, in spite of some infirmities,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-served them faithfully and cheerfully and
-consumed little fuel.</p>
-
-<p>They had a few leaks to contend with when the
-rain drove against the car, leaks that simply refused
-to be located when the weather was dry and
-Wayne, armed with pieces of tin, and tacks, and a
-hammer went searching for them. But even more
-expensive houses leak, and it was a simple enough
-matter to move away from the trickles. To be
-sure, it wasn’t so pleasant when they awoke one
-very stormy night toward the first of April to
-find that the trough-shaped seat upon which they
-were reposing had turned itself into a reservoir
-for the collection of the rain driving in at a corner
-of the car. They had to open the draughts of the
-little stove and dry their blankets before they
-could go to sleep again on the opposite seat. And
-they had difficulties with the windows, too, occasionally,
-for the paper had a mean habit of breaking
-loose under the combined assaults of wind and
-rain. At such times the old horse blanket, now
-discarded as an article of bedding, was used as a
-temporary shutter. Wayne threatened to varnish
-or shellac the paper so that it would turn the rain,
-but he never carried out the threat.</p>
-
-<p>June was the cook and a very good one. He
-had a positive talent for coffee and could really
-do wonders with a frying pan. They never attempted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-ambitious feats of cookery, but they lived
-well, if simply, and had all they wanted. Only
-breakfast and supper, the latter a rather hearty
-meal, were eaten at “Carhurst.” The midday
-meal was taken in the town. Wayne went to the
-Golden Star Lunch when he had opportunity, at
-other times patronising the counter in the station.
-June skirmished his lunches in the hotel kitchen,
-and, since everyone there from the chef to the
-scullery maid liked him, fared well. Sam ate
-twice a day to the boys’ knowledge and, it was
-suspected, levied toll at noon hour on the employees
-of the stamping works. If there hadn’t
-been so many chipmunks and squirrels and, possibly,
-worthier game to chase he would have
-waxed fat and lazy at this period of his history.</p>
-
-<p>They had been living at “Carhurst” something
-over three weeks when, quite unexpectedly, almost
-overnight, spring arrived. Of course, if they
-were to believe the almanac, spring had really
-been there some time, but they would never have
-suspected it. Some days there had been a mildness
-in the air that had seemed to presage the
-lady’s appearance, but it wasn’t until they awoke
-that April morning to the knowledge that the fire
-in the stove, as low as it was, was “super’ogatory”—the
-word is June’s, and one he was extremely
-fond of—and stuck their heads outdoors<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-to find out why, that it seemed to them she had
-really arrived. It was like May rather than April.
-Although it was still only five o’clock in the morning,
-there was an unaccustomed warmth in the
-air and the east was rosy with the coming sun.
-It was after June had scudded off and Wayne had
-washed the few breakfast dishes and hung the
-dishcloth—yes, they had even attained to the
-luxury of a dishcloth by then!—over the platform
-rail and had seated himself on the step with Sam
-in his arms that the desire that affects almost all
-of us on the first warm morning of spring came
-to him. He wanted to grow something!</p>
-
-<p>At first glance the prospect of growing anything
-at “Carhurst” was not encouraging. The
-meadow was still soft and sodden with the spring
-rains and here and there little pools of water
-showed between the hummocks of turf. But when
-one becomes really possessed with the longing to
-have a garden it takes a great deal to discourage
-one. Wayne set Sam down and walked around
-the car and frowned intently over the problem.
-After all, he didn’t need a very big patch for his
-garden, and by filling in a few low places along
-the sunny side of the car and digging out the
-turf—turning it under would be better, but it entailed
-more labour than he felt capable of that
-lazy-feeling morning—he could have a patch about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-four yards long by a yard wide, quite big enough
-for his needs. He had no idea of raising such useful
-things as vegetables. His soul sighed for
-foliage and flowers. He wondered, though, what
-kinds of flowers grew up here in the North. He
-would, he decided, have to consult someone as to
-that. Probably the man he bought his seeds of
-would tell him. Anyhow, at the back of the bed,
-where it would shade the car in hot weather, he
-would have something tall. And in front he
-would grow pretty things with lots of colour. He
-talked it over all the while with Sam, and Sam indicated
-quite plainly that he considered it a perfectly
-glorious idea, following Wayne around and
-around with his tail never for an instant still.
-Finally, Wayne drew forth the little leather bag
-in which he kept his money and viewed the contents
-doubtfully. Two dollars didn’t seem a great
-deal, but it would probably do if only he could
-borrow a shovel and rake and not have to buy
-them. All the way to town his mind dwelt on the
-project and he became so absorbed that he sometimes
-forgot to keep on walking and came very
-near to being late at the stable.</p>
-
-<p>It was June who solved the problem of shovel
-and rake by borrowing both these necessary implements,
-as well as a hoe, at the stamping works.
-June had many friends there by that time and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-there was no difficulty at all. Wayne bought eight
-packages of flower seed—they were far cheaper
-than he had dared hope—and one afternoon the
-boys began the preparation of the garden. June
-was less enthusiastic than Wayne, but he lent
-willing assistance. June advocated the growing
-of useful things like corn and beans and “tomatuses,”
-but acknowledged that the ground at their
-disposal was rather too small in area for much
-of a crop. Wayne compromised by agreeing to
-set out some tomato plants since they were, while
-not exactly flowers, attractive when in fruit. The
-job was a good deal harder than they had expected,
-for that turf had been growing there a
-long while and resented being displaced. Sam
-tried to help, but his digging was merely spasmodic
-and seldom in the right place.</p>
-
-<p>They spent four evenings getting the plot of
-ground cleared of grass and graded up, and
-Wayne went to bed that fourth evening very tired
-but cheered by the anticipation of planting his
-garden the next morning. When morning came,
-however, a cold east wind was blowing across the
-field, the sun was hidden and it seemed as though
-Miss Spring must have drawn her flimsy garments
-about her and gone shivering back to the Southland.
-Instead of planting his seeds, Wayne spent
-the time between June’s departure and his own in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-sitting disgustedly in front of the stove and
-trying to get warm. He had awakened some time
-in the night to find himself uncomfortably chilly,
-his cover having fallen to the floor, and he hadn’t
-so far succeeded in driving away the little shivers
-that coursed up and down his back. He even
-sneezed once or twice and sniffed a good deal, and
-was sorry when the time came for him to go to
-work. He felt strangely disinclined for exertion
-and the thought of the walk along the tracks to
-town quite dismayed him. But he put his sweater
-on and started out and felt better by the time he
-had been in the air awhile. The station platform
-was a rather exposed place and sitting beside it
-on the front seat of a carriage was not a very
-grateful occupation today. Wayne sneezed at
-intervals and blew his nose between sneezes and
-by noon had reached the conclusion that he had a
-cold. He wasn’t used to them and resented this
-one every time he had to drag his handkerchief
-out. There were few arrivals today and Wayne
-had little to do. When he took his horse back
-to the stable at twelve-thirty for his feed he
-climbed into an old hack in a far corner of the
-carriage-room and spent an uncomfortable three-quarters
-of an hour there. He didn’t want any
-lunch, although he had a dim notion that a cup
-of hot coffee would taste good. But that meant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-exertion, and exertion was something he had no
-liking for today.</p>
-
-<p>He was back at the station for the two-twenty-four
-and picked up two passengers for the hotel.
-He hoped that June would come out for the luggage,
-but it was another boy who attended to the
-arrivals and Wayne drove off again without seeing
-June. It got no warmer as the afternoon
-progressed and Wayne was shivering most of
-the time. When the five o’clock express was in
-and he had satisfied himself that there were no
-fares for his conveyance he drove back to the
-stable as fast as the horse would trot, unharnessed,
-and set out for home. That walk seemed
-interminable and he thoroughly envied a gang of
-track workers who, having eaten their supper,
-were sitting at ease around a stove in an old box
-car which had been fitted up for living purposes.
-It was all Wayne could do to drag a tired and
-aching and shivering body past that stove!</p>
-
-<p>It was almost dusk when he finally crept down
-the embankment, squirmed between the wires of
-the fence and, with the light from “Carhurst”
-guiding him, floundered across the field. June
-had a fine fire going in the stove and when Wayne
-had pushed the door half open and squeezed
-through he simply slumped onto the seat and
-closed his eyes, immensely thankful for warmth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-and shelter. June viewed him at first with surprise
-and then with misgiving.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with you, Mas’ Wayne?”
-he asked.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne shook his head and muttered: “Just
-tired, June.” Then he had a spasm of shivering
-and reached for a blanket. June observed him
-anxiously for a moment. Then:</p>
-
-<p>“You got a chill, that’s what you got,” he
-said decisively. “You lay yourself right down
-there an’ I’ll cover you up. My sakes!”</p>
-
-<p>The last exclamation was called forth by a
-sudden fit of sneezing that left Wayne weak and
-with streaming eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Lawsy-y-y, child, but you got a cold sure
-enough!” said June. “What-all you been doin’,
-I like to know? You fix yourself for bed this yere
-minute. My goodness, ’tain’ goin’ to do for you
-to go an’ get sick, Mas’ Wayne!”</p>
-
-<p>June bustled around and brewed a pot of tea,
-a cup of which he insisted on Wayne’s swallowing
-while it was still so hot that it almost burned
-the latter’s mouth. After that June piled all the
-blankets on the invalid and sternly told him to
-go to sleep. Rather to Wayne’s surprise, he
-found that, as tired and played out as he was,
-sleep wouldn’t come. He had aches in queer
-places and his head seemed due to burst apart<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-almost any moment. With half-closed eyes he lay
-and watched June cook and eat his supper. Now
-and then he dozed for a minute or two. The
-warmth from the stove, the hot tea he had drank,
-and the piled-on blankets presently had their effect,
-and Wayne, muttering remonstrances, tried
-to throw off some of the cover. But June was
-after him on the instant.</p>
-
-<p>“Keep them blankets over you, Mas’ Wayne,”
-he commanded sternly. “You got to sweat that
-cold out.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m hot,” protested Wayne irritably.</p>
-
-<p>“I know you is, an’ you goin’ to be hot! Jus’
-you leave them blankets alone an’ go to sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>After a long while Wayne opened his eyes
-again. He had been sleeping hours, he thought.
-He felt horribly uncomfortable and wondered
-what time it was. Then his gaze fell on June
-hunched up near the stove with Sam on his knees,
-and sighed. If June was still awake it couldn’t
-be late, after all. Presently he fell again into a
-restless, troubled sleep. In the corner June
-nodded, roused himself, looked at the recumbent
-form on the seat, reached across and tucked a
-corner of a gray blanket in and settled back in
-his corner. The firelight, finding its way through
-cracks and crevices in the stove, made streaks
-and splotches of light on the wall and ceiling, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-one ray fell fairly on June’s face. Perhaps it
-was that ray of light that did the business, for
-presently his eyelids slowly closed——</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere, afar off, a clock struck three.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</a><br />
-<small>WAYNE LOSES A JOB AND FINDS ONE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Wayne had the grippe, although as neither he
-nor June had ever had any experience of that
-complaint neither of them named it that. For
-four days he was a pretty sick boy, with fever
-and aches and inflamed eyes, and June was far
-more worried than he allowed the other to see.
-June had a mortal fear of “pneumony,” and there
-was scarcely an hour when he was at home when
-Wayne wasn’t required to assure him that his
-chest wasn’t sore and that it didn’t hurt him to
-breathe. Two of the four nights June got almost
-no sleep, only dozing for a few minutes at a time
-as he sat huddled in the corner by the stove.
-The first day of the illness he stayed at home,
-after walking to the nearest telephone and explaining
-his absence from duty to the Union Hotel.
-After that he took himself off each morning only
-because Wayne insisted, and was far from happy
-until he had got back again. He invested in three
-different varieties of patent medicine and administered
-them alternately in heroic doses, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-one of Wayne’s chief interests was the attempt
-to decide which of the three was the nastiest. It
-was a difficult question to decide, for the last one
-taken always seemed the worst. June also attempted
-the concoction of some “yarb tea” such
-as he had so often seen his mother make, but
-while it smelled the place up in a most satisfactory
-manner, June was never quite certain that it contained
-all it should have, and distrusted it accordingly.
-There was one day, the second of the
-attack, when Wayne was in such agony with an
-aching head and body that June was all for finding
-a doctor and haling him posthaste to “Carhurst.”
-Wayne, however, refused to listen to
-the plan, declaring that he would be all right
-tomorrow. “Besides,” he added weakly, “you
-couldn’t get a doctor to come away out here,
-anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say I couldn’? Reckon if I tell a doctor man
-I got to have him and show him the money right
-in my fist, he goin’ to come where I say!” declared
-June sturdily. “Jus’ you let me fetch one, please,
-sir, Mas’ Wayne.”</p>
-
-<p>But Wayne insisted on waiting a little longer,
-and June rubbed the lame and achy spots and
-doubled the doses and, sure enough, after a most
-wretched night, Wayne felt better in the morning.
-The nights were always the worst, for,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-while he slept for an hour now and then during
-the day, at night he was always wakeful. Illness
-always seems worse at night, anyway, and there
-was no exception in Wayne’s case. Poor June
-was driven nearly to his wits’ end some nights.
-Wayne was not, I fear, a very patient patient.
-He had never been as sick before in all his life
-and he resented it now forcibly and seemed inclined
-to hold June in some way accountable for
-it. But that was only when he had really begun
-to get better, and June was so thankful for his
-recovery that he bore the other’s crankiness quite
-cheerfully.</p>
-
-<p>All things come to an end, and one day—it happened
-to be a Sunday—Wayne got up for the first
-time and ate some real food. June had been trying
-to entice him with soup and gruel and similar
-things which Wayne unkindly termed “hog-wash”
-for two days with little success, but today Wayne
-consumed a lamb chop and two slices of toast and
-a cup of tea with gusto. And after it he went to
-sleep again and awoke in the afternoon quite himself,
-save for an astonishing wabbliness in his
-legs. The next day he was out on the “front
-porch” in the warm sunlight when June departed
-to town, and still later he walked around some, to
-Sam’s vociferous delight, and cooked some lunch
-for himself and discovered a returning interest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-in the garden. And the next day he reported to
-Mr. Callahan for work again and was curtly informed
-that his place had been given to someone
-else.</p>
-
-<p>As June had visited the stable and told the
-liveryman of Wayne’s illness as soon as it became
-evident that the latter couldn’t go to work, and
-as Mr. Callahan had given June to understand
-that the position would be kept open, Wayne was
-too astounded to even make a reply, and it wasn’t
-until he was a full block away that it occurred
-to him to be either indignant or disappointed.
-And then, as neither indignation nor disappointment
-promised any relief, he tried his best to
-swallow them and put his mind on the problem of
-finding other work. There was another livery
-stable in town that he knew of, and there might
-be still more that he didn’t know of, and, while
-driving a carriage wasn’t at all his idea of a
-satisfactory occupation, it brought money to his
-pocket and enabled him to live, and whereas he
-had not been particularly interested in living four
-days ago, today he was convinced that it was not
-only desirable but delightful. There is at least
-this to be said for an illness: after it is through
-with you it leaves you with a greater appreciation
-of life.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne visited the stable he knew of but received<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-no encouragement. The foreman told him
-that they had all the men they needed and that
-they didn’t expect to have a vacancy in the near
-future. He directed Wayne to another livery,
-however, at the farther side of town, and Wayne
-set off. His course took him over the railroad
-about a block beyond the freight sheds. It was
-nearly nine by then and the scene about him was
-a very busy one. Cars were loading and unloading
-beside the long, high platforms, while, on the
-other side of the sheds, trucks and drays were
-coming and going along the cobbled street. A
-switch engine was tooting frantically for a switch
-and a long train of day coaches and sleepers sent
-Wayne scurrying out of the way. Then an impatient
-engine clanged up with a couple of
-gondolas laden with machinery and contemptuously
-jerked them onto a side-track, spurting off
-again as though vastly relieved to be rid of such
-trifling company. There were many tracks where
-Wayne crossed and one had to keep one’s eyes
-opened. When he was half-way over a pounding
-of the rails caused him to look down the line. A
-long train of empty box cars was backing toward
-him at a brisk speed, the locomotive out of sight
-at the far end. Wayne hurried his pace and
-reached an empty track in plenty of time, and
-was for paying no more heed to the string of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-empties until a shout behind him brought his
-head quickly around.</p>
-
-<p>On the roof of the first car a man was doing
-two things at once. He was yelling at the top of
-his voice and swinging himself over the end of the
-car to the ladder there as fast as he could. A
-few yards distant, squarely in the middle of the
-track, stood a boy of five or six years. Afterward
-Wayne wondered where he had come from,
-for surely he had not been in sight a moment
-before, but just now there was no time for speculation.
-The child, terrorised into immobility,
-stood as though rooted to the cinders between the
-rails. <a href="#image02">Wayne’s cry was uttered involuntarily
-as he leaped forward.</a> Only one line of track
-separated him from the boy, but it seemed impossible
-for him to reach the latter before the bumper
-of the box car struck him.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 457px;">
-<a id="image02">
-<img src="images/image02.jpg" width="457" height="600" alt="" title="" />
-</a><br />
-<div class="caption"><a href="#Page_105">Wayne’s Cry Was Uttered Involuntarily as he Leaped
-Forward</a></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>As Wayne dashed forward with a horrified, sickening
-fear at his heart the brakeman dropped
-from the car ladder. But he staggered as his feet
-touched the ground, and had the boy’s safety depended
-on him he would never have escaped. It
-was Wayne who caught him up roughly and half
-lifted, half dragged him across the further rail
-to safety just as the end of the car swept over
-the spot on which he had stood. So close was the
-escape that the corner of the car struck Wayne’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-hip and sent him reeling to fall on his knees
-against the end of the ties of the next track, the
-child sprawled beside him. Dazed, breathless,
-Wayne struggled to his feet, pulling the lad up
-with him. Twenty feet distant a switch engine
-had stopped with grinding brakes, and engineer
-and fireman were running toward him. The train
-of empty box cars rolled stolidly on, but in a moment
-began to slow down with much bumping and
-clatter of couplings, while back along the roofs
-sped the brakeman whose warning shout had
-alarmed Wayne. Just what happened during the
-next few minutes Wayne couldn’t recall afterward.
-The lad, his face crushed to Wayne’s
-worn coat, was sobbing hysterically. The engineer
-and fireman were there, and presently the
-brakeman dropped down beside them, and after
-that other men appeared as though by magic.
-Everyone talked at once and it was all very confused.
-Someone took the boy from Wayne and
-lifted him in arms and someone else propelled
-Wayne across toward the freight house. About
-that time the talk around him began to register
-itself on his brain.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis Jim Mason’s kid,” said one. “’Twould
-have broke his heart entirely had the lad been
-hurted!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hurted!” scoffed another. “Sure, ’tis dead<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-he’d be this minute save for this la-ad here!
-’Twas a close shave at that, I’m telling you.
-Faith, I shut my eyes, I did so!” It was either
-the engineer or the fireman speaking. “Are you
-hurted, me boy?” This was to Wayne, and Wayne
-shook his head silently. “Your hands be cut a
-bit, but they’ll soon mend.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’d better wash the dirt out,” advised
-another as they climbed the steps at the end of
-the platform. “I’ve known lockjaw to come from
-less, and——”</p>
-
-<p>But just then they entered the dim twilight of
-the shed and Wayne, pushed ahead by his good-natured
-captors, lost the rest of the cheerful remark.
-Someone shouted for “Jim! Jim Mason!”
-and an answering hail came from further down
-the shed and a big man advanced toward them,
-illumined for a moment as he passed one of the
-wide, sunlit doorways.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s wanted?” he shouted.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis your kid, Jim,” was the reply. “Nearly
-run over he was a minute back. All right, laddie,
-here’s your father comin’. Hush your cryin’
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Terry!</em>” The big man’s voice held wonder
-and alarm and joy. He sprang across the intervening
-space and seized the child from the arms
-that held him. “Terry! Are you hurt, darling?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-What were you doing on the tracks? Don’t cry,
-son, it’s over now.” He turned questioningly to
-the sympathetic faces about him, faces that were
-grinning only because tears were so near the
-eyes. “How did it happen, fellows? Who saw
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Him and me,” answered one man, “and Larry
-there. Larry was riding the roof on a string of
-empties when he seen the boy on the track——”</p>
-
-<p>“Holy Saints, but I was scared stiff!” broke
-in the brakeman. “I gave a shout and tried to
-get down the ladder, but when I jumped I hit
-the end of a tie, Jim, and it was this fellow——”</p>
-
-<p>“Grabbed him up in the nick o’ time,” went on
-another. “I seen it from the cab window. There
-wasn’t the width of an eyelash between the car
-and the child when he got him. Sure, even then
-I thought it was good night to the pair of them.
-The car hit the fellow as he jumped and——”</p>
-
-<p>“So ’twas you?” said Jim Mason in his big,
-deep voice. “’Twas brave of you, sir, and God
-bless you for it.” He had the child on one big
-arm now and stretched his free hand toward
-Wayne. “I guess I don’t need to say I’m thankful
-to you. You know that, sir. I think a deal of
-this little kiddie, and as for his mother——” His
-voice trembled. “Heaven only knows what she
-would do if anything happened to him! She’ll<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-thank you better than I can, but if there’s anything
-Jim Mason can do for you, why, you say it!”</p>
-
-<p>“It was nothing,” stammered Wayne. “I’m
-glad that—that I was there, and that I—was in
-time, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“God be praised and so am I!” said the father
-fervently. “Hush your crying now, Terry. It’s
-your father that’s got you. Can you thank the
-brave lad for saving you?”</p>
-
-<p>But Terry couldn’t. Terry was as yet incapable
-of anything but sobs. Wayne, wanting to go,
-scarcely knew how. Mechanically he raised a
-bruised knuckle to his lips and Jim Mason was
-all solicitude.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve cut your fist!” he exclaimed. “Come
-to the office with me till I fix it up for you.
-There’s dirt in it, likely. Larry, I’m thanking
-you, too, for what you did,” he added, turning to
-the brakeman. “I’ll not forget it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, I did nothing,” laughed the brakeman
-embarrassedly, “only yell!”</p>
-
-<p>“It was his shout that drew my attention,”
-said Wayne. “He tried hard to get to him.”</p>
-
-<p>“What matter now?” muttered the brakeman.
-“’Tis all over, and ’twas you was Johnny-on-the-Spot,
-feller. ’Twas finely done, too, and no mistake!
-I take my hat off to you for a fine, quick-thinkin’
-and quick-doin’ laddie!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Why, I know you now!” said Jim Mason at
-that moment. “I was thinking all the time I’d
-seen you before. You’re the kid—I mean the
-young gentleman—that spoke me one morning a
-couple of weeks ago. You had a nigger boy with
-you, and a dog. Ain’t I right?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Mr. Mason, but it was more than two
-weeks ago,” answered Wayne. “I—I’m glad to
-see you again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you’re glad, what about me?” bellowed
-Jim Mason. “Thank you all, fellows. I’ll
-mend this gentleman’s hand now. Will you come
-with me, please?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne followed the man to the farther end of
-the freight house where, occupying a corner that
-afforded a view down the long stretch of shining
-tracks, there was a cubby-hole of an office. A
-high desk, a correspondingly tall stool, a battered
-armchair, a straight-backed chair, a stove,
-and a small table made up the furnishings. The
-walls held many hooks on which were impaled
-various documents, a shelf filled with filing-cases,
-several highly-coloured calendars, a number of
-pictures cut from magazines and newspapers, and,
-over one of the two dusty-paned windows, a yard-long
-framed photograph of “The Lake-to-Coast
-Limited.” In spite of dust and confusion, a
-confusion which as Wayne later discovered was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-more apparent than real, the little office had a
-cosy, comfortable air, and the sunlight, flooding
-through the front window, made even the dust-motes
-glorious.</p>
-
-<p>Jim Mason set the child in a chair, produced a
-first-aid kit from some place of concealment, and
-proceeded to repair the damages wrought by the
-cinders. There was running water outside, and
-the wounds, none of them more than surface
-scratches, were first thoroughly cleaned. Then
-peroxide was liberally applied, the man grunting
-with satisfaction when the stuff bubbled. Finally
-surgeon’s tape was put on, and Wayne was discharged.
-During his administrations Jim Mason
-asked questions at the rate of a dozen a minute,
-and soon had Wayne’s history down to date.
-The liveryman’s callousness wrought him to
-gruff indignation.</p>
-
-<p>“Fired you because you was sick, did he, the
-pup? What do you know about that? Sit down
-and rest yourself, lad.” He perched himself on
-the stool and became busy with a pile of waybills
-on the desk, talking as he worked. “And so
-you’re out of a job again, are you? I suppose a
-smart lad like you can figure and write a good
-fist, maybe?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can figure,” replied Wayne, “but I don’t
-believe my writing’s much to boast of.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Here, put your name and your address on
-that.” Jim pushed a slip of paper to the end of
-the desk and dipped a pen in ink.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne wrote and handed the result back.
-“‘Wayne Torrence Sloan,’” read Jim, “‘Carhurst,
-Medfield, Pennsylvania.’ That’s not so
-bad. But what might ‘Carhurst’ mean?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne explained and the man chuckled. “It’s
-a fine-sounding name all right,” he said. “How’d
-you like a job here with me, Sloan? I been looking
-for a feller for a week. There’s a guy up to
-Springdale that wants the place, and he’s coming
-down this afternoon to see me, but—I don’t
-know.” Jim looked out the window and whistled
-a tune thoughtfully. “He mightn’t do at all,”
-he went on after a moment, “and if you say you
-want to try it——”</p>
-
-<p>“I do!” said Wayne promptly. “That is, if
-you think I could.”</p>
-
-<p>Jim turned and looked him over appraisingly.
-“I don’t see why not. If you can figure and
-write a bit and do as I tell you, you’d have no
-trouble. And you look like a strong, healthy lad,
-although your face is sort of pale. That comes of
-being sick, I guess. ’Tain’t all office work, for
-you’ll have to be out in the yard a good deal.
-You’d be here at eight in the morning—I’m here
-long before, but you wouldn’t need to be—and get<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-off at five, with an hour for dinner. The pay ain’t
-much, only eight dollars, but if you got on there
-might be something better; maybe a place in the
-main office. Want to try it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very much,” said Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>“All right then. Maybe I can head that feller
-at Springdale off and save him a trip.” He drew
-a telegram blank from a pigeonhole and wrote
-slowly and laboriously. “Maybe I’m taking a
-chance, lad, for I don’t know much about you,
-do you see, and you haven’t any references, but
-a feller that shows pluck like you did awhile ago
-can’t have much wrong with him, I’m thinking.
-There, I’ll put this on the wire. Be around at
-eight sharp in the morning, lad, and I’ll put you
-to work. Better come a bit before eight, though,
-so’s I can tell you what’s wanted before the rush
-starts. Got any money?”</p>
-
-<p>“A little, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Get yourself a suit of overalls; black like
-these. You’ll need ’em likely. Now I got to do
-something with this kid.” Jim turned and observed
-his offspring frowningly. Terry had at
-last stopped sobbing and was watching interestedly
-through the front window the operation
-of unloading a car. “How he came to be wandering
-about here I dunno. And maybe his mother’s
-worrying about him this minute. He ought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-to be home, but I don’t see how I can get him
-there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let me take him home,” offered Wayne
-eagerly. “Just tell me where the house is, Mr.
-Mason.”</p>
-
-<p>The man’s face lightened. “Will you do it?”
-he exclaimed. “That’s fine, then. Will you go
-with the nice gentleman, Terry?”</p>
-
-<p>Terry looked doubtful, but when Wayne smiled
-down at him he nodded shyly and summoned a
-smile in return.</p>
-
-<p>“I live on Monmouth Street,” said Jim. “’Tis
-the fourth house from the corner of Railroad Avenue,
-the one with the sun-parlor on it.” There
-was pride in his voice when he mentioned the sun-parlor
-and Wayne was quite certain that it was
-the only sun-parlor on Monmouth Street. “Ask
-for Mrs. Mason and just tell her the kid was down
-to see me and I sent him home by you. Don’t
-tell her about what happened, lad. She’d be tied
-up in a knot. I’ll give her the story when I get
-home. Maybe you’d better go around to the back,
-for I dunno would she hear you knock, being busy
-in the kitchen likely. Do you want the nice gentleman
-to carry you, Terry, or will you walk along
-like a little man, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Want to be carried,” said Terry promptly.
-“I’m tired, daddy.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“’Tis a blessing you ain’t worse than tired,
-kiddie,” said his father feelingly. “How came
-it you were down here all alone, Terry?”</p>
-
-<p>Terry studied his shoes intently for a moment.
-At last: “Wanted to see choo-choos,” he
-answered.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen to me, Terry. Don’t you ever come
-around the choo-choos again without somebody’s
-with you. If you ever do I’ll whale you, kid.
-Remember that. Now go along with the gentleman
-and be a good boy.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne carried Terry until they were across
-the tracks and then the child demanded to be set
-down. “You don’t carry Terry like daddy does,”
-he complained. “Want to walk?” So they went
-the rest of the way hand in hand, Terry, now most
-communicative, talking incessantly. Wayne had
-a very hazy idea as to the location of Monmouth
-Street and Terry’s directions were difficult to
-follow, so he had to ask his way several times.
-But he found the house eventually, easily identifying
-it by the sun-parlor which stood out at one
-end of a tiny front porch like a sore thumb. Mrs.
-Mason proved to be a comely, smiling-faced
-woman apparently some years Jim’s senior.
-Terry, she explained, as she wiped her hands on
-her apron in the back doorway, had been turned
-out to play in the yard, and he was a bad boy to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-run away like that. “You might have been
-killed,” she told the child severely, “and the Lord
-only knows why you wasn’t. Thank you, sir, for
-bringin’ him back, and I hope he was no trouble
-to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit, Mrs. Mason. He behaved beautifully.
-Good-bye, Terry. Be a good boy now and don’t
-run off again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye,” answered Terry, politely but indifferently.
-“I got a hen, I have, an’ she’s going
-to have a lot of little chickens pretty soon. Want
-to see her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not today, Terry, thanks,” laughed Wayne.
-“Maybe I’ll come and see her after the chickens
-are hatched.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. Mama, can I have some bread and
-sugar?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne left while that question was being debated
-and hurried off uptown, first to tell June
-the wonderful news and then to purchase that
-black jumper. There was a new quality in the
-April sunshine now and Wayne discovered for
-the first time that Medfield was an attractive
-place after all. The folks he passed on the street
-looked friendly, the clanging of the trolley car
-gongs fell pleasantly on his ear; in short, the world
-had quite changed since early morning and was
-now a cheerful, hopeful place, filled with sunshine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-and bustle and ambition. Wayne’s spirits soared
-like the billowing white clouds of steam above
-the buildings and he whistled a gay little tune as
-he went along.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</a><br />
-<small>BIG TOM MAKES AN OFFER</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>He spent the afternoon, after his return to “Carhurst,”
-in planting his garden and had the seeds
-all in by the time June came. He displayed the
-result proudly. Every row was marked with a
-little stick on which was perched the empty seed
-packet like a white nightcap. June admired flatteringly
-and then, for so it always happens,
-criticised.</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to me like you ought to put them rows
-’tother way roun’, Mas’ Wayne, ’cause the sun
-goin’ to shine this yere way. Back home they
-always set the rows with the sun.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so, June,” acknowledged Wayne. “I
-forgot that.” But he was in far too fine spirits
-to be worried by a little thing like that. He said
-he reckoned they’d grow just the same, and June
-agreed with him, but a trifle doubtfully. Then
-June questioned whether the planting had been
-done at the right time of the moon, and Wayne
-lost patience and told him to get busy and help
-carry stones for a border. They had to fairly dig<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-for those stones and it was almost twilight by the
-time they had the bed neatly edged. Then June
-washed up and set about his culinary duties, leaving
-Wayne outside to admire his handiwork
-from various angles and try to picture mentally
-the appearance of that bed three months
-later.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne had brought home a slice of ham as a
-special delicacy and June fried it to a turn, after
-cutting it in three pieces to fit the diminutive
-pan, and made coffee, and cut bread, and opened
-a can of peaches, and, in brief, prepared a banquet
-fit for Luculus—or two very healthy and hungry
-boys, one of whom had been on short rations for
-a week! Afterward, by the light of a swinging
-lantern which had taken the place of the candles
-with which they had at first tried to illumine their
-abode, Wayne read from the newspapers that
-June picked up at the hotel and brought home
-with him. June had a weakness for such things
-as robberies, murders, fires, shipwrecks, and similar
-sensations, while Wayne always looked for the
-baseball news first. So, to be quite fair, he alternated,
-reading first, perhaps, the story of a Texas
-bank robbery and following with an interesting
-rumour regarding the trade of Catcher Moffet
-to the Pirates by the Braves. Toward the last of
-the news budget, especially if the robberies and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-train wrecks and such gave out, June usually
-fell asleep and snored unflatteringly, and Wayne
-finished his perusal in silence. But tonight the
-latter early exhausted the papers and the boys
-fell to a discussion of Wayne’s new job and to
-laying plans for the future.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” said Wayne, “if I get eight dollars
-a week it won’t be long before we can go on to
-New York.” He made the observation without
-apparent enthusiasm, however. For the past
-fortnight New York had slipped out of their conversation.
-June nodded, opened his mouth, closed
-it again without speaking and once more nodded.
-“It doesn’t cost us more than three dollars a
-week to live and so we’d have twenty dollars saved
-up in no time at all,” Wayne added.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so,” agreed the other. “Reckon New
-York’s a mighty fine city, ain’ it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wonderful, June.”</p>
-
-<p>“Uh-huh. Bigger’n Medfield consid’able?”</p>
-
-<p>“Medfield! Why, New York’s a thousand times
-bigger than Medfield, you silly!”</p>
-
-<p>“Say it is?” June digested that in silence for
-a moment. Then: “Must be a powerful big ol’
-place, Mas’ Wayne,” he said dolorously. “Ain’
-you afraid we’d get lost or somethin’. There was
-a feller I know got lost in Atlanta one time an’
-he didn’ find hisself for days an’ days, no sir!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-An’ I ’spects New York’s a heap bigger’n Atlanta,
-ain’ it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lots bigger. Atlanta’s just a village compared
-to New York.”</p>
-
-<p>“Uh-huh.” June remained silent this time for
-many minutes, and Wayne too seemed engrossed
-in thought. Finally, though, June said: “Mas’
-Wayne, what we-all got to go to New York for,
-sir? Why don’t we stay jus’ where we is? We’s
-both of us got jobs here, an’ goodness only knows
-what’s goin’ to happen to us in that big ol’ place!
-Why don’t we stay put, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” answered the other slowly, “we started
-for New York, June, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, we surely done started for it, but we
-don’t have to get where we started for, does we?
-Ol’ Eph Jennings, he started for the circus one
-day but he fotched up in the calaboose, Mas’
-Wayne. Startin’ an’ stoppin’s mighty different
-things, I reckon. Let’s us stay right here a little
-while longer, please, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, June. I—I guess I’d rather, anyway,”
-answered Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning he started at his new work,
-rather doubtful as to his ability to perform it
-satisfactorily but determined to try his very
-hardest. There were two reasons for that, one
-the necessity of earning money and the other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-a strong desire to please Jim Mason and prove
-that he had made no mistake in his choice of a
-helper. By evening of that first day, however,
-Wayne knew that the work was not beyond him,
-and he went home at dusk happy in the knowledge.
-Perhaps someone who had the interests of the
-boy less at heart might have made that first day
-in the freight house far from simple for him,
-for, of course, the duties were new and strange,
-but Jim was patient and explained everything
-clearly and in detail. Wayne found that his
-mathematical ability was more than enough to
-cope with such simple problems as fell to him.
-Most of that morning was occupied in filing away
-an accumulation of papers that had got far ahead
-of Jim during the time he had had no assistant.
-There were waybills to check after that, and once
-Wayne had to go up and down the yard on a vain
-search for a mislaid flat car loaded with two tractor
-engines. Jim, relieved of much of the clerical
-work, was busy outside most of the day, but he
-and Wayne ate their lunches together in the little
-office, Jim sharing the can of coffee he had brought.</p>
-
-<p>As the days went on Wayne’s tasks multiplied.
-He went errands to the main office down the track
-a block, he tacked waycards to freight cars, became
-an adept with lead seals and pincers, learned
-how to coax open a door that had “frozen,” became<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-friends with most of the workers and truckmen—not
-a difficult task since the story of his
-timely rescue of little Terry Mason had gone the
-rounds and even got in the <cite>Medfield Evening Star</cite>,
-although Wayne didn’t learn of that until later
-and never read the account of his heroism—and
-got on very famously for a new hand. And he
-liked his work, which is always half the battle.
-Jim began to trust him with bigger things when
-he had been there a fortnight, and Wayne proved
-worthy of the trust. Perhaps the things weren’t
-so vastly important, after all, but they seemed so
-to Wayne; to Jim, too, for that matter, for Jim
-was extremely conscientious and took his work
-seriously. After a few days Wayne got to walking
-across the tracks and up the line a ways to the
-Golden Star Lunch. He was always sure of a
-welcome there, and sometimes, when the wagon
-wasn’t very full, he and “Mister Denny” had
-long and serious conversations on a variety of
-subjects. Denny had a fair education, was an
-omnivorous reader, a good listener and held views
-of his own. Moreover, he could put his views
-into words. They were sometimes unusual, but
-Wayne had a feeling that it was a heap better to
-have opinions and be able to state them, even if
-they were queer, than to merely agree with everyone
-else.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There was one subject that never failed them as
-a conversational topic, and that was baseball.
-Denny was a “thirty-third degree fan” if ever
-there was one. Besides that he had some practical
-knowledge of the game, for he had played it
-from the time he was four feet high until he had
-bought the lunch-wagon and set up in business.
-Wayne’s command of baseball history and percentages
-was nothing like Denny’s, but he followed
-the news closely and there were some rare
-discussions at times in the Golden Star. Many of
-the freight handlers and truck drivers patronised
-Denny’s café and Wayne was surprised to find
-how much they knew of the national pastime and
-how intelligently they could talk of it. Quite
-frequently the lunch-wagon shook with the ardour
-of debate, for there were deep and hearty voices
-in the company. But a time shortly came when
-Wayne didn’t loiter in the Golden Star after his
-lunch was eaten, for he had found by then a better
-way to spend the remaining time.</p>
-
-<p>He had been in the freight house about a fortnight
-and May had come to the world, bringing
-ardent sunshine and soft breezes. Green leaves
-were unfolding and the meadows were verdant.
-It was sometimes a task in those first warm days
-to move, and the trucks that rolled incessantly
-from cars to platform and from platform to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-freight house moved more slowly. One noontime
-Wayne felt too languorous to walk even as far as
-Denny’s, and so he bought two sandwiches and
-some apples from a man who came around with a
-basket and joined the throng on the shaded platform
-where the trucks stood. After a while one of
-the younger fellows pulled a baseball from his
-pocket and soon a half-dozen were throwing and
-catching in the wide cobble-paved road behind the
-sheds. Wayne watched lazily and interestedly
-until a wild throw sent the ball rolling under a
-truck to his feet. He jumped down and rescued
-it and threw it back, choosing the man farthest
-distant and speeding the ball to him so hard and
-true that shouts of commendation rewarded him.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on out here, kid, and take a hand,”
-called one of the players, and Wayne, glad enough
-to do it, responded, forgetting that a quarter of
-an hour ago he had felt too lazy to walk two
-blocks. There was lots of fun to be had, for many
-of the players, Wayne amongst them, had not
-handled a ball since the summer before and the
-“hot ones” made them wince and yell, something
-that always brought laughter from the rest. Soon
-a dozen or so were at it and the ball passed from
-one to another, up and down the road. Occasionally
-a fly would go up and a mad scramble ensue
-in which hats fell off and the ball, as like as not,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-escaped them all. Wayne thoroughly enjoyed
-that half-hour and resolved to buy a baseball
-on his way home so that he and June could
-pass.</p>
-
-<p>A few days later someone produced a bran-new
-bat and the fun increased. At the end of a
-week or so they were playing “scrub” every noon-hour,
-and by common consent the truckmen left
-their vehicles at the far end of the platform so
-that there would be more room for playing. Even
-so the diamond was pretty narrow and the distance
-from first base to third was ludicrously
-short. A ball hit to right or left performed
-strange antics, bounding from wall or platform
-and landing almost anywhere in infield or out.
-Freight handlers, truckmen, clerks from the main
-office, switchmen, even “Big Tom” Maynard, who
-ran the Limited and laid over in Medfield twice
-a week, took part. And there was a slim, good-looking
-youth named Pattern who worked in the
-office of the coal company several blocks away and
-who could pitch a ball so that you couldn’t see it
-until it had passed you. With the exception of
-Pattern and possibly a truckman named Donovan,
-who had once played semi-professional ball on
-some team in New Jersey, Wayne was the star of
-the gatherings. He never failed of a hit save
-when Pattern was in the points, and even then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-was the only one who could come near to meeting
-that youth’s offerings, and fielded remarkably.
-So, at least, the less adept considered. “Big
-Tom,” who by virtue of having the best run on the
-road was accorded unusual respect, told Wayne
-he was wasting his time. It was a noon when
-a sudden shower had driven them to the shelter
-of the overhang.</p>
-
-<p>“If I had a wing like you’ve got, kid, I’d be
-training for the Big League. I surely would.
-You’re a natural-born ball player, son. I know
-a fellow up in Lebanon who’ll be glad to give you
-a try-out if you say the word.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I’d better stick to what I’m sure of,”
-laughed Wayne. “I reckon I wouldn’t last very
-long up there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure you would,” said Big Tom earnestly.
-“And look at the money you’d be getting! They
-wouldn’t pay you a cent under twenty dollars,
-kid!”</p>
-
-<p>“But I’m getting thirty-five here, Mr. Maynard.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re what? Thirty-five a week?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” stammered Wayne, “thirty-five a
-month.”</p>
-
-<p>“What you talking about then? Twenty a
-week’s what they’d pay you up in Lebanon.
-Maybe a lot more. Tell you what I’ll do, kid;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-I’ll tell this fellow about you the next time I
-see him, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>But Wayne shook his head. “Thanks, but I
-reckon I’ll stick here,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p>Big Tom told him he was making a mistake and
-appealed for confirmation to Pattern who had
-joined them. Pattern laughed. “Twenty dollars,
-you say? What sort of a team is it, Maynard?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a corking good team, that’s what
-sort——”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean is it professional? Or semi or what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I guess it’s a professional team. Sure
-it is. They play in the Central City League.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see. Well, I’d advise this fellow to keep
-out of it then. He’d be wasting his time with a
-bunch of pikers like that.” Pattern turned from
-Big Tom’s indignant countenance to Wayne.
-“When you think you’d like to play ball for a
-living, you tackle the manager of a real team.
-Tell him you want a try-out. He will give it to
-you if he’s any good. If he isn’t you don’t want
-to join him. These two-by-twice ball teams don’t
-get you anything but a lot of hard work and you
-can stay in one of them until you’re gray-headed
-without doing any better for yourself. I played
-with one of them one summer and I know something
-about them. When you aim, aim high. It
-pays.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I wasn’t thinking of aiming at all,” said
-Wayne. “I don’t reckon I could play baseball
-good enough for a real team.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you could and maybe you couldn’t,”
-replied Pattern. “Anyway, don’t throw up a good
-job on the off-chance of becoming a Ty Cobb or
-a Baker.”</p>
-
-<p>Big Tom took himself off, disgruntled and
-grumbling, and Pattern swung himself to the platform
-at Wayne’s side. “How old are you?” he
-asked, and raised his eyebrows when Wayne told
-him seventeen. “I’d have thought you were
-eighteen, anyway,” he said. “Played much?”</p>
-
-<p>“I played four years at home,” answered
-Wayne, “on my school team. And one summer
-with a team we got up in our town.”</p>
-
-<p>“That all? Well, some fellows are like that.
-Sort of born with the baseball knack. Comes
-naturally to them. My roommate in college was
-that sort. He didn’t have to learn, you might
-say. He was the shiftiest shortstop I ever saw
-outside professional teams. You sort of remind
-me of him the way you handle the ball.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do they really pay as much as twenty dollars
-a week?” asked Wayne. “I mean just for fielders.
-Of course I know that pitchers and star batters
-get lots of money, but I always thought most of
-it was just—just on paper.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“There are all sorts of salaries. You get somewhere
-near what you’re worth, as a general thing.
-Twenty a week is poor pay for a good fielder, my
-boy, even in the bushes. Thirty-five’s more like
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thirty-five dollars a week!” exclaimed Wayne.
-“Why, that’s more than two hundred a month!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</a><br />
-<small>NEW FRIENDS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Yes, I believe it figures out something like that,”
-laughed the other. “But, mind you, I’m not saying
-you could get that. Probably you couldn’t
-get anything yet. You’re a year or two too
-young. If I were you, and thought seriously of
-playing professional ball, I’d get on some amateur
-team this year and play with them for the
-practice.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the difference, please, between an
-amateur team and a professional?”</p>
-
-<p>“Money. On an amateur team you play for the
-love of playing and nothing else. On a professional
-team you play for the love of playing plus
-a fat salary.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see,” murmured Wayne. “But could I—I
-mean would you——”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, if I needed the money,” was the answer.
-“I wouldn’t be a professional ball player and
-expect to stick at it all my life. You can’t do it.
-The pace is too hard. But if I had the ability and
-could command a good salary for playing ball<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-I’d do it, and keep my eyes open for something
-better. I know a chap who played professional
-ball for six years and studied law in the winter
-and whenever he got a chance. Then he went into
-an office two winters. After that he quit baseball
-and now he’s doing well over in Trenton. Lots
-of folks think professional baseball is like highway
-robbery or something. They class professional
-ball players and prize fighters and thugs all
-together. I guess there was a time when some
-ball players were a roughish lot, but that’s gone
-by. Most of them are just like the rest of us
-nowadays. A lot of them lead cleaner lives than
-the folks who knock them. They have to, for one
-thing. Anyway, they do it. You can be a professional
-ball player now and be a gentleman, too.
-Most of them are. A great many are college
-fellows; practically all are educated. They don’t
-expect to make a life’s work of it, you see.
-They’ve got the gift of playing good ball and they
-turn it into money, just the same as a man who
-has the gift of teaching Greek turns it into money.
-It’s just a business proposition. Where your
-ball player has it on some of the rest of us is just
-here: he likes his work and we don’t!”</p>
-
-<p>Pattern knocked the ashes from his pipe against
-the edge of the platform and yawned. “I’ve got
-to get back,” he announced. “It’s nearly one.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-Think over what I said about joining an amateur
-team and getting practice, my boy. That’s your
-best move.” He nodded, smiled, and hurried
-away, leaving Wayne, for some reason, rather
-excited.</p>
-
-<p>He had never considered playing baseball for
-a living, had never taken his ability seriously.
-He had known since he was fourteen that he could
-field and throw and bat far better than his playmates,
-but he had accepted the fact without concern.
-They had made him captain of his school
-team in his last year and he had led them through
-a season of almost uninterrupted victories. And
-that summer he had played twice a week with
-the “White Sox,” a local aggregation formed by
-the young men and older boys in Sleepersville,
-holding down third base with phenomenal success
-and winning renown with his bat. But never until
-today had it occurred to him that he might perhaps
-earn money in such a simple way as playing
-a game he loved. It didn’t sound sensible, he
-thought. Why, he would be glad to play baseball
-for his board and lodging alone! Glad to do it
-for nothing if he could afford to! To receive
-thirty-five dollars a week, or even twenty, for
-doing it sounded absurd. But, of course, fellows
-did get paid for it, and—and—well, it was something
-to think over!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He thought it over a good deal during the succeeding
-days. He had another talk with Pattern,
-waylaying him one evening on his return from the
-coal office. He had, he said, decided to follow the
-other’s advice about joining an amateur team,
-but he didn’t know how to do it, didn’t know
-where there was such a team.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s one here in Medfield,” replied Pattern.
-“Two, in fact. The Athletics have a pretty
-fair bunch, but I don’t believe they’d take you
-on. They’re rather a silk-stocking lot. The other
-team is the Chenango. Younger fellows mostly:
-the Y. M. C. A. bunch. By the way, you don’t
-belong to the Y. M. C. A., do you? Why don’t
-you join? It won’t cost you much of anything
-and will do you a lot of good all around. You’ll
-meet fellows, for one thing. I’ll get you an application,
-Sloan. It’s something you ought to do,
-my boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to very much,” said Wayne. “But
-I’m afraid I wouldn’t have much time for playing
-ball. You see, I have to work until five every
-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Most of the others do, too, I guess. They
-usually hold practice after that time. You’ll have
-your Saturday afternoons to yourself after the
-middle of June, and they only play on Saturdays.
-You join the Association, Sloan, and I’ll make<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-you acquainted with some of the chaps there.
-You’ll find them a nice lot. And I guess you
-won’t have much trouble getting a chance to
-play.”</p>
-
-<p>Pattern—his full name was Arthur Pattern,
-as Wayne eventually learned—was as good as his
-word and four days later Wayne was a member
-of the Medfield Young Men’s Christian Association
-and had increased his list of acquaintances
-about two hundred per cent. The Association had
-a comfortable building in the new business district,
-with a well-equipped gymnasium, a small
-auditorium, reading, lounging, and game rooms,
-and a few bedrooms at the top of the building,
-one of which Arthur Pattern occupied. Pattern,
-Wayne learned, was not a native of Medfield, but
-had come there a year before from a small town
-in New Hampshire, where his folks still resided.
-Pattern preferred his room at the Y. M. C. A.
-to similar accommodation at a boarding-house.
-It was in Pattern’s little room that Wayne made
-a clean breast of his adventures for the past three
-months. His host, who had vouched for him to
-the Association without knowing any more about
-him than had been revealed to him in their few
-meetings in the freight yard, had asked no questions,
-but Wayne thought he owed some account
-of himself to his new friend. Pattern listened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-interestedly, and when Wayne had ended shook
-his head slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s none of my business, Sloan,” he said,
-“and I don’t know what you were up against
-back home, but this thing of running away is
-usually a pretty poor business. However, that’s
-done now. One thing I would do if I were you,
-though, is write back and tell your stepfather
-where you are and how you are. I guess you owe
-him that much. Will you do that?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne consented doubtfully. “I wouldn’t
-want him to come after me, though, and fetch me
-home with him,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“I dare say he could do that, but I don’t believe
-he would. From what you’ve told me of
-him—or, maybe, from what you haven’t told me—I
-gather that he might be rather relieved to be rid
-of the expense of clothing and feeding you, Sloan.
-Anything in that?”</p>
-
-<p>“A heap, I reckon. I don’t mind his knowing
-where I am as long as he doesn’t make trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see what trouble he could make,” objected
-Pattern. “Anyway, you’d feel better for
-writing. I’d tell him why I left, that I was well
-and getting on and that I meant to make my own
-way.”</p>
-
-<p>“June wrote to his mother a little while after
-we got here, so I reckon Mr. Higgins knows I’m<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-still alive. June didn’t tell where we were,
-though.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where did he mail his letter?” asked the
-other. “Here in Medfield?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then it seems to me he may have a suspicion,”
-laughed Pattern.</p>
-
-<p>“I never thought of that!” exclaimed Wayne,
-joining the laughter. “I reckon if he’d wanted
-me back he’d been after me before this, then.
-I’ll write tonight, before I go home.”</p>
-
-<p>“I would. What about this boy that’s with
-you? Why doesn’t he join here, too?”</p>
-
-<p>“June? Why, he—he’s coloured!”</p>
-
-<p>“So you said. What’s that got to do with it?
-Isn’t he a clean, decent boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes, but—I thought——”</p>
-
-<p>“We don’t draw the colour line up here, Sloan.
-We’ve got more than a dozen coloured fellows
-in the Association right now. Some of them are
-mighty well liked, too. You’d better get your
-friend to come in. It’ll be good for him and
-good for us. We’re trying to get all the new
-members we can. See if you can’t persuade
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he will join if I tell him to,” responded
-Wayne carelessly. “But it seems—sort of
-funny——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but you’re not down in Dixie now, my
-boy. Remember that.”</p>
-
-<p>For once, however, Wayne’s authority failed
-him. June firmly and respectfully declined to have
-anything to do with the Y. M. C. A. “Maybe it’s
-jus’ like you-all say, Mas’ Wayne, but I ain’ fixin’
-to act like these yere Northern darkies, no, sir!
-I done watch ’em. They acts like they thought
-they was quality, Mas’ Wayne, dressin’ themselves
-up in store clothes an’ buttin’ white folks
-right off’n the sidewalk! If they was down in
-Colquitt County someone’d hit ’em over the head
-with a axe!”</p>
-
-<p>“But this isn’t Colquitt County, June. This is
-up North, and things are different here. Up here
-a coloured man is as good as a white man—at
-least they think he is.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, Mas’ Wayne, they don’ think that,
-sir. They jus’ perten’ they thinks it. Don’ no
-white man sit down to a table with a nigger, does
-they? They lets you ride in the same car with the
-white folks, but you can’ go to white folkses hotel.
-It’s mighty mixed up, Mas’ Wayne, an’ you don’
-know where you is!”</p>
-
-<p>“But there are a lot of coloured fellows in
-the Y. M. C. A., June. Doesn’t that show that it’s
-all right for you to join it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Shows it’s all right for them, Mas’ Wayne,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-but it don’ prove nothin’ to me! I jus’ wouldn’
-care for it. White folks is white folks an’ niggers
-is niggers, an’ there ain’ no gettin’ aroun’
-it, Mas’ Wayne. No, sir, don’ you ask me to join
-no ’Sociation, Mas’ Wayne.”</p>
-
-<p>Secretly, Wayne was a little relieved at June’s
-decision, for he held the same views on the subject.
-He and June had been playmates when they
-were tiny, companions later, and friends always,
-but he had been brought up in the firm conviction
-that the negro was an inferior race. Whether
-he was right or wrong I don’t pretend to know.</p>
-
-<p>At all events, June remained firm. By this time
-he was flourishing exceedingly. His deposit had
-been paid and he was now getting three dollars
-every Monday from the proprietor of the hotel
-and earning an average of twice that amount in
-tips, all of which, it may be truthfully stated, he
-did his honest best to deserve. He was easily the
-most popular of the four bell boys employed at
-the hotel, and, since envy and malice are not confined
-to those with white skins, he had had his
-troubles. The head bell boy who, prior to June’s
-advent, had ruled the roost with a high hand,
-levying toll on the earnings of the other and
-younger boys, had not yielded his rule without
-a struggle. But he had run up against a Tartar
-in June, for the latter refused to either acknowledge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-the other’s right of dominion or give up
-any of his earnings to him. The eventual result
-was a decisive battle with fists in the furnace-room,
-a bout in which June, in spite of smaller
-size and weight, conclusively proved his superiority.
-The head bell boy retired from public life
-for the space of one whole day, and, when he returned,
-brought back with him a meek and respectful
-demeanour. June didn’t deceive himself into
-thinking that the other was any fonder of him for
-the beating he had received, but he was quite sure
-that thereafter he would be let alone.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Wayne learned a little better every
-day how to make himself useful to Jim Mason
-and every day grew to find more interest in his
-work. He became a great favourite with the men
-around the freight yard, while Jim never missed
-an opportunity to do him any kindness in his
-power. Frequently Wayne was invited to the
-house with the sun-parlor for supper or Sunday
-dinner, and less frequently he accepted the invitation
-and went. He was always certain of good,
-well-cooked food which, if plain, was abundant.
-Mrs. Mason had long since learned of Wayne’s
-rescue of Terry and could never do enough for
-him. Terry, too, welcomed the visitor, evincing
-an almost embarrassing enthusiasm for his
-society. Wayne was duly introduced to the wonderful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-hen—whose name, strangely enough,
-proved to be Teddie—and to her even more
-wonderful brood of chickens, four in number.</p>
-
-<p>In consequence of new friends and new interests,
-Wayne naturally spent less time at “Carhurst”
-and saw less of June. But June, too, had
-found friends amongst his own race and was not
-lonesome. In fact, he confided to Wayne one evening
-after supper, while the latter was anxiously
-examining the growth of his plants and watering
-them from the dish pan, that he “liked this yere
-place right smart,” adding that he “reckoned it
-wasn’t never intended they should go to New
-York.” June had blossomed forth in new clothes
-which, while extremely inexpensive, made him
-look quite fine. Wayne tried to tease him by
-saying that he was just like a Northern nigger
-now, but June didn’t mind. “’Tain’ your clothes,
-Mas’ Wayne, that makes you ’spectable,” he said.
-“It’s the way you acts!”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne, too, had provided himself with new
-attire. It was Arthur Pattern who tactfully
-hinted at the advisability of enlarging his wardrobe,
-something that Wayne had had in mind for
-a fortnight and had been deterred from doing only
-by the realisation of the tremendous hole the outlay
-would make in his savings. When he did
-emerge from the clothing store carrying a neat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-blue serge suit in a big pasteboard box he was as
-near penniless as one could be and have a jingle
-left in his pocket! But the expenditure paid for
-itself if only in the comfortable feeling of being
-decently dressed when Wayne went to the Y. M.
-C. A. of an afternoon, as had become his custom.
-Usually Arthur Pattern stopped for him on his
-way past the freight house and they walked uptown
-together. Wayne saw his circle of acquaintances
-grow from day to day, thanks to Arthur,
-and it wasn’t long before he could truthfully echo
-June’s sentiments and say that he “liked this
-yere place right smart.” And finally, as May was
-drawing to its end, he secured what he had hoped
-for from the first, an invitation to join the
-Chenango Base-Ball Club squad and show what
-he could do.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</a><br />
-<small>THE CHENANGO CLUB</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The club had already played several games by
-that time, but, as all the members were either
-attending high school or employed at work, one
-day’s line-up was seldom like another’s. Captain
-Taylor never knew until the last moment which
-of his team members would be able to play and in
-consequence he tried to have two good players
-for every position. Practice was held in a field
-on the edge of town leased by the Association.
-It wasn’t either very level or very spacious, but
-it sufficed. It had a board fence around it, contained
-a small grand stand, a shed which answered
-the purpose of dressing-room, a cinder track, one-eighth
-mile in circumference, and jumping pits.
-The practice hour was five o’clock, or as soon
-after as the fellows could reach the field, and they
-kept at it as long as daylight lasted or hunger
-would go unappeased.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne found some twenty-odd fellows in attendance
-the afternoon of his first appearance.
-All of them wore a uniform of some description<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-or a portion of one. All, that is, save Wayne, who
-had given no thought to the matter of attire. Still,
-he was no worse off than Hoffman, whose regalia
-consisted of a pair of football trousers and stockings
-in combination with his usual street clothes.
-Hoffman was a catcher, and when he donned mask
-and protector he made a laughable appearance.
-His first name was Augustus, but he had been
-known as Gus until he had become a clerk in the
-office of the gas company. Now he was called
-“Gas” Hoffman. He was a fairly good catcher
-and a slugging batsman, as catchers so often
-are.</p>
-
-<p>Practice with the Chenangos was work very
-largely diluted with play. As a captain, Joe
-Taylor was anything but a martinet. Wayne,
-recalling his own strict discipline when he had
-captained his school team the year before, decided
-that Taylor erred on the side of laxity.
-Perhaps, however, the Chenango captain knew his
-business, for there was a very evident disinclination
-on the part of most of the candidates to take
-their occupation seriously. They were there for
-fun and meant to have it. Wayne had wondered
-that Arthur Pattern had not tried for the team
-until Arthur had explained that his playing on a
-semi-professional team in New Hampshire one
-summer had taken him out of the amateur class<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-and that since the Chenango was a purely amateur
-club he would have no right there.</p>
-
-<p>The fellows at the field that afternoon averaged
-nineteen years of age. One or two were older,
-among them “Gas” Hoffman and Captain Taylor.
-Gas was twenty-three and Taylor twenty-one. To
-even the average, young Despaigne, who played
-shortstop very cleverly, was only seventeen, and
-Collins, a fielder, was scarcely older. Wayne suffered
-for lack of baseball shoes that day and made
-up his mind to buy a pair at the first opportunity.
-There was about twenty minutes of fielding and
-batting practice and then two teams were chosen
-and six innings were played. Wayne was put at
-third base on the second-string nine and made a
-good impression in spite of his lack of practice.
-At bat he failed ignominiously to hit safely even
-once, but, having waited out the pitcher in one
-inning, he got to first and gave a very pretty exhibition
-of base-stealing a moment later, reaching
-the coveted bag simultaneously with the ball but
-eluding it by a dexterous hook-slide that kept him
-far out of reach of the baseman’s sweep.</p>
-
-<p>It was all over at half-past six and the fellows
-walked back toward the centre of town together,
-still very full of spirits, disappearing one by one
-down side streets until at last only Hal Collins,
-a tall youth named Wheelock, and Wayne remained.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-Wheelock played first base and was thin
-and angular and wore glasses over a pair of pale,
-peering eyes. He was about nineteen, Wayne
-judged, and had a slow, drawling manner of
-speech and a dry humour. Collins was a quick,
-nervous youngster, inclined to be sarcastic.
-Wayne liked Jim Wheelock best, although for a
-while he was never sure whether Jim’s remarks
-were serious or otherwise. It was Jim who
-praised Wayne’s throws to first base as they
-tramped along Whitney Street.</p>
-
-<p>“You peg the ball across like you were looking
-where you were sending it,” drawled Jim. “Playing
-first would be a cinch if they all did that,
-Sloan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jim’s idea of playing first,” said Hal Collins,
-“is to stand on the bag and pick ’em off his
-chest. He hates to reach for anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“My arms are four inches longer than they
-were before I started playing ball with this gang,”
-responded Jim, “and I’ve got joints in my legs
-that aren’t human!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t any of them look human to me,” said
-Hal. “Say, where was Harry Brewster today?
-Someone said he was sick or something.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, he’s got the sleeping disease,” answered
-Jim gravely. “Had it ever since he got his berth
-in the State National. That’s why they call it a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-berth when you get a job in a bank. They give
-you a column of figures to add up in the morning
-and if you’re not asleep by half-past ten they
-fire you. About four they go around with a pole
-and jab it through the cages. If you don’t wake
-up then they put a blanket over you and lock
-you in. They say Harry’s the best little sleeper
-they’ve got. Wouldn’t wonder if they made him
-president pretty soon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, quit your kidding,” laughed Hal. “What
-<em>is</em> the matter with him, Jim?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cold. Went to sleep on a New York draft
-yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure it wasn’t counting coins? You can catch
-gold that way, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but it’s not so hard to check. Good-night,
-fellows.” Jim tramped off down a side street
-and Collins asked Wayne which way he went.</p>
-
-<p>“I go down the next street,” was the answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Boarding?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I—we keep house. About two miles out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Well, see you again. Here’s my turn.
-Good-night.”</p>
-
-<p>It was nearly dark when Wayne reached “Carhurst”
-and June had supper ready and waiting.
-Sam was ready and waiting, too, but he forgot his
-hunger long enough to make a fuss over his
-master. Wayne narrated his experiences of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-day while they plied busy knives and forks and
-then June brought the chronicle of his life down
-to date. But the most interesting item of information
-to Wayne was June’s announcement that one
-of the tomato plants had buds on it, and nothing
-would do but that Wayne had to jump up from
-“table” and rush forth in the twilight and see for
-himself. The garden was showing promise by
-that time, although nothing was more than a few
-inches high.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne was up early the next morning so as to
-do a half-hour’s gardening before he left for
-town. He had long since made the discovery that
-eradicating grass from a meadow is not a simple
-matter of removing the turf, for the grass was
-always threatening to choke his seedlings utterly,
-and it was only by watching and working that he
-was able to keep it down. When he wasn’t weeding
-he was poking up the dirt with a pointed
-stick in lieu of trowel. June called this “coaxin’
-’em,” and opined that “if they flowers don’ act
-pretty, Mas’ Wayne, ’twon’ be no fault o’ yourn!”
-But it was the tomato plants that interested June
-most, and he was forever estimating the crop to
-be picked later on from the six rather spindling
-plants that they had bought at the grocer’s. He
-declared that each one ought to yield fifteen “big,
-red, ripe, juicy tomatuses,” and that if they consumed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-only six a day the supply would provide
-for them only two weeks. It was June’s firm and
-oft reiterated conviction that they should have
-planted just three times as many! Tomatoes
-were a weakness with June.</p>
-
-<p>But two days later he found something besides
-the prospective tomato crop to interest his idle
-hours. At Wayne’s invitation he met the latter
-at the freight house one afternoon and accompanied
-him out to the Y. M. C. A. field to watch
-the doings. But just looking on never suited
-June very well and it wasn’t a quarter of an hour
-before he was on speaking terms with everyone
-there. The fellows enjoyed hearing his soft dialect
-and did their best to draw him out, punctuating
-his remarks with laughter. June was speedily
-established on the bench, and from just sitting
-idly there to presiding over the bats and the
-fortunes of the players was but a short step.</p>
-
-<p>“Jus’ you let me choose you a bat, Mister
-Cap’n. I goin’ put a conjur on this yere stick o’
-wood, sir, an’ you-all’s goin’ to everlastin’ly lam
-that yere ball, yes, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>As it happened Joe Taylor did “everlastingly
-lam the ball,” sending it over left fielder’s head,
-and June’s reputation as a prophet, as well as
-his status as Keeper of the Bats, was firmly established.
-He was back again the next day, good-natured<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-and smiling and anxious to serve, and
-was welcomed like a long-lost friend. June was
-never “fresh,” no matter how many opportunities
-were presented, nor would he accept the footing
-of equality that was offered him. He picked
-up the bat hurled aside by the man streaking to
-first and dropped it neatly in its place in front of
-the bench, soon knew which bat each player liked
-best and was ready with it, saw that the water
-pail was kept filled and, in brief, filled the office of
-general factotum so well that the question arose
-of how they had ever got along without him!</p>
-
-<p>It was Jim Wheelock who suggested June’s
-adoption as official club mascot. “No wonder we
-don’t win more’n half our games,” drawled Jim.
-“We’ve never had a mascot. Here’s our chance,
-fellows. That darkey was just created to be a
-mascot. You can see it written all over him.
-Here’s where our luck changes.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll stake him to a uniform,” suggested Joe
-Taylor, “and take him over to Ludlow Saturday.
-Guess we’ll have style if nothing else!”</p>
-
-<p>June was complacent, even proud. “Fetch
-along your uniform, Mister Cap’n,” he said.
-“Only don’ you put no stripes on it, please, sir.”
-When, however, June learned that he was required
-to take train with the fellows at two o’clock he
-was dubious. “Don’ know about that, gen’lemen.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-You see, I got a mighty ’portant position at the
-hotel an’ I dunno will my boss let me off.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll ask him to, June,” replied Taylor.
-“He’s a regular baseball fan himself and never
-misses a home game, I guess. He won’t kick. You
-leave it to us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, jus’ as you says. I surely would love
-to ’company you-all. I reckon Mas’ Wayne won’
-have no objection.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who? Sloan? What’s he got to say about
-it, June?” demanded Hal Collins. “He doesn’t
-own you, does he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’ nobody <em>own</em> me,” replied June, “but
-Mas’ Wayne he got the say-so, yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>So Wayne was called into consultation and gave
-his permission, and on Saturday, when the team,
-fourteen strong as to players and half a hundred
-strong as to “rooters,” left Medfield they took
-with them one Junius Brutus Bartow Tasker
-radiantly attired in a bran-new suit of light gray
-flannel, with a pair of blue stockings and a jaunty
-cap. The shirt was a great joy to June, for on
-the left side was a big blue “C” surrounding an
-Indian’s head. Jim Wheelock told him the
-Indian was Mr. Chenango, after whom the club
-was named, and that he had been in his time a
-celebrated first baseman with the Susquehannock
-Club of the Passamaquoddy League. How much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-of that June believed I can’t say, but he certainly
-was proud of those baseball togs.</p>
-
-<p>They played the Ludlow Y. M. C. A. that afternoon
-and were beaten ingloriously, 14 to 4. The
-Chenangos relied on their second-best pitcher,
-and his work was nearer third-best on that occasion.
-Wayne got a chance in the eighth inning,
-pinch-hitting for Despaigne, who was never a
-strong batter, and subsequently going in at third
-when a substitute was wanted. Wayne did well
-enough in the infield but failed to hit, which was
-about the way with the others. Hitting was the
-Chenangos’ weak point that day. Pitching was
-another, however, scarcely less lamentable. As
-Jim Wheelock said on the way home, it would
-have taken eighteen fellows instead of nine to keep
-Ludlow from scoring her runs. Jordan, the substitute
-pitcher, was hit “fast, far, and frequent,”
-and the tiredest members of the visiting team
-were the outfielders.</p>
-
-<p>Several good-natured jibes were aimed at June
-on the return trip, but June didn’t mind them a
-bit. “Ain’ no mascot as ever was, gen’lemen, can
-change the luck for a team that ain’ hittin’. I
-done my mascotin’ all right, but you gen’lemen
-didn’ give me no kind o’ support!”</p>
-
-<p>There was one thing about his companions that
-Wayne admired, and that was their good nature<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-in defeat. He remembered that when his school
-team had returned from that disastrous contest
-with Athens High gloom thick enough to be cut
-with a knife had enveloped them. After all, playing
-ball was sport and not business, and why
-should they be downhearted over a defeat?
-Whether they should or not, they certainly were
-not. Even Jordan, who had so ignominiously
-failed in the box, seemed no whit upset, nor did
-the rest hold it against him. They had quite as
-merry a time of it returning home as they had had
-going to Ludlow.</p>
-
-<p>But it was apparent on Monday that Captain
-Taylor meant to do better the next time. Several
-substitutes were changed over into the first nine,
-and Wayne was amongst them. Wayne was
-bothered because he couldn’t hit the ball as he was
-capable of hitting it, but comforted himself with
-the assurance that practice would bring back his
-former skill. But it didn’t seem to. In the next
-four practice games he secured but one clean hit,
-a two-bagger, and a very doubtful “scratch.” He
-confided to June one evening that he was afraid
-he had forgotten how to hit. “That fellow Chase
-isn’t nearly as much of a pitcher as Ned Calhoun
-was, and I never had much trouble with Ned,
-did I?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mas’ Wayne,” said June, “I done been watchin’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-you, sir, an’ I goin’ to tell you-all jus’ what
-the trouble is.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you would,” sighed Wayne. “What
-is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“You-all’s too anxious. Anxiousness jus’
-sticks out all over you when you goes to bat. Now
-the nex’ time, Mas’ Wayne, jus’ you go up there
-an’ tell you’self you don’ care ’tall if you hits or
-if you don’ hit. Jus’ you forget how anxious you
-is an’ watch that ol’ pill an’ hit it on the nose.
-If you does that, sir, you’s goin’ to see it travel,
-yes, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne thought it over and decided that perhaps
-June had really found the trouble. At all
-events, the advice sounded good and he determined
-to try to profit by it. The result wasn’t
-very encouraging the next day, but on Friday he
-had the satisfaction of getting two hard singles,
-and after that his return to form was speedy.
-Neither Chase, the Chenangos’ best twirler, nor
-Jordan, who was capable of pitching very decent
-ball when at his best, had any further terror for
-him. He lambasted them both impartially, much
-to June’s delight. “What did I done tell you,
-Mas’ Wayne?” he demanded as Wayne returned
-to the bench after turning his second hit into a
-run with the aid of Gas Hoffman’s single and a
-stolen base. “Ain’ nobody else got them two hits<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-today yet, sir. Reckon you’s done come into your
-own again, Mas’ Wayne!”</p>
-
-<p>They went up against the Athletics, the team
-that Arthur Pattern had referred to as “a silk-stocking
-lot,” the next afternoon and scored a
-victory when, with the bases full in the seventh,
-Larry Colton banged a two-bagger down the alley
-into right. The three resulting runs put the Chenangos
-two tallies to the good and there they
-stayed in spite of the Athletics’ desperate efforts
-to score in the eighth and ninth. It was Wayne
-who cut off a run in the first of those two innings
-when he reached far above his head and brought
-down what was labelled “two bases” when it left
-the bat. A perfect peg to second caught the
-runner flat-footed and retired the side.</p>
-
-<p>That play, together with two singles and a base
-on balls in four times at bat, settled Wayne’s
-right to a position on the team. In fact, he was
-already spoken of as the best player in the infield,
-although to Wayne it seemed that no amateur
-could handle himself and the ball as Victor Despaigne
-did at shortstop. But Despaigne, while
-he fielded almost miraculously, was a more uncertain
-thrower, and only Jim Wheelock’s reach—and,
-possibly, those extra joints of which he
-had told—saved him from many errors.</p>
-
-<p>The regular second baseman was a chap named<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-Tad Stearns. Tad played his position steadily
-if not spectacularly, and Captain Taylor was perfectly
-satisfied with him. It was Tad who almost
-invariably took Hoffman’s throws to the second
-bag and who was always a stumbling-block in the
-way of second-nine fellows seeking to win renown
-as base-stealers. When, some three weeks after
-Wayne’s connection with the team, Tad fell down
-an elevator shaft in the carpet factory where he
-was employed as shipping clerk and broke his left
-arm and otherwise incapacitated himself for either
-work or play for some two months to follow, Taylor
-was left in a quandary. Tad Stearns’ understudy,
-Herrick, was not good enough, and when
-the news reached the field one afternoon that Tad
-was out of the game for the rest of the summer
-there was a consultation that included everyone
-on hand. As frequently occurred, it was Jim
-Wheelock who offered the most promising solution.</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you let Sloan go to second,” he
-asked, “and put Whiteback at third? You want
-a good man on second.”</p>
-
-<p>“That might do,” answered Joe, “if Sloan can
-play second. Ever try it, Sloan?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve played second a little,” Wayne answered.
-“I’ll be glad to try it again if you like.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” agreed Hoffman, swinging his mask,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-“that’s the best way out of it. Beat it down there,
-Sloan, and I’ll slip you a few throws. You and
-Vic ought to work together finely.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said Captain Taylor, “we’ll try it
-that way. Billy White, you take third, will you?
-It’s just like Tad to fall down a shaft right in the
-middle of the season,” he ended grumblingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Jim drily, “he never did have any
-consideration for folks. Thoughtless, I call him.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe grinned. “Oh, well, I suppose he didn’t
-mean to do it,” he answered. “I must drop
-around this evening and see how he is. All right,
-fellows! Let’s get at it!”</p>
-
-<p>So that is how Wayne became a second instead
-of a third baseman. After two or three days in
-the position he decided, and all who watched him
-in action decided, that second was where he belonged.
-He took throws from the plate nicely
-and developed an almost uncanny ability to outguess
-the base-runner, and the way he blocked
-him off was good to see. He had to guard against
-over-throwing to first for a while, for the distance
-was strange, but it didn’t take him long to learn
-to snap instead of speeding them to Wheelock.
-The best thing of all, however, was the way in
-which he and Vic Despaigne fitted into each
-other. As Gas Hoffman had predicted, they
-worked together nicely and double plays began<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-to be so frequent as to scarcely merit remark. At
-third, White got along very well, although he was
-scarcely as dependable as Wayne had been. He
-got better as the season progressed, however, and
-by the first of July the Chenango infield was about
-as good as they make them for amateur teams.</p>
-
-<p>Up to that time the club had played seven
-games, of which it had won three, lost three, and
-tied one. The Fourth of July contest was with
-the Toonalta A. A., and, since Toonalta had beaten
-Joe’s charges the year before and the year before
-that, Chenango was very anxious to score a victory.
-The game was to be played at Medfield, a
-fact calculated to favour the home team, and Joe
-and most of the others were quite hopeful. But
-Joe didn’t allow that to keep him from putting the
-nine through some very strenuous practice during
-the week preceding the contest.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</a><br />
-<small>MEDFIELD CELEBRATES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Medfield began her celebration of the Fourth
-about twenty-four hours ahead of time and gradually
-worked up to a top-notch of noise, eloquence,
-and patriotism at approximately one o’clock
-Tuesday afternoon, at which hour the observances
-in City Park were at their height. Everyone had
-turned out, in spite of the almost unbearable heat,
-and every club or association, from the Grand
-Army Post to the Medfield Women’s Civic Association,
-had marched in the procession that,
-headed by a platoon of police and a very stout
-Grand Marshal seated precariously on one of
-Callahan’s livery horses, had, in the words of the
-next day’s <cite>Morning Chronicle</cite>, “taken just forty-eight
-minutes to pass a given point.” The
-<cite>Chronicle</cite> neglected, however, to mention the fact
-that the given point to which it referred was the
-Grand Street crossing where the procession had
-been held up quite ten minutes by an inconsiderate
-freight train! Still, it was a fine parade, any way
-you looked at it. The Fire Department made a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-glorious showing, the Sons of Veterans marched
-well in spite of the small boys who got under their
-feet, the High School Cadets displayed quite a
-martial appearance, and the various floats, from
-that of the Women’s Civic Association, which depicted
-a somewhat wabbly, Grecian-robed America
-accepting a liberty cap from General Washington,
-down to the clattering, tinkling wagon hung with
-tin pans and dippers and plates and dustpans that
-represented the Medfield Stamping Works, all
-added to the brilliance of the occasion!</p>
-
-<p>You may be certain that neither Wayne nor
-June missed that parade. On the contrary, they
-viewed it four separate and distinct times, dodging
-through side streets as soon as the tail end
-had passed and reaching a new point of vantage
-before the head of it appeared. June was frankly
-disappointed in that the Grand Marshal managed
-somehow to remain in the saddle until the very
-end and then left it of his own free will and, it is
-suspected, very thankfully. June remained hopeful
-to the last, but was doomed to disappointment.
-He had a wearied, sleepy appearance today, had
-June, explained by the fact that he had stayed up
-all last night with some of his cronies, doing his
-best to make the occasion memorable in the annals
-of Medfield, assisting at the lighting and nourishing
-of the bonfire on Tannery Hill, observing the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-firing of the cannon in the park at dawn, and finally
-returning to “Carhurst” at breakfast time with
-the look of one completely surfeited with pleasure.
-Wayne had been rather cross at first, but his
-anger had subsided at sight of June’s left hand.
-June, it seemed, had lighted a Roman candle and,
-unwisely obeying the instructions of an acquaintance,
-had held it by the business end. He hadn’t
-held it that way long, but long enough to burn
-the palm of his hand so badly that he had to wear
-a bandage for nearly a week.</p>
-
-<p>The two boys listened to the speeches and singing
-at the park, ate a hurried and fragmentary
-dinner at a downtown lunch-room, and then hied
-themselves to the Y. M. C. A. field. The game
-with Toonalta was to begin at half-past two, but
-owing to the fact that Joe Taylor and Jim
-Wheelock and one or two others had spent the
-noontime swaying about on top of the Association
-float and that it took them some time to change
-from Historical Personages to baseball players,
-it was nearly three when, before an audience that
-crowded the stand and flowed over on both sides
-of the field, Pete Chase wound up and sent the
-first delivery speeding across the plate for a
-strike.</p>
-
-<p>It was a sizzling hot afternoon, with scarcely
-a breath of air blowing across the diamond. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-glare on the gray-brown dirt of the base path
-hurt the eyes, and Wayne, clad in almost immaculate,
-new baseball togs, felt the perspiration trickling
-down his back and from under the edge of his
-cap. Between him and the pitcher’s box heat
-waves danced and shimmered. His throwing hand
-was moist and he wiped it on a trouser leg. The
-Chenango infield was talking hearteningly to
-Chase and each other, Jim Wheelock’s drawl
-mingling with Vic Despaigne’s sharp staccato.
-There were two umpires that day and Wayne was
-wondering how the one on the bases stood the heat
-in his blue flannel attire, with his coat buttoned
-tightly from chin to waist. Chase wasted one
-and then put a second strike across. Medfield’s
-adherents cheered and the chatter in the field increased
-again. Then there was a <em>crack</em> and Chase
-put up a lazy gloved hand, turned and tossed the
-ball to Jim. One out!</p>
-
-<p>After that, for several innings, Wayne forgot
-how hot he was. East, the Toonalta left fielder,
-also fell victim to Chase’s slants, but Burns,
-second baseman, slammed a hard one at Despaigne
-and that youth made his first error. Although he
-recovered his fumble like lightning, the runner,
-a fast chap on the dirt, was safe by the time the
-ball was in Jim Wheelock’s hands. A single past
-White sent the runner to second and placed the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-rival shortstop on first, but the trouble ended a
-few minutes later when Pete Chase scored his
-third strike-out in one inning.</p>
-
-<p>Joe Taylor had rearranged his line-up for
-today’s battle. Hal Collins, left fielder, led off
-and was followed by Wheelock, first baseman,
-Taylor, right fielder, Colton, centre fielder, White,
-third baseman, Hoffman, catcher, Sloan, second
-baseman, Despaigne, shortstop, and Chase,
-pitcher.</p>
-
-<p>The Toonalta pitcher, Ellis by name, was
-heralded as a wonder, and before the game started
-the team was undeniably in awe of him. But by
-the time the first inning was at an end the awe had
-disappeared. Nor did it return, for only one
-strike-out did Ellis have to his credit when the
-contest was over, and that the game went as it
-did was due rather to the Toonalta fielding than
-to the twirler’s science. It was a hitting game
-from first to last, a game in which slip-ups in fielding
-by either side would have spelled disaster at
-any moment. As for strike-outs, after the first
-inning Chase hung up but two more scalps, giving
-him, however, a creditable total of five for the
-game.</p>
-
-<p>It was Hal Collins who took the first jab at
-Ellis’ reputation as a pitcher. Hal failed to hit
-safely, but his fly to deep centre on the second<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-ball pitched might easily have gone for three bags,
-and the fielder’s catch, made on the run, brought
-a salvo of applause from friend and foe alike.
-Jim Wheelock, with the score two-and-two, sent
-a sharp single down the first base line. Joe
-Taylor tried hard to land safely but only succeeded
-in dropping an easy one into shortstop’s
-glove and Colton brought the inning to an end by
-banging a low fly to right fielder. Jim never got
-beyond first, but as every man up had connected
-in some fashion with Ellis’ delivery the home
-team’s respect for his skill fell to zero.</p>
-
-<p>In Toonalta’s second things began to happen
-at once. The brown-stockinged first baseman hit
-between Wayne and Jim Wheelock for a base and
-only a fine stop and throw by Joe Taylor kept
-him from taking second. The next man hit to
-Wayne, and Wayne fielded to Despaigne, cutting
-off the first runner by a yard. There was, though,
-no chance for a double. With one on, Browne,
-Toonalta’s right fielder, let Chase work two
-strikes across before he found anything to his
-liking. Perhaps Chase held him too lightly. At
-all events the fourth offering was a perfectly
-straight, fast ball and the batsman leaned against
-it hard, so hard that the sphere cleared Chase’s
-head at a speed roughly estimated at a mile a
-minute, climbed up out of Wayne’s reach, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-kept right on going. And when it finally did
-come to earth no one saw it, for it landed somewhere
-beyond the fence at the far end of the field!
-The handful of Toonalta “rooters” stood up and
-shouted themselves hoarse and blared through
-red, white, and blue megaphones and waved anything
-they could lay their hands on, while a deep
-and all-pervading silence rested over the Medfield
-forces. Two runs came across and things looked
-rather blue for the home team, or perhaps I should
-say brown, since brown was the Toonalta colour.</p>
-
-<p>The discredited Ellis fouled out to Gas Hoffman
-and the head of the visitors’ list was thrown
-out, Despaigne to Wheelock, and the trouble was
-over for the moment. For Chenango, Billy White
-led off with a safety to left and went to second a
-minute later when first baseman let Ellis’ throw
-go past him. Hoffman hit to Ellis, the pitcher
-spearing the ball with his gloved hand and holding
-White at second. Wayne produced the third
-safety of the game by trickling a slow one down
-the first base line, sending White to third and
-putting himself on first. Despaigne hit to second
-baseman and the latter hurled to the plate, getting
-Billy White. Wayne took second and Despaigne
-was safe at first. Chase worried Ellis for a pass
-and the bases were full. Medfield howled gleefully
-as Hal Collins stepped to the plate, for a hit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-would tie up the game. But there were two down
-and Ellis tightened up, and, with two balls and
-one strike on him, Collins bit at a bad one and
-it came down into third baseman’s waiting hands
-just over the foul line.</p>
-
-<p>But that inning encouraged the Chenangos, for,
-as Joe Taylor said confidently, if they kept on
-hitting Ellis as they had been hitting him something
-was sure to break lose sooner or later.
-June, presiding at the bats and lording it a bit in
-his fine uniform, predicted ruin and desolation
-for the enemy in the fifth inning. “Ain’ nothin’
-goin’ to happen till then,” he declared, looking
-wise and rolling his eyes, “but when it do happen
-it’s goin’ to happen, yes, sir! You min’ my words,
-gen’lemen!” June wasn’t far wrong, either, as
-things turned out, for nothing did happen until
-the fifth and even if that inning didn’t prove quite
-as disastrous to the enemy as he had predicted,
-why, perhaps, that wasn’t his fault.</p>
-
-<p>Four men faced Chase in the third, the first getting
-a scratch hit, the second sacrificing him to
-the next bag and the other two proving easy outs.
-In the home team’s half, Jim Wheelock flied out
-to centre fielder, Joe Taylor to first baseman—it
-was a hot liner, but the chap held onto it—and
-Colton went out third to first. In the fourth,
-Toonalta started out with a walk, followed with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-a sacrifice hit, a fly to Collins in left field, another
-pass and still another one—three for the inning.
-Then Jordan was warming up over behind third
-and the infield was begging Chase to take his time
-and stop fooling, and, with bases filled, half a
-hundred seemingly insane spectators yelling like
-wild Indians, Gas Hoffman looking pretty set
-about the mouth and Pete Chase plainly slipping,
-hit a long fly to Collins and so ended as nerve-racking
-a quarter of an hour as the contest provided!
-When that ball settled into Hal Collins’
-hands the shout that went up must certainly have
-been heard at the corner of Main and Whitney
-Streets, which is equivalent to saying a mile and a
-half away! Anyone who has played through that
-sort of a half-inning knows the vast and blessed
-relief that comes when the end arrives and the
-men on bases turn, grumbling, away and the team
-trots triumphantly in. They pounded each other’s
-backs and slapped Chase on the shoulder and
-shook hands with him quite as though he had
-not himself caused all the anxiety and suspense.
-June’s face was one big, white-toothed
-grin!</p>
-
-<p>“That’s their last chance!” proclaimed Captain
-Taylor. “They’ll never get another one like
-it. Now, then, fellows, let’s go in and cop this
-game right now!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But they didn’t. Billy White hit a weak one
-to Ellis and was out by a mile. Hoffman popped
-up a mean little foul to the catcher and Wayne,
-hitting safely to short left, obeyed instructions
-and tried to stretch the hit to two bases and
-was caught a foot off by a fine throw from left
-fielder.</p>
-
-<p>Again Toonalta secured a hit, her fifth, after
-one man was gone in the first half of the next
-inning. It was Gore, shortstop, who performed
-the feat, and it was Gore who gave as pretty an
-exhibition of base-stealing as one ever sees. He
-stole second when the Toonalta catcher struck out
-and blocked Hoffman’s throw and then stole third
-a moment later. Gas got the ball to White as
-quick as he could, but Gore was already sliding
-his cleats against the bag. Even Medfield cheered
-that exploit, realising the next instant that, even
-with two down, everything predicted another tally
-for the enemy. But once more Fortune favoured
-the Blues. Or perhaps the credit should go to
-Pete Chase. At least, Wayne didn’t deserve much
-of it, for the ball that came at him was breast-high
-and he didn’t have to move from his tracks to
-take it. Anyhow, it ended another anxious
-moment, and the Chenangos again went to
-bat.</p>
-
-<p>This was the last of the fifth, Toonalta was still<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-two runs to the home team’s none and it was
-surely time to do something in the way of scoring
-if anything was to be done. When the other
-crowd is two runs to the good, and the game is
-just half over, you begin to count innings!
-Despaigne started out poorly enough, trickling
-a bunt to third and being thrown out easily. Chase
-did no better, being retired by second baseman
-to first. The home team’s hopes dwindled again
-and its supporters, human-like, began to grumble
-and make pessimistic remarks. But Hal Collins
-was hopefully applauded, nevertheless, when he
-stepped to the plate, looking, as it seemed, a little
-more determined than usual in spite of the smile
-that curled his lips. The smile was the result of
-June’s earnest plea to “Please, sir, Mister Collins,
-r’ar up an’ bust it!”</p>
-
-<p>Pitcher Ellis, with two gone, took Collins untroubledly.
-He tried to sneak the first one across
-for a strike, to be sure, failing narrowly, but after
-that he sent in two wide ones, and Hal would have
-had three balls to his credit had he not, for some
-reason, swung at the third delivery, missed it
-widely and made the score one-and-two. Ellis
-tried a drop then; Collins had fallen for it before;
-but it went unheeded and put him in the hole.
-There was nothing to do then but let Collins hit—or
-pass him—and Ellis wasn’t issuing many<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-passes today. The next delivery was high and
-over the plate, and Collins fouled it into the stand.
-The next was lower and might have gone for a
-ball had not the batsman swung at it, met it fairly
-on the end of his bat, and sent it travelling down
-the field just over first baseman’s head and hardly
-more than a yard inside the foul line. It
-was good for two bases and Medfield cheered
-wildly.</p>
-
-<p>“Bring him in, Jim!” cried the Blue team as
-the Chenango first baseman accepted the bats that
-June proffered and strode to the plate, and
-“Here we go!” shouted a strong-voiced spectator.
-“Here we go! Hi! Hi! Hi! Hi! Hi!” A hundred
-others took up his chant and beat time to it with
-feet on planking or with clapping hands. Whether
-the pandemonium had its effect on Pitcher Ellis
-or not, certain it is that his first delivery was
-grooved if ever ball was grooved, and equally
-certain is it that Jim Wheelock drove it straight
-past the pitcher and out of the infield and that
-Hal Collins tore around from second, touched
-third with flying feet and slid into the plate well
-ahead of the ball!</p>
-
-<p>“There’s one of ’em!” shrieked Hoffman.
-“Let’s have another, Cap! Hit it out! Bust it!”</p>
-
-<p>Joe Taylor tried his best to bring Jim in from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-second, but failed, finally flying out to centre field
-and ending the rally.</p>
-
-<p>Still one to two was better than two to nothing,
-and the home team trotted hopefully out to their
-places for the beginning of the sixth.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</a><br />
-<small>WAYNE BEATS OUT THE BALL</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Rider, the Browns’ third sack artist, waited out
-two offerings and then slammed the next down the
-base line to Billy White. Billy was having a bad
-day, and, although he knocked the ball down, he
-couldn’t heave it to Jim in time to get his man,
-and another black mark was set against Billy’s
-fair fame. This poor beginning was speedily
-remedied, though, when the Toonalta right fielder
-hit to Despaigne, and Vic, performing one of
-his circus stunts, grabbed the ball as it bounded
-past him well to the right and tossed it to Wayne
-as the latter sped to the bag. Still going, Wayne
-half turned and chucked underhand to Jim, completing
-as pretty a double play as one would wish
-to see. Medfield voiced delight and approval and
-relief very loudly and very long while Ellis walked
-to the plate and faced Chase, grimly determined
-to get a hit. But Chase knew his opponent’s
-weakness and toyed with him until the score
-stood two strikes and one ball. Then, however,
-Ellis managed to connect with the next delivery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-and send it high into the air behind first base.
-For a long moment it looked safe, but Wayne got
-under it after a hard run and squeezed it.</p>
-
-<p>For the Chenangos, Colton flied out to shortstop,
-Billy White hit to second and was out on a
-close decision that brought a howl of protest from
-the blue nine’s supporters and Hoffman made his
-first—and last—hit, a bounder over shortstop’s
-head. Wayne went up with the encouraging applause
-of the Medfield supporters in his ears and
-faced Ellis calmly. He had been twice up and
-had two hits to his credit, and he meant to keep
-his score perfect. But he was reckoning without
-Fate, for after Ellis had pitched a wide one on
-the supposition that Hoffman would steal on the
-first ball, and then had sneaked a low strike across—low
-ones constituted Wayne’s batting weakness,
-and he knew the fact and meant to profit by the
-knowledge—the hit-and-run signal came, Wayne
-swung at a high one on the inside, missed it and
-watched the ball hurtle down to shortstop and
-saw Gas put out at second. Wayne disappointedly
-tossed his bat to June and went back to the
-field.</p>
-
-<p>Toonalta started the seventh with the head of
-her batting-list up. This was Brook, her centre
-fielder, a player with some reputation for getting
-to first and for moving along afterward. So far,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-though, he had not lived up to that reputation,
-since in three times at the plate he had reached
-the initial sack but one, that being when Chase
-had passed him in the nerve-racking fourth. He
-was due now, as it proved, to sweeten his average,
-and at the expense of Billy White, for when he
-swung at Chase’s second delivery and slammed
-it straight at Billy the latter made his second
-error of the game. The ball went through him,
-and had Brook taken advantage of his chance he
-might easily have reached second. As it was,
-though, he hesitated at first and Collins, who had
-come in fast on the ball, pegged promptly to
-Wayne and Brook was forced to scuttle back to
-safety.</p>
-
-<p>East laid down a sacrifice bunt and retired, but,
-with only one man gone and the speedy Brook on
-second, Toonalta’s chance to pull the game up
-high and dry looked bright. But when Burns had
-hit to Jim Wheelock and Jim had trotted across
-the bag and then held Brook at third the visitors’
-stock sank again. Gore ended the suspense by
-sending a high one to Hal Collins.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne was requested to “start it up” when he
-went to the plate for the last of the inning, and
-the audience loudly reminded him that this was
-the lucky seventh! But it wasn’t lucky for
-Wayne, since, in spite of his resolve to bat for a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-clean thousand, his attempt at a hit was only a
-roller to Ellis and he was out before he had gone
-half-way to first. Vic Despaigne fell victim to
-Ellis’ skill, yielding the Toonalta pitcher his first
-and only strike-out of the game, and Chase, after
-nine deliveries, four of which were fouls, found
-something to his liking and whanged it into right
-field. It was a long one and might easily have
-put him on third, but the redoubtable Browne,
-he of the home-run fame, raced back to the corner
-of the field and made a one-hand catch that moved
-even the enemy to wild acclaim.</p>
-
-<p>The eighth began with the Toonalta’s fifth batter
-facing Chase, but by the time it had ended
-five others had toed the rubber. That inning
-rivalled the fourth for hair-raising suspense.
-Hunt, the Toonalta catcher, began the trouble by
-hitting safely between Jim Wheelock and Wayne
-for one. The subsequent batsman was an easy
-out, popping a fly to Chase. Rider outwaited the
-pitcher and finally got a pass, advancing Hunt
-to second. With two on bases and the hard-hitting
-Browne coming up, the Blues’ chances might
-have been bought for a penny. To make things
-look more desperate, it was apparent that Pete
-Chase was weakening. Jordan was hurried out
-of his sweater and sent off to warm up and Hoffman
-and Chase met midway between plate and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-mound and conversed earnestly while the Toonalta
-“rooters” howled jeers and polite insults.</p>
-
-<p>“Play ball! Quit stalling!” “It’s got to happen!
-Get through with it!” “Good-night!”
-“He’s all in! Take him out! Take him out!”
-“Let him stay! We like him!” “Make ’em play
-ball, Mr. Umpire!”</p>
-
-<p>Chase was for passing Browne, but Hoffman
-wouldn’t consent. “Feed him high ones, Pete,”
-he muttered, “and cut the corners, but, for the
-love of Mike, don’t groove any!”</p>
-
-<p>Chase nodded none too confidently and went back
-to his place and Browne swung an eager bat above
-his shoulder. Possibly eagerness was Browne’s undoing,
-for he bit at the first one, which was almost
-shoulder high and far wide of the plate, but he
-only smiled when Gas asked him if he was practising
-and Medfield yelled its delight. The next
-offering was a ball that sent the batsman staggering
-back from the plate and brought hisses and
-cries of “He’s trying to hit him!” from the
-Toonalta bench. Gas, though, knew that Chase
-wasn’t trying anything of the sort, that the explanation
-was far simpler, that, in fact, Chase was
-rapidly pitching himself out and losing control.
-But he only spoke more confidently than ever.</p>
-
-<p>“Let him live, Pete! There aren’t any cigars
-in this game!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Browne scowled. “If he beans me the first
-thing you know’ll be a bat alongside your head,
-Fresh!”</p>
-
-<p>“I should worry,” answered Gas pleasantly,
-dropping to his knee to signal. “Come on, Pete!
-Make it good, old man! Don’t waste ’em on
-him!”</p>
-
-<p>Pete did waste one, though, for the ball passed
-wide of the plate. Browne laughed. “Got you
-scared, haven’t I?” he jeered.</p>
-
-<p>“Scared blue,” replied Gas. “Watch your
-head this time.”</p>
-
-<p>But the next one came with a hook and looked
-good and Browne let go at it. It wasn’t labelled
-“Home Run,” though, this time, for it went
-straight to Vic Despaigne, back of the goal path,
-and Vic took it neatly on the bound, studied the
-situation, and heaved to White. Hunt was two
-yards from the bag when the ball reached third
-base, and, although he made a clever slide, he
-should have been out. But, as before stated, this
-was not Billy’s day, and Hard Luck was still
-after him. Perhaps the throw was a trifle low,
-but Billy should have held it, nevertheless.
-But he didn’t, and while he was searching
-for it around his feet Hunt slid to safety, the
-bases were filled, and Toonalta was crazed with
-joy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Chase started badly with Ellis and put himself
-two in the hole at once. At third, Hunt was
-taking long leads and doing his utmost, ably assisted
-by the coacher there, to rattle the Blues’
-pitcher, and it looked very much as though he
-was succeeding until Chase suddenly turned the
-tables on him by a quick peg to White, who had
-crept close to the bag unobserved. Caught two
-yards off, Hunt did the only possible thing and
-dug for the plate. But the ball was ahead of
-him and he doubled back again. Chase and
-Despaigne took a hand in the contest and in the
-end Hunt, making a despairing slide for the
-rubber, was ignominiously retired. Rider and
-Browne reached third and second respectively
-during the excitement, but, with two gone, the
-situation looked far brighter.</p>
-
-<p>Chase settled down to recover lost ground with
-Ellis and managed to get a strike across. But
-his next attempt failed and the score was one-and-three.
-Hoffman signalled for a straight one
-and held his big hands wide apart. “Put it over,
-Pete! Let him hit it!” he cried. And Pete
-earnestly endeavoured to oblige and failed miserably,
-and the umpire waved the Toonalta pitcher to
-first!</p>
-
-<p>Bases full again, two down and the head of the
-list coming to bat! Now if ever, it seemed, Chase<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-should be derricked and the falling fortunes of
-the Chenangos entrusted to Jordan. The spectators
-demanded the change loudly, even rudely,
-but Joe Taylor, out in right field, was deaf to the
-inquiring looks sent him and made no sign. Even
-Chase showed a desire to quit; while, over behind
-third, Jordan was awaiting the summons. But
-the summons didn’t come, then or later, and Pete
-Chase, looking a bit bewildered, philosophically
-took up his task again and turned his attention to
-Brook.</p>
-
-<p>Now, Brook, in spite of his reputation, had so
-far failed to get a hit, and, as Joe explained later,
-it was on this that the latter based his calculations.
-Brook would, he thought, be so anxious to
-deliver that he would very probably fail altogether.
-Five times out of ten it is questionable
-policy to put a new pitcher in when bases are
-full and any sort of a hit means runs. As often
-as not such a procedure proves to be jumping
-from frying pan to fire. Had Toonalta chosen to
-substitute a pinch-hitter for Brook, Joe was ready
-to switch pitchers, but failing that he decided to
-trust to Chase and, more especially, perhaps,
-Hoffman. Whether Captain Taylor’s reasoning
-was good or bad, in the abstract, on this occasion
-it was vindicated. With one strike and two balls
-on him, Brook was offered one that was just above<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-his knees and square over the base, and he went
-for it. And so did Hal Collins, and caught it
-almost in the shadow of left field fence, and
-another tragedy was averted!</p>
-
-<p>In their half of the eighth, the Chenangos went
-out in one, two, three, order, Collins flying to
-centre, Wheelock fouling to third, and Taylor
-being thrown out at first. In the ninth, Toonalta
-tried very hard to add to her score, but, when the
-first batsman was retired on an easy toss from
-Chase to Jim, she lost some of her ginger. Even
-Billy White’s fourth error, which put Burns on
-first and seemed to pave the way for a tally, failed
-to arouse the visitors to much enthusiasm. Probably
-they thought they could hold their opponents
-scoreless for another half-inning and were satisfied
-to call it a day. Gore, however, woke them
-up when he hit cleanly past Despaigne and
-advanced Burns to the second station, and the
-Browns’ coaches got busy again and once more
-things looked dark for the home nine. But Hunt
-fouled out to Hoffman—and the big catcher’s
-expression as he looked at the rival backstop
-was beautiful to see if you were a Chenango sympathiser!—and
-the Blues’ first baseman, who had
-played a star game all the afternoon, ended his
-services at the bat, and incidentally the inning,
-by fanning. Chase received an ovation for that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-strike-out as he returned to the bench, and he
-deserved it.</p>
-
-<p>Toonalta jogged into the field with a fine confidence,
-or an appearance of it. She had only to
-keep the adversary from crossing the plate to
-win, and since the fifth inning the Chenangos had
-failed to show anything dangerous. Perhaps
-the home team itself was more than doubtful of
-its ability to pluck that contest from the fire,
-although certainly Joe Taylor showed no sign of
-dejection. Joe insisted loudly and cheerfully that
-now was the appointed time, although he didn’t
-use just those words. What he really said was:
-“Now come on, Chenangos! Get at ’em!
-Eat ’em up! Here’s where we start something!
-Hit it out, Larry! Let’s get this right
-now!”</p>
-
-<p>But Colton was a disappointment, for he only
-rolled one to the pitcher’s box when he tried to
-bunt down first base line and was out in his tracks.
-Billy White was called back once to make place
-for Brewster, but even as the pinch-hitter strode
-to the box Taylor changed his mind again and it
-was finally the unlucky Billy who stood up at the
-plate. Just how Billy managed to outguess Ellis
-was a mystery, but outguess him he did, and
-presently he was trotting down the path to first
-base while Vic Despaigne tried to stand on his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-head and <a href="#image03">every other Medfield adherent made a
-joyful noise</a>!</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 419px;">
-<a id="image03">
- <img src="images/image03.jpg" width="419" height="600" alt="" title="" />
-</a><br />
-<div class="caption"><a href="#Page_182">Every Other Medfield Adherent Made a Joyful Noise</a></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Joy, however, gave place to gloom a few minutes
-later when Hoffman, after almost securing a two-bagger—the
-ball only went foul by two inches—sent
-a hot one straight into third baseman’s glove.
-As the ball went back to the pitcher the audience
-started its exodus, for with two down and the
-runner no further than first, the end was discernible—or
-so they thought. But what followed only
-proved again the famous adage that the game isn’t
-over until the last man’s out.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne got his bat from an anxious-faced June,
-a June too downhearted to even put a “conjur”
-on it, listened to Taylor’s instructions to “just
-meet it, Sloan, and try for the hole between first
-and second,” and took his place in the trampled
-dust of the box. Ellis was cautious and deliberate
-and was putting everything he had on the ball.
-Wayne let the first one go by and was sorry for
-it, since it cut the outer corner of the plate and
-went for a strike. Then Ellis tried him on a wide
-one, waist-high, and followed it with a second
-strike, a drop that fooled the batsman completely.
-Ellis attempted to sneak one over close in, but
-overdid it and the score was two-and-two, and
-Wayne realised that a whole lot depended on his
-judgment of the next offering. Possibly Ellis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-meant to fool Wayne with a change of pace, for
-what came next was a slow one that looked tempting.
-Wayne yielded to the temptation. Then he
-flung his bat aside and was streaking to first
-amidst the triumphant shouts of the spectators.
-At first, Taylor waved him on, and Wayne circled
-and dug out for second. Centre and left fielder
-were on the ball together and left fielder made the
-throw in, but it arrived only when Wayne was
-stretched in the dust with one toe on the bag. On
-third, Billy White was listening to excited instructions
-from Hoffman, while, from the sides of
-the field, came pæans of delight. Those spectators
-who had wandered from their seats or points
-of vantage fought their way back again, crowding
-and pushing and questioning. Joe Taylor
-was sending in Brewster for Despaigne, and
-Hunt, the Toonalta catcher, in spite of his confident
-reassurances to Ellis, looked disquieted.</p>
-
-<p>On second, Wayne, mechanically slapping the
-dust from his new togs, hoped hard for a hit. He
-knew nothing of Brewster’s batting prowess and
-wished with all his heart that Hal Collins or Jim
-Wheelock was up. A hit would bring him in
-from second, with White ahead of him, and win
-the game. Then he was off the base, watching the
-shortstop from the corner of his eye, listening
-for warnings from the coach at first, ready to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-speed ahead or dodge back. But, with an eager
-runner on third, Ellis was taking no chances.
-Nor was Hunt. Once the catcher bluffed a throw-down,
-but the ball only went to the pitcher, and
-neither White nor Wayne was fooled.</p>
-
-<p>Brewster looked nervous, but he didn’t act so.
-He judged the first offering correctly and let it
-go, started to swing at the next, changed his mind,
-and heard it called a strike and held back from
-the third, which dropped at the bag and almost
-got away from Hunt. The shouting of spectators
-and coaches was having its effect on Ellis at
-last. A third ball followed. The uproar increased.
-Even the base-runners added their
-voices to the pandemonium of sound. Ellis
-fumbled his cap, looked around the field, rubbed a
-perspiring hand in the dust, took the signal very
-deliberately, although it could mean but one thing
-unless Hunt had decided to pass the batsman,
-wound up slowly, and pitched.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it would have been the part of wisdom
-to have walked Brewster, under the circumstances,
-but Toonalta chose otherwise and so things happened
-as they did. The ball, fast and straight,
-went to the plate like a shot from a gun, but
-Brewster was ready for it. A fine, heartening
-crack sounded over the diamond, the ball sailed
-off toward left field, Billy White sprang into his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-stride and Wayne lit out for third. Left fielder
-came in on the run, got the ball on the first long
-bounce, set himself quickly, and plugged it home.
-It was a good throw and it reached Hunt only one
-stride from the plate. But that one stride was
-sufficient to bring victory to the Blues and defeat
-to the Browns, for when Hunt fell to his knee and
-swept the ball downward Wayne was stretched on
-his back with one scuffed, dust-covered shoe fairly
-on the rubber!</p>
-
-<p>After that, confusion, cheering, a grinning,
-white-toothed June pulling Wayne to his feet, an
-influx of shouting, happy Medfieldians, amongst
-them Arthur Pattern, and hands thumping Wayne
-on the back as he pushed his way toward
-the bench. He was breathless, dusty, and tired,
-as he added his feeble voice to the cheer for the
-defeated rival, but he was terrifically happy at the
-same time.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</a><br />
-<small>“A GENTLEMAN TO SEE MR. SLOAN”</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>There was a Fourth of July entertainment at the
-Y. M. C. A. that evening, and Wayne and June
-stayed in town for supper and afterward walked
-around to the Association building through the
-warm summer night. June still talked about that
-ninth inning. “Mas’ Wayne, that was surely one
-fine ol’ innin’,” he declared for the tenth time.
-“Lawsy-y-y, but I certainly was scared, yes, sir!
-When that yere Mister Brewster grab a bat an’
-walk up to that yere plate I didn’ look for nothin’
-but jus’ disappointment. But he delivered the
-goods, didn’ he? He certainly did! But I was
-mortal ’fraid you wasn’ goin’ get home before that
-ol’ ball!” June chuckled. “You surely did run
-<em>some</em>, Mas’ Wayne!”</p>
-
-<p>They found most of the other players present
-when they reached the building and when it was
-time to adjourn to the hall they flocked in together,
-June accompanying them protestingly,
-and received a round of applause as they went to
-their seats. The entertainment was enjoyable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-but didn’t last long, and when it was over an impromptu
-reception took place in the big lounging-room
-and everyone flocked around and
-said nice things about the team and the
-game was played over again several times. It
-was difficult to decide who the real hero of the
-contest was, since so many had performed. Pete
-Chase came in for a good share of praise; for
-five strike-outs, three assists, and no errors was
-considered a fine record against as strong a team
-as the Toonaltas. The five passes that he had
-issued were easily pardoned since none had resulted
-in a score. In hitting, Toonalta stood
-seven for a total of ten bases and Chenango nine
-for a total of eleven.</p>
-
-<p>Brewster was lauded for his rescue hit, Jim
-Wheelock for his steady playing on base and at
-bat, Collins for a brilliant defence of left field
-and a timely two-base wallop, Hoffman for his
-heady catching, and Despaigne for his work at
-short. Even Billy White came in for a share of
-the compliments, for Billy had worked Ellis for
-a pass in the last inning and subsequently landed
-the tying run. But when all was said Wayne was
-really the star. He had fielded without an error,
-having three assists and two put-outs to his credit,
-had made three hits for a total of four bases in
-four appearances at the plate, and had tallied the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-winning run. In the batting line Jim Wheelock
-was his nearest competitor, Jim having two hits
-to his credit. In fielding Wayne had no competitor
-that day. Many kind things were said about
-him, and Arthur Pattern’s prediction that Wayne
-would make himself heard some day as a baseman
-was concurred in by all. Perhaps the Chenangos
-and their admirers were a bit too lavish with their
-praise that evening, but they felt exceptionally
-good over the victory and may be pardoned for
-indulging in what our English cousins would call
-“swank.”</p>
-
-<p>In the middle of the session of mutual admiration
-word came from the office that a gentleman
-was inquiring for Wayne, and Wayne wondered
-who it could be and decided that Jim Mason had
-at last accepted his oft-repeated invitation to the
-Association. But it wasn’t Jim who awaited him.
-The caller was a somewhat thick-set man of forty
-with a much wrinkled face from which a pair of
-shrewd, light-blue eyes peered forth from under
-heavy brows. He wore a suit of gray plaid, the
-coat a trifle tight across the big chest, a pair of
-wonderfully brilliant tan shoes, a heavy gold
-chain across his waistcoat, and a big diamond ring
-on one hand, and carried a soft straw hat adorned
-with a black-and-yellow scarf. Wayne didn’t observe
-all these details at first, for he was much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-too busy speculating as to the man’s errand, reflecting,
-as he crossed to meet him, that the letter
-to his stepfather had reached him well over a
-week ago, allowing plenty of time for him to set
-the law on his track. But the visitor didn’t quite
-look the part of Authority, for he had a genial
-smile and a ready expression of polite apology.</p>
-
-<p>“This Mr. Sloan?” he asked as Wayne reached
-him. Wayne acknowledged the fact. “My
-name’s Farrel, Chris Farrel. Maybe you’ve
-heard the name.” He held out the ringed hand
-and Wayne took it, shaking his head. “No?
-Well, I was before your time. I’m with the Harrisvilles,
-of the Tri-State League.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, baseball?” asked Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! Say, isn’t there a place we can sit
-down a minute? I’ve got a proposition I’d like to
-make you, Mr. Sloan.”</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon,” said Wayne. “I reckon
-we can find a corner in the game-room. There’s
-a crowd in the big room.” He led the way to a
-couch in a corner that was sufficiently removed
-from the few groups of chess and domino players.
-“You’re a ball player?” he asked as the caller
-cautiously lowered himself into place and dropped
-his hat to the floor beside him.</p>
-
-<p>“Do I look it?” inquired the other, with a
-chuckle. “Say, I weigh two hundred and eight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-right now. I’d make a hit, wouldn’t I, chasing
-around the gravel? No, I haven’t played for six
-years. I’m interested in the Badgers now. Own
-a little stock and do a bit of scouting for ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Badgers?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that’s what they call the Harrisville
-team. John K. Badger, the Southern Pennsylvania
-Coal Company man, is the owner: him and
-Steve Milburn and me. Him owning ninety per
-cent, and me and Steve dividing the rest.” Mr.
-Farrel chuckled again. “Ever see our team play,
-Mr. Sloan?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, I haven’t been up North very long.”</p>
-
-<p>“So a fellow was telling me. Said Georgia was
-your home, I think. Well, they grow peaches
-down there. Ty Cobb, for instance. Guess you’ve
-heard of him, haven’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, a good many times, Mr. Farrel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yup, he’s some player, Tyrus is. Well, say,
-we’ve got a pretty good little team over our way.
-Copped the pennant two years running and
-finished third last season. Had hard luck last
-season. Weak in the box, too. This year, though,
-we’re going nicely. Got a twelve-game lead right
-now and mean to hold it. There won’t be anyone
-else in it by the last of August. That’s a cinch.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope so, I’m sure,” murmured Wayne
-politely.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“We can’t miss it. We’ve got the pitchers and
-the fielders and the hitters. Ever hear of Nick
-Crane?” Wayne shook his head. “Thought
-maybe you had. Well, Nick’s with us this year.
-Got him sewed up for three seasons. And, say,
-that kid can certainly pitch! You ought to have
-seen him in the game with Damascus last Thursday.
-Not a hit off him until the eighth, and not
-a man got beyond second. Then we’ve got
-Herring—played with Syracuse two years ago—Nye,
-Cotton, Wainwright, and young Joe Casey.
-Six mighty good lads. And we’ve got a hitting
-team, too. Give me a good bunch of pitchers and
-five men who can hit the pill and I’ll guarantee
-to finish first two years out of three. We don’t go
-in for stars much. Can’t afford them, to be
-honest. What we try to get is a nice, well-rounded
-team. Do you get me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I think so,” responded Wayne. “But—but
-I’m afraid I don’t see what this has got to
-do with me, Mr. Farrel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I was coming to that. Takes me some
-time to get moving, I’m so heavy, you see. Here’s
-the story.” Mr. Farrel lifted one ponderous leg
-over the other and dropped his voice to a confidential
-and husky rumble. “I’ve got a pal lives
-here. Maybe you know him. H. M. Breen, of the
-Sterling Spool Company. No? Well, him and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-me has been pals for a long time, and his daughter
-was married last night and I came over for the
-shindig. Today him and me went out and saw
-you fellows play ball. And, say, we saw a good
-game, too. I don’t mean it was so blamed scientific—those
-Toonalta guys made a lot of fool
-moves: they ought to have sewn that game up in
-the eighth—but it was fast and interesting. Well,
-I was just passing the time, you understand, Mr.
-Sloan. Wasn’t looking for any finds or nothing.
-Just enjoying a day off. Get me? But ’long
-about the fourth inning I began to sit up and take
-notice of the fellow playing second for the Medfield
-bunch. ‘He ain’t so poor,’ says I. ‘He’s
-got a nice way of handling himself, he has, and
-he sure can biff the ball. Course, he needs training,
-but it looks to me like he had the goods.’
-Well, I watched him close and I saw him dip in on
-a nice double play and push the pellet around
-for three hits, one of ’em a clean two-bagger,
-an’ I says to myself, ‘Chris, why don’t you look
-the young gentleman up and have a talk with
-him?’ I says, ‘Maybe he’d think well of a chance
-to get in good company and learn how to play
-real ball.’ So I inquired around and found you
-hung out up here a good deal and here I am.”
-Mr. Farrel smiled jovially, produced a cigar from
-a pocket, viewed it and replaced it with a sigh.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“That’s very kind of you,” stammered Wayne.
-“Do you mean that—that you’ll give me a position
-on your team?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! That is, if you pan out like I think
-you will. That’s up to you, Mr. Sloan. You see,
-you’re young yet: can’t be more than eighteen,
-eh?” Wayne shook his head again. There was,
-he felt, no necessity of being more specific.
-“Well, I’ve seen fellows play rattling ball at
-eighteen and be no good at all when they were
-twenty. Seemed like they just outgrew it. I ain’t
-saying that’s your way. But it don’t do to
-promise too much just at first. And then again,
-Steve’s the man that has the last word. He’s
-manager, you see, and what Steve says goes. All
-I can do is send you up to him and tell him
-to give you a try-out. If he likes you he’ll treat
-you fair. If he don’t like you, why, there’s no
-harm done, is there?”</p>
-
-<p>“How long would he be finding out?” asked
-Wayne doubtfully. “You see, sir, I wouldn’t
-want to lose my job here and then get turned
-down.”</p>
-
-<p>“Two or three days. Say three, just to be on
-the safe side. You get your boss to let you off
-for that long, beat it over to Harrisville tomorrow
-night and report to Steve Thursday morning. If
-he says nothing doing you’ll be back here Saturday.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-It’s only a two-hour run on the train. How
-does that strike you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” replied Wayne. “If—if the
-manager liked me well enough to keep me would
-I play second?”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you would or maybe he’d put you
-somewhere else. Maybe you’d have to wait
-around awhile for a position. Our infield’s
-pretty good as it is and you ain’t had the experience
-you need, you see. But Steve will treat
-you right, take it from me.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I didn’t get on the team, though, would I
-get paid?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! Once you put your name to the contract
-you get paid every month regularly whether
-you play or just sit on the bench. That’s soft,
-ain’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose it is, but I’d rather play, Mr. Farrel.
-How much—that is—what would I get?”</p>
-
-<p>“Salary? Oh, you and Steve would have to
-fix that up. He’s no piker, though. He’ll do the
-fair-and-square by you. Don’t you worry about
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but, how much do you suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to quote any figures, Mr. Sloan.
-That ain’t in my job. All I do is scout. When I
-see a likely looking chap I say just what I’m
-saying to you. ‘Go and report to Steve Milburn,’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-I says. ‘He’ll talk salary with you when you’ve
-shown him what you can do.’ More than that I
-ain’t got the right to say, Mr. Sloan. But we pay
-good salaries as salaries go on the minors, and,
-what’s more, we <em>pay</em> ’em! You don’t get promises
-and an order on the grocer. Old John K. is right
-there every month with the coin. He don’t waste
-his money, John K. don’t, but he pays his bills.
-Now what do you say, Mr. Sloan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m much obliged to you and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait a minute! Tell you what I’ll do. I
-believe in you. I believe you’ll make good. Get
-me? So I’ll hand you over a ten-dollar bill right
-now. That’ll pay your expenses both ways. If
-you make good you can pay it back to me. If you
-don’t, forget it. That’s fair, ain’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, but I don’t know whether I want to—to
-do it. If I was sure of a chance to play and
-knew what I’d earn——”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re sure of a chance to play the very
-minute you show you can play. And whatever
-you get for a salary will be three or four times
-what they pay you in the freight house, at least.”</p>
-
-<p>It occurred to Wayne that Mr. Farrel had
-managed to learn quite a few particulars about
-him in the short space of four hours! Secretly
-he was overjoyed by the prospect of joining a real
-baseball team and earning money, but something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-whispered caution, and so, after a minute’s deliberation,
-he said: “I’ll think it over, Mr. Farrel,
-and let you know tomorrow if you’ll tell me where
-I can find you.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right,” answered the other heartily
-enough, but there was a look on his face suggesting
-that he would have been better pleased had Wayne
-closed with the offer then and there. “I’ll be at
-the Union House until noon tomorrow. You think
-it over and let me know by twelve o’clock. I was
-going down to Philadelphia tonight, but I thought
-maybe I wouldn’t be around here again for a
-while and it mightn’t do me or you any harm if
-we had a little chat. Get me? But, say, Mr.
-Sloan, you take my advice and don’t talk much
-about this business. And don’t let anyone con
-you into signing a contract. A lot of these baseball
-scouts are regular thieves. That sounds like
-talking down my own business, don’t it? Well,
-there’s scouts and scouts, and some of ’em’ll sign
-you up hard and fast before you know what’s
-happened. And when you go to look over your
-contract you’re getting the core and the club’s got
-the apple. See me before you talk to anyone
-else, will you? Just give me an option on your
-services until tomorrow noon, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes, sir. I don’t expect anyone else
-will be after me, though.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“No, I guess not. I’m only playing it safe.
-You see, I’ve taken some trouble to talk with you
-about this, and missed an appointment in Philadelphia
-this evening, and it’s only fair for me to
-get the first chance, ain’t it? You see that yourself,
-I guess. Well, I’ll be moving. Don’t forget
-to come around by twelve tomorrow. Ask for
-Chris Farrel—F, a, r, r, e, l—in Room 28. I’ll be
-looking for you. Good-night, Mr. Sloan. Much
-obliged to you. Don’t trouble. I know the way
-out. S’long!”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Chris Farrel, with a big, black cigar in a
-corner of his mouth at last, and searching for
-matches with an anxious hand, nodded and passed
-out, leaving Wayne a prey to excitement and
-incredulity.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</a><br />
-<small>PATTERN GIVES ADVICE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Wayne wanted advice, and it was to Arthur
-Pattern that he went. A quarter of an hour
-after Mr. Farrel’s departure Wayne and Arthur
-were sitting on the steps of the State National
-Bank talking it over. Now and then the sound of
-exploding fireworks sounded and occasionally the
-sparks of a distant rocket lighted the sky beyond
-the roofs or red, white, and blue stars floated high
-against the purple darkness of the night, but the
-celebration was nearly over and the main street
-was nearly deserted.</p>
-
-<p>“I remember Chris Farrel,” Arthur Pattern
-was saying. “That is, I remember reading about
-him. He used to be a crackajack catcher some
-years ago. Played for a long time with one of the
-western clubs; Cincinnati, I think. Then he was
-with Washington and left them to manage some
-team like the Baltimores. Don’t think it was
-Baltimore, though. I don’t know much about this
-Harrisville outfit, but the Tri-State League’s been
-going for a good many years. It’s a six-club<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-league. Harrisville and Doncaster in this state,
-Paterson and Trenton in New Jersey, and Utica
-and some other place in New York State.”</p>
-
-<p>“Damascus, I think he said.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Damascus. Some of those are good baseball
-towns, and they ought to make money. Still,
-I don’t suppose they do much better than split
-even after expenses are paid. Saturdays and
-holidays are about the only times they draw big
-attendances, they charge about half what the big
-leagues charge for admission, and players’
-salaries, travelling expenses, and so on count up
-fast. Men like this Mr. Badger own ball teams
-more for amusement than anything else, I guess.
-Some of them go in for steam yachts, some for
-trotting horses, and some for ball teams. I guess
-they net about the same on the investment,” ended
-Arthur drily.</p>
-
-<p>“Then you think this Harrisville team isn’t
-very good?” asked Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>“Better than some, not so good as others. If
-you’re going in for professional baseball playing,
-Wayne, you’ve got to get experience, and one
-team’s about the same as another, so long as you
-get your salary. You can’t afford to choose and
-pick, I guess, because it isn’t easy for a youngster
-like you to get a try-out. If a chance comes to
-you, grab it. After all, it doesn’t make much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-difference where you start. If you’re any good
-you won’t stay long in the bushes. The main
-question is: Do you want to be a ball player?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne considered in silence for a long minute.
-Then: “Well, it’s like this, Arthur,” he answered
-slowly. “I wouldn’t want to play ball all my
-life. It isn’t good enough. But there isn’t much
-I can do—yet. It isn’t as though I’d been trained
-for something, like engineering or keeping books
-or—or farming. I’m not good for anything at all—yet.
-The only thing I can do half-way well is
-play baseball. So it seems to me that it’s a
-sensible thing for me to play ball and make some
-money so that I can learn to do something better.
-If I made some money in the summer I could go
-to school or college in the winter, couldn’t I?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you could. What would you like to
-be?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” answered the other, smiling, “I used
-to think I wanted to be a locomotive engineer, but
-I reckon now I’d rather be a veterinary surgeon.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” exclaimed Arthur. “A horse
-doctor?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne nodded untroubledly. “Yes, that’s what
-they call them in the country,” he replied, “just
-as they call the doctor a ‘sawbones.’ Don’t you
-think curing sick animals is just as fine a profession
-as curing sick people?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Hm. Do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Finer. Seems to me it takes more skill. A
-person who is ill can help the doctor, you see, by
-telling him where the trouble lies, but an animal
-can’t. The doctor has got to depend on his
-knowledge altogether, hasn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose so. Still, up where I live we don’t
-class the vets and the physicians together, I’m
-afraid. The vets are generally rather ignorant
-old chaps, I guess. I remember hearing my father
-say once when I was a kid that old Nancy, the
-carriage horse, was dying and that he guessed it
-was time to call in the vet and let him have the
-credit for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did she die?” asked Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>Arthur thought a minute. Then: “By Jove, I
-don’t believe she did that time!” he laughed.
-“Perhaps old What’s-his-name was some good,
-after all!”</p>
-
-<p>“Doctor Kearny—he’s the veterinarian at home—says
-that the profession is making faster strides
-nowadays than any other,” said Wayne. “He
-says the day is past when the man who can’t make
-a living any other way can become a dentist or a
-veterinary surgeon. He says treating horses and
-cows and dogs and things is a heap harder than
-giving pills to persons. I’d rather cure a horse
-or a dog any day than a human being.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“It might depend on the human being, mightn’t
-it?” laughed the other. “Well, all right, old man,
-you be a vet if you want to. Perhaps it is a good
-deal finer trade than I’d thought. Anyway, what
-we’ve got to decide is whether you’re to join the
-Badgers, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I wish he’d given me some idea what
-the salary would be. What do you think,
-Arthur?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I wouldn’t look for more than a hundred
-a month at first. You see, Wayne, you aren’t anything
-remarkable yet. You don’t mind my talking
-plain? This man Farrel is banking on you learning
-the game and turning out well in a couple of
-years. He thinks that if they can get hold of you
-now and sign you up at a small salary it’ll pay
-them to do it on the chance that you’ll be of real
-use later. I dare say there are lots of chaps who
-play just about the same sort of game that you do
-right now. Personally, I think you’ll make good.
-You sort of—sort of—well, I don’t just know
-how to say it, but you sort of <em>look</em> good. There’s
-a certainty in the way you handle the ball and the
-way you handle yourself that’s promising. I
-guess it struck Farrel the same way. If he was
-sure he could come around two years from now
-and find you he wouldn’t have made a sound
-today, but he isn’t. He’s afraid that someone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-else will discover you and grab you. But don’t
-get it into your head that you’re a marvel, Wayne,
-because you aren’t. Not yet. If you do go over
-to Harrisville, old man, talk small and don’t let
-your hat hurt you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t. I don’t think this has swelled my
-head any. What I’m afraid of is that this
-manager man won’t like me when he sees me.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s possible, too. Better not hope too
-much. I dare say Farrel sends a lot of fellows
-over there who just turn around and go home
-again. But his offering to stake you to your
-fares looks as if he was pretty fairly certain in
-your case.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I wouldn’t take that money,” said Wayne
-earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>“You will if you go. I’ll see that you do. It’s
-a business proposition, Wayne. Farrel’s paying
-you ten dollars for an option on you. If he takes
-you he gets his option money back. You mustn’t
-think, though, that being a minor league ball
-player is all roses. It’s no picnic. You’ll have
-to practice every morning, whether you get on or
-not, you’ll have to beat it around the country for
-weeks at a time, sleeping on the train or in punk
-hotels, you’ll get bawled out when you pull a
-boner and no one will say ‘Thank you’ when you
-make a star play: no one but the ‘fans,’ and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-they’ll be the first to hoot you the next day if you
-make one miscue. You’ll run up against some
-rough ones on the team who will probably make
-life a perfect misery for you at first, and you’ll
-get the short end of a lot of decisions until the
-umpires see that you are real. I don’t want you
-to think that minor league ball playing is all bread
-and treacle, Wayne.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe it’ll be hard,” was the response, “but
-any work is hard, isn’t it? And I’d rather do
-something hard that I like to do than something
-easy that I don’t. And I do like to play ball,
-Arthur. Besides, a hundred dollars a month is
-real money to me. If I stayed on the team three
-months I’d have three hundred dollars!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not quite, because you have to live meanwhile.
-Remember that the club only pays your
-bills while you’re travelling, and you’re travelling
-only about half the time.”</p>
-
-<p>“It wouldn’t cost me much, though, to live in
-Harrisville, would it? I reckon I could find a
-boarding-house pretty reasonable.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess so. It’s a pretty big town. Look
-here, Wayne, suppose I go around there with you
-tomorrow and have a talk with Farrel. Maybe
-I could get him to promise something definite.
-Want me to?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you would,” said Wayne gratefully.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-“That is, if I decide to try it. I’m going to think
-it over tonight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you want to start thinking pretty soon,”
-laughed Arthur, yawning as he arose, “because
-it’s nearly eleven now and there isn’t much night
-left for us slaves. You call me up at the office
-in the morning and let me know. Then I’ll take
-my lunch hour at eleven-thirty and we’ll go around
-to the hotel together. Good-night, Wayne.”</p>
-
-<p>It was close on midnight when Wayne left the
-railroad track and started across the meadow
-through the lush grass toward the dim orange
-glow from the windows and open door of the
-car. It suddenly came to him that he would be
-sorry to leave this queer retreat of theirs, for it
-had been more like a real home than any he had
-known for several years. And, with a genuine
-pang, he remembered the garden he had planted.
-He would never see the flowers blossom, never see
-the little green pellet, which had mysteriously
-appeared on one of the tomato plants a few days
-ago, grow and ripen! The thought of leaving that
-garden almost determined him then and there to
-think no more of Mr. Farrel’s offer, but to stay at
-home with June and be satisfied with his work
-and the new friends he had made.</p>
-
-<p>June was still awake when he approached, and
-hailed him across the starlit darkness. And Sam<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-barked shrilly, at first with a challenge and then,
-as he scuttled to meet Wayne, with delight. The
-boy picked him up and snuggled him in his arms,
-and the dog licked his cheek with an eager pink
-tongue. “He done catch him a terrapin today,”
-announced June as Wayne seated himself tiredly
-on the step. “An’ he jus’ act disgusting he was
-so proud.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon the terrapin was just a plain, everyday
-mud turtle,” laughed Wayne. “Did you
-see it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, he brung it home an’ put it on its
-back so’s it couldn’t get away, an’ I ’most trod
-on it. What’s the diff’ence between a terrapin,
-Mas’ Wayne, an’ a mud turkle?”</p>
-
-<p>“About seventy-five cents, June.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say there is?” June was silent a minute.
-Then: “What done ’come o’ you this evenin’?
-I was waitin’ an’ waitin’ for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry, June. I wanted to see Arthur
-Pattern about something and we got to talking.
-I—I’m thinking about leaving here, June.” Then,
-sitting there in the star-sprinkled gloom, and
-fighting mosquitoes, Wayne told of Mr. Farrel
-and his proposition and of his talk with Arthur
-Pattern; and when he had finished June
-gave a joyous “Yip!” that startled Sam into
-barking.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Ain’ I always tol’ you, Mas’ Wayne, that you
-goin’ make you-all’s fortune up here? Ain’ I?”
-Wayne couldn’t recall having been told anything
-of the sort, but he didn’t say so. “Reckon we’s
-goin’ to be mighty ’portant folkses now!” the
-darkey went on. “How much money he goin’
-to pay you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know yet. And I don’t know that I’ll
-go, June. Maybe Mr. Farrel isn’t really in earnest.
-I don’t see how he can be. I can’t play ball much,
-June. If I——”</p>
-
-<p>“Say you can’? Let me tell you, Mas’ Wayne,
-sir, you plays ball better’n any of those other
-gen’lemen, a heap better!”</p>
-
-<p>“But playing on a real league team is different,
-June. Suppose this manager doesn’t like me when
-I get there?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s goin’ to like you! How far is this yere
-place, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“Harrisville? About eighty miles, I think. It’s
-a pretty big place, June, and maybe I wouldn’t
-like it as well as Medfield. I—I’ve got sort of
-fond of this place. If I do go, I want you to look
-after the garden, June. If you don’t I’m going
-to tan your hide for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What you mean look after your garden, Mas’
-Wayne? Ain’ I goin’ with you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I don’t see how you can,” answered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-Wayne troubledly. “Maybe after I get ahead a
-little——”</p>
-
-<p>“Now look yere, Mas’ Wayne! My mammy
-done tell me to watch out for you, ain’ she? How
-you ’spects I’m goin’ watch out for you if I ain’
-with you? No, sir, Mas’ Wayne, if you goes, I
-goes, an’ that’s all there is to it, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we’ll see,” evaded Wayne. “I dare say
-I’ll be back by the end of the week, anyway. If
-I’m not, and you want to come, I’ll send you some
-money and you and Sam can follow.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’ have to send no money,” said
-Wayne. “I got me ’most fifty dollars right now.
-How much you got, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a great deal,” owned Wayne ruefully.
-“I’ve had to buy so many things that I’ve been
-spending it about as fast as I’ve got it, June.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’ boughten anythin’ you ain’ needed, I
-reckon.” June stepped down and disappeared
-around the side of the car and when he came back
-he held a tin can in his hand. He rattled it
-proudly. “Reckon you better take this along
-with you,” he said, offering it to Wayne. “Jus’
-you drap it in your pocket right now, sir, so’s you
-won’ forget it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Get out! I’m not going to take your money,”
-answered the other firmly. “I don’t need it, anyway.
-I’ve got twelve dollars, pretty near;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-and Mr. Farrel is going to pay my fare both
-ways.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know that, Mas’ Wayne, but ’twon’ do for
-you to walk in on them ball players over to this
-yere place with no little ol’ picayune twelve dollars
-in your pocket, no, sir! You got to put on a
-heap o’ dog, Mas’ Wayne, ’cause if you don’t
-they’s goin’ to think you don’ amoun’ to nothin’
-’tall. Please, sir, you take it.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Wayne firmly. “I’m much obliged,
-June, but I don’t need it. If they give me the
-position I’ll have money of my own, you see.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you take half of it, Mas’ Wayne,”
-pleaded June.</p>
-
-<p>But Wayne was adamant and June had to hide
-his treasure again, and after a while they went to
-bed, June to slumber and Wayne to lie awake
-until the sky began to brighten in the east. It
-was only when the stars paled that sleep came
-to him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</a><br />
-<small>OFF TO HARRISVILLE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>At a quarter to six the next afternoon Wayne sat
-in a red plush seat in the Harrisville train and
-watched the outskirts of Medfield drop behind.
-He had his ticket to Harrisville and return in
-his pocket and nearly eighteen dollars folded
-away in his old leather coin purse. His luggage
-reposed beside him in a small brown paper parcel,
-for he was travelling in light marching order.
-For some reason, June had failed to show up at
-the station to say good-bye, and Wayne was a
-little bit resentful. He thought June might have
-found the time to see him off.</p>
-
-<p>It had been a busy day. Rather to his surprise,
-he had awakened with the question fully decided.
-He would go to Harrisville and talk with the
-manager of the baseball team. Whether he stayed
-or not would depend on whether he made good and
-what salary was offered him. He would not, he told
-himself firmly, accept less than a hundred dollars
-a month. The talk with Chris Farrel had been
-fairly satisfactory. Arthur Pattern had failed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-elicit any definite promise of engagement from the
-scout, but he had made Mr. Farrel agree to supplement
-the letter of introduction which Wayne
-was to deliver with another, to be posted then and
-there, presenting Wayne’s qualifications and advising
-his employment. After that Wayne had
-accepted the ten dollars, shaken hands with Mr.
-Farrel, and returned to the freight house to apply
-to Jim Mason for a three days’ leave of absence.</p>
-
-<p>Jim had given his permission quickly enough,
-but had shown little enthusiasm for the boy’s
-project. Playing baseball for a living did not,
-to his thinking, contrast at all favourably with
-working for the railroad, and he didn’t hesitate
-to say so. In fact, he was decidedly pessimistic
-and gloomy until Wayne reminded him that there
-was a strong possibility of his not securing the
-position after he reached Harrisville. Jim
-cheered up after that and chose to look on the
-three days’ absence as a sort of brief vacation,
-and virtually despatched Wayne with his blessing
-when closing time arrived.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you worry about me,” he said. “I’ll
-get on all right. It ain’t but two days and a half,
-anyway. Just you have a good time and enjoy
-yourself, son. Better come around for dinner
-Sunday and tell us about your trip.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne promised to do this in the event of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-return, shook hands with Jim, feeling a bit guilty
-and more than half hoping that the manager of the
-Harrisville Baseball Club would send him home
-again, and hurried off to the train. Arthur Pattern
-had promised to get down to see him off if he
-could do it, but evidently Arthur had had to stay
-late this evening. The train was in the open
-country now, running between wooded hills on
-which the long, slanting rays of the setting sun
-fell gloriously. He was a little lonesome and
-wished he had taken Sam with him. After all,
-Sam wouldn’t have been much trouble, and he
-was a heap of company. And just then the door
-at the front end of the car opened and in walked
-June with a squirming, excited Sam in his arms!</p>
-
-<p>June was grinning broadly, but there was something
-anxious and apologetic about that grin.
-After his first gasp of surprise, Wayne wanted
-to be stern and severe, but he just couldn’t because
-it was so good to have June and Sam there!
-And, anyway, you couldn’t frown or be cross with
-a delirious dog in your lap trying to lick your
-face and whine his delight at the same time! And
-so Wayne gave it up, and only smiled a trifle
-sheepishly, and June, seeing that he was not to
-be scolded, hugged himself, and grinned harder
-than ever.</p>
-
-<p>The conductor interrupted the reunion with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-request for tickets and a demand that the dog
-be removed to the baggage car, and so the three
-of them made their way forward and Sam was
-once more secured to the handle of a trunk with a
-piece of cord and Wayne and June perched themselves
-alongside and so finished their journey.
-June, it seemed, had at no time entertained any
-notion of being left behind, but had thrown up his
-job at the hotel that morning, staying only long
-enough to break in one of his recently made
-friends, and had then gone back to the car to
-pack up. Wayne’s belongings were here in a
-pasteboard box and June’s tied up in paper. “I
-done fasten up the place,” said June, “an’ nail
-boards over the windows, an’ I reckon if we-all
-wants to go back there we’s goin’ to fin’ things
-jus’ the same like we left ’em. An’ I done water
-them tomatuses an’ everything too, Mas’
-Wayne.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, June, if we don’t stay in Harrisville
-what will you do? You shouldn’t have thrown
-up your job.”</p>
-
-<p>June winked solemnly. “I done made a ’greement
-with that nigger, Mas’ Wayne. If I comes
-back he’s goin’ to get out, yes, sir, an’ I gets my
-job back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! But supposing he changes his mind by
-that time?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Then,” answered the other solemnly, “I’se
-goin’ to change his face.”</p>
-
-<p>Just before it got too dark to see, the train
-began to run parallel with a broad river, and
-after that, at intervals, the big stream flashed into
-sight. The baggage-man was amiable and talkative
-and told them much about the country they
-were passing through and the city they were approaching,
-giving them directions for finding a
-cheap but satisfactory hotel near the station. As
-Harrisville contained about fifty thousand population
-the boys naturally expected to find a big place,
-but when, having alighted from the baggage-car
-by the simple expedient of jumping to a truck
-outside the wide door, and made their way through
-the crowded station to an equally crowded street,
-the city proved to be larger and far more confusing
-than their anticipation. Fortunately,
-though, the Bemis House was in plain sight across
-the way and they had soon secured a room. The
-Bemis House drew no colour line, nor did it object
-to a small dog if he was sort of smuggled
-upstairs and kept quiet, and so the three companions
-were speedily housed together in a small
-and shabby but comfortable enough bedroom.</p>
-
-<p>They didn’t stay in it long, however, for the
-city lights were calling them. They had some
-supper at a little restaurant near by and then,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-with Sam pulling ahead at the end of his improvised
-leash, they set forth on exploration bent.
-That was a most exciting evening, for they had
-traversed no more than a half-dozen squares
-when the lights and gaudy pictures of a moving-picture
-theatre brought them to a stop. June
-announced his intentions inside of two seconds,
-and Wayne, after discovering that a dime would
-purchase admittance, made no objections. For
-the subsequent hour and a half they were as happy
-as two boys could be, and when the “Good Night!
-Come Again” was flashed on the screen and the
-audience poured out June was all for seeing the
-show over again and had to be literally dragged
-away, Wayne assuring him that they could come
-again tomorrow evening. They saw some of
-the town then, but nothing short of a three-alarm
-fire would have snared their attention after the
-things they had witnessed on the screen, and so,
-being tired and sleepy, they went back to the little
-hotel and crawled into the beds.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne’s letter of introduction to Mr. Stephen
-Milburn bore the address of the Congress House,
-and inquiry elicited the information that the Congress
-House was far uptown and many blocks
-away from their lodgings. For fear that the club
-manager might get away before he could reach
-him, Wayne ate a hurried and sketchy breakfast<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-at seven, entrusted Sam to June’s care, and hurried
-off on foot at about the time the retail section
-of the city through which his route lay was
-beginning to wake up. The distance was long and
-Wayne was horribly afraid that Mr. Milburn
-would have had his breakfast and be off and about
-the business of managing before he got to the
-hotel. Consequently, he was somewhat surprised
-when, on inquiring for the manager, he was told
-that Mr. Milburn never saw anyone until after
-breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>“After breakfast!” repeated Wayne blankly.
-“Well, what time is that, please?”</p>
-
-<p>The clerk at the desk looked speculatingly at
-the clock and yawned behind his hand. “He
-usually comes down about nine,” was the reply.
-“Come back at half-past and you’ll probably find
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne withdrew, wondering how Mr. Milburn
-ever found time to do anything after getting up at
-nine o’clock! For a while he occupied one of the
-extremely comfortable chairs in the hotel lobby
-and perused a newspaper that someone had discarded
-there, but the street outside was by this
-time humming and bustling, the morning was still
-cool and the temptation to see more of Harrisville
-was too strong for him. So he went out and
-joined the stream on the sidewalk and loitered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-along, looking into fascinating windows and missing
-little that went on. At a quarter to nine he
-was some distance from the hotel and so he turned
-back. But when he had walked as many squares
-as seemed necessary to bring him to his destination
-he failed to discover it. It dawned on him
-then that he had been walking at right angles to
-the street on which the hotel was situated, and
-he turned back and hurried along the way he had
-come. In the end he had to ask his way of a
-newsboy. Whether that young rascal purposely
-gave him the wrong direction or whether Wayne
-misunderstood him, the result was the same. He
-reached the Congress House at just twenty-five
-minutes to ten by the big round clock in the lobby
-and was met with the information that Mr. Milburn
-had breakfasted a little earlier than usual
-and had just gone out. The clerk, still yawning
-delicately, could not even hazard a guess as to
-the manager’s present whereabouts, and Wayne
-was turning disappointedly away from the desk
-when a bell boy came to his assistance.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, Mister, you can find Mr. Milburn at
-the ball park after half-past ten,” he said. “They
-practises then every day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, thanks,” answered Wayne. “Which way
-is the park from here, please?”</p>
-
-<p>“Out Tioga Avenue. Take any blue car going<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-north. The conductor’ll tell you where to get
-off. But you’ll see it yourself if you watch for
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it much of a walk?” Wayne asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No, not more’n a mile and a half. Mr. Milburn
-walks out there every morning. Go out
-Prentiss Street till you come to the armory and
-then turn left and follow the car tracks. You’ll
-find it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I surely will!” Wayne told himself as he
-thanked the boy and went out again. “But the
-next time I’ll know better than to let him get away
-from me like that. When you start to do anything,
-I reckon it’s a good plan to keep on
-doing it.”</p>
-
-<p>As it was still only a quarter to ten, Wayne
-assured himself that he had plenty of time. But
-he also assured himself that he wasn’t going to
-loiter for that reason. If he could intercept Mr.
-Milburn before he started to work it would, he
-thought, be better. So he set forth at a good,
-steady pace, asking his direction every few
-squares so that he would not again get lost, and
-presently found the armory and took the turn to
-the left as instructed. A square farther a blue
-car buzzed past him bearing the legend “Ball
-Grounds,” and Wayne knew that he was right.
-It was, however, a minute or two past the half-hour,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-when the enclosure came into sight, and
-Wayne decided that the bell boy had underestimated
-the distance, possibly from kindly motives.</p>
-
-<p>The park occupied two squares in a part of
-the city given over to small, thickly clustered
-dwellings. On one side the railroad tracks ran
-close to the high board fence and smoke from the
-engines—accompanied by cinders, as Wayne was
-to learn later—billowed over onto the field whenever
-the wind blew in the right—or, more accurately,
-wrong—direction. The place looked
-well cared for and the stands, visible above the
-fence, were of steel and concrete. The ticket
-windows and main entrances were closed and
-Wayne went nearly to the next corner before he
-found a means of ingress. And even then his way
-was barred by a man who sat beside the small
-door reading a paper until Wayne had exhibited
-his letter.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Jack, help yourself,” replied the
-man on guard. “He’s in the house, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne didn’t consider it worth while to waste
-his time telling the man that his name wasn’t
-Jack; which was just as well since Mike always
-called everyone Jack—except Mr. Milburn and
-one or two of the more important team members—and
-it wasn’t at all likely that he would have
-given serious consideration to the correction.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-Wayne passed through and found himself squarely
-behind first base, with a wide expanse of not
-very flourishing turf stretching away to the distant
-fences which were everywhere adorned with
-colourful advertisements of everything from
-smoking tobacco to suspenders. Beside him on
-his right was an open door leading into a structure
-built under one of the stands and which he
-presumed held the dressing quarters. At his
-left was another stand with a similar building
-beneath it. Over the door of the latter was the
-word “Visitors.”</p>
-
-<p>A tall, raw-boned youth of twenty-one or two
-emerged through the open door at that moment.
-He had the reddest hair Wayne had ever seen on
-a human being and was fearfully and wonderfully
-freckled. He was in uniform and held a ball in
-one hand and a glove in the other. As he almost
-ran into Wayne he could not help noticing
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“’Lo, Bill!” he said. “Lookin’ for someone?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, Mr. Milburn.”</p>
-
-<p>The red-haired chap jerked the hand holding
-the ball over his shoulder. “Steve? He’s inside
-bawling ’em out. That’s why I beat it. If you
-want to sell him anything or strike him for a
-pass, kid, take my advice and don’t do it. Let
-him simmer down. Can you catch?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Wayne nodded. “I’ve got a letter to him,”
-he said uncertainly and questioningly.</p>
-
-<p>“Keep it, Bill, till he recovers,” advised the
-other. “Come on out and catch a few for me. I
-got a bum wing this morning for fair.”</p>
-
-<p>Doubtfully, Wayne followed the big chap
-around to the front of the stand. He didn’t like
-the idea of delaying his interview, but it seemed
-possible that the red-haired man knew best. The
-latter pointed to a scarred place in the turf in
-front of which a stone slab did duty for a plate.
-“Stand there, Bill. Haven’t got a glove, have
-you? Well, I’ll just toss ’em. I got to limber
-up or Steve’ll be riding me, too, in a minute.” He
-swung an arm up and sped the ball slowly and
-easily across the trampled grass to Wayne and
-Wayne tossed it back again.</p>
-
-<p>“Guess you’re a player, ain’t you?” asked the
-big pitcher. “Looking for a job, are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Mr. Farrel sent me over here to see Mr.
-Milburn.”</p>
-
-<p>“So Chris is at it again, eh?” The red-haired
-one eyed Wayne with more interest as he waited
-for the ball to come back. “Where’d he find
-you, kid?”</p>
-
-<p>“Medfield, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Medfield? Have they got a club there? What
-league’s that? The Nile Valley?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“It’s just an amateur club,” replied Wayne.
-“It isn’t in any league.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s it, eh? Well, say, Chris is catching
-’em young, ain’t he? What was you doing when
-he caught you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I played second on the Chenango team
-and——”</p>
-
-<p>“On the <em>what</em>?”</p>
-
-<p>“On the Chenango team, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Think of that! You played second base for
-’em, eh? Bet you they was the proud bunch!”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne coloured. “Maybe you’d better find
-someone else,” he said stiffly, rolling the ball back
-and turning away.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, come on, kid!” called the pitcher, with a
-good-natured laugh. “Have a heart! I wasn’t
-saying anything, was I? Gee whiz, if you stay
-around here you’ll get a lot worse ragging than
-that, believe me! And if you know what’s what,
-Bill, you’ll take it smiling, ’cause if you don’t
-they’ll make it worse for you. Just hold a few
-more now, like a good feller. Dan’ll be out in a
-minute.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne nodded and spread his hands again.
-This time the ball came in with a thud that almost
-staggered him and the pitcher grinned. “Too
-bad, kid,” he said. “I won’t do it again.”
-Wayne smiled, too.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“You may if you’ll tell me before you do it,” he
-answered.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, I’ll bet you can hold down a sack all
-right, Bill,” replied the other. “Tell you what.
-You wait for me to give you the signal, see?
-When I see that Steve’s got his temper back I’ll
-pipe you off. But don’t you tackle him before.
-Here they come now. Thanks, kid. Keep out of
-the way awhile.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne tossed the ball back, nodded and loitered
-aside as the players emerged from the dressing-room.
-Wayne thought them a very likely-looking
-lot as they made their way around to the bench,
-followed by a man lugging two big bat-bags. In
-age they ran from nineteen to thirty, he judged.
-One, a broad-shouldered and powerful-looking
-man, appeared even older than thirty and wore a
-heavy mustache, something that none of the others
-had. The big man looked decidedly cross, Wayne
-thought, and he wondered if he had been the
-principal object of Manager Milburn’s wrath.
-The manager himself Wayne failed to see. No
-one paid any attention to Wayne. All the players
-looked very grave and solemn, but Wayne caught
-one, a youth not much older than he, winking at
-a companion and concluded that the solemnity
-was largely assumed. It was the man with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-mustache who took command of the situation just
-then.</p>
-
-<p>“Now show some pep!” he barked. “Get out
-there and act alive. Some of you stuffed sausages
-will be benched mighty quick if you don’t wake
-up, and I’m giving it to you square. Ten dollars
-a month would buy the lot of you if anyone made
-the offer!”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne awoke to the fact that the mustached
-man was Mr. Steve Milburn, something he had
-not suspected, since he had thought to find the
-manager in street clothes. Wayne viewed his
-angry countenance with sinking heart. The big
-pitcher was right, he concluded. This was no
-moment to approach Mr. Milburn with the expectation
-of getting a hearing. He made himself
-as small and inconspicuous as he might, finding a
-seat on the empty bench, and for the ensuing half-hour
-watched the Harrisville Badgers go through
-their morning practice.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</a><br />
-TURNED DOWN!</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The practice wasn’t much different from what
-the Chenangos were accustomed to. Harrisville
-showed more certainty and ease and speed in
-handling the ball, and there were fewer slip-ups,
-but, on the other hand, Wayne thought there was
-something rather perfunctory about the work.
-Manager Milburn was after his charges every
-minute, barking and snarling, and nothing appeared
-to please him the least bit in the world.
-Wayne began to wonder whether it would not be
-the part of wisdom to take himself off and let the
-interview wait until after dinner or even tomorrow.
-There came no sign from the red-haired
-pitcher—his name appeared to be Herring, according
-to the irate manager, and “Red,” if you
-believed the players—who was working out near
-by in company with three other twirlers and two
-catchers. Manager Milburn was behind the plate
-and the rest of the players, with the exception of
-two, were in the field. The two took turns at
-batting, laying down bunts, cracking out liners<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-and arching long flies at the behest of the
-manager. A short, stocky youngster named Nye
-was pitching. It was interesting enough and
-Wayne would have enjoyed it had it not been for
-that letter in his pocket toward which his hand
-strayed every minute or two.</p>
-
-<p>After a while Nye gave way to one of the batters,
-who, it appeared, was also a pitcher, and
-retired to the bench beside Wayne. Several not
-over-clean towels draped an end of the seat and
-Nye seized one and patted the perspiration from
-his streaming face.</p>
-
-<p>“Getting hot,” he said to Wayne. The latter
-agreed. “Newspaper man?” asked the pitcher.
-Wayne shook his head. “Thought I didn’t know
-your face. What’s your line, friend?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m after a place on the team,” replied the
-boy. “Mr. Farrel sent me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Honest? How old are you?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne hesitated an instant. Finally, however,
-since he had a fondness for the truth, he told it.
-The pitcher raised his brows.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if Steve asks you you’d better tack on a
-couple of years,” he advised. “You look like
-you might be eighteen, easy. Where do you
-play?”</p>
-
-<p>“Second, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you aren’t likely to get there this season.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-Jones is as good as they make ’em. Seen him
-yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jones?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Steve Milburn.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, not yet. He didn’t seem to be in
-very good humour and so I thought maybe I’d
-better wait awhile.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hop” Nye chuckled. “You got it about right,
-kid. If I was you I’d beat it and come around tomorrow.
-He won’t get any better today, I guess.
-Not this morning, anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is he always like—like he is now?” asked
-Wayne anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Steve? No, this is a little extra. Some of
-the boys went off to a picnic night before last and
-yesterday we got licked to a fare-ye-well by the
-‘Billies.’ Oh, no, Steve has his fits now and
-again, but we don’t mind ’em much, and he gets
-over ’em. He’s a good sort—for a manager.”</p>
-
-<p>At that moment a stout man wearing a faded
-sweater whose alternate rings of red and white
-added to his apparent circumference and who
-walked with a rolling gait and chewed gum fast
-and furious, appeared on the scene and was
-instantly pounced on by Mr. Milburn.</p>
-
-<p>“Where have you been, Jimmy?” demanded
-the manager irately. “Had your dinner yet? Or
-are you just up from breakfast?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“It’s my usual time, Steve,” was the placid
-reply. “Got through with ’em?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’m through with them.” The manager’s
-tone implied that he was vastly relieved. “Take
-them, and if you can do anything with them, do
-it for the love of mud!”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Boss. Over to the net, boys. Bring
-them bats, some of you. Get a hustle on now.
-Some of you look like you was falling asleep on
-your pedals. Get goin’, get goin’!”</p>
-
-<p>The players moved off with more or less alacrity
-to the further side of the field where two batting
-nets were set, and the manager, after watching
-them a moment with the utmost contempt, turned
-toward the bench and caught sight of Wayne. The
-latter wished then that he had acted on Nye’s advice
-and left the field when he had had the chance.
-Steve Milburn strode up to him belligerently.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing in here?” he barked.
-“Who let you in? Don’t you know you fellows
-aren’t allowed in here without permission? Get
-out and stay out!”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne found himself on his feet. There was
-something extremely compelling in the manager’s
-voice and manner! But the next instant his
-fingers had closed around that letter and he was
-pulling it forth from his pocket. “I—I was sent
-to see you, sir——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“See me at the hotel then. You newspaper
-fellows make me sick, anyway. Who sent
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Farrel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Farrel? Who’s Farrel?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Chris Farrel, sir. He told me—he gave
-me——”</p>
-
-<p>“Chris sent you? What have you got there?”</p>
-
-<p>“A letter.” Wayne offered it and the manager
-pulled it impatiently from his hand, tore open
-the envelope, and ran a quick and frowning gaze
-over the contents. Then he squeezed letter and
-envelope into a tight ball and tossed them under
-the bench.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s a fool! I don’t need infielders, and he
-knows it. Nothing doing, kid.”</p>
-
-<p>“But—he said you’d give me a try-out, sir,”
-exclaimed Wayne with a sinking heart.</p>
-
-<p>“He’d tell you anything. Look here, now, and
-get this. I don’t need infielders and wouldn’t sign
-one up if he was a Baker and a Collins all rolled
-into one. I told Chris to find me an outfielder
-who could hit and he goes and sends me a second
-baseman! And robs the nursery, too! The man’s
-crazy! You might as well beat it, kid. Back
-to the crib for yours.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m old enough to play ball, sir,” answered
-Wayne.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Nothing doing,” replied the man wearily.
-“I can pick them up any day like you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he said you’d give me a try-out, Mr.
-Milburn. He—he promised me that. He wrote
-another letter to you yesterday——”</p>
-
-<p>“He <em>said</em> he did. He’d tell you anything. What
-would you expect of an idiot who will ship you a
-second baseman when you want an outfielder?
-Anyway, I haven’t got any letter. And it
-wouldn’t matter if he wrote me a dozen. I’ve
-got all the second baseman I want. So don’t
-stand there and argue about it. I know what I
-want, don’t I?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon you do,” answered Wayne, losing his
-temper at last. “And I know I was promised
-a try-out by your—your representative”—the
-manager sniffed audibly—“and I want it!”</p>
-
-<p>“What do I care what you want?” demanded
-the man loudly. “You won’t get any try-out from
-me, and I’m telling you right. I’m not responsible
-for Chris Farrel making a fool of himself.
-Anyway, you aren’t old enough. Come around
-next year and I’ll give you a try-out—for bat-boy!”
-Steve Milburn turned on his heel.</p>
-
-<p>Several retorts, none of which were either tactful
-or likely to aid his cause, sprang to Wayne’s
-lips, but he closed his teeth on them. Instead, he
-strode quickly after the manager, and the latter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-turned upon him scowlingly. “Listen to me, kid,”
-he said threateningly. “You beat it out of here
-before I throw you out. Get that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” answered Wayne unflinchingly.
-“I’m going. Can I see you at your hotel this
-evening?”</p>
-
-<p>“You can not! I’ve said everything. Want
-me to sing it for you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, only I thought that maybe you’d feel
-different when you’d——”</p>
-
-<p>“When I’d what?”</p>
-
-<p>“When you’d got your—when you weren’t
-angry, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Angry? Who says I’m angry? I’m not
-angry. You can’t make me angry.” Mr. Milburn
-scowled alarmingly. “Anyway, wouldn’t a bunch
-of boneheads like those over there make anyone
-angry? I’d like to see anyone keep sweet-tempered
-with that bunch of ivory-domed, flat-footed,
-slab-sided cripples on his hands. There isn’t a
-ball player in the lot! Not a single, solitary one!
-They don’t know ball from beans, and they don’t
-want to! Angry! Great Scott——”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, don’t you want to hire a ball player,
-then, sir?” asked Wayne innocently.</p>
-
-<p>“Hire a——” Mr. Milburn sputtered and
-waved impotent hands about his head. Then:
-“<em>Get out!</em>” he bawled.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Wayne went. There didn’t seem anything to be
-gained by driving the manager to new heights of
-frenzy. The last he saw of Steve Milburn that
-much-tried man was legging it across the field as
-fast as his feet would carry him. Wayne smiled.
-“I’m glad I’m not one of those fellows,” he
-thought as he turned to the gate.</p>
-
-<p>Mike, who had moved his chair into the shade
-and was dozing over his newspaper, looked up
-sleepily and nodded as Wayne passed through the
-fence. Outside, the smile faded from the boy’s
-face. The humour had quite gone from the situation
-now. He had failed and there was nothing to
-do but go back to Medfield. The thought didn’t
-please him. To be sure, he had prepared Jim
-Mason and the others for his return by a prediction
-that he wouldn’t make good, but it came to
-him now that he hadn’t believed in that prediction,
-that, deep down inside of him, he had all along
-expected to succeed. No, returning to Medfield
-didn’t appeal to him a bit.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, as he walked along in the full glare
-of a merciless noonday sun, anger ousted dejection.
-Steve Milburn had no right to turn him
-down like that. The club’s scout had guaranteed
-him a try-out and the manager ought to give it
-to him. Wayne told himself that several times,
-and the more often he said it, the more convinced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-he became of the truth of it, until, having reached
-the armory corner and turned toward the Bemis
-House, he was in a condition of perspiration and
-indignation. Sight of the Congress House crystallised
-the indignation into resolution. He had
-a right to a fair trial and he would have it. He
-would have it if he stayed in Harrisville all
-summer!</p>
-
-<p>From that verdict to reckoning up his money and
-comparing the amount to the requirements of a
-prolonged sojourn in the city was a short step. He
-had a little over ten dollars left, or would have
-when he had paid for his room at the hotel, and ten
-dollars would not, he reflected, keep two hungry
-boys and a dog from starvation very long. Then he
-remembered June’s savings and cheered up again.
-Using June’s money was something he didn’t like
-to do, something he wouldn’t do under ordinary
-circumstances, but this was no ordinary crisis.
-Wayne felt that justice and honour were involved.
-He was standing up for his rights. June’s money
-should be used, if necessary, for the Cause!</p>
-
-<p>He wondered whether it might not be well to
-apply to the law for assistance, but he abandoned
-that idea quickly. Lawyers were, as he had
-always heard, expensive helpers. And, besides,
-what was the good of a try-out if nothing came
-of it? And if he antagonised Mr. Milburn too<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-much nothing would come of it. All the manager
-needed to do was to give him the try-out and say
-that he didn’t suit. Next Wayne thought of the
-owner of the club, Mr. John J. Badger. Or was
-it John K.? He might seek Mr. Badger and put
-the situation up to him. But then, that, too, would
-increase the manager’s ire and probably accomplish
-harm rather than good. No, what was to
-be done must be done tactfully, if firmly, he decided.
-He must persuade Mr. Milburn to give
-him the try-out of his own free will. Only,
-how?</p>
-
-<p>He was still confronted by that “How” when
-he reached the Bemis House and found June and
-Sam dozing in a tilted-back chair under the
-striped awning in front. Wayne dragged a chair
-alongside and, defeating Sam’s attempts to crawl
-into his arms, narrated the story of the morning’s
-encounter—and defeat. June was incredulous,
-outraged, indignant. He insisted that Wayne
-should revenge himself instantly on Mr. Milburn
-and the Harrisville Baseball Club by shaking the
-dust of the place from their feet and leaving
-manager and team to get along without his services.
-But Wayne said no to that.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re going to stay right here until I get
-what I came for,” he declared stoutly. “We’re
-going to find a place to live first of all. This is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-too expensive, I reckon. How much money have
-you got, June?”</p>
-
-<p>“I got forty-seven dollars an’ ninety-three
-cents,” replied June proudly. “I reckon that’ll
-keep us here mos’ all summer, Mas’ Wayne, if
-that fool man don’ give you that position before.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, June. Now I’m going to write a
-letter. Then we’ll have some dinner and try to
-find a boarding-house afterward. You stay here,
-Sam.”</p>
-
-<p>The letter, written at one of the sloping desks
-that lined a wall in the little hotel lobby, was short
-but decided. It was addressed to Jim Mason and
-announced that Wayne would not be back to his
-job but was going to remain in Harrisville. It
-didn’t go into details at all and it ended up with
-thanks to Jim for his kindness and love to Mrs.
-Mason and Terry and a promise to see him the
-first time he returned to Medfield. He considered
-writing to Arthur Pattern, too, but decided to
-wait for a day or two longer. Then, having
-burned his bridges behind him, Wayne accompanied
-June to a nearby restaurant and ate a
-very satisfactory dinner.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</a><br />
-<small>“BADGERS” VS. “BILLIES”</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>They found a boarding-place without difficulty
-less than a square from the hotel. It was not very
-prepossessing and even June was inclined to turn
-up his nose at it. However, June’s nose was not
-shaped for turning-up purposes, and Wayne reminded
-him that they couldn’t expect much for
-two dollars and a half a week, and so he didn’t.
-They engaged a small and illy-lighted little apartment
-with one very grimy window that looked
-out into the rear premises of an iron foundry.
-The view, while not exactly inspiriting, was at
-least not monotonous, for the foundry provided
-movement and noise; to say nothing of smoke.
-Their landlady was frowsy and sleepy-looking
-and toddled away in evident relief the instant
-Wayne had deposited the first week’s board money
-in her hand, leaving them to debate whether the
-one small towel was intended to serve both occupants.
-The furniture consisted of two narrow
-cots pushed side by side, one chair, a decrepit
-bureau, and a metal washstand. There was a
-tattered rug on the floor and an equally tattered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-sash curtain at the lone window. (The rug was
-tossed into the hallway that night after Wayne
-had caught his foot in a hole and fallen against
-the bureau.) The cots looked ready to collapse
-of their own weight, but proved equal to the tasks
-set them, although they complained horribly every
-time Wayne or June turned over in them.</p>
-
-<p>But that was later. After settling their few
-belongings into place the boys, followed, you may
-be certain, by Sam, sallied forth again. It was
-mid-afternoon by that time and Wayne led the
-way hurriedly along the street in the direction of
-the distant ball park. To part with fifty cents of
-their combined fortunes seemed, on the face of
-it, pure recklessness, but Wayne soothed his
-conscience by telling himself that a fellow ought
-to know something about the ball team he was
-going to join. June’s conscience troubled him
-not a whit. June was as pleased as Punch at the
-idea of seeing a ball game. Sam—well, we don’t
-know what Sam thought about it. He seemed,
-however, perfectly willing to accompany the expedition.</p>
-
-<p>The game was well into the first half of the
-third inning when the two boys settled themselves
-in their places on the bleachers. There had been
-a trifle of difficulty in persuading the man at the
-gate to allow the passage of the dog, a difficulty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-which Sam had solved by taking the matter under
-his own control and trotting past. The ticket taker
-had threatened to have the dog removed, but his
-threat had seemed to lack conviction and the boys
-were not troubled. Wayne was surprised to note
-the smallness of the attendance. The reserved
-sections were merely sprinkled with spectators
-and more than half of the bleacher seats were
-empty. Possibly six hundred persons were on
-hand, but surely no more.</p>
-
-<p>The Doncaster Club, familiarly known as the
-“Billies,” were the opponents this afternoon,
-playing the third contest of a four-game series.
-The score-board showed Doncaster leading by
-two runs obtained in the first inning. Wayne
-squandered another five cents and bought a score-card
-which informed him of the batting order. A
-neighbour ended his doubt as to which of the three
-pitchers on the card was really performing by
-telling him over his shoulder that “Wainwright’s
-in the box and Linton’s catching. They worked
-him for a pass and a three-bagger in the first.
-Henderson and Coe’s the Billies’ battery.”
-Wayne thanked him and turned his attention
-back to the game in time to see the third Doncaster
-man thrown out at first.</p>
-
-<p>After that the game dragged for several
-innings, with neither team getting past second.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-Wayne recognised several of the players he had
-watched in the morning, notably O’Neill, the
-lanky, tow-headed left fielder, and a small, lithe
-youngster named Bennett who played third base
-as if he had a bunch of steel springs inside him.
-In spite of the distance to the bench, Wayne easily
-made out Steve Milburn and “Red” Herring and
-thought the smaller man next to “Red” was Nye.
-The crowd in the bleachers kept up an incessant,
-good-natured flow of comment and advice. O’Neill—Wayne
-learned before the game was over that
-his popular nickname was “Sailor”—was a great
-favourite with the bleacherites and frequently
-turned to wave a hand or shout a pat reply to
-some remark aimed at him. The bleacherites had
-other favourites as well: young Bennett and Nick
-Crane, the first-choice pitcher, and a swarthy,
-broad-shouldered, long-limbed first baseman
-named Morgan. And Wayne gathered in the
-course of the contest that Steve Milburn was
-held in the utmost respect as a manager and was
-personally popular to a degree.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne thought that the manager’s “bawling-out”
-that forenoon had done good, for the Harrisville
-team was certainly on its toes all the time
-and played with a snap. Only the total inability
-to hit the Billies’ pitcher safely kept the home
-club from scoring. Henderson was slammed here,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-there, and everywhere, but there was always a
-man right on the spot to spoil the hit. However,
-the Badgers did manage to get a run across in the
-fifth when Cross, who played shortstop and captained
-the team, beat out a roller to first, was
-sacrificed to second, and won home on a long fly to
-right fielder. But Doncaster came back in the next
-inning and found Wainwright for two hits and
-a sacrifice and took back her lead of two tallies.</p>
-
-<p>June was having a fine time with a bag of
-peanuts, which he shared with Sam, and was already
-a violent partisan of the Harrisville
-Badgers. His comments, voiced for Wayne’s ear
-alone but audible to the nearby spectators,
-aroused much mirth. Wayne didn’t hear them
-all, for he was busy watching the players and
-their methods. He saw several tricks that were
-new to his experience. For instance, a Doncaster
-coach at third insisted that a runner who had
-reached that base should keep outside the foul
-line, something that the runner repeatedly neglected
-to do. That puzzled Wayne for the better
-part of two innings and wasn’t solved until a
-batter hit sharply to young Bennett, whereupon
-Wayne realised that had a runner been on fair
-ground he would probably have been hit by the
-ball and so been put out. By keeping on foul
-territory he was safe. He stored the fact away<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-in his memory for future use. Most of all he
-watched the playing of Jones, the second baseman.
-Jones was short and a bit heavy-looking,
-but he seemed fast enough in action and certainly
-played a good, steady game. At bat he was not
-dangerous that afternoon, but, for that matter,
-none of the Badgers was. Wayne asked the man
-behind him, who had volunteered the information
-about the batteries, what sort of a hitter
-Jones was and the man pursed his lips and
-shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“Clover Jones? We-ell, he ain’t so bad as some.
-He bats better’n Tim Leary. I’ve seen Clover
-everlastingly wallop the ball an’ then again I’ve
-seen him go a week without making a hit. You
-can’t tell about Clover. He’s a good baseman,
-though. Ain’t anybody hitting today. That
-feller Henderson’s got a lot on the ball, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>But even Henderson, who ranked high in the
-Tri-State League, couldn’t keep it up to the end,
-and when the eighth inning came Sailor O’Neill
-brought yelps of joy from the stands by leading
-off with the Badgers’ fourth safe hit of the game,
-a sharp liner that whizzed over shortstop’s head
-and let O’Neill reach second base by a hair’s
-breadth. Then Leary struck out. Linton, the
-catcher, laid down a bunt in front of the plate and
-the Billies’ backstop chose to head off O’Neill at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-third. But his hurried throw went wide, O’Neill
-scored and Linton slid into second. With but one
-down there was a fine chance of evening up the
-score or winning, and Wayne wasn’t surprised
-when the delay at the plate resulted in the arrival
-there of a pinch-hitter in the person of Fawcett, a
-substitute outfielder. Fawcett’s appearance was
-greeted joyfully by the bleachers and he received
-a deal of advice. Fawcett, however, failed to
-deliver the needed hit, for, after swinging at two
-good ones and missing them, he stood idle, while
-a third sailed across the plate. Bennett was the
-remaining hope, and Bennett came across nicely.
-He allowed Henderson to put him in the hole to
-the tune of two-and-one, refused a wide one and
-a drop, and then connected with the next offering
-and banged it hard at the hole between second
-and shortstop. The pitcher nearly reached it but
-failed, and the ball sailed serenely over the second
-bag and Linton scuttled home with the tying run.</p>
-
-<p>The inning ended when Briggs, centre fielder,
-flied out to first baseman, and with the score three
-to three the game went through the ninth and
-started the tenth. By this time ennui was no
-longer discernible in stands or bleachers.
-Leather-lunged “fans” were appealing wildly to
-the Fates for a victory. Cotton was the relief
-pitcher for the Badgers, and, although he was as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-wild as a hawk in the ninth, he got by with the aid
-of sharp fielding and settled down in the tenth
-very nicely. With two of the Billies gone, though,
-an error by Captain Cross gave a life to the Doncaster
-left fielder and a pass to the succeeding
-batsman put him on second. Then the first baseman
-succeeded where better batters had failed and
-lined one past third, allowing the left fielder to
-score and putting the next man on second. A
-fly to the outfield brought the end.</p>
-
-<p>But Doncaster again held the lead and it was
-up to Harrisville to get a run across. The
-bleacherites did all they could to help, and June’s
-was a conspicuous voice amongst them. Even
-Sam seemed to sense a desperate crisis, for he
-roused himself from the lethargy produced by
-a feast of peanuts and barked wildly. Cross went
-out, third to first. “Cob” Morgan, the dark-visaged
-first baseman, reached the initial station
-safely by reason of a fumble on the part of shortstop.
-Jones started to the plate but was recalled
-and LaCroix took his place. LaCroix was a thick-set,
-hook-nosed Canuck. Opinion in Wayne’s
-vicinity differed as to the advisability of putting
-“Nap” in, but it was generally conceded that
-Steve Milburn generally pulled the trick and that
-events might vindicate his judgment in this case.
-And events surely did.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Nap LaCroix leaned against the first offering
-and hit to short right and there were two on. The
-Harrisville “rooters” cheered and yelped and,
-considering their scarcity, made a brave uproar.
-Possibly it had its effect on Henderson, for he
-wabbled for the first time in the proceedings and
-walked O’Neill. The bleacherites arose to their
-feet and waved hats and coats and newspapers
-madly. Wayne did his share, June yipped, and
-Sam, squirming in Wayne’s arms, barked
-frantically. Another pinch-hitter was sent in,
-this time in place of Leary.</p>
-
-<p>“O you Joe Casey!” bellowed the audience.
-“Hit it out, Joe!” “Remember yesterday, Joe!”</p>
-
-<p>The young pitcher, who Wayne gathered had
-been ingloriously hammered the preceding afternoon,
-didn’t look like a likely candidate to pull
-the game out of the fire, for he presented a very
-awkward appearance at the plate. But he didn’t
-have much chance to show his prowess for Henderson
-pitched two balls before he got a strike over
-and then followed with two more, forcing in the
-tying run and exiling himself to the showers.
-The audience shouted joy and relief and settled
-down to their seats again. But they still sat on
-the edges, for the game was still to win. Linton
-tried hard to deliver but only hit across the infield
-to shortstop and LaCroix was an easy out at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-the plate. The new pitcher for Doncaster was
-slow and heady and he was cutting the corners
-very nicely, it seemed, for he wafted two strikes
-over on Cotton before the Badgers’ box artist
-knew what was happening, and Harrisville saw her
-hopes descending. Still, in the end Cotton almost
-came through. With the score two-and-two, he
-met a straight one and lifted it gloriously against
-the sky for what looked like a circuit hit. Harrisville
-arose as one man and shouted hoarsely and
-triumphantly, for that ball looked exactly as
-though it meant to ride right on over the left
-field fence. The fielder hiked back on twinkling
-feet, looked over his shoulder, raced on again,
-turned, stepped back until his shadow loomed
-large against the boards behind him, and put up
-his hands. And that deceitful ball just came
-right down into them as though pulled there by
-an invisible string!</p>
-
-<p>Gloom and disgust possessed the stands!</p>
-
-<p>The sun was gone behind the hills in the west
-when the eleventh session opened and the heat of
-the afternoon was giving place to the coolness of
-evening. Coats which had laid across knees for
-ten long innings were donned again. Here and
-there a spectator arose, unwillingly, and, with
-long backward looks, took himself homeward.
-Cotton was pitching fine ball now and Doncaster<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-had never a look-in during her half of the eleventh.
-But neither had Harrisville in her portion. If
-Cotton was going well, so was the rival twirler,
-and the nearest thing to a hit that either team
-evolved was a palpable scratch that placed Cross
-on first, from which sack he failed to move. In
-the twelfth the Billies caused consternation by
-working Cotton for a pass and advancing a man
-to third on a sacrifice and an error by LaCroix,
-playing second. But two strike-outs followed and
-averted calamity.</p>
-
-<p>Manager Milburn’s line-up was a rather
-patched affair by now, for he had staked all on
-that tenth inning crisis. Fawcett started off by
-flying out to left. O’Neill hit for one. LaCroix
-fouled out to catcher. O’Neill stole on the second
-pitch to Linton and was safe. Linton fouled
-twice behind third base, each time barely escaping
-being caught out, and then, with two strikes and
-two balls against him, waited and walked to base.
-With two on and Cotton at bat anything might
-happen—or nothing. For a while it looked like
-nothing, for Cotton, in spite of his eagerness to
-hit and the wild and weird manner in which he
-swung his bat around his head, for all the world
-like a joyous lad twirling a shillalah at Donnybrook
-Fair and daring an adversary to step up
-and have his head broken, the Billies’ pitcher<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-managed to sneak them across in unexpected
-places until the score was two-and-two. Cotton
-was losing his temper now, and Wayne could hear
-Steve Milburn barking at him from the bench.
-A third ball went past. The bleachers stormed
-and railed at the Doncaster pitcher, Cotton
-squeezed his bat harder than ever and did a little
-dance in the box. The Billies’ twirler wound up,
-shot his arm forward and the ball sped to the
-plate. Perhaps Cotton mistook the ball for the
-pitcher’s head. At all events, he tried hard to
-break his bat on it and came near to doing it.
-Off whizzed the ball and off sped Cotton. But
-the long fly, while it started fair, soon broke to the
-left, and Cotton, pounding the turf between first
-and second with head down and legs twinkling,
-was stopped in his mad career and headed back to
-the plate. The audience groaned its disappointment
-and sat down again. Then an unlooked-for
-event occurred. Wayne was apprised of it first
-when a wild burst of delight broke from his
-neighbours in the bleachers. At the plate Cotton
-was walking sadly toward the bench, the umpire,
-mask off, was shouting something that Wayne
-couldn’t hear for the noise about him and a new
-figure strode to the batter’s box.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is it?” asked Wayne to the bleachers at
-large.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Steve himself!” was the answer. “Bust it,
-Steve! Knock the hide off it! Wow!”</p>
-
-<p>And sure enough it was Manager Milburn who
-faced the Doncaster pitcher now and who tapped
-a long black bat gently on the rubber, leaned it
-against his leg, moistened his hands and rubbed
-them together, took up the bat again and eyed
-the moundsman warily. In the outfield the players
-were stepping back and still back. The Harrisville
-rooters shouted and screeched, red of face,
-entreating of voice.</p>
-
-<p>One ball, far wide of the plate, that Steve Milburn
-only looked at as it sped by. A strike that
-caused him to turn and observe the umpire silently
-and derisively. Another ball, high and on the
-inside, that sent Steve’s head and shoulders jerking
-back from its path. The pandemonium increased.
-Another offering that would have cut
-the outer corner of the plate knee-high had not
-Manager Milburn’s bat been ready for it. A
-fine, heartening <em>crack</em> of wood and leather, a gray
-streak cutting the shadows of the first base stands,
-cries, pounding feet, dust, confusion and—victory!
-The ball passed second baseman a yard
-from his outstretched fingers and went to right
-fielder on its first long bound. But right fielder
-never threw it. Instead, he merely trotted benchward.
-For O’Neill was throwing himself across<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-the plate by that time and Milburn was on first
-and the game was over! And Harrisville had
-avenged yesterday’s defeat to the tune of four to
-three!</p>
-
-<p>The stands emptied, the players thronged to
-the dressing-rooms and Wayne and June journeyed
-across the trampled field of battle on their
-way to the gate as happy as though they themselves
-had won that victory. And Sam trotted
-behind with his pathetic stub of a tail wagging
-proudly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX</a><br />
-<small>WAYNE LENDS A HAND</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>That evening Wayne went to the Congress House
-and inquired for Mr. Milburn. The clerk at the
-desk pushed a card toward him and he wrote
-his name on it. Five minutes later a bell boy
-returned with the message that the manager declined
-to see him. As Wayne had expected just
-that, he was not disappointed. Finding a vacant
-chair against a wall of the lobby, he went on watch.
-But, although he saw several of the Harrisville
-players come and go during the succeeding hour,
-the manager did not appear, and at half-past nine
-Wayne returned to the new lodgings. June, with
-Sam curled into a tight bunch on his chest, was
-stretched on his bed reading an evening paper.
-June was not a fast reader but he was most
-thorough, and one newspaper generally lasted him
-for several days. Wayne made him lay his paper
-aside for the present and produce what money he
-had. To it Wayne added his own wealth and they
-then counted it over. They had to count it thrice
-for the result was different the first two times.
-Fifty-five dollars and forty-one cents was what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-they finally made it. Then Wayne figured on the
-margin of June’s paper and, after much frowning
-and muttering, decided that by rigid economy
-they could live just about five weeks on their
-capital.</p>
-
-<p>“Fifteen cents apiece is enough for breakfast
-and supper,” said Wayne, “and we can get a
-good dinner for thirty cents. That comes to one
-dollar and twenty cents a day, or eight-forty a
-week. Then two and a half for the room makes
-it ten-ninety, and ten-ninety goes into fifty-five
-forty five times and leaves ninety cents over.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so,” assented June, “but we’d better
-leave us enough to get home on, Mas’ Wayne.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re home now,” replied Wayne firmly.</p>
-
-<p>“Is we?”</p>
-
-<p>“We are! We’re going to stay right here,
-June. If I don’t get on the baseball team I’ll
-find a job somewhere. And you can do the
-same.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, but what’s to hinder me from gettin’
-me a job right now?” asked June.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne considered. Finally he shook his head.
-“No,” he answered, “I don’t want you working
-if I’m not. We’ve got enough to last us five
-weeks; four, anyway; and when we get toward the
-end of the money we can begin to look for something
-to do. If Mr. Milburn gives me a try-out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-and I make good, why, you won’t have to work.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say I won’? How come, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll keep house for me, June, and look after
-Sam. And you can go to school again. We’ll
-find a couple of rooms where we can get our own
-meals. How would you like that?”</p>
-
-<p>“With a real cook stove, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, a real, sure-enough one, June. And we’ll
-buy a whole outfit of pans and dishes and everything.
-And there’ll be a pantry with all sorts of
-things in it: canned soup and flour and sugar
-and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Molasses?” asked June eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course. Everything we want.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lawsy-y-y!” crooned June, hugging himself
-tightly and rolling his eyes. “Jus’ like quality,
-Mas’ Wayne! Say, I goin’ to cook a big mess of
-pork an’ cabbage the very firs’ thing! I ain’ had
-none of that for a mighty long ol’ time, I’m tellin’
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s ‘if’,” reminded Wayne. “Maybe it
-won’t happen, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mas’ Wayne,” said June earnestly, “it’s jus’
-got to happen, yes, sir! If that yere Mister
-Manager don’ give you that yere job I goin’
-pesker the life out’n him! ’Deed I is, yes, sir!
-I’m goin’ make him pow’ful mis’able.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to do a little ‘peskering’ myself,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-responded Wayne grimly. “And I’m going to
-begin tomorrow morning. Now, though, I’m going
-to sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>In the morning they found a little restaurant
-within a block of their new lodgings and had
-breakfast there. It wasn’t a very attractive
-place, and the tablecloths were likely to be soiled,
-but the food was satisfactory and the prices well
-within the limit Wayne had decided on. Also, the
-proprietor, a little man with a pronounced squint
-who talked in broken English, took a liking to Sam
-and neither of the boys had to stint his appetite
-to provide for the dog. After that first morning
-Sam trotted at once to the door at the back and
-stood there with an inquiring gaze and slowly
-wagging tail until the expected chop bone or other
-delicacy came his way.</p>
-
-<p>After breakfast June and Sam were left to their
-own devices and Wayne set forth for the ball park.
-Summer had come to Harrisville in its full intensity
-now and that long walk through the city
-and out beyond where there were neither buildings
-nor trees to mitigate the ferocity of the sun
-left the boy rather limp. As on the first occasion,
-Mike held him up at the door, but, recognising
-him the next instant, passed him through unsuspectingly.
-Today practice was in full swing
-when he entered the enclosure. Mr. Milburn was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-batting grounders to the infield and the portly
-trainer was knocking up flies. No one paid any
-attention to Wayne, and he crossed to the bench
-in the shade of the right base stand and settled
-himself to watch. Perhaps yesterday’s victory
-had restored the manager’s good-humour, for he
-was quite a different despot this morning. He
-didn’t hesitate to criticise or find fault, but his
-criticisms were just, and his fault-finding excusable.
-And he was quite as quick to praise as
-blame today. The players seemed in a merry
-mood and jokes and sallies passed from one to
-another across the diamond. Wayne’s first acquaintance,
-“Red” Herring, was limbering up
-his long arm, in company with the rest of the
-pitchers, at the other side of the field; Linton and
-Young catching. In deep right field, two painters,
-seated on a swinging scaffold, were dividing their
-attention between the sign they were at work on
-and the practice.</p>
-
-<p>Both Mr. Milburn and Mr. Slattery, the trainer,
-caught the balls as they were returned to them
-from the fielders, and now and then one got away
-from them. Presently a ball thrown to the trainer
-went wide and rolled nearly to the fence at the
-entrance. Being nearer than Mr. Slattery, Wayne
-went after it and tossed it back. The trainer accepted
-it without comment, swung his bat and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-sent it flying out into the field again. When it
-came in again, however, it passed well out of the
-trainer’s reach and that individual, turning with
-an exclamation of disgust, saw it, to his surprise,
-bound into the hands of Wayne. Unseen of the
-trainer, Wayne had signalled to the fielder with
-upraised hand. Mr. Slattery grunted, accepted
-the ball and sent it sailing forth again. After
-that it was Wayne who caught the throw-in each
-time, taking it on the bound, and who tossed it
-lightly to the batter. The latter accepted the
-service silently, doubtless glad to have it performed
-for him and not troubling about the performer’s
-identity. But, looking across to the plate
-once, Wayne found Manager Milburn observing
-him curiously, perhaps wondering where he had
-seen him before. That the manager did not remember
-him seemed evident a few minutes later
-when the players were called in and someone reported
-that the second base bag had broken away.
-Mr. Milburn called to the trainer.</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmy, send in and get a new strap for the
-second base bag,” he directed. “Jones says it’s
-broken.” And when Jimmy Slattery turned to
-waddle back to the dressing-room he added:
-“Send your helper, Jimmy, and you take them
-over to the nets.”</p>
-
-<p>“This feller?” asked Jimmy viewing Wayne<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-doubtfully. “You know where they are?” he
-inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll find them, sir,” said Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, get one, then, like a good feller,” said
-Jimmy, “and slip it on the second bag.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne entered the shed and looked around.
-There was a table in the first half-lighted room,
-and a half-dozen ticket boxes in a row on the
-floor. The table held a telephone instrument,
-some newspapers, a blotting-pad that looked as
-though it had been unchanged for many years and
-a litter of miscellaneous articles. But there were
-no base straps there and Wayne penetrated to the
-next apartment. This was evidently the dressing-room,
-for one side was lined with wooden lockers,
-most of them open and displaying the street costumes
-of the players, and on the other side were
-half a dozen showers. Two bare tables occupied
-the centre. Three wooden benches about completed
-the furnishings. One of the benches held
-a pile of towels and a box which, containing bottles
-and rolls of tape and gauze, exhaled a strong
-odour of liniment. But still there were no straps
-and Wayne returned to the outer room and was
-about to acknowledge defeat when his eyes fell
-on a closet. Although its door was closed, the
-key was in the lock, and when he had pulled it open
-he found what he was after. There were all sorts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-of things in that closet: base bags, bats, boxes
-of balls, masks, chest protectors, boxes whose contents
-he could only guess at, and, finally, a lot of
-straps depending from a nail. Wayne took one
-of the latter, closed the door as he had found it
-and went out again.</p>
-
-<p>Everyone had crossed to the further side of
-the field where the batting-nets stood, and Wayne
-took the strap down to second base and proceeded
-to fix it in place. When he had finished
-and had secured the bag to its spike he went
-over to Jimmy Slattery, who was coaching the
-batters at the nearer net, and held out the
-broken strap. “What shall I do with this?” he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Huh?” asked Jimmy. “Oh, throw it away,
-kid. Want a job?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” answered Wayne truthfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Get out there then and chase some of those
-balls,” directed the other.</p>
-
-<p>So Wayne went down the field, discarded his
-jacket and placed it against the fence and got
-to work. It was work, too, for only three of the
-players were fielding and they were quite content
-to let Wayne run after the hits that went over
-their heads or got past them. Now and then
-Wayne had the fun of trying for a fly. When he
-did he usually got it, although he started out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-with a muff that brought ironical remarks from
-the others.</p>
-
-<p>“Open your mouth and let it fall in,” called
-Fawcett.</p>
-
-<p>“Put your hands up,” advised Briggs facetiously,
-“and see will the ball hit ’em, kid!”</p>
-
-<p>But Wayne only smiled as he trotted after the
-elusive sphere and threw it to the nearer fielder.
-The next time the ball did hit his hands and,
-moreover, stayed in them, and Briggs was ready
-with a cheerful “’Ata boy! Squeeze it!” After
-that, by common consent, a fly that passed over
-the heads of the three players was left to Wayne
-undisputed.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, Win,” called Briggs once, “you’ll be
-losing your job first thing you know. The kid’s
-clever!”</p>
-
-<p>At first Wayne threw to Briggs or Fawcett or
-the third fielder, Leary, and let them peg the
-ball back to the pitcher, but presently, when he
-had stopped a grounder well in, he took courage
-and threw the ball in himself and threw it so well
-that Fawcett turned and regarded him with new
-interest.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you do that every time, stranger?” inquired
-the substitute outfielder. “’Cause, if
-you can, you’d better strike the boss for a
-job!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After a while Fawcett, Briggs, and Leary went
-in to take their turns at the net and a new trio
-came out to field. One was “Sailor” O’Neill, the
-left fielder, and “Sailor,” sauntering out toward
-Wayne, observed him curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’d you come from, kid?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Medfield,” replied Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>“Steve signed you on, has he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is he going to? Are you the fellow ‘Red’ was
-telling me about?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon so,” was the answer. “Mr. Farrel
-sent me here for a try-out, but Mr. Milburn says
-he don’t need me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Huh! One of Chris’ finds, eh? Well, he
-picks a good ’un now and then; about once in
-three years. Keep after him, kid. He’ll come
-across all right.”</p>
-
-<p>Further conversation was interrupted by a
-sizzling grounder that reminded “Sailor” of his
-duties.</p>
-
-<p>The morning’s work-out ended with practice
-on the bases and Wayne went back to the bench.
-He didn’t have it to himself now, for Jimmy
-Slattery, very warm and puffing from his recent
-exertions, was there, as were four of the pitching
-staff, “Hop” Nye amongst them. “Hop” recognised
-Wayne and nodded. The others viewed him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-with mild curiosity. Only Jimmy challenged his
-presence there.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you happen to be in here, kid?” he
-asked when Wayne had seated himself on the
-bench.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m waiting for a try-out,” answered the boy
-as casually as he could. “Mr. Farrel sent me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh.” But the trainer was still evidently puzzled.
-After a minute, spent in surreptitious examination
-of the boy, he inquired with a trace of
-sarcasm: “And what might you be? A pitcher
-or a catcher or what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Infielder, sir. Second baseman, for choice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Huh! You’ve got a choice, have you? That’s
-fine! What’s the boss say?”</p>
-
-<p>“He hasn’t decided yet.”</p>
-
-<p>Nye, who had overheard the conversation,
-leaned forward and spoke to the trainer. “He’s
-all right, Jimmy,” said “Hop.” “Chris sent him
-up and Steve won’t give him a look-over. <em>Says</em>
-he won’t, anyway. What’s your name, kid?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sloan, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Sloan, you take my advice and keep
-right after him. You’ll have to if you want to
-get anything out of him. Ain’t that so, Jimmy?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s true as true, my boy. I don’t see, though,
-what for Chris Farrel sent us an infielder. Can
-you hit the ball any?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I—yes, sir, a little.”</p>
-
-<p>“A little won’t get you anything, my boy.
-What the boss is lookin’ for is fellers as can swing
-on ’em hard. Still and all, I ain’t saying you
-mightn’t develop if Steve’ll take you on. Who
-was you playing with last?”</p>
-
-<p>“Medfield,” answered Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>“Medfield? I never heard of them,” pondered
-the trainer.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s an amateur team, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, that’s it, eh? You’re one o’ them
-gentlemen amachoors, are you? Well, Joe,
-here, was one o’ them things himself till I found
-him. ’Twas me that rescued him from a life of
-crime.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe Casey turned a tanned countenance and
-grinned along the bench. “When you found me,
-Jimmy,” he said, “I was playin’ with a bunch
-that knew baseball, take it from me. That team
-could give us two runs an inning and beat us without
-trying.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yah!” said Jimmy disdainfully. “Listen to
-him, fellers! When I first set my eyes on that
-guy he was playing toss with a bunch of these
-here Willie Boys, and all dolled up in fancy togs
-like a moving-picture hero! Wore a silk shirt,
-he did! And every time he steps gracefully to
-the box a lot of his sissy friends waves little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-pink flags and cheers right out loud for him!
-Say, believe me, fellers, it was killing!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right,” responded Casey, with a
-laugh. “That same bunch of Willie Boys could
-play ball some! We were the champs three years
-running, old scout!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know, but them girls’ schools is easy to
-beat,” replied Jimmy, with a wink at Wayne.
-The others on the bench laughed and Jimmy
-pulled himself to his feet. “Kid,” he said, “if
-you want a try-out you’ve got to make the boss
-think you’re good. Tell him you fielded for a
-thousand and batted for seven hundred. He
-won’t believe you, but he might be curious to see
-how you stack up. And keep after him, laddie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” answered Wayne. “I mean to.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX</a><br />
-<small>JUNE GOES TO WORK</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>But Wayne did not approach Manager Milburn
-that day. Somehow the occasion failed to present
-itself, and, while determined to overcome the
-other’s resistance by perseverance, he did not
-want to start out by making a nuisance of himself.
-Save that he became slightly acquainted with
-several other members of the Harrisville Club
-that morning, he could not be said to have made
-much progress. He wanted very much to see that
-final game with Doncaster in the afternoon, but
-it meant the price of two dinners approximately,
-since it didn’t even occur to him to go without
-June. He had to be satisfied with reading about
-it in the late edition of the evening paper and
-was vastly disappointed when he learned that the
-Billies had fallen on Joe Casey in the eighth and
-driven him to cover, scoring four hits and two
-runs and securing a lead that the home team had
-been unable to overcome. Herring had finished
-in the box for Harrisville and had held the opponent
-safe, but the damage had been done by that
-time and the final score read 7 to 6. Doncaster<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-had, consequently, split even on the series and
-incidentally reduced Harrisville’s lead in the
-league standing to eight games. Damascus had
-won again that day from Utica and slipped into
-second place. Wayne concluded that it would be
-well to wait until Harrisville had won her next
-game before presenting himself again to Mr.
-Milburn.</p>
-
-<p>A single line under the caption “With the
-Amateur Clubs” announced: “At Medfield;
-Chenango, 14, Atlas A. A., 2.” Something rather
-like a pang of homesickness went through him
-then and he almost wished himself back in Medfield.
-He wrote a letter to Arthur Pattern that
-night before going to bed and sent his new
-address.</p>
-
-<p>Sunday was a quiet and rather dull day for the
-boys. They went for a walk in the afternoon and
-explored the city pretty well, but the only incident
-of interest occurred when Sam made the mistake
-of underrating the fighting ability of a large
-gray cat and returned sadder and wiser after an
-encounter in an alley. Tabby had clawed his nose
-most thoroughly and Sam had to whimper a little
-and be sympathised with before the journey continued.
-By getting up late that morning and
-dressing very leisurely they managed to make
-breakfast and dinner suffice in the way of meals,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-thus saving twenty cents. (The saving would
-have been thirty cents had not June fallen victim
-to the fascination of a chocolate éclair and Wayne
-squandered another nickel on a Sunday paper.)</p>
-
-<p>On Monday Wayne went back to the ball park
-and again served as utility man, catching throw-ins
-for Jimmy Slattery and backing up the fielders
-during batting practice. He was rapidly becoming
-an accepted feature of the morning work and
-the players, most of whom had by this time heard
-his story, were very friendly toward him, “Red”
-Herring especially. Practice lacked vim this
-morning, and the manager, while he gave no such
-exhibition of temper as he had displayed Friday,
-was plainly disgruntled. Wayne took pains to
-keep out of his way, but he was haunted by a feeling
-that Mr. Milburn’s lack of recognition was
-only assumed. Once Wayne surprised the
-manager observing him with an expression that,
-while not unfriendly, was decidedly ironical. He
-wondered then whether Mr. Milburn had recognised
-him Saturday. Somehow he rather thought
-he had!</p>
-
-<p>Practice again ended without any apparent advancement
-of Wayne’s fortunes, for he had by
-now determined that when he again broached the
-subject of that try-out to the manager it should
-be after Harrisville had won a game and while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-Mr. Milburn was in the best of humours. To
-bring the matter up at the wrong moment might,
-he suspected, result disastrously. Although
-Wayne was unacquainted with the phrase, it was
-the psychological moment that he waited for.
-Besides, there was another thing that he was
-banking on, and that was the return to Harrisville
-of Chris Farrel. It seemed to him that
-Chris could easily secure that try-out if only he
-would put in his appearance. But inquiry that
-morning of Jimmy Slattery was not encouraging.
-Jimmy didn’t know when Chris would get back.
-He had heard that the scout was working his way
-south as far as Maryland. He might be back
-tomorrow or next week. He came and went about
-as he saw fit, a fact which Jimmy, for some reason
-not apparent to Wayne, seemed to resent.</p>
-
-<p>Damascus had no trouble winning that Monday
-game. Herring started in the box for the Badgers
-but lasted only three innings and was succeeded
-by Tommy Cotton. In the seventh Cotton resigned
-and Nick Crane took up the task. Harrisville
-played rather poorly, Wayne learned from
-the evening paper. At all events, Damascus
-gathered in the contest to the tune of 4 to 0.</p>
-
-<p>Tuesday’s work-out went with a new dash and
-vigour, and the batting practice lasted twice as
-long as usual. It was freely given out that Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-Milburn intended to win a majority of those four
-games, which meant that the Badgers must take
-the remaining three. That afternoon “Red”
-Herring again started the performance and this
-time he went through without a hitch, and, although
-the home club failed again to win renown
-with their sticks, the game went to the Badgers
-2 to 1. Wayne was tempted to try his fortunes
-with Mr. Milburn that evening, but discretion held
-him back. If the Badgers took tomorrow’s game
-perhaps he would risk it. Or maybe it would be
-still safer to wait until the Badgers had secured
-their three out of four. That is, if they did.
-They had got back their eight-game lead again,
-but Doncaster had won both games of a double
-header with Trenton and was now tied for second
-place, and it was no secret that Manager Milburn
-feared the Billies more than the Damascus club.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne got a reply from Jim Mason that afternoon.
-Jim was all for having Wayne give up and
-come back to his job. Perhaps he had read more
-in the boy’s letter than Wayne had intended him
-to. “I haven’t got any new fellow in your place
-yet,” wrote Jim, “and I won’t if you say you’re
-coming back. I can get along for another week
-I guess but you better write and say you are
-coming back so I will know whether to expect you
-or not. The missis is well and so is Terry. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-sends you his love and says please come back to
-see him. We are not very busy right now but
-last week they dumped a string of foreigns on me
-and I had a tough time getting shut of them.
-Terry says tell you the chicken with the twisted
-leg up and died on him the other day. So no
-more at present.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne was strongly tempted after reading
-Jim’s letter to see Mr. Milburn then and there
-and, if he still refused, to go back to Medfield
-on the first train in the morning. Perhaps it was
-a chance remark of June’s, as much as anything
-else, that kept him from yielding to that temptation.</p>
-
-<p>“I sure does like this yere Ha’isville,” declared
-June that evening at supper. “Wouldn’ go back
-to that little ol’ Medfield if they ask me, no, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>“You wouldn’t?” asked Wayne. “Why,
-June?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Cause this is a regular white man’s town,
-Mas’ Wayne. Livin’s cheap an’ fine, an’ folkses
-is fine, an’ there’s somethin’ goin’ on all the time.
-An’ if I wanted to, Mas’ Wayne, I could get me
-a job in no time at all, I could so, yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“What kind of a job, June?”</p>
-
-<p>June waved a fork vaguely but grandly. “Anythin’
-at all,” he answered. “I met up with a
-nigger blacks boots at that yere Congress House<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-you-all was tellin’ about an’ he say he can get me
-a job there tomorrow if I wants it, yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“As bell boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, an’ it don’ cost me but four bits.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who gets the four bits, June?”</p>
-
-<p>“This yere nigger I’m tellin’ you about. That’s
-his commission.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he wants a half-dollar for getting you the
-job, you mean?” Wayne was silent a moment.
-Then: “June, that’s where Mr. Milburn lives,” he
-said thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I ’member you tellin’ me that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder——” Wayne’s voice dwindled off
-again to silence. At last: “Would you like to
-take that job, June?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Not if you-all don’ want me to, Mas’ Wayne.
-I ain’ complainin’ none. ’Course, ain’ much to
-do ’cept hang aroun’——”</p>
-
-<p>“You go there tomorrow and grab it,” said
-Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>“Hones’? You ain’ mindin’ if I do?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’d rather you did, June. You might—I
-don’t see how you could, exactly—but you
-might——”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you just <em>might</em> be able to help me,
-June, if you were at the Congress House. Suppose,
-for instance, I wanted to see Mr. Milburn,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-and the clerk wouldn’t let me up. If you sort of
-made his acquaintance and got friendly with
-him——”</p>
-
-<p>“Lawsy-y-y! Ain’ that the truth? Mas’
-Wayne, I goin’ make that yere Mister Manager
-jus’ love me, yes, sir! I goin’ be so nice an’ ’tentive
-to him——”</p>
-
-<p>“Go ahead,” laughed Wayne. “Make him love
-you so much that he will give me a place on the
-team, June.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s jus’ what I’m aimin’ to do,” replied
-June, showing all his teeth in a broad grin. “You
-jus’ wait till I gets me acquainted with that Mister
-Man. I—I goin’ put a conjur on him, yes, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>The next morning June departed, armed with
-his “four bits” and his ingratiating smile in the
-direction of the Congress House and Wayne saw
-him no more until supper time. Wayne spent
-the forenoon at the ball grounds making himself
-useful. Today his duties included catching
-“Red” again. Linton did not show up and as
-Young couldn’t attend to more than three of the
-pitchers Herring found a mitt for Wayne and
-towed him across to the third base side of the
-field and ranged him alongside Catcher Young.</p>
-
-<p>“You take the other fellers, Dan,” said “Red.”
-“I got me a catcher.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne was a little embarrassed and awkward at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-first, but by the time “Red” was getting warmed
-up and putting speed into the ball he was so
-interested that he forgot all self-consciousness.
-“Red” was feeling in fine form this morning, possibly
-as a result of yesterday’s game, and some of
-his deliveries were hard to judge. There was a
-“jump ball” in particular that always caused
-Wayne anxiety until it had settled into his mitten.
-Crane, Nye, and Cotton, who were pitching to
-Young, and Young, too, for that matter, observed
-the emergency catcher with interest. It was
-“Hop” who asked presently: “You and Steve got
-together yet, kid?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet,” replied Wayne cheerfully, rolling
-the ball from mitt to hand and tossing it back to
-Herring. “There’s no hurry, I reckon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Better not leave it too long,” advised Cotton.
-“Chris Farrel’ll be sending another rookie along
-first thing anyone knows. He’s a great one for
-that sort of thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Chris is all right,” said Herring. “He discovered
-Cob Morgan and Bee Bennett, didn’t he?
-And I sort of guess they ain’t so poor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Chris makes about one lucky guess in ten,”
-observed Pitcher Crane, “but maybe that’s a good
-average. I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“You twirling this afternoon, Nick?” asked
-Herring.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I guess so. The boss is crazy to cop the next
-two games.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t look like it,” said Cotton innocently.
-“You’d think he’d put a good pitcher in today.”</p>
-
-<p>Crane only smiled. Nick, in the words of the
-Harrisville baseball scribes, was the “dean of
-the pitching corps,” and didn’t have to answer
-such aspersions. Just then Manager Milburn
-summoned Herring to take Casey’s place on the
-mound and Wayne was for removing his mitt.
-Young, however, suggested his taking Nye off
-his hands and Wayne assented. “Hop” was easy
-after Herring, for he used straight balls a good
-deal and although they came like lightning they
-were far easier to judge than “Red’s” eccentric
-slants. Later, when the players moved to the
-nets, Wayne encountered another of Manager
-Milburn’s sarcastic glances, but he didn’t mind.
-As long as the manager didn’t object to his being
-on the field during practice Wayne was for the
-present satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>That afternoon he received a letter, forwarded
-from Medfield, that brought his heart into his
-mouth as he read the postmark and recognized
-the writing. It was from his stepfather, and for
-a moment Wayne hesitated to open it, fearing that
-it was a summons home. But it wasn’t. Mr.
-Higgins was brief and decided. “Understand,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-he wrote, “that this is your doing and not mine.
-Don’t come home here expecting me to take you
-in again for I won’t. And don’t apply to me for
-money. You won’t get any. You will have to
-get along by your own efforts. I hope you will
-do so, but nothing I have ever seen of you leads
-me to expect it.”</p>
-
-<p>“It sounds a heap like him,” murmured Wayne,
-thrusting the letter back into its envelope. “He
-never did think I was any good, anyway. But
-I’ll show him. And he needn’t be afraid of my
-going back or asking him for money, because I
-wouldn’t, not if I was starving to death!” Wayne
-clenched his hands tightly and frowned at the
-letter. Then the frown faded and gave place to
-a satisfied smile. “Anyway,” he said to himself,
-“he isn’t going to try to get me back, and that’s
-a load off a fellow’s mind!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI</a><br />
-<small>MR. MILBURN PROMISES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>June took a shining half-dollar from his pocket
-and slipped it along the counter. Wayne examined
-it questioningly.</p>
-
-<p>“Mister Milburn done give me that,” chuckled
-June. “An’ all I done was jus’ fetch him some
-seegars from the news-stand.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean he tipped you a whole half-dollar
-for that?” marvelled Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>June nodded. “Yes, sir, that’s all I done. He
-say, ‘Boy, fetch me two seegars from the news-stand.
-Tell them they’s for Mister Milburn an’
-they’ll know what you want.’ An’ he give me a
-dollar bill an’ they was seventy-five cents change
-an’ he say, ‘Where you come from? I ain’ seen
-you before, has I?’ An’ I say, ‘No, sir, you ain’.
-I’m the new bell boy, sir, an’ anytime you wants
-anythin’ done partic’lar jus’ you asks for June.’
-He sorter laughed an’ say as how he’s goin’
-remember, an’ asks me where did I come from,
-an’ I tell him I come from Colquitt County,
-Georgia, an’ he say he knows Colquitt County
-’cause he was to a trainin’ camp down thataway<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-once.” June paused long enough to transfer some
-of the contents of his plate to his mouth, and then,
-heedful of his companion’s mandate regarding
-conversation and a full mouth, waited another
-moment before continuing. “We got on fine, him
-an’ me, Mas’ Wayne. He’s a right sociable gen’leman,
-yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne laughed. “I reckon that half-dollar was
-for your conversation, June, and not for the errand.
-Did you tell him you came here from
-Medfield?”</p>
-
-<p>June shook his head innocently. “He ain’ ask
-me that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you made a good start. Do you like the
-work, June?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, it’s a right promisin’ place. Lot’s
-o’ free-spendin’ gen’lemen at that yere hotel.
-Reckon I’m goin’ do better’n I did at the Union.
-I gets four dollars a week. They works you
-longer, though, ’cause I got to get there at six in
-the mornin’ an’ I don’ get through till six in the
-evenin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, that’s twelve hours, June!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, but the more I’m aroun’ there the
-more I’m goin’ to put in my jeans. I made a
-dollar an’ ten cents today, Mas’ Wayne; an’ I’d
-a done better’n that if them other boys hadn’
-tried to friz me out. There’s four of them, an’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-one’s a big yaller boy with a mean disposition.
-I reckon,” June added thoughtfully, “I’ll jus’
-have to lam him good before he quits foolin’ with
-me!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’d better not,” cautioned Wayne. “This
-isn’t Medfield, and they might fire you if they
-found you fighting.”</p>
-
-<p>“They ain’ goin’ to fin’ me. I’m goin’ do
-it where they won’ know nothin’ about it. How
-come them other gen’lemen pesker us like they
-done today, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“What other gentlemen? Oh, you mean the
-Damascus club. We just couldn’t hit them any
-more than they could hit us, June. You see Mr.
-Milburn pitched Nick Crane and so the Damascus
-manager put in Woodworth, their best man, and
-it was a pitchers’ battle right through the whole
-eleven innings. If Bennett hadn’t stolen home
-from third with two out in the eleventh I reckon
-they’d be playing yet. I’d like to have seen that
-steal. It must have been a dandy!”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure must! That gives us three games to
-their two, don’ it? Reckon we’ll win the one
-tomorrow, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. I heard that they’re going to
-use a fellow named Ripley, and they say he’s almost
-as good as Woodworth. He’s a spit-ball
-pitcher.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I am’ never see nobody pitch one of them
-yere spit-balls,” said June. “Who goin’ pitch
-for us, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose it will be Nye. It’s his turn, I think.
-Either Nye or Cotton. I reckon if Damascus
-plays the way she played today tomorrow’s game
-is going to be worth seeing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’ you-all go an’ see it, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t afford it, June. We’ve been here a
-week now and——”</p>
-
-<p>“You ain’ got to ’ford it,” chuckled June.
-“Mister Milburn say if I want to see a game jus’
-let him know an’ he goin’ pass me in. I’ll ask
-him about it tomorrow an’ you can take the
-ticket.”</p>
-
-<p>“He wouldn’t want you to give it to anyone
-else, June. Maybe I’ll try walking in past Mike
-at the players’ gate. I don’t believe he would
-stop me, and I don’t believe anyone would mind,
-because I’ve helped a good deal out there in the
-mornings, June.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure you has, Mas’ Wayne! You got a perfec’ly
-good right to see them games, yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne exhibited his stepfather’s letter then
-and June, after he had slowly puzzled through it,
-snorted with disgust. “Ain’ that like him, Mas’
-Wayne, sir? Ain’ it jus’ <em>like</em> him? Firs’ thing
-he thinks of is money! I can’ ever say jus’ what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-I thinks of that gen’leman ’cause he’s a sort o’
-relation o’ yours, Mas’ Wayne, but I certainly
-does do a heap o’ thinkin’!”</p>
-
-<p>“Anyway, he intends to let me alone, June, and
-that’s what I wanted. As for money, why, he
-will have to give me some when I’m twenty-one
-because mother left me almost twelve hundred
-dollars and he only has it in trust.”</p>
-
-<p>“Reckon he ain’ wishin’ for you-all to remember
-that,” replied June, shaking his head. “An’
-if I was you, Mas’ Wayne, I’d write to Lawyer
-Ackerman an’ tell him to keep a mighty sharp
-watch on that yere stepdaddy of yours, yes, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>“He can’t very well run off with the farm,
-June,” laughed Wayne, “and as long as
-that’s there I reckon I can always get my
-money.”</p>
-
-<p>June was passing along the second floor corridor
-of the Congress House the next morning,
-laden with a number of empty ice-water pitchers
-and crooning a song, when a door opened and
-Mr. Milburn confronted him.</p>
-
-<p>“Boy! Run down and get me a Philadelphia
-paper. Any one will do. Oh, is that you,
-January?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, Mister Milburn, I ain’ January yet,
-sir; I’m jus’ June.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, all right, June,” chuckled the manager.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-“Hustle up that paper. I’ve got a dime here
-that’s looking for a home.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, don’ you do nothin’ with it till I
-returns,” answered June, sprinting for the stairs.</p>
-
-<p>When he came back and knocked on the door
-and was told to enter Mr. Milburn was seated at
-a table clipping things from various newspapers
-and pasting them in a huge scrapbook. “That’s
-the boy,” he said, “and here’s your dime, June.
-How did they come to call you June, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Tain’ really June, sir, it’s Junius; Junius
-Brutus Bartow Tasker is my full name, Mister
-Milburn.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Full’ is good! Going out to see my boys
-play today, Junius Brutus And-so-forth?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’ get off today, sir, but I got a friend that
-would like powerful much to see that game.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m not proposing to supply your friends
-with tickets, boy. Hasn’t this friend got a
-quarter?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, but he’s needin’ all the quarters he’s
-got, jus’ like me, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, all right.” Mr. Milburn produced a slip
-of paper and scrawled a hurried signature on it.
-“There you are. Tell him to show that to the
-man at the ticket office and he will fix him out.
-Haven’t you seen my club play yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Once, Mister Milburn. We seen ’em lick those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-Billies last—last Friday, I reckon it was. An’
-we seen some ball playin’! Yes, sir, we surely
-did so!”</p>
-
-<p>“Who are ‘we’? You and this friend of
-yours?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. He ain’ exac’ly a friend, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t he?” Mr. Milburn turned the pages of
-the paper June had brought him and hurriedly
-scanned them. “Isn’t an enemy, is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, he’s—he’s my boss.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your boss? What do you mean by that?”
-The manager dropped the paper to the floor,
-glanced at his watch and turned an amused gaze
-on the boy.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir, he’s Mas’ Wayne Sloan, sir, an’ the
-Sloans is quality down in Colquitt County. You
-see, Mas’ Wayne’s mother she up an’ die ’bout
-three-four years ago an’ this yere stepdaddy of
-his ain’ no earthly ’count, no, sir, he ain’. He
-jus’ pesker Mas’ Wayne somethin’ fierce till him
-an’ me we jus’ lit out an’ come up North here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sloan?” inquired Mr. Milburn. “He’s a white
-boy, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sloan, eh? Look here, that isn’t the kid that
-Farrel sent to me for a try-out, is it? A dark-haired
-chap with——”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, that’s Mas’ Wayne. How come<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-you-all ain’ given him that yere try-out yet,
-sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because he’s an infielder, June, and we don’t
-need infielders. I told him that days ago, but
-he’s still hanging around, I see.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, we’re waitin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m afraid waiting won’t do him any
-good, June. You’d better tell him so. I like the
-kid’s perseverance, but he’s wasting his time.
-If he was a couple of years older and could play
-a little I’d give him a chance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, an’ I reckon he’s goin’ be a couple
-years older if you-all don’ hurry up!” June’s grin
-robbed the statement of offence. “Mister Milburn,
-please, sir, can I tell you somethin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“Go ahead, June.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir, Mas’ Wayne’s surely one fine ball
-player,” said June earnestly, “an’ you-all ain’
-actin’ sensible if you don’ grab him, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s just your idea of him, June,” was
-the good-natured reply. “We get dozens like him
-every spring, fellows fresh from high school or
-college who think that if they can hold a ball
-when it’s thrown to them they’re regular Big
-Leaguers.”</p>
-
-<p>“How come this yere Mr. Farrel done send him
-over here, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Farrel plays it safe, June. He has instructions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-to pick up anything that looks good and
-ship him over for me to see. But he isn’t
-supposed to rob the nurseries. We can’t use
-them until they’re grown up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir, seems like this yere Mister Farrel
-ain’ actin’ jus’ right. He done tell Mas’ Wayne
-how you goin’ give him a try-out an’ all, an’ Mas’
-Wayne he give up his position in Medfield an’
-now ain’ nothin’ ’tall come of it. It don’ seem
-jus’ right, sir, does it? Mas’ Wayne he ’lows
-we’s goin’ stay right here till he gets that yere
-try-out, yes, sir, but we ain’ got but about fifty
-dollars an’ that ain’ goin’ to last forever, is it?
-Please, sir, Mister Milburn, I wish you’d jus’ give
-him that ol’ try-out, sir, an’ then, if he don’ act
-good, we knows where we’re at! Couldn’ you
-jus’ do that, please, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>The manager frowned impatiently, slapped the
-scrapbook shut, opened it again, and once more
-looked at his watch. June observed him anxiously
-but continued to smile. Perhaps it was that smile
-that decided the question, for Mr. Milburn saw it
-and the corners of his own mouth began to go up,
-and presently he laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, June,” he said. “He shall have his
-try-out. Maybe tomorrow. By the first of the
-week, anyway. You can tell him so. And you
-can tell him he owes it to you. Mostly, at any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-rate.” The manager arose. “Maybe I’d have
-given it to him anyhow sooner or later, just to
-get rid of him!” he added grumblingly. He
-turned with pretended ferocity on June. “You
-got that dime, didn’t you?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, thanky, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what are you waiting for then? Beat
-it! Get out of here before you think up any
-more hard-luck stories! Here, give me that
-pass!”</p>
-
-<p>June yielded it and the manager tore it in half
-and dropped the pieces on the floor. “Tell Sloan
-I said he was to go in the players’ gate. I guess
-he’s earned the right to see one game. Now get
-out of here, you black nuisance!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” replied June, grinning from ear to
-ear. “Thanky, sir. Hope you wins your game,
-sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hope you get your wish, June! You don’t
-happen to own a rabbit’s foot, do you? One of
-the lucky sort, I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, I ain’ got no rabbit’s foot, but you-all’s
-goin’ win today, Mister Milburn, yes, sir! I goin’
-put a conjur on that yere game!”</p>
-
-<p>“You and your conjurs!” laughed the other.
-“We’ll see, though, and if we don’t win—well,
-you’d better keep out of my reach, boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” chuckled June from the doorway,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
-“if we don’ win I’m goin’ give you the whole
-sidewalk!”</p>
-
-<p>June, however, had no chance to give Mr. Milburn’s
-message to Wayne, for Wayne did not
-come around to the hotel and June’s duties prevented
-him from seeking him at noon hour. June
-got his dinners at the hotel, which meant a saving
-of thirty cents a day, but he wasn’t allowed much
-time to eat them in. Consequently it was with the
-intention of walking boldly past Mike, the gate-man,
-that Wayne started out for the field that
-afternoon. Yesterday’s close contest, and the fact
-that today’s encounter was the last with the
-Damascus club at Harrisville until after the home
-team’s swing around the circle which began next
-week, had combined to awaken a more than usual
-amount of interest in the afternoon’s game and
-the cars that buzzed and clanged their way past
-Wayne were filled to the running-boards. It was
-evident that the attendance at the park today
-would assume holiday proportions, and, too, that
-the railway company had, in spite of extra cars,
-failed to accommodate all who wanted to ride.
-Wayne had started early, hoping to get there
-about the time the players went in and trusting to
-the good offices of “Red” Herring or some other
-acquaintance to gain him admittance should Mike
-prove obdurate, but the players had passed him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-long ago in their car and it lacked but twenty
-minutes of starting time when he got within distant
-sight of the park.</p>
-
-<p>It was then that he noticed that the trolley cars
-were blocked somewhere ahead. The passengers
-were jumping off and starting the rest of the
-journey afoot, but Wayne thought nothing of it
-until the imperative clang of an ambulance bell
-sounded on his ears and he turned to watch the
-vehicle dash hurriedly past, scattering pedestrians
-to right and left. Before Wayne had covered the
-next two squares, the ambulance passed again,
-speeding now in the direction of town, with a
-white-garbed doctor swaying on the steps.</p>
-
-<p>“Reckon someone got smashed up,” reflected
-Wayne, walking a little faster. The folks about
-him were audibly conjecturing on the accident but
-no one seemed to know anything about it, and it
-was not until Wayne had reached the corner of an
-intersecting street a square from the ball grounds
-that he learned the facts. The brakes on one of the
-cars had failed to work and, since there was a
-down-grade just here, it had crashed into the rear
-of a car ahead. The two cars were there for
-evidence, both badly crushed as to vestibules.
-A motorman and two passengers had been badly
-injured, Wayne heard, but no one had been killed.
-Several others had been shaken up, but, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-Wayne’s informant added, with a smile, they had
-gone on into the ball game and so probably
-weren’t dangerously injured! That reminded
-Wayne of his own purpose and, after pushing his
-way forward for a curious view of the damaged
-cars, he hurried on again and sought the players’
-gate. By now he had determined to see the game
-in any event. After walking all the way from
-town in the hot sun it would be silly to turn back,
-he told himself, and he jingled the few coins in
-his pocket reassuringly.</p>
-
-<p>The door in the high fence was closed but
-yielded readily to pressure and Wayne, looking as
-nonchalant as he knew how, stepped inside. Mike
-was standing a few yards away, talking with one
-of the ground-keepers and didn’t turn until he
-heard the creaking of the door as it went shut on
-its rusty hinges. When he did turn, though,
-Wayne saw an expression of lively interest on his
-face and paused irresolutely, so certain was he
-that Mike meant to deny him admittance. But
-Mike’s greeting was startlingly different from
-what Wayne expected. The door tender took a
-step toward him and jerked an impatient thumb
-over his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurry up an’ get in there,” he said. “The
-boss is lookin’ for you!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII</a><br />
-<small>SECOND BASE SLOAN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The succeeding quarter-hour was always
-strangely confused and indistinct in Wayne’s
-memory. Damascus was warming up on the
-diamond and Herring’s brilliant thatch showed
-above the corner of the stand as the boy’s gaze
-swept hurriedly toward the field ere he turned in
-at the dressing-room door. Doubtless others of
-the pitching staff were out there with “Red,” but
-most of the players were still standing around the
-office when Wayne entered. For the moment none
-saw.</p>
-
-<p>“This is what comes of keeping your salary
-list down!” Manager Milburn was declaring
-heatedly. “Lose two men and you’re shot to
-pieces! How does he expect me to win games
-with only enough players to cover the field? We
-have a right to twenty-two and he gives me nineteen!
-LaCroix, you take first. You’ll have to
-play third, Jones, and Dan will play second. Hold
-on! You catch Nye, don’t you? That won’t do
-then. I’d better take second myself. Hustle out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-now, fellows. We’ve just got to do the best we
-can and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s your man now, Steve!” exclaimed
-someone, and Wayne, pausing doubtfully inside
-the doorway, embarrassedly found himself the
-target of all eyes. But it was for an instant only.
-The next thing he knew Steve Milburn had him
-by the arm and was dragging him forward.</p>
-
-<p>“Where have you been?” he was demanding
-irately. “I told that nigger boy of yours to send
-you out! Jimmy, hustle a uniform! Someone
-find me a contract form in the closet! Yellow box
-on the shelf!” He turned to Wayne. “Now,
-Sloan, you wanted a try-out and you’re going to
-get it,” he said grimly. “Jimmy’ll give you a
-uniform. Pile into it and—can you play third?
-Where have you played?”</p>
-
-<p>“Second, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Take it then! That lets me out!”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t find any forms here, Boss,” sung out
-Briggs from the closet.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind! This’ll do!” The manager
-dropped into the chair by the littered table, opened
-a drawer and pulled out a pad of paper and wrote
-hurriedly for a moment. And as he wrote he
-stabbed at Wayne with short sentences. “You got
-your chance! Show what you know, youngster!
-Make good and I’ll treat you white! Cap here<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-will give you the dope. Do as he tells you. Now
-sign your name here. Witness this, Cap.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hurry up, kid, and climb into these,” called
-Jimmy Slattery from the dressing-room doorway.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne neither knew then nor later what he
-signed. Had there been time to read the half-dozen
-lines he could scarcely have done so, for Mr.
-Milburn’s writing was not the sort to be deciphered
-offhand. But he hardly tried. The
-manager pushed a pen into his hand, Captain
-Cross waited at his elbow and in thirty seconds he
-was hurrying toward the armful of togs that the
-trainer impatiently dangled at the door. Jimmy
-helped him change, or tried to help, and all the
-time dealt out advice freely, none of which Wayne
-afterward recalled. Five minutes later he was
-trotting out at the trainer’s heels, conscious of a
-thumping heart and of the fact that the shoes on
-his feet were at least a size too large for him.
-Then he was around the corner of the stand and
-Jimmy Slattery was pushing him in the general
-direction of second base.</p>
-
-<p>“Go ahead, kid, and good luck to you!” said
-Jimmy. “Keep your nerve!”</p>
-
-<p>But that was far easier said than done. The
-stands were crowded and a fringe of enthusiasts
-stood, three and four deep, inside the rope that
-had been stretched along the left field side of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-enclosure. Balls were travelling back and forth,
-from base to base and base to plate, bewilderingly,
-while overhead the long flies arched to the
-outfield. As he passed in front of LaCroix, at
-first, the lantern-jawed, hook-nosed giant grinned
-as he speared a high throw, and almost in the
-same motion tossed it underhand to Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>“Chuck it in, Bill,” he directed.</p>
-
-<p>But if he thought to find Wayne asleep he was
-disappointed, for the boy wheeled and caught the
-descending ball and threw it to the plate. The
-throw was short and Steve Milburn barked across
-at him: “Keep ’em up, Sloan!” Captain Cross
-met him and walked back with him to the trampled
-ground behind the base line. “I’ll take the throws
-from the plate, Sloan, but if I can’t get in for
-them it’s up to you. Anything’s yours this side
-of the bag, but don’t crowd LaCroix too much.
-I’ll give you the signals on the runners. Just
-keep steady and you’ll do all right, kid. Come on
-now! Get into it!”</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes of fielding followed, Manager Milburn
-batting them out; hard liners that brought
-Wayne up standing when they slammed into his
-glove, slow rollers that sent him speeding nearly
-to the pitcher’s box, pop-flies that lost themselves
-for a moment in the glare of the sky, bounders that
-brought all his baseball instinct into play. On<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
-the whole, he did none too well during that practice.
-More than one ball went past him or dribbled
-out of his hands. Once he muffed a fly
-miserably. Twice he overthrew to first. After
-the muffled fly he caught the dubious expression
-on Captain Cross’ face and felt his heart sink.
-Here, he thought, was the chance he had waited
-and longed for, and now he was going to throw
-it away! But in the next moment he was gritting
-his teeth and thumping fist into glove determinedly.
-He wouldn’t! He could play far
-better than he had been playing! It was only the
-crowd and the unnerving knowledge that so much
-depended on this afternoon’s performance that
-accounted for his fumbles. If only they had let
-him practice just one morning, instead of thrusting
-him like this into a game at a moment’s notice!
-And then the bell sounded and they were trotting
-in to the bench.</p>
-
-<p>Manager Milburn beckoned to him and Wayne
-crossed to where he was standing in front of the
-little press box. Steve looked him over critically
-while Wayne, red-faced, dripping perspiration,
-waited. Finally: “How did it go?” asked the
-manager.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne smiled wanly. “Not very well, sir. I—I
-reckon I’m sort of nervous.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you are! You’ll forget that, though.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-Don’t take it too hard, Sloan, or you’ll pull a
-boner, sure as shooting. Keep cool, that’s the
-main thing. Use your head all the time. I’m
-not expecting miracles, son,” he added kindly.
-“Just do your best. That’s all I’m asking of you.
-Can you hit?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—yes, sir. I mean, I have hit some, but——”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. We’ll soon see. Better try to wait
-him out the first time. Watch his pitching and try
-to make him give you what you can hit after that.
-All right, fellows! On the run!”</p>
-
-<p>Then the game started, Nye in the box for the
-Badgers, Dan Young catching, LaCroix on first
-in place of Morgan, Jones playing third for
-Bennett, and an unknown at second. The umpire
-had announced the latter’s name as Sloan, or something
-like that, but no one had ever seen him before
-or heard of him. He was a well-set-up
-youngster and, in spite of the spills he had made
-during practice, carried himself like a ball player.
-The “fans” watched him and reserved judgment,
-asking each other how Steve had managed to get
-hold of him at less than a half-hour’s notice. For
-it had been five minutes past three when the accident
-had happened that had sent three of the
-Badgers’ best players to the hospital, Bennett,
-as was learned later, with a broken leg, Morgan
-with three ribs caved in, and Pitcher Cotton with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-enough contusions to keep him out of the game for
-a week at least. Morgan, said that evening’s
-paper, would be back at work in a fortnight possibly,
-but young Bennett was out of it for the rest
-of the year.</p>
-
-<p>Ripley occupied the mound for Damascus that
-afternoon, and was discouragingly effective.
-After “Hop” Nye had escaped punishment in the
-first half of the initial inning by the skin of his
-teeth, a fine stop of a possible two-bagger by
-Cross and a phenomenal catch of a long fly by
-O’Neill warding off disaster, Harrisville went in
-to be mowed down one, two, three by the elongated
-spit-ball artist of the visiting club. No one got
-the ghost of a hit in that inning or any other while
-Ripley was in the box; no one on the home team,
-that is. Damascus had better luck, touching up
-Nye for three hits with a total of five bases, but
-failing to score for all of that. The game went to
-the sixth a pitcher’s battle pure and simple, with
-Ripley getting the long end of it, both teams working
-like beavers and not a runner passing second.</p>
-
-<p>Wayne’s opportunities to distinguish himself
-were few, for strike-outs were numerous. Four
-chances were accepted by him in the first five
-innings, but none was difficult. At the bat, he followed
-Manager Milburn’s advice the first time up
-and tried his best to work a pass. But Ripley<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-was not generous that way and Wayne soon
-walked back to the bench with the umpire’s
-“He’s out!” in his ears. In the last of the fifth,
-with LaCroix on first base and none out, he had
-a second trial at the plate and, after getting in
-the hole, landed on a straight ball and smacked it
-squarely into third baseman’s hands.</p>
-
-<p>It was in the sixth inning that the ice was
-broken by Damascus. Before anyone realised it
-she had filled the bases with only one out. Nye
-was plainly wabbling and “Red” Herring and
-Nick Crane were warming up back of third. The
-Damascus left fielder landed on the first pitch
-and Cross got it on the bound and hurled it to
-the plate. But the throw was wide and, although
-Young made the catch, the runner was safe and
-Damascus had scored. She scored again a minute
-later when the following batsman flied out to short
-left, for the best “Sailor” O’Neill could do was
-to hold the next runner at third. With two gone,
-a hit out of the infield was imperative and the
-Damascus catcher tried his best to get it. That
-he didn’t was no one’s fault but Wayne’s, for he
-started the ball off his bat at a mile a minute and
-streaked down the base path, while the other
-bags emptied like magic. Four yards to the left
-of first base sped the ball, ascending as it went.
-LaCroix stabbed at it and missed it by inches and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
-it was Wayne, who had started with the sound
-of the hit, who leaped into the air behind LaCroix
-and brought joy to the stands and sorrow to
-Damascus. That circus catch, for it was scarcely
-less, started Wayne on the road to fame, a fame
-at present presaged by cheers and hand-clapping
-as, somewhat embarrassed, he walked back to the
-bench.</p>
-
-<p>“Lift your cap,” chuckled Cross as he and
-Wayne neared the first base stand. “Where’s
-your manners, kid?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne obeyed sketchily and dropped onto the
-bench aware of the amused glances of his team
-mates. From the other end Mr. Milburn nodded
-to him. “Good stop, Sloan,” he said. But that
-was all.</p>
-
-<p>Harrisville again failed to hit or score and the
-seventh began. Nye was derricked when he had
-passed the first man up and “Red” Herring
-ambled to the mound. “Red” was wild for a few
-minutes but then settled down and, after Young’s
-clever peg to Cross had retried the man from first,
-the inning was virtually over. A long fly to right
-and a stop and throw by Jones settled matters.</p>
-
-<p>The seventh witnessed a change of fortunes.
-“Sailor” O’Neill led off with a clean single and
-LaCroix advanced him to second and reached
-first safely. Ripley retired then and a left-hander<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-named Marks took his place. Marks was a man
-of wide curves and slow delivery. Wayne tried
-desperately to get a hit but fanned, which, considering
-that his advance to the plate had been
-greeted by applause, was horribly humiliating.
-But Leary found Marks for one, scoring O’Neill
-and putting LaCroix on third. Young flied out to
-deep centre and LaCroix scored, Leary advancing.
-Herring smashed a liner to shortstop too hot to
-handle and Leary beat out the subsequent throw
-to the plate by inches. Cross hit safely but was
-doubled up with Briggs a few minutes later.</p>
-
-<p>Damascus came back in the first of the eighth
-and added another run, tying the score at three
-each. Herring passed the first man up and although
-he struck out the next two, a momentary
-let-down paved the way for a two-bagger and
-sent the tying tally across. A moment later a
-quick peg from Herring caught the runner at
-second a foot off the bag and brought relief to
-the anxious audience.</p>
-
-<p>Jones started the last of the eighth for Harrisville
-by flying out to pitcher. O’Neill, undaunted,
-waited until the score was two-and-three and then
-busted the next offering through the infield for a
-long rolling hit that placed him on second and
-wrought the spectators to a frenzy of delight.
-LaCroix was up next and Wayne followed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>LaCroix. Wayne was wondering anxiously
-whether he would have better success this time.
-Already four hits had been made off Marks, proving
-that he was far from formidable, and yet
-when Wayne, swinging his bats between bench
-and plate, saw LaCroix match his wits against
-Marks’ and come off second best in the contest
-it seemed futile for him to hope to succeed. LaCroix
-swung at one and missed it, judged two
-balls wisely, fouled into the first base stand for a
-second strike and then let go at one and popped
-it nicely into shortstop’s glove. Wayne dropped
-one of the two bats he had been swinging and
-stepped to the rubber.</p>
-
-<p>Two out, a man on second and a run needed to
-break the tie! A hit, nothing less, was expected
-of Wayne, and he realised it. At first the thought
-was horribly disturbing. He heard the applause
-from the stands, less hearty this time, since he
-had failed them before, and it added to his
-tremors. He felt himself absurdly young and
-inexperienced and—yes, actually scared! He
-wished himself back on the bench, any place save
-where he stood, facing the pitcher with the
-muscles at the back of his legs trembling! They
-were talking to him and at him, his own side
-and the enemy, but what they said was confused
-and meaningless, and it was not until the Damascus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-catcher called down to his pitcher to “Fan the
-kid, Walt!” that any words registered on his
-brain.</p>
-
-<p>“Fan the kid!” That meant him. He didn’t
-mind being called a kid by his fellow players, but
-the catcher’s tone was a veiled insult, and something
-very much like anger welled up in Wayne’s
-breast. He tugged down his visor, seized the bat
-more firmly, and determined to show them that a
-kid could hit! He made up his mind then and
-there to forget everything but the task in front
-of him, to even forget that there were already two
-out and that so much depended on him, and suddenly,
-why he couldn’t have told, the certainty
-that he <em>could</em> hit possessed him firmly.</p>
-
-<p>Marks looked him over. He leaned forward to
-get the catcher’s signal. Then he stood for an
-instant and Wayne knew that he was undecided
-what to offer him. “I’ll have a good look at the
-first one,” Wayne told himself, “no matter what
-it is!”</p>
-
-<p>And when it came it was well worth looking at,
-for it was a nice curve over the corner of the
-plate and was a strike.</p>
-
-<p>“’Ata, boy!” called the Damascus catcher.
-“You’ve got him beaten, Walt.” But Wayne paid
-no heed. <a href="#image04">His conviction that he could hit that
-ball was still strong.</a> He had watched the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-offering all the way and had had no trouble keeping
-it in sight. Marks evidently thought his curve
-ball, an outcurve to a right-handed batter, had
-fooled the latter once and that he had better try
-it again. Wayne was ready for it and meant to
-try very hard to hook it low into right field. His
-guess was correct, for what came was the same
-sort of delivery. But it was a little lower and
-Wayne missed it and heard the second strike
-called on him.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<a id="image04">
- <img src="images/image04.jpg" width="400" height="600" alt="" title="" />
-</a><br />
-<div class="caption"><a href="#Page_298">His Conviction that he Could Hit that Ball Was Still Strong</a></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But even yet he was confident. With two strikes
-against him he still felt certain of getting that hit.
-It surely looked as if Marks had him in a hole,
-but Wayne somehow knew that he hadn’t. Followed
-then two wide ones, just outside the plate,
-and Wayne, expecting them, made no offer. He
-knew that Marks was tempting him to bite at
-them and resolutely held back. And then came
-the fifth delivery.</p>
-
-<p>It looked good as it left the pitcher’s hand. It
-was coming to Wayne about waist-high and he
-thought it would break toward him and drop a
-trifle. As it neared the plate he stepped to meet
-it, and when it broke he put all his strength into
-the lunge and tried to send it between first baseman
-and the bag. He met it hard and started
-with the crack of the bat. He saw the ball shooting
-low inside the foul line, saw first baseman leap<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-toward it, and, digging harder than ever, saw
-the ball strike the bag and go bounding out into
-the field!</p>
-
-<p>He knew then that he was safe, knew that he
-had done what was expected of him, and was
-terrifically glad. As he turned first he saw second
-baseman standing idle and heard the voice of
-Steve Milburn in the coaching box yelling him on,
-and he legged it hard for second. He saw the ball
-coming in then, but the throw was to the plate and
-he slid to second unchallenged. As he got to his
-feet again he was fairly dismayed by the pandemonium
-that arose from the stands, and then, for
-the first time since he had determined to forget
-everything save the business of hitting the ball,
-he remembered O’Neill!</p>
-
-<p>Anxiously he looked to third. He was not there.
-But of course not! He had either scored or been
-put out at the plate! He turned to the Damascus
-shortstop. “Did you get him?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” was the disgusted reply. “He was safe
-by a mile!”</p>
-
-<p>And then Wayne understood why the stands
-were cheering and roaring! Harrisville had
-scored! The Badgers were one run to the good!</p>
-
-<p>Gradually the babel of sound died away. Leary
-was at bat. Wayne led off, danced back again,
-keeping an eye on the shortstop, watching the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-pitcher as well, listening to warnings from the
-coachers. If only Leary would come through!
-But Leary failed. A sharp crack, a sudden leaping
-dive by second baseman as Wayne sped along
-the path, a left-hand toss to first and the inning
-was over, and Wayne, turning disappointedly back
-to his position, heard the cheers and clapping
-break forth afresh, and wondered!</p>
-
-<p>It was all over ten minutes later, all over, that
-is, but the shouting, and that didn’t last long
-after the Harrisville players scuttled from field
-to dressing-room. In the doorway, smiling
-broadly now, stood Mr. Milburn, and as Wayne
-pushed through with the rest the manager’s arm
-shot out and seized on his shoulder and dragged
-him aside.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to tear up that contract, Sloan,” he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>“Tear it up!” faltered Wayne.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.” The manager’s eyes twinkled. “It
-wasn’t any good, anyway! Tomorrow I’ll have
-a new one ready for you. I’m going to sign you
-on to play second base, Sloan, at a hundred and
-ten a month. That suit you?”</p>
-
-<p>Wayne only nodded, but the expression on his
-face was answer enough. Mr. Milburn laughed
-and pushed him good-naturedly on. “All right!
-Sign up tomorrow morning, and——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But his remark was never finished, for just then
-there was an excited barking outside and a little
-yellow dog burst through the doorway and leaped
-at the boy. And following Sam appeared the
-grinning face of June.</p>
-
-<p>“Mas’ Wayne, sir, I hear down to the hotel as
-you-all’s playin,” panted June, “an’ I jus’
-nachally had to come, sir! I reckon I done lose
-my job, but I ain’ carin’!”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind your job,” laughed Wayne, as he
-picked Sam up in his arms. “You’ve got a new
-job after today, June.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say I is? What I goin’ do, Mas’ Wayne?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re going to look after me, June; and Sam.
-We’re going to find those rooms tomorrow and go
-to keeping house. We—we’re going to live like
-white folks again!”</p>
-
-<p>“Lawsy-y-y!” cried June.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p4 noic">THE END</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="tnote">
-<p class="noi tntitle">Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
-
-<p class="smfont">Except for the frontispiece, illustrations have been moved to
- follow the text that they illustrate, so the page number of the
- illustration may not match the page number in the Illustrations.</p>
-
-<p class="smfont">Punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently corrected.</p>
-
-<p class="smfont">Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.</p>
-
-<p class="smfont">Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Second Base Sloan, by Christy Mathewson
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