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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.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64435 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64435)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of First Base Faulkner, 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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: First Base Faulkner
-
-Author: Christy Mathewson
-
-Illustrator: Charles M. Relyea
-
-Release Date: January 31, 2021 [eBook #64435]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIRST BASE FAULKNER ***
-
-
-
-
- FIRST BASE FAULKNER
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Sensing a mix-up, Joe held the ball and raced for second
-base]
-
-
-
-
- First Base Faulkner
-
- BY
- CHRISTY MATHEWSON
-
- AUTHOR OF
- CATCHER CRAIG,
- PITCHER POLLOCK, Etc.
-
-
- ILLUSTRATED BY
- CHARLES M. RELYEA
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- GROSSET & DUNLAP
- PUBLISHERS NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1916, by
- DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY, Inc.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I THE NEW HOME 3
- II JOE LOOKS FOR WORK 16
- III AUNT SARAH IS SURPRISED 28
- IV JOE FINDS A FRIEND 45
- V HOCKEY AND JUST TALK 59
- VI JOE HAS AN IDEA 74
- VII PARTNERS 86
- VIII MR. CHESTER YOUNG 102
- IX IN THE BASEBALL CAGE 117
- X STRIKING A BALANCE 130
- XI HANDSOME FRANK 138
- XII OUTDOOR PRACTICE 151
- XIII THE FIRST GAME 161
- XIV A TRY-OUT AT FIRST 178
- XV BUSTER DROPS OUT 190
- XVI FOLEY IS WORRIED 208
- XVII IN THE TWELFTH INNING 221
- XVIII EMPTY BOXES 233
- XIX JOE ACCEPTS A LOAN 243
- XX PURSUIT 258
- XXI ON THE WEST-BOUND 265
- XXII THE AMATEUR DETECTIVE 278
- XXIII “BATTER UP!” 296
- XXIV BUNCHED HITS 307
- XXV A DOUBLE UNASSISTED 317
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- Sensing a mix-up, Joe held the ball and raced for second
- base (Page 327) _Frontispiece_
-
- FACING
- PAGE
-
- Joe found himself still in the company of Strobe 54
-
- “He thinks he’s a pretty swell little dresser, Foley does” 214
-
- “_What!_” squealed Young. “You ain’t a――a――――” 290
-
-
-
-
-FIRST BASE FAULKNER
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE NEW HOME
-
-
-“Lucky” Faulkner arrived in Amesville, Ohio, shortly before seven
-o’clock of a cold morning in the first week of January. He wasn’t known
-as “Lucky” then, and he certainly didn’t look especially fortunate as
-he stepped from train to platform and blinked drowsily at this first
-sight of the strange city that was to be his new home. He had travelled
-nearly six hours in a day-coach, sleeping fitfully with his head on the
-arm of the car seat, and his clothes were creased, his hair rumpled
-and his face tired and pale under its coating of train dust. He wore a
-good-looking gray ulster and a cap to match, and carried a big valise
-whose sides bulged tremendously and which bore the inscription “J. C.
-F.” in neat old English characters.
-
-On the platform he set the bag down, took a trunk-check from a pigskin
-purse and gazed inquiringly about him. The passengers who had left the
-warmth of the cars had hurried to the restaurant to make the most of
-the ten minutes allowed them for breakfast, and it was much too early
-in the day for loiterers. It was a boy of about his own age――which was
-sixteen――who, stopped in his mad career of dragging a mail-sack along
-the platform, supplied information.
-
-“Huh? Expressman? Sure! Around back. Ask for Gus Tenney.”
-
-Gus, a small, crabbed-looking negro, was loading a huge sample-trunk
-into a ramshackle dray when discovered.
-
-“I’ve got a trunk on this train,” said the new arrival. “Will you take
-it to Miss Teele’s, on Brewer Street, please? And how much will it be?”
-
-“Brewer Street? What’s the number, Boss?”
-
-“One-twenty-eight.”
-
-“Fifty cents, Boss.”
-
-“I’ll give you a quarter. Can you get it there by eight?”
-
-“I can’t tote no trunk ’way up to Brewer Street for no quarter, Boss.
-You’ll have to get someone else to do it.”
-
-“All right. Is there anyone else around?”
-
-“Don’t see anyone, Boss. Reckon I’se the only one here.”
-
-“Will you take my trunk up there first and let me ride along with you?”
-
-“I got to deliver this to the Commercial House first, Boss.”
-
-“How far is that from Brewer Street?”
-
-“’Most a mile.”
-
-“And Brewer Street’s near the City Hall, isn’t it?”
-
-“Well, it ain’t so mighty far.”
-
-“And the Commercial House is near the City Hall, too, isn’t it?”
-
-“Look here, Boss,” said the negro peevishly, “maybe you-all knows my
-business better’n I do and maybe you don’t. I got to deliver this trunk
-right away ’cause the gentleman’s waitin’ for it.”
-
-“All right. Don’t let me keep you, then.”
-
-“Well, you give me that check an’ I’ll get your trunk up just as soon
-as I can, Boss.”
-
-“No, I’ll wait for someone else. It isn’t worth more than a quarter.”
-
-The negro hesitated and muttered as he gave the sample-trunk a final
-shove. Then: “All right, Boss, I’ll do it. Seems like folks nowadays
-don’t want anyone to make a livin’, I ’clare to goodness it does!”
-
-“Will you get it there by eight?”
-
-“I’ll get it there in half an hour, Boss, if that old mare of mine
-keeps on her feet. It’s powerful mean goin’ today, with so much snow.”
-
-The boy yielded his check, saw his trunk put on the dray, and, after
-getting directions from the negro, trudged across Railroad Avenue and
-turned eastward past the row of cheap stores and tenement houses that
-faced the tracks. There had been a good deal of snow since Christmas
-and it was still piled high between sidewalk and street. Overhead a
-gray morning sky threatened more, and there was a nip in the air that
-made the boy set his bag down before he had traversed a block and slip
-on a pair of woollen gloves. Behind him a door opened and an appealing
-odour of coffee and cooking was wafted out to him. As he took up his
-valise again he looked wistfully through the frost-framed window of
-the little eating-house and mentally counted up his change. Evidently
-the result prohibited refreshment, for he went on, the heavy valise
-dragging and bumping as he walked, and at last turned the corner and
-struck northward. Here, after a short distance, the buildings became
-comfortable homes, many of them surrounded by grounds of some extent.
-From chimneys the gray smoke was ascending in the frosty air and now
-and then the tantalising vision of a breakfast table met his sight. The
-sidewalks hereabouts had been cleaned of snow and walking was easier,
-something the boy was heartily glad of since that valise was gaining
-in weight at every step.
-
-It was not, he was thinking as he trudged along, a very inspiriting
-morning on which to arrive in a strange place. Perhaps if the sun had
-been shining Amesville would have seemed less gloomy and inhospitable
-to him, but as it was he found nothing to like about the city. On the
-contrary, he was convinced that it was far inferior in every way to
-Akron and that he would never care for it, no matter how long he stayed
-there. However, he forgot to take into consideration the fact that he
-was tired and hungry and cold, neglected to realise that almost any
-city, approached from its least attractive quarter and viewed in the
-dim light of a cloudy Winter morning, looks far from its best.
-
-He set his valise down at a corner, rubbed his chilled fingers, and
-went on once more with his burden in the other hand. He was wondering
-now what Aunt Sarah would prove to be like. He had never seen her
-to remember her, although his mother had tried to recall to his
-recollection an occasion when Aunt Sarah had visited them in Akron. But
-that had been when he was only four or five years old and his memory
-failed him. Aunt Sarah was not a real, bona-fide aunt, for she was
-his mother’s half-sister. But she was the closest relative there was
-and when it had become necessary to break up the home in Akron it was
-Aunt Sarah who had written and offered to take them in. There would be
-practically no money left after his father’s affairs had been settled
-up and all the bills paid, and Mrs. Faulkner had been very glad to
-accept Aunt Sarah’s hospitality for her son. She herself had obtained,
-through the influence of a friend of her husband’s, the position of
-housekeeper in a hotel in Columbus. Since her son could not be with her
-she had decreed that he was to go to Amesville, finish his schooling
-there, and remain with Aunt Sarah until enough money had been saved
-to allow of the establishment of a new home. He had pleaded hard to
-be allowed to leave high school and find work in Columbus, but Mrs.
-Faulkner wouldn’t hear of it.
-
-“You may not realise it now, dear,” she had said, “but an education
-is something you must have if you are ever to amount to anything. And
-there’s just one time to get it, and that’s now. If you study hard
-you’ll be through high school next year. You’ll be eighteen, and that’s
-quite young enough to start earning a living. Meanwhile Aunt Sarah will
-give you a good home, dear. I shall pay her a little, as much as I can
-afford, so you needn’t feel that you are accepting charity. You must
-try to be nice to her, too. She――she doesn’t always show her best side,
-unless she’s changed since I saw her last, but she’s as good as gold,
-for all her sharp tongue. And I want you to try and remember that,
-dear.”
-
-He recalled the words now and tried to banish the mental picture of
-Aunt Sarah which he had unconsciously drawn: a tall, thin, elderly
-maiden lady with sharp features and a sharper tongue, dressed in a
-gingham gown of no particular colour and wearing a shawl over her
-shoulders. But the preconceived vision wouldn’t be dispelled, and
-consequently, when a few minutes later, the door of the little yellow
-house with chocolate-coloured trimmings opened to his ring and Aunt
-Sarah confronted him, he was not a bit surprised. For she was, with the
-exception of gingham dress and shawl, so much like what he had imagined
-that it was quite as if he had known her for a long time.
-
-“This is Joseph?” she asked as he took off his cap on the threshold.
-“You’re late. I’ve been expecting you for a quarter of an hour and
-breakfast is stone-cold likely. Come in, please, and don’t keep the
-door open. Take your bag right upstairs. It’s the first room to the
-left. When you’ve washed, and dear knows you need it, come right down
-again. I dislike very much having folks late to their meals.”
-
-During this announcement, uttered levelly in a sharp voice, she shook
-hands rather limply, closed the door, pushed the rug straight again
-with the toe of a sensible boot and smoothed the front of her black
-merino gown. That black gown was the only thing that didn’t fit in
-with his picture of her and he rather resented it as, tugging his bag
-behind him, he went up the narrow, squeaky staircase. That colourless
-gingham he had mentally attired her in would, he thought, have been
-less depressing than the black merino.
-
-The room in which he found himself was small, but, in spite of the
-cheerless weather outside, bright and homelike. There were some
-surprisingly gay cretonne curtains at the two windows, the paper
-was blue-and-white in a neat pattern, the brass knobs of the single
-bed shone like globes of gold, and Joe noted with approval that the
-gaslight was convenient to the old-fashioned mahogany, drop-front
-desk. On the table at the head of the bed were three books, disputing
-the small surface with a candlestick and a match-safe, and while he
-hurriedly prepared for breakfast he stole time to examine the titles.
-“Every Boy’s Handy Book,” he read, “Self-Help,” “Leather Stocking
-Tales.” He smiled as he turned away. On the walnut bureau――it had a
-marble slab and an oval mirror and a lidded box at each side――was a
-Bible. He made a quick toilet and returned downstairs. A pleasant
-fragrance of coffee guided him to the dining-room. Aunt Sarah was
-already in place and a large black cat was asleep on a chair between
-the windows.
-
-“That will be your place,” said Miss Teele, indicating a chair across
-the table with a nod. “Do you eat oatmeal?”
-
-“Yes, ma’am, thanks,” replied Joe as he settled himself and opened
-his napkin. Aunt Sarah helped him and passed the dish. A glass
-percolator was bubbling at her elbow and, after serving the oatmeal,
-she extinguished the alcohol flame underneath and poured a generous and
-fragrant cup of coffee. Joe ate hungrily and finished his oatmeal in a
-trice. He would have liked more, but none was offered. Then an elderly,
-stoop-shouldered woman entered with a quick, curious glance at Joe from
-a pair of faded eyes and deposited a platter of bacon and eggs before
-her mistress.
-
-“This is Mildred Faulkner’s boy, Amanda,” announced Miss Teele. “You
-may hand the coffee, please.”
-
-Amanda nodded silently in reply to Joe’s murmured “How do you do?” and
-quickly departed, to return a moment later with a toast-rack. Joe had
-never seen toast served that way before and was viewing it interestedly
-when Aunt Sarah, having served him with a generous helping of bacon and
-a fried egg, and tasted her coffee, remarked:
-
-“You’ll find the food here plain but wholesome, Joseph. And I guess
-you’ll always get enough. If you don’t I want you to tell me. I don’t
-hold with skimping on food. How’s your mother?”
-
-“Quite well, thank you. She goes to Columbus today.”
-
-Aunt Sarah sniffed. “Going to be a housekeeper at a hotel, she wrote
-me. A nice occupation, I must say, for a Teele!”
-
-“There didn’t seem to be much else,” replied Joe.
-
-“She might have come to me. I offered her a home. But she always was
-dreadfully set and independent. Well, I hope she don’t regret it. How
-was it your father didn’t leave anything when he died?”
-
-“I don’t know, Aunt Sarah. We always thought there was plenty of money
-before. But there were a good many bills, and the paper hadn’t been
-paying very well for a year or two, and so――――”
-
-“I told your mother when she was so set on marrying John Faulkner that
-he’d never be able to provide for her. I’m not surprised.”
-
-“But he did provide for my mother,” replied Joe indignantly. “We always
-had everything we wanted.”
-
-“You haven’t got much now, have you? Giving your folks all they want
-while you’re alive and leaving them without a cent when you die isn’t
-exactly my idea of providing.” Aunt Sarah sniffed again. “Not that I
-had anything against your father, though. I always liked him. What I
-saw of him, that is, which wasn’t much. He just wasn’t practical. Are
-you like him?”
-
-“Folks say I look like him,” said Joe coldly. He felt resentful of Aunt
-Sarah’s criticism.
-
-“So you do, but I guess you’ve got more spunk than he ever had. You’ll
-need it. When do you propose to start in school?”
-
-“As soon as I can. I thought I’d go and see the principal this morning.”
-
-“The sooner the better, I guess. Idleness never gets a body anywhere.
-Will you have another egg?”
-
-“Yes, please.”
-
-“I’m glad you haven’t got a finicky appetite.” She added bacon to the
-egg and pushed the toast-rack nearer. “Will you have another cup of
-coffee?” Joe would and said so. It seemed to him that he would never
-get enough to eat, which, considering that he hadn’t had anything since
-six o’clock the night before wasn’t surprising. Aunt Sarah nibbled at a
-piece of toast and sipped her coffee and was silent. Joe felt that he
-ought to attempt conversation and presently said:
-
-“You have a very pleasant home, Aunt Sarah.”
-
-“I’m not complaining any,” was the brief response.
-
-A minute later he happened to look up and caught her gaze. He may
-have been mistaken, but it seemed to him that she was regarding
-his performance with knife and fork quite approvingly. When he had
-finished, Aunt Sarah said grace, which to Joe’s thinking was turning
-things around, and arose.
-
-“I suppose you brought a trunk with you?” she questioned.
-
-“Yes, ma’am, and it ought to be here. The expressman said he would get
-it around by eight.”
-
-“Like as not it was Gus Tenney,” said Aunt Sarah. “If it was it won’t
-get here until afternoon, I guess. He’s the most worthless, shiftless
-negro in town.” But Aunt Sarah, for once, did the coloured gentleman
-an injustice, for even as she finished he backed his team up to the
-sidewalk. “You show him where to put it,” she instructed, “and tell him
-to be careful and not bump the walls. And don’t pay him a cent more
-than a quarter of a dollar, Joseph. Have you got any money?”
-
-“Yes, ma’am, thanks.”
-
-Aunt Sarah, who had begun to look around in a mildly distracted way for
-her purse, stopped and said “Hmph!” Then, “Well, don’t you give him
-more than a quarter, now!”
-
-Five minutes later Joe was unpacking his belongings and whistling quite
-merrily. After all, things weren’t so bad, he reflected. Aunt Sarah was
-cross-grained beyond a doubt, but she gave a fellow plenty to eat!
-
-“And good eats, too!” he murmured contentedly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-JOE LOOKS FOR WORK
-
-
-“Joseph Faulkner?” inquired Mr. Dennison, the high school principal.
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“I’m very glad to meet you, Faulkner.” They shook hands and Mr.
-Dennison pulled a chair nearer the big, broad-topped desk. “Sit down,
-please. You wrote me a week or so ago from Akron, I believe, and
-enclosed a letter from your principal, Mr. Senter.”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“I have it here, I think.” Mr. Dennison searched for a moment in
-the file at his elbow and drew forth the two communications pinned
-together. He read Mr. Senter’s letter again and nodded.
-
-“I see,” he murmured. “Now tell me something about yourself, my boy.
-Your father has died recently?”
-
-“Yes, sir, in November.”
-
-“I’m very sorry. I think now I recall reading of his death in the
-paper. He was the editor of the _Enterprise_, I believe?”
-
-“Yes, sir. He owned the paper, too. That is, most of it.”
-
-“Your mother is alive, I trust?”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“And you have brothers and sisters?”
-
-“No, sir; there’s only me.”
-
-“I see. I rather expected your mother would call with you, Faulkner.
-It’s the customary thing. We rather like to meet the pupils’ parents
-and get in touch with them, so to speak. Possibly your mother, however,
-was not feeling well enough to accompany you this morning.”
-
-“She isn’t here, sir. She’s in Columbus. You see, father didn’t leave
-much money and so she――she took a position in Columbus and sent me here
-to live with an aunt, a Miss Teele, on Brewer Street. Mother wants
-me to finish high school. I thought I’d ought to go to work, but she
-wouldn’t let me.”
-
-“Dear, dear!” said Mr. Dennison sympathetically. “Most unfortunate!
-Well, I think your mother is quite right, my boy. You’ll be better
-fitted to face the――er――the responsibilities of life if you have
-supplied yourself with an education. Hm! Yes. Now, let me see. I gather
-from what your former principal writes that you have been a very
-steady, hard-working student. You like to study and learn, Faulkner?”
-
-“Yes, sir. That is, I like to study some things. And, of course, I want
-to learn. Mr. Senter said he thought there wouldn’t be any trouble
-about my getting into the junior class here, sir. I’ve only missed
-about seven weeks.”
-
-“I see.” Mr. Dennison thoughtfully folded the letters in his hands,
-observing Joe the while. What he saw prepossessed him in the boy’s
-favour. Joe was large for his age, sturdy without being heavy, and
-had the healthful colouring and clear eyes of a youth who had divided
-his time fairly between indoors and out. You wouldn’t have called him
-handsome, perhaps, for his nose wasn’t at all classic, being rather of
-the tip-tilted variety, and his chin was a bit too square to meet the
-Greek standard of beauty. Perhaps it was the chin that had suggested
-spunk to Aunt Sarah. Anyhow, it suggested it to Mr. Dennison. In fact,
-the whole face spoke of eager courage, and the gray eyes looked out
-with a level directness that proclaimed honesty. For the rest, he had
-light-brown hair, so light that one hesitated at calling it brown, but
-had to for want of a better description, a forehead that matched the
-chin in breadth and gave the face a square look, and a mouth that, no
-matter how serious the rest of the countenance was, seemed on the point
-of breaking into a smile. On the whole, summed up the principal, a
-healthy, honest, capable appearing boy, and one likely to be heard from.
-
-“Yes,” said Mr. Dennison after a moment’s silence, “yes, I think the
-junior class is where you belong. At least, we’ll try you there. I
-don’t want to set you back unless it’s quite necessary. You may have to
-work hard for a month or so to catch up, but I think you can do it. How
-old are you, Faulkner?”
-
-“Sixteen, sir, on the fourth of last August.” Other questions were
-asked and answered and the answers were entered on a filing card. Then:
-
-“Can you start in tomorrow?” asked the principal.
-
-“Yes, sir, I’d like to.”
-
-“Very well. Then in the morning report in Room D to Mr. Whalen. School
-takes in at eight-thirty. Here is a list of books and materials you’ll
-need, many of which you doubtless have already. Any books or stationery
-you need can be obtained at the outer office. Books may be purchased
-outright or rented, as you please. That’s all, I think. I hope you’ll
-like us here, Faulkner. You must get acquainted with the other boys,
-you know, and then you’ll feel more at home. Come and see me in a day
-or two and tell me how you are getting on. And if there’s anything you
-want to know or if there’s any help you need don’t hesitate to apply to
-Mr. Jonson, my assistant, or to me.” Mr. Dennison shook hands again and
-Joe, armed with the printed list of books and materials, expressed his
-thanks and passed out into the corridor. A gong had sounded a moment
-before and the stairways and halls were thronged with students. No one,
-however, paid any attention to Joe and he left the big building and
-walked across the town to Main Street and turned southward, his eyes
-busy as he went.
-
-The sky was still gray and Main Street was ankle-deep in yellow-brown
-slush, and Amesville did not, perhaps, look its best even yet. But the
-buildings, if not so fine as those of Akron, were solid and substantial
-for the most part, and the stores presented enticing windows and
-leavened the grayness with colour and brightness. It seemed, he
-decided, a busy, bustling little city――he had already ascertained that
-it boasted a population of twenty-five thousand and the honor of being
-the county seat――and it didn’t require any great effort of imagination
-to fancy himself back in Akron.
-
-Joe not only observed but he studied, and for a reason. To let you into
-a secret which he had so far confided to no one, Joe had no intention
-of allowing his mother to pay Aunt Sarah for his board and lodging for
-very long. He meant to find some sort of work that he could perform
-before and after school hours. What it was to be he did not yet know,
-although there was one job he expected to be able to secure if nothing
-more promising offered. He was fairly certain, although his mother
-had not taken him into her confidence to that extent, that hotel
-housekeepers did not receive munificent wages, and he realised that his
-mother, used to having practically every comfort money could buy, would
-find it hard enough to get on without having to send a part of her
-monthly salary to Aunt Sarah.
-
-The job that he felt pretty certain of obtaining was that of delivering
-newspapers. Joe was well enough acquainted with the newspaper business
-to know that it was always difficult for circulation managers to find
-boys enough to keep the routes covered. He had had some experience
-of the kind, for when he was in grammar school he had delivered the
-_Enterprise_ all one Summer and part of a Winter, until, in fact,
-a chronic condition of wet feet caused his mother to interfere. His
-father had not at any time approved of the proceeding, for Mr. Faulkner
-had been a man of position in Akron and it had seemed to him that in
-carrying a newspaper route Joe was performing labor beneath him and,
-perhaps, casting aspersions on the financial and social standing of
-Mr. John Faulkner. Joe had had to beg long for permission and his
-father had agreed with ill-grace. The fun had soon worn off, but Joe
-had kept on with the work long after his chum, who had embarked in
-the enterprise with him, had given up. It didn’t bring in much money,
-and Joe didn’t need what it did bring, since his father was lavishly
-generous in the matter of pocket-money. It was principally the fact
-that his father had predicted that he would soon tire of it that kept
-him doggedly at it when the cold weather came. Getting up before light
-and tramping through snow and slush to toss twisted-up papers into
-doorways soon became the veriest drudgery to the fourteen-year-old boy,
-and only pride prevented him from crying quits. When, finally, wet
-boots and continual sniffling caused his mother to put her foot down
-Joe was secretly very, very glad!
-
-But delivering newspapers wasn’t the work he wanted now, unless he
-could find none other, and, as he went down Main Street just before
-noon, his eyes and mind were busy with possibilities. To find a
-position as a clerk was out of the question, since he wouldn’t be able
-to work during the busiest hours. Some labor that he might perform
-after school in the afternoon and during the evening was what he hoped
-to find. And so, as he passed a store or an office, he considered
-its possibilities. He paused for several minutes in front of one of
-the big windows of Miller and Tappen’s Department Store, but finally
-went on with a shake of his head. If it had been before instead of
-after the holidays he might have found employment there as an extra
-hand in the wrapping or shipping department, but now they would
-more likely be turning help away than taking it on. A drug store on
-the corner engaged his attention next, and then a brilliantly red
-hardware store across the street, a hardware store that evidently
-did a large business in athletic goods if one was to judge by the
-attractive display in one broad window. But Joe couldn’t think of any
-position in one or the other that he could apply for. Further along,
-a handsome new twelve-story structure was nearing completion, and he
-stopped awhile to watch operations. It was the only “skyscraper”
-in sight and consequently stuck up above the surrounding five- and
-six-story edifices like, to use Joe’s metaphor, a sore thumb! It was
-a fine-looking building, though, and he found himself feeling a civic
-pride in it, quite as though he was already a settled citizen of the
-town. Well, for that matter, he told himself, he guessed Amesville
-wasn’t such a bad place, after all, and if only he could find a
-job that would bring him in enough to pay Aunt Sarah for board and
-lodging――――
-
-But at that moment the noon whistle blew, a bell struck twelve
-somewhere and Joe turned back toward Brewer Street. Aunt Sarah had
-enjoined him to be back before half-past twelve, which was dinner time,
-and he recalled her assertion that she disliked having folks tardy at
-meals. So his search for employment must wait until later.
-
-His walking had made him hungry again and he viewed veal chops
-smothered with tomato sauce and the riced potatoes piled high in the
-blue dish and the lima beans beside it with vast approval. There was a
-generous plate of graham bread, too, and a pyramid of grape jelly that
-swayed every time Amanda crossed the floor. He satisfied Aunt Sarah’s
-curiosity as to the interview with the high school principal while
-satisfying his own appetite. Aunt Sarah said “Hmph!” and that she’d
-heard tell Mr. Dennison was a very competent principal. Thereupon she
-went into the past history of the Amesville High School and its heads,
-and Joe, diligently addressing himself to the viands, told himself that
-his Aunt Sarah seemed astonishingly well informed on the subject. Later
-he discovered that Aunt Sarah was well informed on most subjects and
-that when it came to town news she was better than a paper!
-
-“I had Amanda bake an apple pudding,” she informed him presently, when
-his appetite began to languish. “I guess boys usually like something
-sweet to top off with. Do you eat apple pudding?”
-
-“Yes, Aunt. Most any kind of pudding. But don’t you――don’t you go to
-any trouble about me, please. I――I can eat whatever there is. I’ve got
-a fine old appetite.”
-
-“Hmph! Well, I guess you won’t go hungry here. Not that I intend to
-have things much different from usual, though. I don’t hold with
-humouring folks’ notions about food. Food is food, I say, so long’s
-it’s nourishing and decently cooked. Your mother, though, was always a
-great one for strange, outlandish dishes and I suppose you’ll miss ’em.
-Well, all I can say is plain food’s what I was brought up on and I’ve
-never seen anyone hurt none by eatin’ it. I’ve noticed that folks who
-like messed-up dishes generally have dyspepsia and are always doctoring
-themselves. Amanda, bring in the pudding.”
-
-Aunt Sarah seemed slightly surprised when, the apple pudding partaken
-of, Joe announced that he thought he’d go and have a look around town.
-“Well,” she said, “you’re old enough to look after yourself, I suppose,
-but for goodness’ sake, don’t go and get run over or anything! Main
-Street’s getting to be something awful, what with these automobiles
-and all. Seems like a body just has to take his life in his hands when
-he goes there nowadays. If those awful things don’t run you down they
-scare you to death, and if they can’t do any worse to you they spatter
-you with mud. Gracious sakes, I haven’t dared shop on the other side of
-Main Street for ’most a year!”
-
-Joe didn’t confide to her his real errand, just why he didn’t exactly
-know. Perhaps he had a dim notion that Aunt Sarah wouldn’t approve of
-his engaging in work that might keep him away from home at strange
-hours of the day or night. She watched his departure doubtfully from
-the front door and when he was almost to the corner of the next street
-called after him to go to Rice and Perry’s and get himself a pair of
-overshoes. “Tell Mr. Perry they’re to be charged to me, and see that he
-gives them to you big enough. If you don’t watch him he’ll fit you too
-snug and then they’ll wear out right away!”
-
-Joe didn’t obey instructions, however. Somehow he wasn’t yet ready
-to become indebted to Aunt Sarah, and, besides, he didn’t need
-overshoes to get around today. His boots were heavy-soled and as nearly
-waterproof as any “guaranteed waterproof” boots ever are. During the
-afternoon he made several inquiries for work. A photographer declined
-his offer to do errands after three o’clock in the afternoon, a
-haberdasher failed to discern the benefits to accrue――to him――from
-giving employment to the applicant, and four other merchants of
-different trades answered to similar effect. Just before dusk Joe
-sought the office of the Amesville _Recorder_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-AUNT SARAH IS SURPRISED
-
-
-The _Recorder_ was an evening paper and came off the press at half-past
-three, and for that reason Joe had made it first choice over its
-morning rival, the _Gazette_, which was delivered in the early morning.
-Fortunately, he found the circulation manager still on duty when he
-reached the office, and although that gentleman, who wore a nervous,
-harassed look, scowled upon him fiercely at first, the scowl gradually
-faded as Joe stated his mission. Unknown to him, Joe had timed his
-application extremely well, since one of the carriers had that very
-afternoon been given his dismissal, and it didn’t take more than four
-minutes to secure what he was after. The route was not a long one and
-paid less than Joe wished it did, but the manager promised to give
-him something better if he proved satisfactory and the opportunity
-occurred. Joe was supplied with a list of subscribers on Route 6,
-told to be on hand promptly next afternoon at three-thirty, and took
-himself away well satisfied. The work would bring him only three
-dollars a week, which was much less than he believed himself capable of
-earning, but the route would take but two hours from the time he left
-the newspaper office and he would be through well before supper time.
-Besides, Joe had no intention of delivering papers very long. Sooner or
-later, he believed, a better chance would offer. Until then, though,
-Route 6, with its resultant three dollars a week, would be a heap
-better than nothing.
-
-He told Aunt Sarah about it at the supper table and Aunt Sarah,
-instead of expressing disapproval, appeared much pleased. Only, she
-insisted, the work mustn’t be allowed to interfere with his studies.
-Joe assured her that it wouldn’t, since he would have his evenings
-free. After supper he went upstairs, opened the mahogany desk and wrote
-a long letter to his mother. He tried to make it sound very brave
-and cheerful, but I don’t think Mrs. Faulkner had much difficulty in
-reading between the lines and reaching the conclusion that Joe was a
-little bit homesick and lonely and that he missed her a lot. He told
-about his interview with Mr. Dennison and about the employment he had
-secured.
-
-“It pays only three dollars,” he wrote, “but it won’t take more than
-an hour and a half or two hours and I won’t have to work on Sunday
-because the _Recorder_ doesn’t have any Sunday edition. I’m going to
-pay two and a half of it to Aunt Sarah every week and so you won’t have
-to send her very much, will you? I’d give it all to her, but I guess
-I’d better keep a half-dollar out for pocket-money. Then you won’t have
-to send me any money. After a while I’m going to get something to do
-that will pay me more and maybe then you won’t have to send Aunt Sarah
-a cent. Aunt Sarah looks like she would bite my head off if I brought
-any dirt into the house on my shoes and she talks mighty crusty, but
-I guess she’s a pretty good sort after all. She had Amanda cook me a
-bully apple pudding for dinner today. I’m pretty sure she did it on my
-account, because she didn’t touch it herself. Amanda is a funny old
-woman who does the cooking and so on. She’s about sixty, I guess, and
-hasn’t but three or four teeth and sort of mumbles when she talks. When
-I say anything to her she looks scared and beats it.
-
-“Mr. Dennison gave me a list of the books I have to have and I’ve got
-them all but one. I can rent that and it won’t cost much. I’ve still
-got nearly four dollars of what you gave me and you don’t need to send
-me any more. I guess I’m going to like this place very much when I get
-used to it. Aunt Sarah wanted me to get a pair of overshoes and charge
-them to her, but I didn’t like to, and besides my boots are all right
-without overshoes. Maybe I’ll get a new pair of rubbers some time. The
-ones I brought with me are sort of leaky. But I won’t need any other
-things like clothes or shoes or anything for almost a year, I guess, so
-you’re not to worry about me.”
-
-He spent all of an hour over that letter and used four sheets of Aunt
-Sarah’s old-fashioned blue-ruled paper, and when it was finished and
-ready for the mail his watch told him that the time was half-past nine.
-He was opening his door to go downstairs and say good-night to Aunt
-Sarah when he heard her coming up.
-
-“I hope you’ll have enough covers,” she said as she came to the
-doorway. “If you haven’t you’ll find another comfortable on the closet
-shelf. Breakfast’s at seven, but if you’re very sleepy tomorrow I guess
-it won’t matter much if you don’t come down right on time. Amanda can
-keep something hot for you. ’Twon’t hurt her a bit. I suppose you’ll
-be wanting a bath every morning, and I haven’t any objection to your
-having it, only remember the water’s metered and don’t let the plug
-slip out. It’s awful the way they charge for water nowadays! First
-thing we know they’ll be putting the air on a meter, too, just as
-likely as not! Well, I hope you sleep well and get rested, Joseph.
-Good-night.”
-
-“Good-night, Aunt Sarah.” Joe hadn’t had any intention of doing what he
-did then, but writing to his mother had left him a little bit lonesome,
-and――well, acting on the impulse of the moment, he kissed Aunt Sarah
-on the cheek! I fancy he was almost if not quite as surprised as Aunt
-Sarah when he had done it. That Aunt Sarah was surprised was very
-evident. Indeed, something very like consternation was expressed on her
-countenance.
-
-“_Hmph!_” she snorted. “Hmph! Well, I declare!”
-
-Joe, embarrassed himself, drew back over the threshold, smiling
-uncertainly. Aunt Sarah, at a loss for further words, stared a moment,
-said “Hmph!” again in more thoughtful accents and turned away. But
-when she had gone a few steps she paused. “I told Amanda to boil you a
-couple of eggs for breakfast,” she announced, “but maybe you don’t care
-for eggs. Some folks don’t.”
-
-“Indeed, I do. Thanks.”
-
-“Well, all right, then. I don’t hold with humouring folks with finicky
-appetites, but if there’s anything you’d rather have than the eggs――――”
-
-“There isn’t, really. The eggs will be fine!”
-
-“Humph! Good-night.”
-
-Aunt Sarah’s door closed softly down the hall and Joe smiled as he shut
-his own.
-
-“I don’t believe she minded it at all,” he murmured. “I guess――I guess
-she’s never had very many kisses!”
-
-His first day of school passed without special incident. Several
-fellows spoke to him at recess and satisfied their curiosity about
-the newcomer, but none of them appealed greatly to Joe and he made no
-effort to pursue the acquaintances. At half-past three he was on hand
-at the _Recorder_ office, received his bundle of papers, slung them at
-his side by a strap which he had bought on the way from school, and
-started out. His route began nearly a mile from the newspaper building
-and it would have saved time if he had taken a car on Main Street.
-But to do that every day would cost him thirty cents, and thirty
-cents taken from three dollars leaves quite a hole! So he tramped
-the distance instead. He had already studied his route on a map in
-a copy of the city directory and so had little difficulty. He did,
-however, manage to leave out a block and had to go back to it, but
-that wouldn’t happen the next time. The district was one well over on
-the west side of town and was inhabited for the most part by factory
-workers, although there were a few blocks of more prosperous patrons.
-As a general thing the sidewalks were ill paved and held pools of slush
-or water, and Joe’s “waterproof” boots belied their reputation by the
-time he had tossed the last of his papers on the final porch. But damp
-feet didn’t trouble him greatly and he made up his mind to change to
-a pair of slippers as soon as he got home. It was quite dark by the
-time he reached the little house in Brewer Street and Aunt Sarah had
-begun to be concerned, and when he entered the front door, she appeared
-quickly from the sitting-room.
-
-“I was beginning to think one of those automobiles had got you,” she
-said tartly. “It’s ’most six o’clock.”
-
-“I’m sorry to be so late,” replied Joe, “but it took longer today than
-it will the next time. I missed some houses and had to go back.”
-
-“Well, I suppose I don’t need to get anxious about you, but――――” Aunt
-Sarah paused, her gaze on his feet. “Joseph Faulkner, look at your
-boots!”
-
-“Yes, they’re sort of damp, aren’t they?”
-
-“Sort of damp! Land sakes, they’re sopping wet! You go right upstairs
-this very minute and take them off and change your socks and dry your
-feet and――and don’t you dare come home tomorrow without those overshoes
-I told you to get yesterday! First thing I know you’ll be down with
-pneumonia! Tramping around through the slush with nothing on but a pair
-of fancy shoes!”
-
-“They’re supposed to be waterproof, Aunt,” said Joe meekly.
-
-“Supposed to be! Maybe they are supposed to be, but they ain’t. Now,
-don’t stand there arguing, but do as I say, Joseph. I may not be your
-mother, but I guess I know wet shoes when I see them! And I don’t see
-why you didn’t get those overshoes like I told you to yesterday.”
-
-“I didn’t feel that I could afford them,” said Joe defensively, “and I
-didn’t just like to take them as a gift.”
-
-“Land sakes, you needn’t be so proud, Joseph Faulkner! I guess I’m
-your mother’s own half-sister, ain’t I? And if that doesn’t give me
-the right to buy a pair of overshoes for you――Hmph! I never heard such
-foolishness. You take those wet shoes off directly and I’ll bring you
-up a cup of ginger-tea. Fine thing it would be to have you sick on my
-hands the very first week you’re here!”
-
-Joe went up, smiling to himself, and obeyed directions. Only, when Aunt
-Sarah passed a steaming cup of ginger-tea in to him he didn’t play
-quite fair. He gave it a trial, to be sure, but he didn’t like it, and
-if Aunt Sarah had been listening she might have heard one of the guest
-room windows cautiously raised. Let us hope that the ginger-tea had no
-ill effects on Aunt Sarah’s shrubs!
-
-Damp feet did not affect Joe’s appetite, and, watching him eat, Aunt
-Sarah dared hope that he was not in for a serious illness!
-
-By Saturday he had settled down into his new life. He was relieved to
-find that the few weeks away from school had not put him far behind
-and during that first week he proved to his own and Mr. Dennison’s
-satisfaction that he really belonged in the junior class. He found much
-to like about the school. For one thing, the building, which was fairly
-new, was quite a model school structure, with big, broad rooms lighted
-by an almost continuous row of high windows through which the sunlight
-fairly streamed. Sunlight in classrooms makes for cheerfulness, and
-cheerfulness for better work, and better work for more cheerfulness!
-That, at least, was the way Joe summed it up. The fellows seemed an
-average lot, some nice, some rather objectionable, some neither one
-thing nor the other. The same was probably true also of the girls, but
-Joe, having no sisters of his own, was shy of girls and didn’t attempt
-to decide as to whether they were nice or otherwise.
-
-At home he and Aunt Sarah settled down into a very pleasant
-companionship. Although her voice remained as acid as ever, it was
-evident to Joe that she was prepared to be fond of him, and that, used
-as he was to affection, was sufficient to make him fond of her. She
-was sometimes fussily anxious about him, but she didn’t try to govern
-his movements, and that he appreciated. Aunt Sarah’s bark, he soon
-decided, was far worse than her bite. The newspaper route occupied
-his afternoons between school and supper――which was more like dinner,
-since he had only a light lunch in the middle of the day――and required
-no great effort. On Monday he collected two dollars and a half for the
-five days he had worked and handed the amount over to Aunt Sarah. His
-board and lodging was, he learned, to cost three dollars a week.
-
-“That,” said Aunt Sarah, “was the arrangement your mother made. I told
-her she didn’t need to pay a cent unless she was set on it, but she
-wouldn’t let you come unless I’d take some money. So I reckoned that
-three dollars would be about right. I’ve never taken a boarder and I
-don’t pretend to know. If that seems too much, though, I’d like you to
-tell me.”
-
-“It doesn’t seem enough, Aunt,” replied Joe. “I’ll bet I eat more than
-three dollars’ worth of food, and that doesn’t leave anything for the
-room.”
-
-“I wasn’t calculating to charge for the room. The room’s there and it
-might as well be used. I just meant to charge for what you ate, Joseph,
-and I guess you won’t eat more’n three dollars’ worth of food a week.”
-
-But that was on Monday, and today was only Saturday, and Joe had a
-whole morning to dispose of as he liked. He had been given a fine new
-pair of skates Christmas before last and had learned at school that
-there was fair skating on the river and on one or two ponds around
-town. After breakfast he got his skating boots and skates out of his
-trunk and looked them over. The only thing missing was a new lacing,
-and so he went across to Main Street in search of the article. But
-the shoe store in which he had purchased the overshoes didn’t have a
-leather lacing suitable and sent him to Cummings and Wright’s, further
-down the street. This, he discovered, was the brilliantly-red hardware
-store he had noticed one day. One side of it was given over to athletic
-goods and when Joe entered two boys were in conversation across a
-counter near the door.
-
-“You can’t get to work too early, Sam,” he heard one of them say as he
-drew near. “Start them going about the middle of February. Of course
-there isn’t a whole lot to be done in the cage, but you can get in a
-lot of batting practice, and your pitchers can find themselves, and――――”
-
-He broke off and walked along behind the counter to where Joe was
-standing. “Good morning,” he said cheerfully. “Is there something you
-want?”
-
-He was a well-built chap of seventeen, with red-brown hair, very blue
-eyes and a smile that won Joe on the instant.
-
-“I want a lacing for this boot, or a pair of them, please. They told me
-at Rice and Perry’s that you kept them.”
-
-“We surely do, and you can have one or two, just as you say.” He turned
-away and pulled a box from the shelves. “There you are. Five cents
-apiece.”
-
-“I’ll take just the one, I guess.”
-
-“All right. They say the skating’s best at Proctor’s Pond. Have you
-tried it?”
-
-“No, I haven’t. I was going down to the river, because I thought I
-could find that. Where is this pond, please?”
-
-“Take a Fair Grounds car at Myrtle Street. Or you can walk it in twenty
-minutes. You’ll find it better than the river, I guess. You’re a
-stranger here?”
-
-“I’ve been here just a few days.”
-
-“That so? I thought I’d seen you around somewhere.” He had taken one of
-the skating boots and, despite Joe’s protest, was replacing the broken
-lace with the new one. “I know now; I saw you at high school, didn’t I?”
-
-“I guess so. I started there Tuesday. I――I’ve been living in Akron.”
-
-“Akron’s a nice town. You’ll like Amesville, though, when you get
-acquainted. Have you met many fellows at school yet?”
-
-“N-no, I haven’t. That is, some have spoken to me, but I don’t really
-know anyone yet.”
-
-“You must, then. Start in by knowing me. My name’s Pollock.” He smiled
-winningly and reached a hand across. Joe smiled back and clasped it.
-
-“Thanks. Mine is Faulkner.”
-
-“Sam!” called Pollock. The boy at the front of the store, who had been
-gravely looking out into the street, turned inquiringly. He didn’t
-resemble the other in build or features, but there was, nevertheless, a
-similarity between them that Joe couldn’t explain. He wasn’t handsome,
-but he had a nice pair of gray eyes and a generously wide mouth that,
-although no smile curved it, somehow seemed to proclaim good nature and
-kindliness. In build he was heavier than his friend, more sturdy, with
-a resolute way of planting his feet that seemed to defy anything short
-of an explosion of dynamite to move him until he was ready to move. He
-approached in response to Pollock’s hail.
-
-“Sam, I want you to know Mr. Faulkner,” said Pollock. “Faulkner,
-this is Sam Craig. Sam’s our baseball captain and a gentleman of
-much wisdom.” The two shook hands, Joe a trifle embarrassedly, Sam
-Craig with a slight lifting of one corner of his serious mouth and an
-accompanying lighting of the gray eyes.
-
-“How are you, Faulkner? I’ve seen you around school, I think. Glad to
-meet you.” The clasp was a very hearty one, almost painfully hearty,
-and Joe worked his fingers afterwards to see that they were still whole.
-
-“Faulkner,” continued Pollock, completing the lacing of the boot, “is
-a stranger in our midst, Sam. He’s just come from Akron. He says he
-hasn’t got acquainted much yet. What’ll we do about it? Our fair city
-has a world-wide reputation for hospitality, you know, and it mustn’t
-be marred.”
-
-“I’ve only been here since last Monday,” said Joe. “I guess a fellow
-can’t expect to make many acquaintances in that time.”
-
-“Going skating?” asked Sam.
-
-“Yes. He says the pond is better than the river.”
-
-“It is. I was there yesterday; the river, I mean. It isn’t safe more
-than fifty feet from shore. Proctor’s Pond is the best place just now.
-I’m going down there myself. If you’d like to come along I’ll show you
-the way.”
-
-“Thanks, yes, I’d be glad to.”
-
-“Do you play hockey?” asked Pollock.
-
-“No. I’ve never tried it.”
-
-“The team’s practising there this morning and I thought that if you
-played you’d better get Sam to work you in with the scrubs for a
-try-out.”
-
-“Thanks, but I don’t. I’m not a very good skater, either.”
-
-“That makes no matter. Neither is Sam, but they’ve got him playing
-goal. That’s the reason, I guess. If Sam lets go of the goal he always
-falls down.”
-
-Joe smiled politely as he paid for the lacing. Sam paid no attention to
-the slur.
-
-“Tom wants to sell you a hockey-stick,” he said calmly. “Just the same,
-if you’d like to try it, now’s the time. We need fellows.”
-
-“I’d like to, but I’d be ashamed to,” laughed Joe. “What I’d have to do
-first is learn to keep on my feet.”
-
-“Just watch Sam, then,” said Tom Pollock. “If he does a thing one way,
-you do it the other, and you’ll be all right. I suppose I can’t sell
-you a pair of gloves or a sweater, Faulkner?”
-
-“No, thanks. Not today, anyway. Maybe another time――――”
-
-“Don’t promise anything,” interrupted Sam. “There’s a good store up the
-street. Shall we start along?”
-
-“I’m all ready. Thanks for putting that lacing in, Pollard.”
-
-“Pollock is the name,” said Tom. “Think of a fish.”
-
-“A fish?” asked Joe vaguely.
-
-“Yes. A pollock’s a fish, you know.”
-
-“And a mighty ugly, mean-looking fish, too,” said Sam with one of his
-infrequent smiles. “Call him what you like, Faulkner. Anything’s good
-enough for him. Where’s that stick of mine, Tom?”
-
-“Just where you left it, on top of the case up there. Wish I could go
-along with you chaps. I haven’t seen you crack the ice this Winter,
-Sam.”
-
-“I’m getting so I can fall soft now.” He picked a hockey-stick, to
-which were attached boots, skates and leg-pads, from the showcase and
-moved toward the door. “See you later, Tom. Come on, Faulkner.”
-
-Joe nodded to Tom Pollock and followed his new acquaintance outside.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-JOE FINDS A FRIEND
-
-
-“Walk or ride?” asked Sam, when they were on the sidewalk.
-
-“Just as you like,” answered Joe. “Walk, if you don’t mind.”
-
-“I’d rather.” And Sam set off along the street at a brisk pace. “That’s
-the new Adams Building,” he said presently, nodding toward the tall
-structure across the street. “We’re rather proud of it, as it’s our
-only skyscraper. The old one――it wasn’t old, though――burned last Fall.
-I’ve been working for the architects who are putting that up.”
-
-“Really? It must have been a peach of a fire! Was the old building as
-big as that one?”
-
-“Bigger. It had fourteen floors and this has only twelve. The water
-pressure here isn’t good enough yet for high buildings. That’s why we
-left off seventeen feet this time. Still, this new building’s fireproof
-from top to bottom and I guess you could start a fire in it and have to
-lug fuel to keep it going! Rather good-looking, isn’t it?”
-
-“Awfully,” agreed Joe.
-
-“I suppose you’ve got office buildings in Akron that beat it, but we
-think it’s some building. We turn off here.”
-
-They left the busy part of town and walked briskly along a residence
-street until, at last, open country was reached. Sam, having exhausted
-the subject of the new Adams Building, didn’t have much to say and
-conversation was desultory until Joe, hunting for a topic, remembered
-baseball.
-
-“Pollock said you were captain of the baseball team, didn’t he?” he
-questioned.
-
-Sam nodded. “Yes. Tom could have had it, but he wouldn’t. So they hit
-on me.”
-
-“Pollock, you mean?”
-
-“Yes. He has charge of the sporting goods department there at Cummings
-and Wright’s and thought he wouldn’t have time to look after the team.
-Where have you played?”
-
-“In Akron. Oh, you mean what position? Last Spring I played first base
-for our Second Team. How――how did you know I played at all?”
-
-“Felt that crooked finger of yours. Break it?”
-
-“Yes, and didn’t know it for a couple of days. Thought it was just a
-strain. Then when it came out of the splints it had an out-curve. I
-guess I’ll have to have it broken again some day and set right.”
-
-“Well, it didn’t _look_ so bad,” said Sam judicially. “I happened to
-notice it when we shook hands. We’ll be glad to have another candidate
-for the bases. You’ll have a couple of pretty good fellows to fight,
-but I wouldn’t be surprised if you made good somewhere. How are you at
-the bat?”
-
-Joe shook his head ruefully. “Pretty rotten last year. I used to hit
-pretty well when I was on the grammar school team, but I guess the
-pitching was awfully soft. I suppose you begin practice indoors some
-time next month?”
-
-“About the middle. You’ll have a chance to get your batting-eye. We
-usually put the fellows through a good deal of bunting work in the
-cage. It seems to help a lot when they get outdoors. There’s the pond
-over there. Let’s cut across here; it’s shorter.”
-
-The pond was some three acres in extent, and was long and narrow,
-curving back around the shoulder of a hill and looking at first glance
-like a river. As Joe and his guide climbed a rail-fence and crossed a
-snow-covered meadow, following a well-trodden track, the pond proved
-to be well populated. Skaters were gliding and turning, many armed with
-hockey-sticks, and at the nearer end of the ice two sets of goal-posts
-were in place. Some of the hockey players had already thrown aside
-their coats and were warming up, their blue-stockinged legs twinkling
-over the glassy surface.
-
-“We usually practise on the river,” explained Sam, “but it isn’t good
-enough yet. We’ve got some nets, but there’s no way of getting them
-out here, and so we just use the posts. They’re mean things, though;
-always getting pushed out of place. Come over here and meet some of the
-fellows.”
-
-Sam’s appearance was vociferously hailed by a knot of boys at the edge
-of the ice. Some of the younger fellows had started a fire there and
-were scurrying around, far and near, for fuel. Joe was introduced to
-seven or eight chaps, many of whose names he either didn’t catch or
-promptly forgot. Those he did recall later were Arbuckle, Morris and
-Strobe. Arbuckle proved to be the coach, although he was apparently no
-older than several of the players, and Morris was the captain. Morris,
-whose first name was Sidney and who was universally called Sid, was a
-handsome chap, lean, well-conditioned, and a marvel on skates. He was
-of about Sam Craig’s age. Arbuckle was a heavier fellow of eighteen
-and bore signs on his upper lip of an incipient mustache. Strobe Joe
-remembered chiefly because his name was unusual, although the latter
-wasn’t certain whether it was Strobe or Strode at the time.
-
-They were all far too interested in hockey to pay more than passing
-attention to the stranger and Joe presently retired from the group
-and donned his skates. By the time he was ready for the ice Steve
-Arbuckle had blown his whistle and fourteen eager youths were racing
-and twisting about after the flying puck. In front of the First Team’s
-goal Sam Craig, sweatered and padded, leaned on his broad-bladed stick
-and calmly watched. Then a Second Team forward somehow stole the puck
-from under Captain Morris’s nose and, digging the points of his skates,
-slanted down the rink, dodging and feinting, until only the point
-remained between him and goal-keeper. Behind him the pursuit sped, but
-he was due for a shot if he could fool the point, and fool the point he
-did. Away slid the puck to the right, the charging Second Team forward
-twirled, recovered as the point missed his check, got the puck again
-before the coverpoint could reach it and charged straight at goal from
-the right.
-
-Sam Craig, still apparently calm and unflustered, refused the challenge
-to go out and meet him. Instead, he closed his padded knees together,
-held his stick across his body and waited. The Second Team player shot
-from six feet away, shot hard and straight. There was a _thud_, the
-puck slammed against Sam’s knee and was gently brushed aside as Sid
-Morris, skating like a whirlwind, rushed past, hooked it expertly,
-swung around behind the goal and set off again down the ice. The Second
-Team forward, who had so nearly scored, was already back in line, quite
-untroubled by his failure, and Joe identified him as Strobe. Sidney
-lost the puck a moment later and the whistle shrilled for off-side. Joe
-watched until the First Team had finally penetrated the adversary’s
-defence and scored its first goal and then went off up the pond to
-skate. Since most of the fellows were watching the hockey he had the
-upper reaches of the ice practically to himself.
-
-Joe was only a fair skater, and now, swinging along and following the
-curving shore, he found himself envying the ability of those chaps on
-the hockey teams. It must, he thought, be fine to be able to skate as
-they did, to feel as much at home on steel runners as on leather,
-and he wondered if any amount of practice would ever enable him to
-duplicate their marvellous feats. He wished he could play hockey, too.
-It looked mighty exciting. Experimentally, he turned and started to
-skate backward, zigzagging as he had seen the Second Team’s coverpoint
-do. All went well for a minute, but then he raised his hands to
-the sky, followed them with his feet and went down on his head and
-shoulders. He had quite a nice slide, but he wasn’t able to enjoy it
-much, since he was too busy watching the vari-coloured stars that
-flashed in front of his closed eyes. When he stopped sliding he felt
-gingerly of his head, grinned and climbed carefully to his feet again.
-
-“That’s what you get,” he murmured, “for trying to be smart.”
-
-However, when he had got his breath again he was ready for more
-experiments and tried the inner edge-roll with fair success, and,
-becoming more ambitious, essayed a figure eight. But that didn’t go
-very smoothly, and since by that time he had neighbours about him he
-stopped his capers. One of the neighbours skated toward him, but Joe
-paid no heed to him until he swung around and came to a stop a few feet
-away.
-
-“Do it slower and you’ll get it all right,” observed the boy
-pleasantly. Joe saw then that he was Strobe. He had pulled a faded blue
-sweater on and still carried his stick. He was a merry-faced fellow,
-with good features, bright blue eyes and a good deal of colour in his
-cheeks. He was evidently about sixteen and rather tall for that age. He
-smiled in friendly fashion as Joe glanced up and stopped so awkwardly
-that he almost fell into Strobe’s arms.
-
-“It isn’t hard,” the latter continued. “Like this. See?” He described a
-circle on the outer edge, changed to the inner and completed the figure
-slowly and gracefully.
-
-“I know very well it isn’t hard,” replied Joe, “but it’s hard for me
-because I’m a perfectly punk skater.”
-
-Strobe laughed. “Oh, well, practice is all you need. Can you do the
-‘Figure 3’?”
-
-“Pretty well. I guess you have to learn to skate when you’re about five
-years old to do it decently. Like swimming. I never skated much until
-two years ago.”
-
-“I started when I was about eight, I guess,” laughed Strobe. “Know this
-one?”
-
-“This one” was a “Maltese Cross” so perfectly done that every loop was
-the same to an inch. Joe watched and sighed in envious admiration.
-“That’s dandy,” he said. “It’s like the ‘cross-cut’ only there’s more
-of it.”
-
-“Yes, the ‘cross-cut’ repeated three times. It isn’t hard, really. You
-could learn it in an hour.”
-
-“I couldn’t learn it in a month,” replied Joe disgustedly. “I can’t
-even skate backwards without bumping my head on the ice.”
-
-“Well, I’ve bumped mine often enough. That’s part of the education.
-I’ve seen some perfectly wonderful stars in my time!” He started to
-skate and Joe joined him.
-
-“You’re not playing any more?” asked the latter, as the shrill sound of
-a whistle from around the shoulder of the hill told him that the game
-was still on.
-
-“No. Sidell’s got my place for this half. There’s a half-dozen of us
-all trying for a wing position on the Second, and Steve has his hands
-full giving us each a show.” He chuckled softly. “He forgot in the
-first half and let me play right through.”
-
-“Hockey must be good fun,” mused Joe, secretly trying to copy his
-companion’s ease of motion.
-
-“Bully. I wish I could play better and make the First.”
-
-“I thought you did finely when you skated down and tried that shot,”
-said Joe.
-
-“Mostly luck. Besides, tries don’t count; it’s only goals. And I ought
-to have got that in that time. It was up to me to skate past and push
-it in instead of whanging it. You can’t get the puck past Sam Craig
-that way. I knew it, too, only I thought I’d be smart. Let’s go up and
-watch them. Mind?”
-
-“No, I’d like to,” replied Joe.
-
-They joined the line of spectators along the side of the supposititious
-rink, being frequently obliged to flee before the slashing sticks or
-plunging forms of the players, and witnessed the final decisive triumph
-of the First Team by a score of seven goals to two. A few of the
-players remained to practise further, but most of them, accompanied by
-a full half of their audience, crossed a field to where, a quarter of
-a mile distant, a blue-sided trolley-car was waiting outside the board
-fence of the Fair Grounds to start its noon journey townwards. Joe
-found himself still in the company of Strobe, and was well satisfied,
-since there was something about the other chap that drew him. They were
-chatting quite intimately by the time the car was reached, and when
-they got out at Main Street Strobe lengthened his own journey homeward
-by several blocks in order to pursue the new acquaintanceship.
-
-[Illustration: Joe found himself still in the company of Strobe]
-
-Joe found out then and during the next meeting that Jack Strobe――his
-full name was Jackson――was in Joe’s class at school, that he lived
-on Temple Street, that he played left field on the nine, that he was
-two months older than Joe, that his father was the senior partner of
-Strobe and Wonson, whose big jewelry store Joe had noticed on Main
-Street, and several other more or less interesting facts. It was only
-when Joe was in the house that he recollected that he had failed to
-take leave of Sam Craig. He had meant to thank him for taking him out
-to the pond, but had been so absorbed in this red-cheeked, blue-eyed
-Strobe chap that he had quite forgotten Sam’s existence. He hoped the
-latter wasn’t thinking him uncivil, and resolved to make an apology
-at the first opportunity. He had agreed to go around in the afternoon
-and call on Jack Strobe, and at a little after two was being ushered
-by a maid through the rather ornate front door of the Strobe mansion
-and into a cosy sitting-room――or perhaps it was a library, since there
-were two large bookcases flanking the fireplace, in which a soft-coal
-fire was sputtering greasily. Jack came charging down the stairs and at
-once haled the visitor up to the third floor, where, on the back of
-the house, overlooking a wide vista of snowy roofs and distant country,
-Jack had his own particular sanctum.
-
-It was a big square room lighted by three windows set close together,
-and at first glance looked like a museum or a curio shop. Almost every
-inch of wall space was covered with pictures, posters or trophies of
-some kind, with snowshoes, tennis rackets, foils and mask, Indian
-moccasins, a couple of small-bore rifles, a battered lacrosse stick
-depended against them. A long, cushioned seat stood under the windows
-and was piled with brightly-coloured pillows. The floor was bare
-save for a few scattered rugs. A brass bed, a chiffonier, an immense
-study table, two comfortable armchairs and several straight-backed
-chairs comprised the principal furnishings, but by no means all. Near
-the windows was a smaller table, holding wireless instruments. A set
-of bookshelves, evidently home-made――Jack referred to them as being
-“near-Mission”――held a miscellaneous collection of volumes ranging
-from “Zig-Zag Journeys” to the latest juvenile thriller, presented
-last Christmas, and including all sorts of old school-books with worn
-backs. An old seaman’s chest stood against a wall, the repository
-for abandoned toys and devices. One end was decorated with the legend,
-apparently inscribed with a brush dipped in shoe-blacking: “Captain
-Kidd His Chest! Beware!!” One corner of the room held an assortment
-of fishing-rods, golf-clubs and hockey-sticks, and another a pair of
-skiis, two canoe paddles, and a camera tripod. The camera itself stood
-nearby, neighboured by a jig-saw, and a stereopticon sat beside it. Joe
-gazed and marvelled.
-
-“You’ve got about everything there is up here, haven’t you?” he
-exclaimed. “Is that a wireless set? How’s it work? I never saw one
-near-to.”
-
-The instruments were duly explained, not over-enthusiastically, since
-Jack had lost interest in wireless telegraphy after a year of devotion,
-and then Joe made a tour of the room, examining and questioning and
-enjoying himself hugely. Later various scrap-books and stamp-books
-were pulled from under the window-seat and looked over, and finally,
-having still only partly exhausted the wonders, the two boys settled
-down amongst the cushions and talked. That afternoon sped like magic.
-Almost before they realised it the room was in twilight and from across
-town came the hoarse sound of the five o’clock whistle at the carpet
-mills. Whereupon Joe said he must go, and Jack, remonstrating, led him
-downstairs, helped him on with his coat, and accompanied him to the
-steps. There:
-
-“What are you doing tonight?” he asked very carelessly.
-
-“Nothing special,” replied Joe quite as disinterestedly.
-
-There was a pause. Finally:
-
-“I might run in for a minute,” announced Jack. “I’m going downtown
-anyway and――――”
-
-“Wish you would.”
-
-“Your aunt won’t mind?”
-
-“Of course not. I haven’t much to show you, though. My room’s just a
-box, you know.”
-
-“That’s all right. We can talk some more. About eight?”
-
-“Before, if you can.”
-
-“Half-past seven?”
-
-“Yes. Don’t forget.”
-
-“I won’t. So long, Faulkner.”
-
-“So long. And thanks for――everything.”
-
-Jack laughed shortly. “I haven’t done anything. See you later.”
-
-“Sure!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-HOCKEY AND JUST TALK
-
-
-That was the beginning of a friendship that lasted――well, so
-far as I know, it’s still lasting and seems likely to continue
-lasting indefinitely. In the course of time the inseparable chums
-were facetiously referred to as the “two Jays” or the “Joejacks.”
-Months later each acknowledged, a trifle shamefacedly, since the
-acknowledgment bordered on sentiment, that he had taken to the other at
-the moment of their first meeting. That was as near an expression of
-affection as they came to, but within a week of that day at Proctor’s
-Pond Joe would have jumped off the top of the Adams Building if by so
-doing he could have benefited his friend, and Jack would have just as
-readily plunged into the river from the railroad bridge had a similar
-result impended. And since Jack at that time couldn’t swim a stroke,
-his deed would have compared favourably with Joe’s as a token of esteem!
-
-Neither, however, was required to undertake such feats of self-sacrifice.
-Perhaps the nearest approach to them occurred when Joe stood about on
-the ice, with the thermometer hovering around zero, his feet numb and
-his fingers aching, while he admiringly watched Jack struggle for a
-position on the First Team, or when Jack, as became his custom when
-duties allowed, tramped by Joe’s side through slush or sleet or rain
-over Route 6! They were together whenever it was possible, and when it
-wasn’t they were either signalling across schoolrooms or using up Mr.
-Strobe’s and Aunt Sarah’s monthly allowance of telephone calls.
-
-January passed into history very happily for Joe. He was earning enough
-to pay Aunt Sarah all but fifty cents a week for his accommodations, he
-was doing well at his studies, he was getting cheerful letters every
-few days from his mother, and he was enjoying the jolliest, finest
-sort of friendship. When the hockey team journeyed to Preston Mills to
-play the academy fellows and Jack went along as a possible necessary
-substitute forward, Joe went along also and huddled in his coat on a
-settee and held Jack’s ulster and saw the Brown-and-Blue go down in
-defeat to the tune of four to three in an overtime contest, and mourned
-with the others on the way back, and with them vowed dire vengeance
-when Preston paid a return visit. That day a substitute delivered Joe’s
-papers and he was short fifty cents the following Monday and went
-without pocket-money for a whole week. But he didn’t mind――much. It was
-worth more than that, much more, to accompany Jack to Preston Mills.
-
-The hockey team didn’t meet with defeat on all occasions, however,
-although it can’t be denied that, in spite of the best endeavours of
-coach, captain, and players, they ended the season with fewer victories
-than beatings. But they did overwhelm Preston Academy nicely the first
-week in February and found the revenge sweet. The ice was in miserable
-shape that afternoon, for there had been a thaw, and the visitors
-suffered more in consequence than did the home team, for the latter had
-cannily spent the forenoon practising under the adverse conditions.
-The game was played on the river and inside a regular barrier and with
-net goals. Jack had at last proven his right to a place amongst the
-First Team substitutes, and in the second period that afternoon he went
-further and showed that he was as good a right-wing as high school
-could put on the ice. And Joe, excitedly and noisily admiring, was
-filled with triumph.
-
-The score was two to one in Amesville’s favour when the whistle started
-the second half and Sid Morris faced off with the opposing centre.
-Each seven had shown a good defence and Amesville’s second goal had
-been rather in the nature of an accident, the puck slipping around
-the corner of the net when four or five sticks had been poking and
-hooking at it in a half-inch of water and the goal-tender’s skate had
-for an instant slipped aside. It was still anybody’s battle from all
-indications and both teams started in in whirlwind fashion. Preston’s
-gray-legged warriors kept the Brown-and-Blue busy for the first five
-minutes and hammered shot after shot at Sam Craig’s anatomy. Amesville
-forgot team-play in the effort to keep the enemy away from the goal,
-with the result that Preston fooled her time and again and forced
-the playing until Sid’s shrill appeals to “Take it away from them,
-High School!” rose high above the rattling of sticks, the grinding of
-skates, and the inarticulate cries of the players. Only an off-side
-play prevented a score for Preston four minutes after the whistle, for
-a hard, low shot got safely past Sam’s shins and into the net. But on
-the face-off it was Jack Strobe who stole the disc from between the
-feet of the two opponents and who, passing once across the rink to
-Captain Morris and drawing the coverpoint from position, took the puck
-on the return, upset the point and slashed past the goal-tender for
-Amesville’s third tally.
-
-How Joe cheered and shouted! And how all the others did, too; all
-save the handful of faithful Prestonians who had journeyed down with
-their team! There was still nearly fifteen minutes of actual time left
-and Amesville, encouraged, recovered from her confusion and took the
-whip-hand. Time and again Jack and Sidney Morris, working together as
-though they had played side by side for years, swept the enemy off
-its feet and rushed down the ice with the puck, eluding the defence
-more often than not, and making shot after shot at goal. That Preston
-Academy was only tallied on five times in that second half was only
-because neither Sidney nor Jack nor the other forwards, Hale and
-Simpson, who infrequently found an opportunity to bombard the net, were
-especially clever shots. But Amesville was well satisfied with the
-final result of the game. Seven to one was decisive enough to more than
-atone for the defeat at Preston Mills. Joe walked back with his hero
-and was as proud as Punch.
-
-It was that evening that Joe voiced a regret that had been troubling
-him for some time. The two boys were in Joe’s room, and Jack, a bit
-lame and more or less bruised, was stretched on the bed, something that
-Aunt Sarah would not have approved of. Aunt Sarah, however, was getting
-used to having boys around and was making the discovery that laws made
-for grown-up folks cannot always be applied to youths. At first Jack’s
-almost daily appearance at the door, followed by his polite inquiry,
-“Is Joe in, Miss Teele?” was greeted by doubtful, sharp glances. Then
-Jack’s smiles melted the ice, and Aunt Sarah confided to Joe one
-day that that Strobe boy seemed real nice. A day or two later, Joe,
-returning from his newspaper delivering, found that a strip of gray
-linen had been laid over the stair carpet and continued along the upper
-hallway to his door. Aunt Sarah, while reconciled to visitors, was not
-going to have her carpet worn out.
-
-“I wish,” said Joe this evening, “that I could do something.”
-
-“What do you mean, do something?” asked Jack lazily, turning slightly
-to take his weight off a lame hip.
-
-“Something like other fellows,” explained Joe frowningly. “I can’t
-play hockey or basketball or tennis or――or even skate! I can’t play
-football, either. Most fellows can do two or three things well. I’m no
-good at anything.”
-
-“Piffle!” said Jack. “You play baseball, don’t you? And you can skate
-pretty well.”
-
-“Yes, like a ton of bricks! As for baseball, well, yes, I can catch a
-ball if it’s thrown at me and I can bat a little and I’m fairly fast
-on bases. But I’m no wonder at it. I want to play something decently,
-Jack.”
-
-“I suppose you’re making things out worse than they really are. Any
-fellow can do those stunts if he tries hard enough. Funny you don’t
-play tennis, though. Why?”
-
-“I never cared for it. I guess the reason I don’t do things is because
-I never wanted to much before. Beside, at home――in Akron――I was always
-pretty busy with other things. I――I studied pretty hard――――”
-
-“There you are, then!” said Jack triumphantly. “Don’t you know that
-a fellow can’t be a grind and a great athlete, too? Look at me. You
-don’t find me being pointed out as an example of conduct, do you? You
-didn’t see my bookcase stuffed with prize volumes, did you? Ever hear
-of me getting an A, or even a B-plus, in anything? Answer, _No_, with
-a capital N! A chap simply has to choose, Joey, whether he is to make
-his mark one way or the other. I chose the other. It’s more fun.”
-
-“You’re talking a lot of rot. I happen to know that you were pretty
-near the head in your class last year. And you never have any trouble
-with your studies. Besides, I was reading not long ago that the
-principal athletes at one of the colleges in the East――either Yale or
-Harvard, I think――were ’way up in their studies; honour men and things
-like that.”
-
-“Oh, if you believe the newspapers――――”
-
-“Newspapers are a heap more truthful than folks,” interrupted Joe.
-“I’ve heard my father say that lots of times. Anyway, it’s silly to say
-a fellow can’t study and go in for athletics, too. Look at Sam Craig.
-He plays baseball, football, and hockey, you told me. And he’s ’way up
-in his class.”
-
-“Well, if you’re going to prove things I shan’t argue,” sighed Jack.
-“It’s no fun arguing when the other fellow insists on proving he’s
-right. It――it puts you at a disadvantage. Anyway, all that’s got
-nothing to do with what we were talking about. You said you wished you
-could do something. I say you can play baseball. That’s something,
-isn’t it? I’d rather make the nine than the hockey team any day.”
-
-“You’ve made both,” replied Joe disconsolately. “I don’t believe I’ll
-ever make anything.”
-
-“A couple of piffles! In two months you’ll be holding down first or
-second base. I wish you’d beat out Frank Foley for first, Joe. If
-you’ll do that I’ll present you with anything I own. I’ll give you an
-order on dad for a diamond sun-burst or a chest of silver. Mind, I
-don’t say you’d get the things; but I’ll give you the order.”
-
-“Who’s Frank Foley?” asked Joe.
-
-“What? You’ve never heard of ‘Handsome Frank’? For the love of lemons,
-don’t let him hear you, Joey! Why, Frank is our Adonis, our Beau
-Brummel, our――our――――”
-
-“Well, what is he when he isn’t Brummeling?”
-
-“There ain’t no such time. He’s always on that job. Frank is the life
-of our little parties on all occasions. He has his nails manicured
-every day and sends to Cleveland or Chicago or somewhere for his
-neckties――only he calls them scarves. Frank is some swell, believe me!
-You surely must have seen him.”
-
-“Tall and sort of bored-looking? Wears a greenish Norfolk suit?”
-
-“Yep, that’s Frank. You can’t always tell him by that green suit,
-though, for he has half a dozen if he has one. I don’t see how he does
-it, because his father hasn’t much coin, they say. He’s division
-superintendent on the railroad. I’ll bet he keeps his father poor.
-Anyway, he’s our best little dresser and we’re mighty proud of him.”
-
-“You didn’t sound so a moment ago.”
-
-“Well, I’ll tell you.” Jack changed his position with a suppressed
-groan. “As a thing of beauty, so to speak, as a――a picturesque feature
-of the local landscape――say, that’s pretty good, isn’t it? Picturesque
-feature of the local landscape!――Well, as one of those things he’s fine
-and we’re proud as can be of him. If a circus came to town we’d trot
-Frank out and simply run away with the honors. But as a――a regular
-fellow he won’t do. He’s too――oh, I don’t know what he is. I don’t like
-him for so many reasons that I can’t think of the first one. I always
-have a fearful temptation to walk on his shoes and take the shine off
-or bang a snowball against his hat or tie him down and put a little
-natural dirt under his finger-nails. Mind you, Joey, I love clean
-finger-nails”――he shoved his hands under him as he spoke――“but I hate
-to have a fellow dazzle my eyes every time he moves his hands! Besides,
-I object to green Norfolks and green hats with the bows in the wrong
-place and fancy vests――waistcoats, I mean! Gee, I’m glad Frank didn’t
-hear me call ’em vests! The trouble with Handsome Frank is that he’s a
-good-looker and someone’s told him about it. He can’t forget it for a
-minute. Now, I’m a handsome brute, Joey, and you’re not as homely as
-you might be, but we don’t go around throwing our chests out and trying
-to look like――like a work of art, do we? And we don’t dress up like a
-horse, do we? And we don’t polish our finger-nails till they shine like
-nice little pink pearls, do we? Let’s see yours. No, we don’t!”
-
-“Well, if he’s like that I shouldn’t expect him to play anything as
-rough and rude as baseball,” said Joe.
-
-“No, would you? And yet he does. And he plays football, too, which is a
-degree and a half rougher and ruder. As a matter of fact, Joe, Handsome
-Frank is a corking good first baseman, and no slouch of a tackle. He’s
-the fellow you’ll have to fight hardest for first, if you’ve set your
-heart on that position.”
-
-“I haven’t. I’d be a silly chump to. I don’t believe I play well enough
-to get a show with the Second Team.”
-
-“Two more orders of piffle, and have them hot! Don’t assume that
-attitude, Joey. Don’t tell folks you’re no good. They might believe
-you. I’ve noticed folks are more likely to believe you when you tell
-them you’re rotten than when you crack yourself up. You keep a still
-mouth, old chap, and if anyone says ‘What was your batting average
-last year, Mr. Faulkner?’ or ‘What was your fielding average?’ you
-dust a speck off your sleeve and look ’em square in the eye and say,
-careless-like, ‘I batted for three-twenty-seven and fielded for a
-little over four hundred!’ They won’t believe you, but they’ll think
-‘If he can lie as well as that he must play a pretty good game of
-ball!’”
-
-“Jack, you’re an awful chump tonight,” laughed his chum. “What does
-your friend Frank do when he gets some dust on his hands fielding a
-ball or soils his trousers sliding to base? Does he stop the game and
-telephone for a manicure and a whisk-broom?”
-
-“No. He bears it wonderfully. Oh, I suppose I’ve made him out worse
-than he is. I just don’t like him. Still, I’m not the only one, by a
-long shot. You’d have trouble finding many fellows who do like him. But
-he can play baseball and he’s a peach of a baseman. He’s not much at
-hitting, though. Are you, Joe?”
-
-“Fairly rotten, thanks.”
-
-“Well, that won’t do. You dig hard when practice begins. Find your
-batting-eye, Joey. Then, if you can hold down first base decently well,
-you might oust Mr. Foley. I’d consider it a personal favour if you did.”
-
-“Seems to me it’s a good thing you don’t actually hate Foley. If you
-did you’d insist on having him thrown into the river or browned in oil!
-When you take a dislike to me, please let me know, Jack, so I can beat
-it while the beating’s good.”
-
-“Well,” replied Jack cheerfully, “I’m like that, I guess. If I like a
-fellow I like him a lot. If I dislike him I haven’t any use for him. I
-suppose it’s my ardent Spanish nature.”
-
-“Your _what_?”
-
-“Yep. You see, Joey, about three or maybe four hundred years ago I had
-a Spanish ancestor. Spaniards, you know, are hot-blooded, desperate
-rascals. Whenever I do anything real wicked I lay it to that ancestor.
-It’s a convenience.”
-
-“You and your old ancestor!” scoffed Joe. “Say, what sort of practice
-do we do in the baseball cage?”
-
-“Naturally, we do tatting and plain sewing.”
-
-“Oh, cut it out, Jack! Honest, what can you do indoors? I never saw
-anyone practise baseball in a cage.”
-
-“Batteries get the most out of it, Joe. But we all go through a certain
-amount of stuff. Bat’s a great believer in setting-up exercises, for
-one thing. He keeps us at that for a week or so before we’re allowed
-to touch a ball. Then the pitchers and catchers work together and we
-have a batting session each day and we slide to base and――and pass, of
-course.”
-
-“Bat’s the coach, isn’t he?”
-
-“Yep. Mr. Bennet A. Talbot; B, A, T, Bat. He’s a good sort, too. And
-knows a baseball from a rosy-cheeked apple, if anyone should enquire.
-He’s all right. I’m strong for Bat.”
-
-“A good name for a baseball coach,” laughed Joe.
-
-“The fact has been suggested before,” replied Jack with a grin.
-
-“Oh, I didn’t suppose I was getting off a new one. But, look here, you
-can’t do much hitting in a little old cage, can you?”
-
-“Not if Tom Pollock’s pitching,” chuckled Jack. “Why, you see, my
-ignorant friend, the idea is not to knock the ball through the wires,
-but to tap it politely. Bat will tell you that if you can get your bat
-against the ball in the cage you can do it when you get on the field.
-I don’t know that he’s terrifically right about it, though. I don’t
-believe it does any harm to roll bunts around in the gym, but I do know
-that in my own case as soon as we move outdoors and I take a healthy
-swing at the ball it isn’t there! And it takes me a week or so at the
-net to find it.”
-
-“They tell me you’re a peach of a batter,” said Joe admiringly and a
-trifle enviously.
-
-“Oh, I connect sometimes. When I do they travel. That’s all. I’m no H.
-R. Baker.”
-
-“Who’s he?” asked Joe innocently.
-
-“Ball-player. I’m going home. Your ignorance may be catching. See you
-in the morning. Who swiped my――Oh, here it is. So long, Joey!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-JOE HAS AN IDEA
-
-
-Joe’s circle of friends and acquaintances widened. He met many fellows
-through Jack, and Jack seemed to know most of the better sort of boys
-in the town. What sometimes puzzled Joe was how it had happened that
-Jack, with so many friends to choose from, had remained without a
-special chum and had finally chosen him. Joe got on very friendly terms
-with Tom Pollock and became a great admirer of that youth. Anyone with
-such a reputation as a pitcher and all-around ball-player as Tom had
-would have won Joe’s respect and regard in any case, but Tom was a
-very likable chap besides. Sam Craig he saw less of, although Sam was
-nice when they met, and more than once reminded him of the approaching
-fifteenth of February, on which day baseball practice was to start
-indoors.
-
-By the beginning of February Joe was quite at home in Amesville and
-had grown to like the place thoroughly. He and Aunt Sarah were getting
-on finely. Aunt Sarah was outwardly still the same stern-visaged,
-sharp-voiced person, but Joe had discovered that under that rather
-forbidding exterior lay a very kind heart. Nowadays Aunt Sarah’s
-principal mission in life appeared to be the finding of new ways to
-please Joe, without, if possible, allowing him to suspect it!
-
-Joe’s only cause for dissatisfaction was his after-school work. In less
-than a fortnight indoor practice would begin for the baseball squad,
-and that meant that either he would have to give up his newspaper route
-or abandon his hope of making the nine. Consequently, he began to look
-around harder than ever for some labour that he might perform in the
-evenings. He consulted Jack, of course, and Jack, while eager to aid,
-had nothing to offer in the way of practical suggestions. In the end,
-Joe solved the problem without assistance.
-
-He and Jack happened to be in Pryor’s stationery store one afternoon.
-Jack was buying some fountain-pen ink and Joe strayed over to the
-counter that held a not very large assortment of magazines, together
-with the local newspapers and a few papers from other cities of the
-State. While he was turning the pages of a magazine a well-dressed,
-middle-aged man came in and asked for a Chicago _Tribune_. He was
-a travelling salesman, Joe concluded. Whether he was or not, he was
-contemptuously impatient when the clerk informed him that they didn’t
-keep Chicago papers.
-
-“Don’t, eh?” he demanded. “No, I suppose you wouldn’t! I ought to
-have known it. You folks in this town don’t seem to know there’s any
-other place in the country. Still, you might have heard of Chicago.
-It’s a little village in Illinois, down near the lower end of Lake
-Michigan. There’s a tree in front of it. They were talking of building
-a horse-car line when I left. Got a Cleveland paper, then?”
-
-The sarcasm was quite lost on the youthful clerk. He only gazed in a
-puzzled fashion at the annoyed customer and shook his head.
-
-“There ain’t any left,” he said indifferently. “We had one this
-morning.”
-
-“You did? Think of that! One whole paper! Say, you folks take a lot of
-risks, don’t you? Just suppose you hadn’t sold it!” The irate gentleman
-left the store abruptly and Joe followed his departing figure with
-thoughtful eyes. A moment later Jack completed his purchase and they
-left the shop. It was well after five and, although it was the custom
-for Joe to walk home with Jack, this afternoon he pleaded duties and,
-promising to go around after supper, watched his friend lose himself in
-the throng. What Joe did next would have occasioned Jack some curiosity
-had he been there to see. Joe crossed the street――the other side of the
-thoroughfare was less congested at this time――and went slowly northward
-for six blocks, his eyes busy all the way. Then he crossed again and
-returned on the first side. His travels took him over the busiest
-portion of the street and left him finally four blocks below the Adams
-Building. But what he was looking for he hadn’t seen, and he shook his
-head as he turned his steps northward again. In front of the Adams
-Building a small newsboy was selling the evening paper and Joe stopped.
-
-“Got a Cleveland paper?” he asked.
-
-The boy shook his head. “I don’t carry ’em,” he said.
-
-“Columbus?”
-
-“Ain’t got nothin’ but the _Recorder_.”
-
-“That all you ever carry?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“Do you know where I can buy a Cleveland or a Columbus paper?”
-
-“You might get ’em at Pryor’s, three blocks up.”
-
-Joe retreated to the front of the building and again looked about him.
-From the entrance beside him quite a stream of folks were emerging to
-hurry homewards. At least every other one stopped to purchase a paper
-before going to the car or walking away.
-
-“Hm,” said Joe thoughtfully. “I wonder, now!”
-
-He entered the lobby of the office building and studied it. On one side
-were the elevators. Behind them a broad marble stairway started upward,
-turning behind the cages, to the floor above. The lobby was not large,
-but it was large enough for the purpose Joe had in mind, and presently,
-when the occupants of one elevator had pushed out through the revolving
-doors, he stepped off the little space between the first elevator and
-the front wall of the building. A little less than three yards he made
-it. The depth was five feet. Joe half closed his eyes and studied it.
-Then, jostled by another carful of departing occupants, he made his way
-across to the directory beside the elevators. It was evident that many
-of the offices, and Joe decided that there must be some two hundred of
-them, were still unoccupied, although the building was now complete
-as to its interior. A placard near at hand notified the public that
-offices were to be rented of Joseph Adams, Room 129. At that moment an
-elevator descended and emptied itself, and the operator, observing Joe
-at the directory, asked who he was looking for.
-
-“Strobe,” replied Joe, giving the first name that came to his mind.
-
-“Not here. Maybe he’s coming later. If you mean John P. Strobe, his
-place is across the street there, on the opposite corner. Jeweler, is
-he?”
-
-Joe said he was and thanked the youth for the direction. Then, looking
-about him at the unsurfaced walls: “This is a pretty good building,” he
-observed. The other nodded.
-
-“Best in this town, anyway. It wouldn’t cut much ice in Cincinnati, I
-guess, but it’s pretty good for Amesville.”
-
-“Are there many in it?”
-
-“Sure, and it’s filling up fast. The old man’s renting two or three
-offices a day, I hear.”
-
-“I suppose there’ll be a news-stand here, won’t there?”
-
-“News-stand? Search me! I haven’t heard of any.”
-
-“I should think you’d need one. You must have two or three hundred
-people in here.”
-
-“Easy! There’s two hundred and eight offices, and some has two or three
-people in ’em. Course, they ain’t all rented yet, but――――”
-
-The signal buzzed and the operator slammed the door and shot out of
-sight just as another car arrived. Joe made his way out with the throng
-and hurried homeward, his mind very busy all the way. At supper he was
-so preoccupied and silent that Aunt Sarah tried to get him to describe
-his symptoms and watched him depart for Jack’s house with misgivings.
-Up in the big room on the third floor Joe laid the scheme before his
-chum. Jack was instantly enthusiastic.
-
-“It’s simply great!” he declared. “How’d you ever think of it? But
-you’d sell other things besides newspapers, wouldn’t you, Joey?”
-
-“Yes. Cigars, candy, magazines――anything I could. You see, Jack, if
-folks who work in the building know they can get such things right
-there they’re pretty sure to deal with me. I ought to sell a lot of
-cigars――――”
-
-“And chewing-gum,” laughed Jack.
-
-“And newspapers, too. And I’d make a specialty of carrying the
-Cincinnati and Cleveland and Columbus papers, and the Chicago, too; and
-maybe one of the New York papers. The trouble is, though, that I’d
-have to have money to start with, and I haven’t got it.”
-
-“That’s so.” Jack’s face fell. “How much would you need?” he asked
-after a minute.
-
-“It’s hard to tell. Of course, I don’t know what rent Mr. Adams would
-charge me, in the first place. In fact, I don’t know yet that he will
-rent the space at all. I wondered if your father knew him well enough
-to speak a good word for me, Jack.”
-
-“Of course he does! They’re thick as thieves. I’ll get dad to go and
-see him with you if you like. Want to go down and ask him now?”
-
-“No; wait a while. I was wondering――――” Joe was silent a minute. Then:
-“Have you any money, Jack?”
-
-“Me? About a dollar. Want it?”
-
-“I wondered whether you had any in the bank or――――”
-
-“I have! I’d forgotten it. I’ve got about sixty dollars, I think. But I
-don’t know whether dad would want me to take it out, Joe. I’d lend it
-to you in a minute if he’d let me, though.”
-
-“I wasn’t thinking of borrowing it,” said Joe. “I was going to suggest
-that we go in together. I think we could start with about fifty
-dollars. We needn’t put in much of a stock at first, you know. There’d
-be a month’s rent, say twenty dollars, and we’d have to buy a few boxes
-of cigars and we’d have to have a counter built. Maybe we’d better say
-sixty dollars, to be on the safe side. I haven’t figured on it yet, but
-I believe we could do it for sixty. I thought that if you’d put in half
-and take half the profits until you were square――――”
-
-“I get you, Joey! Half would be only thirty dollars, wouldn’t it? I
-don’t believe dad would mind my taking out that much. But could you get
-the other thirty, Joey?”
-
-“I think so. I――I’ve got an idea that may work. Anyway――――”
-
-“Why couldn’t I put in the whole sixty if dad will let me? In that way
-you wouldn’t have――――”
-
-“It wouldn’t be wise,” said Joe. “I’m pretty sure I can make the thing
-go and pay a good profit, Jack, but if I happened to be wrong you’d
-stand to lose your money. And sixty dollars would be too much to drop.
-Besides, your father wouldn’t let you put in that much when I wasn’t
-putting in any.”
-
-“Maybe not. Let’s go down and talk to him about it.”
-
-“No, let’s go over it first. There may be something I’ve missed. Now,
-say Mr. Adams lets us have the space for twenty a month; that’s
-enough, although he may not think so; then we’ve got to have a counter
-built and that will cost, say, ten dollars. It’ll have to be made to
-look pretty neat, you know; maybe it had better be imitation mahogany.
-Then we’d arrange with the news company for a small list of magazines.
-We’d have to pay cash for those at first, but they don’t cost much.
-Same way with the papers. There’s good money in the _Gazette_ and the
-_Recorder_ at two cents if you sell enough of them. Then we’d want to
-put in some confectionery, like gum and chocolate and package things.
-We can buy that in Cincinnati and get as little as we want to start on.
-At the end of the month we ought to have enough for the next month’s
-rent and enough to put in new stock. My idea would be to make the stock
-bigger all the time, as we could afford it. There wouldn’t be any other
-expenses, would there? Can you think of any?”
-
-Jack couldn’t. “It looks perfectly safe to me,” he said, “because the
-rent is the only thing we’d have to worry about, isn’t it? I mean, we
-needn’t have more cigars and other things at a time than we could sell
-right away.”
-
-“That’s the idea. We’ve got to begin in a small way and expand. We
-won’t lay out a cent more than we have to. Then, if it shouldn’t
-prove a go we wouldn’t be stung very much. The papers, you know, are
-returnable, so we wouldn’t get stuck on those. Some of the magazines
-are, too, I think.”
-
-“Hold on!” exclaimed Jack suddenly. “Who’s going to tend shop? We’ll be
-in school all day up to three o’clock. Bet you hadn’t thought of that!”
-
-“You must think I’m a good deal of an idiot,” laughed Joe. “I’ll tell
-you my scheme. I thought I could go down there in the morning and get
-things fixed. We’d have a box on the corner with a slot in it and when
-anyone bought anything they could drop the money in the box. Then,
-after school――――”
-
-“Suppose they didn’t!” interrupted his chum. “Seems to me that’s pretty
-risky!”
-
-“I don’t believe so. You put folks on their honour like that and
-they’ll appreciate it and act square. I’ll bet we won’t lose half a
-dollar a month, Jack.”
-
-“Well, you’ve got a lot of faith, Joey. Still, you may be right at
-that. Come to think of it, I guess you are. All right. And then after
-school we could go down there and tend shop, eh?”
-
-“When we didn’t have to practise.”
-
-“That’s so. I’d forgotten practice. Well, on Saturdays we could be
-there all day, eh? That would be a lot of fun. I’ve always wanted to
-be a merchant and sell things. ‘Cigars? Yes, sir. I think you’ll like
-these. We make them ourselves and know just what goes into them, sir.
-Two for five, please. Thank you, sir. Come again if you live!’ That’s
-the stuff, isn’t it?”
-
-“Fine!” laughed Joe. “Now let’s go down and hear what your father
-says.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-PARTNERS
-
-
-Five days later the news-stand in the lobby of the Adams Building was
-ready for business.
-
-It had all been extremely simple and easy. Mr. Strobe had not only
-consented to use his influence with Mr. Adams, but had declared that
-he believed the investment of thirty dollars in the enterprise to be
-a good stroke of business. In fact, Jack’s father became the most
-enthusiastic of the three that evening when the matter was broached
-to him. If, he said, Jack didn’t want to go into partnership with Joe
-he’d be glad to take a half interest himself! A news-stand in the Adams
-Building ought to be a money-maker, and he wondered that someone hadn’t
-thought of it before. Thereupon Joe suggested anxiously that perhaps
-someone had, and wasn’t satisfied until Jack’s father had called Mr.
-Adams up on the telephone and ascertained that the privilege had not
-been disposed of and that Mr. Adams was quite willing to confer with
-them tomorrow in the matter.
-
-Mr. Joseph Adams was president and principal owner of the big carpet
-mills and held title to much residence and store property throughout
-the town. He was about forty-two years of age, a much younger man than
-Joe had expected to find when, led by Mr. Strobe, they entered his
-office in the new building early the next morning. The business was
-completed in rather less than five minutes. Mr. Strobe stated what was
-wanted, Joe answered a question as to proposed location of the stand,
-they all descended to view the spot, and Mr. Adams then said: “I’m
-agreeable. Rent free until the first of March. After that, eighteen
-dollars a month. Keep everything clean and neat. Come around this
-afternoon and I’ll have a lease ready for you.”
-
-When they returned at half-past three Mr. Adams said: “One thing I
-neglected to speak of, boys. About your counter and showcase, now;
-better let me attend to those, I guess. I don’t want anything that
-clashes with the finish down there. I’ve got Mayer coming here in about
-ten minutes. He’s the boss-carpenter. I thought we’d decide what was
-wanted and he could go ahead and put it up. The walls are cream white
-down there and I think we’d ought to have the stand to match. That
-suit you? What had you thought of?”
-
-“Mahogany, sir,” replied Joe. “That is, imitation mahogany. But I think
-cream white would look better.”
-
-“I guess so. Now, look here.” Mr. Adams drew a sheet of paper towards
-him and sketched roughly. “A row of shelves across to here; sliding
-doors at the back; panelled in front. Then a flap counter the rest of
-the way; lift it up to get in, you know; crawl under if you’d rather.
-Now what about shelves at the back? Need them? They wouldn’t look well,
-I guess.”
-
-“I don’t think so,” replied Joe. “I guess we’d have room for everything
-on the counter and in the showcase. I――I hadn’t thought about a
-showcase, though, Mr. Adams. Won’t it cost a good deal?”
-
-“Twelve dollars and sixty cents. I priced it. That needn’t worry you,
-though; I’m paying for the whole thing.”
-
-“Oh!” murmured Joe. “I didn’t understand.”
-
-“That’s great!” exclaimed Jack.
-
-Mr. Adams smiled. “Doing it for my own protection. I’d rather have
-something that looked solid and substantial there. I don’t want
-anything cheap, you know. Here’s Mayer now,” he added as a clerk
-appeared at the door. “Let’s go down and see what’s to be done.”
-
-Joe thought he had never encountered anyone who could rush a thing
-through as Mr. Adams could. It took him about three minutes to explain
-his ideas to the carpenter and when he had finished, that gentleman,
-a taciturn man with a long head and a Scotch burr, could suggest no
-improvements.
-
-“All right, then,” said Mr. Adams briskly. “Get right at it, Mayer.
-Have it done――when do you want it, boys?”
-
-“Whenever it’s convenient, sir. There’s no――――”
-
-“This is Saturday. Get it done by Wednesday, Mayer. See that you get a
-good dull enamel on it, like the walls. Make a good, finished job.”
-
-The boss-carpenter nodded. Then: “How about the light, sir?” he
-inquired.
-
-“Light? That’s so. Ought to be one back of the counter. See Purley and
-Ferris about that and tell them to put up a small dome light, same
-design as the others here. That’s all, I guess.”
-
-A moment later he was being shot upwards in an elevator, Mr. Mayer was
-silently measuring with a pocket rule, and Joe and Jack, their lease
-in Joe’s pocket, sought the sidewalk. Outside, Jack capered gleefully.
-“Nearly a month’s rent free, Joey,” he exclaimed, “and we don’t have to
-pay for building the stand! He’s a brick, isn’t he?”
-
-“Yes,” agreed Joe. “I’m wondering――――”
-
-“What?” demanded the other impatiently.
-
-“Well, we won’t need so much money as we thought, you see. I guess we
-can get started on about half of it.”
-
-“We’ll buy more stock!”
-
-“N-no, we’d better start easy, as we agreed to. What I was thinking was
-this, Jack. When I said I thought I could get hold of my half the money
-I had Aunt Sarah in mind. I think she’d loan me thirty dollars if she
-had it. But I don’t know whether she’d have that much, you see, and――――”
-
-Jack interrupted with a laugh. “Not have thirty dollars!” he cried.
-“Why, your Aunt Sarah is one of the richest women in Amesville, you
-booby! Everyone knows that!”
-
-“She is?” asked Joe in surprise. “I didn’t know it. She’s always so――so
-careful――――”
-
-“Stingy, you mean, don’t you?” laughed Jack.
-
-“No, I don’t mean that, really. She isn’t a bit stingy. She’s just
-careful. About putting the light out when you’re not using it, and
-bargaining with the tradespeople, and――and like that, you know. Well,
-anyway, I’d rather not ask her for the money. I’d much rather borrow it
-from you. If we only need thirty dollars altogether, your share would
-be fifteen and mine would be fifteen. Well, if you can take thirty out
-of the savings bank you might put fifteen into the business and loan
-the other fifteen to me at the regular rate of interest. Would you be
-willing to do that? No matter whether the business got along or not,
-I’d pay you the fifteen back, of course, because I could get it from
-Aunt Sarah.”
-
-“Sure! That’s the ticket! Only I don’t want any interest, you old
-Shylock!”
-
-“I’d rather, though. I’d pay Aunt Sarah interest, and why not you?”
-
-Jack was hard to persuade, but Joe ultimately got him to agree. “We’ll
-ask your father about it, though. If he says it’s all right――――”
-
-“He will,” laughed Jack. “Dad thinks you’re a sort of young Napoleon
-of Finance, Joey, and anything you do is all right. Fact is, I believe
-he’s a bit sore because we didn’t let him in on this.”
-
-During the succeeding four days――with the exception of Sunday――the boys
-spent most of their spare time in the lobby of the Adams Building
-watching the construction of the news-stand. Mr. Mayer called it a
-“booth,” and since they had every wish to keep him good-humoured, they
-adopted that name for it themselves. On Tuesday morning it was in place
-and had received its first coat of paint. The enamel went on Tuesday
-afternoon and a second coat was to be applied two days later. But as
-the final application could be made while business was going on, the
-boys decided to open the stand Wednesday afternoon.
-
-Joe had already ordered a small assortment of package candies,
-chewing-gum, and such things from Cincinnati, had made arrangements
-with the news company for current magazines and certain out-of-town
-papers, had arranged with the two Amesville journals for fifty copies
-to be delivered daily, and had spent the larger part of their principal
-in the purchase of cigars, cigarettes, and tobacco. Although he brought
-as little of everything as he could, he discovered to his dismay that
-on Wednesday morning he had but seven dollars of the original thirty
-left. I don’t think either Joe or Jack did very well at lessons that
-day. It was frightfully hard to keep their minds on their school work,
-so impatient were they to get to the stand and start business. Joe
-went over his newspaper route on Tuesday for the last time. He had some
-slight misgivings about abandoning that employment, for although it
-brought him but three dollars, the money was certain. However, nothing
-venture, nothing have; and he was pretty certain, too, that he could
-find work again with the _Recorder_ if necessary.
-
-So just as soon as school was dismissed the two boys hurried down town
-to their place of business, as Jack importantly phrased it. The counter
-shone freshly white and the handsome showcase, three feet in length
-by twenty-two inches in breadth, nickel-trimmed, with mirrors set in
-the sliding panels at the back, had been cleaned and polished until it
-was speckless. They raised the hinged end of the counter and stepped
-inside. Joe turned a switch and a flood of mellow light shone down
-from the neat ground-glass dome above. Many bundles had already been
-unpacked and their contents stowed on the shelves under the counter,
-but others awaited them, and they set to work. There was not much room
-between counter and wall, but there was enough to move about in. The
-counter was two feet wide, leaving the space behind it not quite three
-feet. The showcase had been placed midway between wall and hinged
-flap and there was two feet of solid counter on each side of it. If
-necessary they could make use of the hinged portion as well and pass
-under it instead of lifting it up. But at present there was plenty of
-room for all their goods without availing themselves of that section.
-The shelves underneath were roomy and the sliding doors were supplied
-with a neat Yale lock. Joe inserted his key in it, pushed aside a panel
-and revealed their store of smokers’ articles. It was a quarter to four
-and they worked busily to get things in shape against the time the
-occupants of the building began to leave. They expected to sell no more
-today than a few evening papers, but they wanted the public to know
-that the stand was opened for business.
-
-The cigars and tobacco and cigarettes went into the case. Joe had to
-do a lot of arranging before he managed to make them occupy enough of
-the space to satisfy him. Even then the showcase looked pretty empty.
-“We ought to have about a dozen boxes of cigars,” he said, “to make a
-showing. I’ll have to spread everything out in here or else it will
-look as if we didn’t have anything!”
-
-Jack, struggling with a bundle of confectionery on the counter, grunted
-assent. Joe, finally closing the showcase, pulled out a dozen or so
-magazines from underneath and arranged them on the counter. Then came
-the candy, most of it in half-pound boxes, and a varied assortment
-of gum and enticing confections put up in tiny tin boxes. There was
-some discussion as to where these things should be placed. In the end
-some were put on top the showcase and the rest ranged between the
-magazines and the wall. The space at the other side of the case was
-reserved for newspapers and a few minutes later the fifty copies of the
-_Recorder_ arrived, were paid for, and spread on the counter. With them
-were a half-dozen copies of morning papers from Cleveland, Columbus,
-Springfield, Sandusky, Cincinnati, and Dayton. At last everything was
-in place and the boys emerged into the corridor to view the result. It
-certainly looked attractive and business-like, and they were hugely
-pleased. Joe rearranged the boxes of candy so that the colored tops
-would show better and then Jack went back behind the counter and
-between them they distributed the price cards. These were small squares
-or oblongs of gray cardboard with black lettering and had been done
-by the man who performed such work for Strobe and Wonson. A number of
-small, weighted holders had been purchased――an extravagance that Joe
-had resisted at first――and the cards were slipped between the wire
-loops. Jack again emerged to view the effect.
-
-“Looks swell, doesn’t it?” he asked. Joe agreed that it did, and one of
-the elevator boys, who had been an interested observer at intervals,
-now stepped from his car and joined them. He was a tall, raw-boned
-youth of seventeen or eighteen, by name Martin Olson, but generally
-known as Ole. Ole had a shock of carroty red hair and an unattractive
-flat face liberally sprinkled with large freckles that matched his
-hair. Neither Joe nor Jack had taken to Ole much, but his praise of the
-news-stand now inclined them more favourably toward him.
-
-“Best looking little shop in town,” he announced enthusiastically.
-“That’s a swell glass case you’ve got there, too.” He examined the
-contents. “You ought to have some Dobbins, though. Dobbins are the best
-five-cent smoke there is. What kind of cigarettes have you got? Uh-huh,
-I see. There’s lots of fellows in the building smokes Scimitars,
-though. You’d ought to lay in some of those, I guess.”
-
-“We’ll find out pretty quick what’s wanted,” replied Joe. “What we
-should have, though, is a lighter. Guess we’d better have some matches
-on the showcase until we can get a lighter. You tend shop, Jack, and
-I’ll go and get some.” When he returned from a trip around the corner
-to the nearest grocery Ole had departed, but the second elevator
-attendant had taken his place. He was a younger lad, short and stocky
-and red-cheeked, with a wealth of assurance and a fine command of
-slang. His name was Walter. There was probably more to it, but the boys
-never learned it. Walter was equally complimentary.
-
-“Some stand, kiddoes, believe me,” he affirmed. “All to the cheese.
-Say, what kind o’ cigs do you handle? Got any Moorish Beauties?”
-
-“No, we haven’t,” said Jack.
-
-“You ought to, then. They’re the best. Lots o’ fellers smokes Beauties.”
-
-“We’ve got six sorts there,” laughed Joe, “and it seems we haven’t the
-right ones yet. Ole says we ought to keep Scimitars.”
-
-Walter sniffed. “Huh, they ain’t no good. Punk! Beauties is the brand
-for you. Got any novels?”
-
-“Novels? No. Just magazines.”
-
-“I mean nickel novels. ‘Dick Dashaway’ and ‘Bull’s-Eye Bob’ and them.
-Ain’t you goin’ to have none o’ them?”
-
-“I think not,” replied Joe drily. “You see, if we kept them we might
-not attend to business we’d be so busy reading them.”
-
-The irony was lost on Walter, however. “That’s so. They’re swell
-novels, take it from me. There’s one of ’em――Oh, gee, there’s a guy
-wants to be dropped!” And Walter disgustedly returned to his car,
-slammed the door and shot upward.
-
-“What time is it?” asked Jack. “My watch has stopped.”
-
-“Nearly half-past four,” replied Joe. “I wonder who will be our first
-customer.”
-
-“Maybe there won’t be one! Say, we’ve forgotten the money box.”
-
-“I know. But we don’t need to put that out except when we’re not here.
-We――we might see how it looks, though.”
-
-Joe went behind, produced a japanned tin box with a slot in the lid and
-a small brass padlock on the hasp and set it on the showcase. On the
-front of the box was printed in white letters: “Help yourself and drop
-the money here.”
-
-“How does it look?” he asked.
-
-“All right. But, say, Joey, wouldn’t it be a joke if someone
-absent-mindedly walked off with the box some day?”
-
-“The funniest kind of a joke!”
-
-“How would it do to chain it?” continued Jack.
-
-“Well, it would look a bit funny, wouldn’t it, to trust folks as to put
-their money in the box and then chain the box down?”
-
-“I don’t see――――” began Jack. But just then an elevator descended, the
-door opened, and out walked Mr. Adams.
-
-“Ready for business, eh, boys? Well, you look very nice, very nice,
-indeed. Hm; cigars, cigarettes, magazines, candy――quite a stock of
-goods. Got any Vista de Isla cigars? I see you haven’t, though. It
-might pay you to keep a box, boys. I run out of them now and then
-and I might as well get them from you as send around to the club for
-them. Well, I’ll take a _Recorder_, I guess. Have to patronise home
-industries, you know.”
-
-Mr. Adams laid down his two pennies and took a paper from the pile.
-Then:
-
-“Hello,” he said, “you’ve got the Springfield paper, eh? Good idea.
-I’ll take that. And Cleveland and Cincinnati and――Well, you’re
-enterprising! Are these today’s? Guess I’ll take the Cincinnati paper,
-too. Will you have these regularly?”
-
-“Yes, sir, and others besides; Chicago and Pittsburg and probably New
-York.”
-
-Mr. Adams viewed Joe curiously across the counter. “You ought to get
-on, my boy,” he said finally as he counted out an additional ten cents.
-“You’re the first person in this city ever thought of keeping a Chicago
-paper. I don’t know that you’ll ever sell one, but you certainly
-deserve to. Business good so far?”
-
-“Well,” replied Joe, with a twinkle, “we’ve sold three newspapers for
-twelve cents.”
-
-“Eh? Oh, then I’m the first customer, am I? Quite an honour, I’m
-sure. I’ll have to continue my patronage, boys. Good luck to you and
-good-night.”
-
-A few minutes later the exodus from the building began and no one
-passed out of the building without pausing to look at the news-stand,
-whether he purchased or not. But many did purchase. The pile of evening
-papers went fast and long before the building had emptied itself Joe
-had to make a hurried trip down to the _Recorder_ Building and get a
-new supply. Several sales of cigars and cigarettes were made as well,
-while a young lady typewriter smilingly purchased a box of candy. The
-only department of the establishment not patronised was the magazine
-department, and when, at six, they closed up shop for the night, Jack
-remedied that by buying a copy of a monthly devoted to scientific
-achievements.
-
-Before they went they counted their receipts and found that they
-totalled three dollars and ten cents. Just how much of that amount
-represented profit they could not reckon off-hand, but they were
-very well satisfied with the result of a little more than an hour’s
-business. After everything had been stowed away under the counter and
-locked up for the night the partners took themselves off, arm in arm,
-looking as much as possible like prosperous merchants.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-MR. CHESTER YOUNG
-
-
-The Adams Building News Stand prospered from the first. There was
-never a doubtful moment. On Thursday business started off with a rush
-and when, just before half-past eight, Joe and Jack had to hurry
-unwillingly away to school, even Joe, now the more pessimistic of the
-two, had to acknowledge that success seemed assured. After school they
-flew back again to discover that the stand was well-nigh exhausted
-of aught save magazines and that even those were half gone! They
-had placed what they supposed to be a sufficient supply of cigars,
-cigarettes, and tobacco on top of the case, but one cigar-box was
-utterly empty, another held but three cigars, all but two packages of
-cigarettes had disappeared, and the candy was down to the final layer
-of boxes! The morning papers had been pretty nearly sold out before
-they had left, and so the sight of the empty counter to the left of
-the showcase produced no surprise. But the inroad made on the rest
-of their stock brought gasps of astonishment. An awful fear assailed
-the partners and with one accord they grabbed at the cash-box. But its
-weight and the pleasant clinking sound it gave out reassured them, and
-when, after they had taken account of stock and had reckoned up the
-contents of the box, they discovered that not only had every purchase
-been honestly paid for, but that someone had dropped in five cents too
-much, they viewed each other triumphantly.
-
-“Eight dollars and fifty-five cents!” exclaimed Jack awedly. “What do
-you know about that? And it’s not four o’clock yet!”
-
-“What’s troubling me,” replied Joe happily, “is how we are to stock
-up again by morning! We can get the cigars, all right, but we’ve got
-to have more candy and it takes a day or two to get that. And the
-magazines are more than half gone, too.”
-
-“Couldn’t we telegraph to Cincinnati for the candy?”
-
-“Yes, but I guess we’d better buy some here meanwhile.”
-
-“But there won’t be any profit on it!” wailed Jack.
-
-“No, but we can’t help that. We’ve got to keep the stock up. We’ll
-telegraph the Cincinnati folks to send fifty pounds this time.”
-
-“Fifty!” exclaimed Jack doubtfully. “Isn’t that a lot?”
-
-“Yes, but we’ve sold five pounds already and we don’t want to have to
-order oftener than a week. The way they pack it, it keeps fresh for a
-long time. Maybe it would be a good idea to put in a few pound boxes of
-a better grade. Guess I’d better go around to the cigar folks now and
-get a couple more boxes. What was that brand that Mr. Adams mentioned?”
-
-“Mister Dyler, or something like that,” answered Jack. “I didn’t get
-it.”
-
-“Neither did I. But I guess they’ll know what I’m after. And we ought
-to have some more magazines, I suppose, if only for show. It’s most
-time for the March numbers to come out, though, and we don’t want to
-overstock on the February. I’ll telephone to the news company and ask
-them to send a half-dozen with the out-of-town papers. I’d better
-hurry, too, or they’ll be here. Where is the nearest telephone? Look
-here, Jack, Mr. Adams ought to have a public booth down here in the
-lobby.”
-
-“That’s so. It would be sort of handy for us, wouldn’t it? Do you
-suppose he would if we asked him?”
-
-“I don’t know, but I’m not afraid to ask. Maybe, though, we could
-afford one of our own.”
-
-“At thirty-six dollars a year? You must be crazy!”
-
-“Is that what it costs? How about a two-party line? Or――――” Joe stopped
-and regarded his partner thoughtfully.
-
-“Out with it!” demanded Jack.
-
-“Why couldn’t we have a public ’phone――one of those drop-a-nickel
-affairs, you know, and set it here by the wall? I wouldn’t be surprised
-if we made enough to get our own calls for nothing.”
-
-“We might,” agreed Jack hesitantly. “How much would we have to pay the
-telephone company?”
-
-“I don’t know. Tomorrow I’ll go around there and ask. Well, I’m off.
-Pay the news company when they come. And pay for the _Recorders_, too.
-I’ll be back as soon as I can.”
-
-“Why don’t you go across to the store?” asked Jack. “The telephone’s in
-the outer office. Just tell them I said you were to use it.”
-
-“Too cheeky. I’d rather pay for the call myself. Out of the firm’s
-money!” he added laughingly as he disappeared through the revolving
-doors.
-
-He was back some twenty minutes later. “Anything doing?” he asked as he
-deposited two bundles on the counter.
-
-“Lots,” replied Jack. “I sold two cigars, a package of cigarettes, one
-_Recorder_, and a box of these mints. And I paid for the evening papers
-and a dollar and twelve cents to the news company.”
-
-“Did you put down what you’d paid out?”
-
-“No. Should I?”
-
-“If you don’t we’ll get all mixed up. I’ve got a small blankbook
-here and I guess we’d better start in and keep a careful account of
-everything. What papers did the news company bring?”
-
-“All sorts. There’s one from New York. We’ll never sell that, Joey.”
-
-“I don’t believe we will, but it doesn’t matter. After a week or
-so we’ll find out just what papers we can sell, and how many, and
-then we’ll confine ourselves to those. They brought the magazines I
-asked them to? Oh, I see. All right. Things begin to look a bit more
-business-like again. Undo this candy, will you, while I get the cigars
-out. By the way, what do you think? That cigar that Mr. Adams smokes is
-called Vista de Isla and it costs seventeen dollars and twenty cents a
-hundred!”
-
-“Great Scott! You didn’t buy any, I hope?”
-
-“Twenty-five; four dollars and thirty cents. Here they are.”
-
-“Well, but, say, Joey, that’s pretty steep! Suppose he doesn’t buy any?”
-
-“He will. He said he would. And the chap who sold these says we must
-have a wet sponge in the case to keep the cigars moist. So I got one.
-Also a five-cent glass dish to put it in. Run upstairs and get it wet,
-will you, while I arrange these?”
-
-“All right. How much do those cigars sell for apiece, Joey?”
-
-“The man said twenty-five cents, but I don’t suppose Mr. Adams pays
-that much at his club for them. I thought I’d ask him. We can sell them
-at twenty cents and still make a good profit.”
-
-“Twenty-five cents!” murmured Jack. “Think of paying that much for one
-cigar! And they don’t look much, either.”
-
-“You happen to be looking at the ten-centers,” laughed Joe. “The others
-are here.” He opened the lid of the flat box and revealed a row of
-greenish-black cigars quite different from the others in appearance
-and aroma. “I guess these are something extra, eh?”
-
-“Must be, but I think anyone’s a chump to pay a quarter for a cigar,”
-responded Jack. “Where’s your old sponge?”
-
-Business that evening was brisk and the seventy-five copies of the
-_Recorder_ disappeared like magic and Jack had to hurry out on the
-sidewalk and buy extra copies from a newsboy. “Tomorrow we’ll get
-a hundred,” said Joe. “If we don’t sell them they can go back.” By
-closing time three dollars and thirty-four cents had been added to
-the amount in the box, swelling the total sales for the day to over
-fourteen dollars!
-
-That evening, in Jack’s room, they tried to figure their profits. They
-had taken in in the two days exactly seventeen dollars and forty-four
-cents. Since, however, they had not been able to enter each sale as
-made, it was difficult to arrive at the desired result. They knew
-that on each morning or afternoon paper they made a profit of one
-cent, that on each half-pound box of candy they made eight cents, that
-magazines netted from four to six cents, and that cigars, cigarettes,
-and tobacco sold for from ten to twenty-five per cent. above cost.
-After much figuring they came to the conclusion that their profits
-were represented by about one-quarter of the amount taken in, or
-practically four dollars and thirty cents.
-
-“And at that rate,” said Joe, “we ought to make a monthly profit of
-about one hundred and twelve dollars!”
-
-Jack stared unbelievingly. Then his face fell. “But we’ve got to pay
-the rent out of that,” he mourned.
-
-Joe laughed. “You’re getting to be a regular Shylock, old man! The rent
-is only eighteen and that leaves us ninety-four. And besides that we
-haven’t to pay any this month.”
-
-Jack brightened again. “That makes forty-seven dollars a month for each
-of us, doesn’t it? And that’s nearly twelve dollars a week! Joey, we’ll
-be millionaires before we know it!”
-
-“Well, it pays better than carrying that newspaper route! Another
-thing, Jack; there’s no reason why we shouldn’t do better as time goes
-on. We can keep other things, you know, like post-cards and――Look here,
-why not get a good line of Amesville views?”
-
-“Views? What sort of views?”
-
-“Why, you know; the City Hall and First Presbyterian Church and the
-Adams Building, of course, and City Park and all the rest of the
-show places. Have them made into post-cards, I mean. There’s a firm
-in Detroit that’ll print them for us, and they don’t cost much of
-anything.”
-
-“Sounds all right. I guess there are lots of things we could sell that
-we haven’t thought of yet.”
-
-“There’s one thing I’d like to do,” said Joe thoughtfully, “and that’s
-have a special brand of cigars made for us. That is, we don’t have
-them made for us exactly. We just select a good brand and then the
-factory puts a special label on them. See what I mean? ‘Adams Building
-Perfecto’ or something like that. If we got a real good quality,
-Jack, and sort of pushed it we might get quite a trade. As far as I
-can see there’s no reason why we should depend on the folks in the
-building for our trade. If we carry things people want they will come
-in from outside for them. It’s just as easy to drop into the Adams
-Building lobby as it is to go into a regular store. We might run an
-advertisement in the paper after we get ahead a bit. ‘Try the Adams
-Building Perfecto, the best ten-cent smoke in the city. Sold at the
-Adams Building News-Stand.’”
-
-“You can think of a lot of ways to spend our profits,” said Jack sadly.
-
-“Advertising pays,” replied Joe. “Anyway, we haven’t fairly started
-yet, Jack. You wait until we’ve been there a couple of months and
-I’ll wager our sales will be double what they were today. For one
-thing, the building isn’t filled yet. There are lots of offices still
-vacant. Every time one is let we get one or two or maybe a half-dozen
-prospective customers. Come to think of it, Jack, there’s no reckoning
-that, for it isn’t only the folks who occupy offices in the building
-who will trade with us, but the folks who have business in the
-building, folks who come in and out. I’d like to know, just for fun,
-how many go through that door every day. Bet you there’s nearly five
-hundred of them, or will be when the offices are all rented! Suppose,
-now, that only one out of ten stopped and bought from us, and that they
-only spent five cents apiece. That would be――fifty times five――two
-dollars and a half right there, besides our regular trade. And I guess
-they’d average nearer ten cents apiece than five, too.”
-
-“How much,” asked Jack, “would we have to pay a clerk to tend the stand
-for us?”
-
-“I’ve thought of that,” replied Joe, “and I guess we could get a young
-chap for about six dollars a week.”
-
-“The fellow we’d get for that price wouldn’t be worth having,” said
-Jack sensibly. “I think it would pay us, perhaps not just now, but
-after we’d got going well, to hire a real clerk and pay him ten dollars
-a week; some fellow who had sold cigars and things like that and who
-could make sales; talk things up, you know, and hustle.”
-
-“I guess you’re right,” answered Joe, after a moment’s thought. “And I
-believe it would pay us to do that. I dare say there will be times when
-folks won’t have just the right change with them and we’ll lose sales.
-Besides, when we get to playing baseball we won’t either of us be able
-to be at the stand except just for a few minutes in the morning and
-evening. Well, we don’t have to think of that quite yet.”
-
-“Indeed, we do, though, Joey. In another week we’ll be staying in the
-cage until five o’clock or so. Of course, that scheme of putting folks
-on their honor has worked all right so far, and I don’t say it wouldn’t
-always work, but someone’s got to be at the stand to receive the papers
-and pay for them.”
-
-“We might have a monthly account with the papers and the news company,”
-said Joe thoughtfully. “I guess they’d be willing. Still, you’re right,
-Jack. We’ll start out and see if we can find a clerk. How would it do
-to advertise?”
-
-“I suppose that’s the only way. Or, hold on, why not look at the
-advertisements? Some fellow may be advertising right now for a job like
-this. I’ll go down and get the paper and we’ll have a look.”
-
-They found nothing promising that evening, but two days later they
-did, and in response to their reply, left at the _Recorder_ office,
-Mr. Chester Young called on them Sunday afternoon. Mr. Young was
-a well-dressed, dapper youth of twenty-one or -two who consumed
-cigarettes voluminously and had a pair of somewhat shifty black eyes.
-The boys didn’t fancy his personality much, but he convinced them
-that he knew how to sell goods and presented recommendations from a
-former employer in Youngstown that read extremely well. They dismissed
-the applicant with a promise to let him hear definitely from them on
-Tuesday, and Mr. Chester Young, tucking his bamboo cane under his arm,
-took himself smilingly out.
-
-“What do you think?” asked Jack when the front door had closed.
-
-“I think,” replied Joe, “that I wouldn’t trust that chap around the
-corner.”
-
-“Me, too. But he looks smart, doesn’t he?”
-
-“Yes. I think he’d be just the fellow for us if――How much does a small
-cash register cost?”
-
-“Search me! But if we had one of those――――”
-
-“Yes, I guess Mr. Chester Young wouldn’t have much chance to get
-absent-minded with the cash. First of all, though, we’d better get
-that man he worked for on the long distance and see what he has to say
-about Chester. Then, if it’s all right, we can price a cash register. I
-suppose we could get one for twenty-five dollars, don’t you?”
-
-“I should hope so! Where’d we get the twenty-five?”
-
-“We’ll have it in another day or two. We’re pretty well stocked up now
-and won’t need to buy much for a week, I guess. I wish, though, that
-Mr. Chester Young could look you in the eye for more than a thousandth
-part of a second!”
-
-“So do I. And did you see the number of cigarettes he smoked in the
-time he was here? Do you suppose he’d help himself from stock?”
-
-“If he did there wouldn’t be any stock very long,” laughed Joe. “Let’s
-go through the advertisements in today’s paper again and see if we
-missed any. Seems to me there must be more fellows than Mr. Chester
-Young looking for work.”
-
-“Yes, but most of them want to be book-keepers or chauffeurs. We
-may want a chauffeur some day, but not quite yet, and as for a
-book-keeper――――”
-
-“We need one, but can’t afford him,” ended Joe. “You’re right. There’s
-nothing here. I guess Chester’s the only thing in sight.”
-
-Five days later Mr. Chester Young was installed behind the counter in
-the Adams Building and at his elbow reposed a neat cash register. The
-former employer of Mr. Chester Young had reported most favourably on
-that gentleman; indeed, to hear him one could not help wondering why he
-had deprived himself of Mr. Young’s services! Joe left the telephone
-booth rather puzzled, but there seemed no good reason for doubting the
-Youngstown man’s veracity, and they decided after some hesitation to
-give the applicant a trial――if they could find a cash register they
-could afford to buy! Fortune favoured them. The proprietor of a fruit
-store whose business was expanding had one to sell and they closed the
-bargain with him at seventeen dollars, thereby securing a machine that
-had originally cost forty-five.
-
-Mr. Chester Young started out well. The sales during his first day at
-the stand were better than for any other day, and neither Joe nor
-Jack could see that the supply of cigarettes had fallen off unduly.
-Perhaps, as Jack pointed out, this was because they did not carry the
-kind affected by their clerk! They did not find that Mr. Young improved
-much on acquaintance, but since he was attending to business and seemed
-to take a genuine interest in the venture they tried to be fair to him
-and to like him. In any event, it was lucky that they had found someone
-to tend shop, for on the fifteenth day of the month Captain Sam Craig
-called the baseball candidates together in the cage in the basement
-of the school building, and for a long time after neither Joe nor his
-partner had much leisure to devote to their business venture.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-IN THE BASEBALL CAGE
-
-
-The High School building stood by itself in the centre of a block in
-the newer residence district of Amesville. It was a handsome structure
-of mottled, yellow-brown brick and sandstone, four stories in height.
-On the top floor was a large hall used for meetings and for morning
-drill. When, some six years before, the building had been planned those
-in charge of the work had believed that in providing that hall and
-supplying it with a modest amount of gymnastic paraphernalia they were
-providing liberally and for all time. To their surprise, no sooner was
-the building occupied than demands came for additional contrivances,
-and no sooner had those demands been satisfied than that troublesome
-body, the Alumni Association, put forth a plea for a baseball cage in
-the basement! It was over a year before the cage materialised, and
-another year before shower-baths and lockers were installed, but at the
-time of our story those things were long-established facts and youthful
-Amesville was deriding the cage as too small and the shower-baths as
-out of style!
-
-The basement of the school building was but half underground, and
-numerous windows supplied light on one side and one end of the cage.
-But in February the days were still short and the light did not last
-long, especially when, as on the fifteenth, the sun was hidden by
-dull clouds. Since, however, the first week of baseball practice was
-confined to setting-up exercises and dumb-bell work, light was not of
-great consequence.
-
-Exactly thirty-two boys reported that afternoon at a quarter to four in
-the cage. Of this number some fourteen or fifteen were holdovers from
-last season’s First and Second Teams, fellows like Sam Craig, “Buster”
-Healey, Sidney Morris, Toby Williams, Gordon Smith, and Jack Strobe.
-Tom Pollock was not present, since his duties at the store in which
-he was employed frequently kept him from participation in preliminary
-work. The coach, Mr. Talbot, was a wide-awake-looking man of some
-twenty-eight years, a former high school player and now a lawyer who,
-in spite of a growing practice, found time every year to take the
-baseball players in hand. Today Mr. Talbot gathered the candidates
-together and spoke energetically and to the point.
-
-“I’m sorry not to see more candidates,” he said. “Some of the fellows
-think that they can keep away until we get outdoors and then report.
-Well, they can, but I give them fair warning that they will find
-themselves handicapped. This indoor work isn’t designed just to keep
-you fellows out of mischief in the afternoons. It’s real stuff. It’s
-important. You can’t go out on the field and make any sort of a showing
-if your muscles are bound. That’s what this indoor practice is for, to
-limber up your muscles, train your eye, get your brain working. Some
-few of you have been playing hockey, and that’s good preparation for
-what’s ahead, but most of you haven’t done a thing since last Fall
-and your muscles are tied up in knots. First thing, then, is to get
-so you can use them without hurting them, and so, before you touch a
-baseball or a bat, you’ll have a week――maybe two――of setting-up drill
-and dumb-bell exercises, and, now and then, a run outdoors when the
-ground gets in shape. It isn’t interesting, I know, but it’s necessary,
-and every one of you can help yourself a lot if you’ll keep in mind
-all the time that what you’re doing you’re doing for a purpose and not
-just to pass the time. When you stretch a muscle I want you to keep
-your mind on that. Don’t merely go through the motions thinking about
-the moving picture show you saw last night or wondering how soon you’ll
-get through. Put your mind on what you’re doing. Say to yourself, ‘I’m
-flexing these muscles to make them strong and supple.’ It will tell
-later on. If you don’t believe me, ask the fellows who have tried it
-before. Now I’ll ask you to form in lines across the floor, just as you
-do upstairs for morning drill. That’s the idea. I guess most of you
-know the drill. Those who don’t will watch me and learn it. All right,
-fellows. Attention!
-
-“I can see that a good many of you don’t know the position called
-for. It’s the position of the soldier. I supposed you learned that
-in morning drill. Heels on a line, now, and close together, and feet
-turned out at an angle of forty-five degrees. Knees straight, but not
-locked. Stand straight from the hips. Put your shoulders back, arching
-your chest a little. Let your arms hang naturally, elbows back, hands
-slightly to the rear of the trousers seam. Some of you look as if you
-were frozen. Get out of it! Ease up! You, third from the left in the
-second row, relax a little. That’s better. Now, then, heads erect,
-chins in, eyes ahead. There you are. Probably some of you are finding
-the position a bit uncomfortable, which shows that you need just the
-exercise you’re going to get here. First exercise, fellows. Remaining
-at attention, bend the head back as far as it will go and then forward.
-Exercise! One――two――three――four――five――six――seven――eight! Attention!
-Now, from side to side, keeping the neck muscles tense. First to the
-right as far as you can comfortably go and then to the left. Exercise!
-Right――left――right――left――right――left――right――left! Attention!
-
-“Keep your stomach in, Williams. That’s better. Second exercise,
-fellows. Raise your arms in front of you, palms down. Now stretch them
-sidewise, turning the palms up, keeping the muscles tense always.
-Exercise! One――two――three――four――five――six――seven――eight! Attention!
-Now relax the muscles and swing the arms backward and forward like
-this. Exercise!... Now your shoulders. Muscles tense. Move them
-forward, then up, then back, then down into position again. Get that?
-Try it. Exercise! One――two――――”
-
-And so it went for thirty minutes, until, in spite of numerous brief
-intervals of rest, more than half of those present were out of breath
-and aching in all sorts of unaccustomed places! Joe, for one, had
-never realised that he had so many muscles in his body as were called
-into play this afternoon! The exercises ended with the body-lift while
-lying face-downwards, and by that time even the more seasoned of the
-candidates were ready to quit. Mr. Talbot viewed the flushed faces with
-satisfaction.
-
-“That’s all for today. Tomorrow we’ll try more. After that we’ll use
-the bells. Now give your names to Mifflin――Oh, he isn’t here? Well,
-I’ll take them. After that get under the shower and don’t stand around
-too much. It’s easy to take cold when your pores are open. Tomorrow
-we’ll start promptly at four. Try not to be late, please. Names, now.”
-
-So it went every afternoon for a week. A half-dozen more martyrs joined
-the squad in that space of time. Gradually some of the first exercises
-were eliminated from the programme and the dumb-bell drill took their
-place. That dumb-bell work certainly gave surprising results, as Joe
-confided to Jack one evening as they hurried from school to the Adams
-Building. “I can turn my wrists in all sorts of ways,” laughed Joe.
-“They’re beginning to feel as if they didn’t have any bones in them!”
-
-“A few days ago I felt as if I didn’t have anything but bones,” replied
-Jack. “We’re almost through with this business, thank goodness. If the
-weather is all right about Saturday morning you’ll see us loping across
-the landscape, Joey. Bat is foxy about that.” Jack chuckled. “He always
-has a press of business when it comes to taking a hike!”
-
-“So would I if I was coaching,” laughed Joe. “Wonder if he wouldn’t
-like me to stay behind and help him!”
-
-“Ask him! I dare you to!”
-
-Jack’s prediction proved right. On Thursday of that week the weather
-turned warm and windy and the ground, which had been like a wet sponge,
-dried so that it was possible to set foot to it without going in to the
-ankle. Sam Craig took charge and, lightly attired, the squad followed
-him over the better part of a two-mile journey that led across fields
-and over walls and, finally, back to town by the road. They alternated
-walking with jogging, but there was no let-up save for some five or six
-fellows who gave out before the romp was over. On the following Monday
-the first baseball appeared in the cage, and after a short setting-up
-drill and a brief session with the wooden dumb-bells the candidates
-were lined up on opposite sides of the cage and the ball was passed
-from side to side.
-
-“Swing your arms, fellows,” instructed the coach. “Act as though you
-were going to throw the ball over the building. Get all your muscles
-into play. Don’t hurry it, Smith. Slow and easy. That’s the idea. I
-want you all to get so you can put the ball squarely into the next
-fellow’s hands without making him move out of place for it.”
-
-Later two more balls were started going, and then the idea was to
-pass back and forth as quickly as possible, trying to catch the other
-fellows unawares. That was fun, and the cage was soon ringing with
-laughter. Mr. Talbot, taking his place at one side of the floor,
-enjoyed it as much as any of them. A few days after that the battery
-candidates were given a half-hour to themselves and practice for
-the rest began at four-fifteen. Occasionally Tom Pollock reported
-and pitched to Sam Craig or to Jack Speyer, who was slated as Sam’s
-understudy. With Tom in the pitching practice were Toby Williams and
-Carl Moran. Toby Williams was an able substitute for Tom, but Moran,
-who was only sixteen, had a lot to learn. Joe frequently went early to
-the cage and watched the pitching staff at work, and his admiration for
-Tom Pollock increased vastly as he noted the ease and certainty with
-which that youth shot the ball into Sam Craig’s waiting glove.
-
-Batting practice began about the first of March. A net was stretched
-near the further end of the cage and the candidates took turns facing
-either Williams or Moran; infrequently, Tom Pollock. They were supposed
-to merely tap the ball, but sometimes they became over-eager and the
-sphere would go crashing into the iron netting at the other end of
-the cage and the pitcher, arising from the floor, would pathetically
-request the batters to “Cut out the slugging!”
-
-One or two of the early volunteers dropped out of the squad for one
-reason or another and their places were taken by newcomers. By the
-first week in March, at which time, if the spring was a normal one,
-they usually got out of doors, the baseball candidates were in hard and
-fit condition. Already Coach Talbot was able to form a fairly correct
-idea of the possibilities of most of the forty-one or -two fellows who
-now comprised the squad. George Mifflin, the manager, was custodian of
-a mysterious book, in which, opposite the various names, was set down
-much interesting information which the fellows would have given much to
-read. In this, at Bat’s command, Mifflin set down each day little marks
-and figures after the names, memoranda practically understandable by
-Bat alone. Now and then came one of those cross-country jaunts――there
-were five of them that season――and now and then the squad was taken
-outside, where the footing was not too soft, and allowed to throw and
-catch. But with these exceptions, no outdoor work was indulged in until
-the second week in March, for on the fifth a miniature blizzard swept
-down the valley, undoing the good work performed by a fortnight of mild
-weather and drying winds. That blizzard had a lot of harsh things said
-about it. It was probably as unpopular a visitation of snow and sleet
-and ice and, subsequently, rain and slush as ever visited Amesville!
-But there was nothing for it but to wait for better conditions and, in
-the meanwhile, continue the drudgery of indoor practice, a drudgery
-that had grown distasteful to everyone by this time.
-
-Joe firmly believed that the work in the cage had done him a lot of
-good, even aside from the matter of physical conditioning. He had
-found that he could meet the ball in front of the batting net and
-roll it across the floor about as often as most of the fellows, and
-he was perhaps more impatient than any of them to get out on the turf
-and discover whether his hitting ability had really improved. Jack,
-himself a clever batter, predicted that Joe was destined to become one
-of the team’s best hitters that Spring.
-
-“You’ve got it all over ‘Handsome Frank’ already,” Jack declared. “If
-you can cover the bag half as well as he can you’ll stand a James H.
-Dandy chance to cop that position, Joey.”
-
-“Foley’s been doing fully as well as I have at the net,” responded Joe
-doubtfully. “I don’t believe I can beat him out, Jack. He looks like
-a pretty good player. He’s built for a first baseman, too, with his
-height and reach and――and everything.”
-
-“Well, I don’t see that he’s got so terribly much on you in height, old
-man. And as for reach, why, even if your arms aren’t quite as long as
-his, you’re a lot spryer on your pins. You’ve got a mighty nice, easy
-way of pulling them in to you, Joey. I hope you make it, that’s all I
-hope.”
-
-“So do I, but, as I say, Foley――――”
-
-“Oh, Foley’s no wonder, after all. That’s what you want to get into
-that solid ivory dome of yours. You’ve begun to think that you _can’t_
-beat him; that’s your trouble. What you want to do is to make up your
-mind that you’re better than he is and that he’s got to prove the
-contrary. That’s the way I beat out Joe Kenney, last year. Joe had been
-holding down the job for two years when I got it into my head that I’d
-like to play out there in the left garden. So I said to myself, said
-I: ‘Jack, you may not think it now, but you’re a perfectly marvellous
-left fielder, one of the best, regular first chop, whatever that is!
-Try and accustom yourself to the fact and hold your head up and stick
-your chest out. And if anyone asks you don’t hesitate to tell them.’
-Well, sir, in a little while I had myself hypnotised into acting like a
-regular fielder! When I’d meet Kenney I’d look at him pityingly and say
-to myself, ‘You poor old has-been, you haven’t the ghost of a chance
-this spring. I’m sorry for you, but it’s my turn.’ I got to believing
-it, and so did Kenney! About the middle of the season Kenney was
-sitting on the bench and I was pulling ’em down out there. Of course,
-a slight ability to hit the ball now and then had something to do with
-it, but a lot of it was just conning myself into thinking I was the
-real goods. You try it, Joey. It’s a great little trick.”
-
-“You’re a silly ape,” laughed Joe. “The reason you ousted the other
-chap was because you batted around three hundred and he didn’t. If I
-bat over two hundred I’ll be doing well.”
-
-“Of course, you will! How many on the team last year hit for over
-that, do you suppose? I don’t believe there were four altogether. Two
-hundred, say you, slightingly! Two hundred’s good batting for chaps of
-our age, and don’t forget it. And my average last year wasn’t three
-hundred; it was two-ninety-three. I want credit for those seven points
-you stuck on!”
-
-“Foley doesn’t like me,” observed Joe after a moment’s silence. “You
-can see that.”
-
-“Why should he?” Jack demanded. “Don’t you suppose he knows that you’re
-after his place and that you stand a pretty good chance of getting it?
-What do you expect him to do? Hug you?”
-
-“No, but――Oh, well, let’s forget it. I wish, though, we could get out
-of doors. When do you suppose we will?”
-
-“In exactly four days,” responded Jack without hesitation. “You see if
-I’m not right. Predicting’s the easiest thing I do.”
-
-The prediction proved correct.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-STRIKING A BALANCE
-
-
-It is not to be supposed that devotion to baseball dulled the partners’
-interest in their business venture. That was still absorbingly
-exciting. Every morning at a little before eight either Joe or Jack, or
-sometimes both of them, went to the Adams Building and superintended
-the opening of the stand for the day’s business. The counter was
-dressed with its magazines and boxes of confections and newspapers,
-the cash register set up and unlocked, and business was talked over
-with Young. In the afternoon, usually a little after five, both boys
-returned and Young, giving an account of his stewardship, went off.
-Young had turned out very satisfactorily and his employers were a
-little ashamed of their suspicions regarding his integrity. It only
-proved, Joe declared, that it didn’t pay to judge a fellow by his
-looks. Young was a smart salesman, polite in an off-hand way, and, so
-far at least, had neither caused shrinkage in the cigarette stock or
-made away with a penny of cash. Consequently both Joe and Jack tried
-to be friendly with him. That they couldn’t quite succeed was not for
-the want of trying. There was just one thing that they found objections
-to, and that was the fact that the news-stand was fast becoming a
-favourite loafing place for a number of the town’s “sports,” men and
-boys of about Young’s age who had no apparent occupation save that of
-smoking cigarettes. They had spoken to Young and he had agreed to do
-what he could to keep the fellows away, but matters did not seem to
-mend and the partners daily feared to receive a protest from Mr. Adams.
-
-Meanwhile the stand had branched out into new avenues of trade. The
-“Adams Building Cigar” had appeared on the market and had met with
-favour and rapidly increasing sales. A small advertisement in the
-morning and evening papers had drawn attention to the cigar and to the
-news-stand and the latter was no longer dependent on the occupants of
-the building alone for patronage. The little shop became a popular
-place and trade increased until, especially during the noon hour, it
-was all Young could do to attend to customers.
-
-A week or so after they had started in business they had been called
-on by a young man who had proclaimed himself rather importantly to
-be a representative of the _Evening Recorder_. The result of his
-visit had been a half-column story in the next day’s paper of the
-novel store where customers helped themselves and paid on honour. It
-was a big advertisement for the little establishment and for several
-days afterwards folks came in just to see it and, usually, purchased
-something if only because of the novelty.
-
-Post-cards, too, were added, a series of six views of Amesville scenes,
-and attained such popularity that Joe’s original order had to be
-quickly duplicated. The picture of the Adams Building especially sold
-like hot cakes. Puzzles were another addition to the stock, ingenious
-contrivances of metal or wood or tin that could be dropped in the
-pocket and that sold for exactly double what they cost when purchased
-from the news company. The cigar trade, however, was what accounted
-for most of the business done. The little showcase was no longer too
-large for its contents. On the contrary, it became more of a problem
-every week to find room in it for the goods they wished to display.
-Instead of five brands of cigars they now offered twelve, and of each
-brand they had to keep in stock from two to four sizes. Cigarettes and
-smoking tobaccos had also multiplied, while the top of the showcase
-held an assortment of gum, candies, and small confections, as well as
-the revolving post-card rack. In fact, the small space was already
-overcrowded and the boys had been for some time contemplating making
-a request to Mr. Adams for a shelf across the back to hold the cash
-register and the overflow from the case.
-
-One evening Joe and Jack arrived at the building in a pelting rain
-which had appeared without warning, and the exclamations of dismay
-which he overheard as the feminine population of the building faced
-the alternative of getting wet or being late for supper put a new idea
-in Joe’s mind. The next day a sign appeared over the stand: “Umbrellas
-for Rent.” They put in a dozen cheap cotton umbrellas which, if not
-much to look at, performed their mission satisfactorily. Customers, if
-they worked in the building, merely left their names, paid a quarter
-and were supplied with protection from the rain. In the course of time
-the dozen dwindled to five or six, but by that time each had paid for
-itself thrice over and instead of wasting effort in recovering the
-missing ones Joe bought more. About this time an automatic telephone
-instrument was installed on the counter and proved a great convenience
-to the boys and to others as well.
-
-At the end of the first four weeks of business the partners went over
-their books――or book, to be more accurate. They found that they had
-expended for stock, rent, clerk’s wages and incidentals the sum of
-$226.50, that they had taken in $324.17, and that their net profit was
-$97.67. While less than the estimate Joe had made, the amount was held
-to be satisfactory, for Joe’s estimate had taken no account of clerk’s
-wages and they were paying Mr. Chester Young ten dollars a week.
-Something like thirty per cent. profit ought to have satisfied anyone!
-
-They paid off all indebtedness――there were no accounts save that with
-the news company, which they settled weekly――set aside the amount due
-Mr. Adams for rent to date and halved the balance, each receiving as
-his share the sum of $48.83. The odd cent was left in the treasury!
-Then Joe paid back to his partner the borrowed thirty dollars, with
-interest at six per cent., although Jack insisted that Joe should
-wait until the end of the next month at least. But Joe preferred to
-get square, he declared, and proceeded to do so by paying most of the
-eighteen dollars remaining to him to Aunt Sarah for board and rent.
-
-Jack’s father laughingly told them that he thought they had been in
-rather a hurry to divide the profits and that it might have been a good
-idea to have left a portion of the money in the business. Joe, however,
-explained that they would have to buy nothing for nearly a week, except
-the newspapers, and by that time they would have accumulated more
-profits. “You see, sir, we’re taking in about fifteen dollars a day on
-an average, and of that nearly four dollars and a half is clear profit.
-So we won’t have to keep any balance on hand.”
-
-“I see,” said Mr. Strobe gravely. “And what do you intend to do with
-all the money you make, boys?”
-
-“I’m going to put mine in the bank, I guess,” answered Jack. “I’ve
-tried to think of something to spend it for, but I can’t!”
-
-“And how about you, Joe?”
-
-“I think I’ll start a bank account, too, sir, but I won’t be able to
-for another month at least. I pay three dollars a week to Aunt Sarah,
-you know, and I’d like to send a little money to my mother.”
-
-“You could have done that now if you hadn’t paid back that thirty,”
-said Jack reproachfully.
-
-“I know, but I like to feel that I’m squared up with everyone. When I
-get, say, five hundred in the bank, if I ever do, I’d like to invest
-it in something, Mr. Strobe. Could I, do you suppose?”
-
-“Certainly. An excellent idea, Joe. You might find a small mortgage
-through the bank, or you could buy a few shares of some safe stock that
-would pay from four and a half to five per cent. You’ll get only three
-and a half from the savings bank. When you get ready to invest you let
-me know and I’ll help you find something.”
-
-One Saturday evening Joe boarded a train and went to Columbus to visit
-his mother, spending a very pleasant Sunday with her and returning to
-Amesville late that night.
-
-If there was anyone even distantly connected with Joe’s business
-venture who did not thoroughly approve of it, it was Miss Sarah
-Teele. Aunt Sarah was doubtless pleased that Joe was earning money;
-she had a very healthy admiration for folks who could do that, and a
-correspondingly poor opinion of those who couldn’t; but the fly in
-Aunt Sarah’s ointment was the fact that her nephew’s prosperity was
-due to the sale of cigars and cigarettes and tobacco. That rather
-spoiled it all in her eyes, for she was a fervidly outspoken foe to
-tobacco in all forms, and considered the use of it closely akin to
-the use of intoxicating liquors. Aunt Sarah made one exception. A
-decoction of tobacco and water was an excellent preventive of bugs on
-her window plants! If she could have had her way she would have limited
-its use to that purpose. Consequently, from the first, she had viewed
-Joe’s venture askance, hinting darkly that money earned by catering
-to the vice of smoking was tainted money and would bring no benefit
-to its possessor. Joe argued with her politely, but was quite unable
-to shake her conviction. In the end they agreed to disagree, Aunt
-Sarah comforting herself with Joe’s solemn promise not to allow the
-association with what Aunt Sarah termed “the filthy weed” to undermine
-his morals to the extent of causing him to smoke. For some weeks Joe
-frequently found Aunt Sarah regarding him anxiously as though seeking
-for signs of moral degeneracy produced by traffic in the obnoxious
-article. Not discovering any, however, Aunt Sarah accepted the state
-of affairs with the best philosophy she could command, and, to Joe’s
-satisfaction, said no more about it. When he announced the result of
-that first month’s balance his aunt’s struggle between pleasure and
-disapproval was almost ludicrous.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-HANDSOME FRANK
-
-
-The Saturday forenoon following their conversation regarding Frank
-Foley found Joe and his chum leaning against the counter in Cummings
-and Wright’s hardware store. Jack was purchasing a new sweater and Joe
-was assisting at the task. Joe would have liked just such a garment
-as Jack was choosing, himself, but the next division of profits was a
-long way off and until that occurred he was bound to be in straitened
-circumstances. Jack had virtually decided on a handsome brown sweater
-with a broad band of blue across the chest and Tom Pollock, who had
-momentarily absented himself to sell a “Junior League” ball to a
-grammar school youth, returned to inquire:
-
-“This one, Jack?”
-
-Jack nodded doubtfully. “I guess so, Tom. It’s sort of heavy for
-spring, but I suppose I’d better buy one that’ll be all right for next
-fall, too.”
-
-Tom agreed, adding: “The new uniforms will be along next week, I think.
-They’re going to be the best ever. I’m getting them from a different
-maker this year and he’s putting a lot better material into them.
-You’ll need one, I suppose, Faulkner.”
-
-Joe smiled “I’d like to think so,” he replied, “but I’m not counting on
-it.”
-
-“You might as well,” said Jack. “You’ll get in as a sub, anyway. Don’t
-you say so, Tom?”
-
-“I hope so. I haven’t seen Faulkner work, as a matter of fact, Jack.
-Anyhow, with all due respect to Bat, I think it’s the outdoor work that
-shows a chap up.”
-
-“That’s what I say,” agreed Jack. “Fellows who can lay down the cutest,
-darlingest little bunts on the cement floor swing like gates when they
-get out on the turf and have the sky in front of them instead of the
-wall of the cage. I’ve seen it happen often.”
-
-“Still,” demurred Joe, “it seems to me all that work indoors must be of
-some value. Don’t you consider it is, Pollock?”
-
-“Oh, yes, I do. I think it’s fine for getting fellows in shape and on
-edge, especially for the new chaps. What I mean is that when it comes
-to actual playing the conditions out of doors are so different that a
-fellow has to practically start all over again. At least that’s been
-my experience. I’m talking of batting and fielding, you understand,
-and not pitching. A pitcher can get his wing in shape anywhere there’s
-room. Although, at that, I think working in the air is away ahead of
-working down there with the steam pipes.”
-
-“Do you think we’ll get out next week?” inquired Jack.
-
-“Yes, I wouldn’t be surprised if we started Monday. Sam tells me the
-field’s in pretty good shape; a bit soft in places, but nothing much.”
-Tom chuckled as he snapped the string around the bundle and laid it in
-front of Jack. “Mr. Hall told a funny yarn one day in here, fellows.
-You don’t know him, maybe, Faulkner, but you will soon. He’s a dandy
-chap, and a double-dyed ‘fan.’”
-
-“I’ve seen him,” replied Joe. “He knows the right place to buy cigars.”
-
-“Well, he told one day about a coach they had at college when he was
-a freshman. I forget what college he went to; Sam could tell you.
-But it seems that they had an awfully wet spring that year and the
-diamond was on a rather low piece of ground, anyway, and it wouldn’t
-dry out for them. So this coach got the idea of having the players
-wear rubbers! Said it would be dangerous to have them work on such wet
-ground without them because they might get rheumatism and sciatica and
-grippe and various other things, and he didn’t intend to lose half his
-team through illness just when it was needed most. So he sent in a
-requisition to the athletic committee or whoever attended to purchasing
-supplies――probably the manager――for three or four dozen pairs of
-rubbers of assorted sizes. There was a lot of argument about the
-expense and finally the coach got his dander up and bought the rubbers
-himself, and one day the fellows put them on and went out for their
-first practice on the field. The field was as soft as mush and whenever
-you put your foot down it went out of sight as far as your shin-bones!
-Mr. Hall said it was the funniest thing he ever saw. About every man in
-college was out to see what they called the ‘Gumshoe Nine,’ and they
-almost laughed themselves to death. Every time a fielder started after
-a ball he’d leave one or both of his rubbers sticking in the mud and
-have to go back and hunt for them. Mr. Hall said that at one time there
-were three pairs of rubbers sticking out of the base-path between
-second base and the plate where the runners had left them in their
-hurry to get around! Finally the coach sent back to town and got a box
-of elastic bands and made the fellows snap them around their ankles
-over the rubbers. Practice went better after that, but there was almost
-a riot once, when one chap, who had stolen second, went back to get his
-rubbers and the second baseman tagged him out!”
-
-The laughter of Tom’s audience was interrupted by the opening of the
-door and the advent of Frank Foley. Handsome Frank quite deserved
-the title this morning. For a day or two there had been unmistakable
-indications of spring, and Foley had responded to them today by donning
-a Norfolk suit of very light homespun material with knickerbockers, a
-pair of very green golf stockings, and a cap that matched his suit. A
-pale heliotrope “sport shirt” from under whose flaring collar emerged
-a vividly green scarf completed the costume, except that he was,
-naturally, appropriately shod with brown rubber-soled shoes. Even Tom
-was a bit taken back by the radiance of the vision which sought the
-athletic goods department, and his “Hello, Frank,” sounded rather
-feeble. The other boys nodded, Jack adding a murmured salutation to
-the nod. Foley returned the greetings with a remarkable absence of
-self-consciousness and joined the group.
-
-“What about a baseman’s glove, Tom?” he asked. “Anything new in that
-line this spring?”
-
-“No, nothing much different,” was the answer as Tom pulled some
-boxes from a shelf. “You had one of these last year, didn’t you?”
-he continued, placing a glove on the counter. Foley examined it
-indifferently.
-
-“Yes, that’s like the one I’ve got now. I thought maybe there was
-something new on the market. How’s everything, Jack?”
-
-“Pretty good, Frank. My eyes are troubling me a bit, though.”
-
-“What’s the matter with them? They seemed all right at practice
-yesterday.”
-
-“I don’t know.” Jack gravely blinked. “They seem sort of weak. I guess
-it’s the glare that hurts them, Frank. You couldn’t turn your coat
-collar up, could you?”
-
-“Oh, that’s the idea?” said Foley calmly. “Don’t you like what I wear,
-Jack?”
-
-“Oh, I like it, all right, but my eyes sort of go back on me. What are
-you impersonating, Frank, a custard pie?”
-
-“You chaps have a lot of fun with my clothes, don’t you?” inquired
-Foley good-naturedly enough. “I don’t mind, though. I’d certainly
-hate to go around looking like a tramp, the way some of you do.” Foley
-seated himself on the counter, swinging his brightly-hued legs, and
-viewed Jack smilingly. “Any come-back to that?” he inquired.
-
-“There’s a come-back from me,” said Tom quietly. “Gentlemen will not,
-others must not, sit on the counters, Frank.”
-
-“Oh, all right; I’ll try to stand up a bit longer. I don’t believe
-you’ve got anything there I want, Tom.” He glanced unenthusiastically
-at the several gloves displayed. “I’ll use the one I’ve got. It went
-all right last year and I guess it’s still good.”
-
-“You won’t need a glove much this spring,” said the irrepressible Jack.
-“They’re not worn on the bench, Frank.”
-
-Foley winked untroubledly. “Don’t worry about me, old chap. I may not
-be any McInnes, you know, but I never noticed much resemblance between
-you and Tris Speaker. You watch out that you don’t keep that bench warm
-yourself.”
-
-“Frank, you know very well,” replied Jack severely, “that when it comes
-to playing baseball I’ve got it all over you. You’re not a bad first
-baseman when you’ve got time for it, but you know mighty well you
-can’t bat over a hundred. I like you, Frank; I appreciate your many
-fine qualities, and I just love your picturesqueness, but I don’t just
-see you holding down that first sack beyond the middle of March. I’m
-saying this to you so you won’t be too awfully disappointed when you
-lose your job.”
-
-“Thanks.” Foley laughed amusedly. “Just who is the coming wonder that
-gets my position, Jack? Is it Faulkner here? Is he telling you how good
-you are, Faulkner?”
-
-“He’s just talking,” replied Joe uncomfortably.
-
-“I’m not saying who it is, Frank,” said Jack. “There are two or three
-who look good to me in your place. I’d be sorry to see you go, though.
-I certainly do like you, Frank.”
-
-“Yes, you do――like poison,” responded Foley with a grin. “Tell you what
-I’ll do, Jack. I’ll bet you anything you like that I’ll play in more
-games――contests with outside teams, I mean――than you do this spring.
-Want to take that?”
-
-“Ger-ladly, old sport! I’ll bet you”――Jack’s eyes twinkled about the
-cases and shelves――“I’ll bet you one of those nice leather bat-cases,
-Frank. I’ve always wanted a bat-case. How much are they, Tom?”
-
-“A dollar and a quarter and two seventy-five.”
-
-“I mean the all-leather ones.”
-
-“Two seventy-five.”
-
-“That’s the idea. How does that strike you, Frank? Feel like spending
-that much to make me happy?”
-
-“Yes, but I don’t happen to want a bat-case, thanks. Think of something
-else.”
-
-“Then I’ll buy you a couple of pairs of lavender gloves to wear to the
-parties.”
-
-“Quit fooling and say something. What do I get if I win?”
-
-“What do you want that doesn’t cost more than the bat-bag?”
-
-“I don’t know. Leave it that I’m to pick out anything I like up to that
-amount, eh?”
-
-“Certainly. Gentlemen, you’ve heard the terms of the wager. If, at the
-end of the season, Frank has played in more games than I have he comes
-in here and goes the limit――up to two dollars and three-quarters. If,
-on the other hand――――”
-
-“Why do I have to buy the thing here?” asked Frank.
-
-“Because I want to see my friend Mr. Pollock make a little money. Tom
-ought to get something out of it, Frank.”
-
-“Oh, all right. I’ll find something I want, I guess.”
-
-“As I was saying when so rudely interrupted,” resumed Jack, “if, on the
-other hand, Frank plays in no more games than I do he comes across with
-one of those perfectly beautiful and useless bat-bags which Tom prices
-at two dollars and seventy-five cents and which you can get from the
-mail-order house for a dollar sixty-nine.”
-
-“You try it,” laughed Tom.
-
-“I don’t need to. The cost doesn’t interest me a bit. Well, that is the
-wager, gentlemen. May the best man win――so long as it’s me. Come on,
-Joey. So long, Tom. Bye, Frank. By the way, which way are you going
-from here?”
-
-“You wait around and find out, old chap.”
-
-“Won’t tell? Sorry. I wanted to stand on the corner and see you go by.”
-
-“What did you do that for?” remonstrated Joe when they were on the
-sidewalk again.
-
-“Do what? Make that bet? Oh, just for fun. Besides, I’m pretty sure to
-win it.”
-
-“I didn’t mean the bet, you chump. I meant why did you rag him like
-that? He thinks you meant that I’m the one who’s to beat him out at
-first.”
-
-“So you are,” answered Jack calmly. “As for why I did it, I did it
-because I couldn’t help it, Joey. Frank gives me a severe pain every
-time I meet him and I just can’t resist the temptation to have a little
-fun with him.”
-
-“He took it all right,” said Joe. “He’s good-natured, I guess.”
-
-“You guess again,” said Jack grimly. “He’s good-natured when he knows
-it would look silly to get mad, but he’s got a disposition like
-a――a――What is it that has a disposition?”
-
-“You!” laughed Joe. “You’ve got a nasty one at times.”
-
-“Meaning just now? Was I specially rude, Joey? Maybe I was a bit nasty.
-Well, never mind. You can’t really hurt Handsome Frank’s feelings. If
-you could he’d be black-and-blue by this time!”
-
-“Black and blue are the only things he wasn’t,” said Joe. “He was about
-every other colour; buff and green and purple and lavender――――”
-
-“Shucks! He was dressed real quietly today; almost unostentatiously, so
-to speak! You ought to see him when he’s really dolled up! Now, look
-here, Joey. If you don’t buckle down and play ball and beat him out of
-his position at first I’ll never forgive you.”
-
-“But, Jack, I can’t play first the way he can!”
-
-“How do you know? You’ve never seen him play. Besides, you can out-hit
-him. Leastways, if you can’t you ought to be ashamed. And it’s batting
-that’s going to count this spring, old man. Petersburg has got a line
-of good pitchers this year and Bat will be going on the policy that
-hits mean runs. So you get your eye peeled, Joey, and win that bet for
-me.”
-
-“I don’t think I’ll ever be much of a batter,” said Joe sadly.
-
-“Poppycock and piffle! You can hit the merry sphere just as well as
-anyone can if you’ll only tell yourself so. Look here, what you want to
-do is to go out there and when the ball comes say to yourself, ‘It’s so
-big I can’t miss it if I try! Why, it’s a cinch. _Bing!_ That for you,
-Mr. Ball!’ Try it and see how well it will work.”
-
-“You’re great on the psychology stuff, aren’t you?” laughed Joe.
-
-“I don’t know the gentleman,” answered Jack serenely. “I only know that
-no chap ever became a decent batsman by telling himself that he was no
-good! Confidence, my friend, confidence! That’s the――er――the password,
-no, the keynote, to success! Think it over. Now, let’s go in and see
-how much money we’ve taken in this morning. Ah, as usual, Young has his
-Roman mob around the place. If he doesn’t make those loafers stay away
-we’ll get notice to quit, I’m thinking.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-OUTDOOR PRACTICE
-
-
- _BASEBALL_
-
- “Candidates report at the field dressed to play at 3:30.
-
- “CRAIG.”
-
-This notice met the gaze of Joe on Monday morning as he paused in front
-of the bulletin board in the school corridor. Sidney Morris and a
-companion came up and read the announcement over his shoulder.
-
-“That’s good news, Faulkner,” said Sidney. “Last year we were out a
-week earlier. By the way, do you know Toby Williams?”
-
-The boys shook hands and the trio walked together along the corridor.
-Williams was a nice-looking chap of about Joe’s age, rather solidly
-built, with a natural talent for pitching a baseball that had won for
-him the position of Tom Pollock’s understudy, Tom, it was said, showing
-Toby everything the former knew in the science so that next year Toby
-might come as near as possible to filling Tom’s shoes. There was
-still, however, a fairly long road for the younger boy to travel before
-he attained Tom Pollock’s standing.
-
-“You’re trying for the infield, aren’t you, Faulkner?” Toby asked.
-
-“Yes, but I don’t believe――――” He paused, recalling Jack’s oft-repeated
-advice. “I don’t believe I’ll get what I want,” he resumed with assumed
-assurance. “The bases look to be pretty well occupied, and I want to
-play first or second.”
-
-Toby seemed impressed, but Sidney laughed as he said, not ill-naturedly:
-“There’s nothing like knowing what you want, Faulkner.”
-
-“And going after it?” asked Joe smilingly.
-
-Sidney nodded. “That’s right. How’s the business getting on?”
-
-“Very well, thanks.”
-
-“We were talking about you the other day, Tom Pollock and Sam Craig and
-I,” said Sidney, “and Tom said he thought you were the luckiest chap he
-knew, and I guess I agree with him. You’ve been here in Amesville only
-a couple of months and you’ve got a good business and are making money
-at it. Sam said he guessed luck had less to do with it than pluck,
-though.”
-
-“I think Tom Pollock was nearer right,” replied Joe modestly. “It’s
-been mostly luck, I guess.”
-
-“Jack Strobe’s in that with you, isn’t he?” inquired Toby.
-
-“Yes, it was Jack put in most of the money to start. About all I had
-was the idea!”
-
-“And the luck,” laughed Sidney. “‘Lucky’ Faulkner is your real name, I
-guess. Well, I hope your luck keeps on. If it does, maybe you’ll get
-what you want on the team!”
-
-The gong put an end to the talk and they hurried off to their rooms.
-Whether that was the beginning of it Joe never knew, but a month
-later he suddenly awoke to the fact that he was very generally known
-throughout school as “Lucky” Faulkner! He was inclined to dislike the
-nickname at first, since to him it seemed to preclude more desirable
-attributes, but Jack insisted that to be called lucky was a great
-compliment because, after all, what was called luck was in reality the
-reward for skill or forethought or some other quality of merit. Jack
-didn’t put it in quite those words, but that was the idea he managed to
-convey, and Joe, considering it, became reconciled. It was perhaps just
-as well he did, for by that time the nickname had come to stay, and
-his approval or disapproval would have had small effect.
-
-That Monday afternoon it was a gay-hearted lot of fellows who gathered
-at the field, which lay some ten blocks north of the high school. To
-be out of doors again filled everyone with delight and neither coach
-nor captain had any cause for complaint that day on the score of
-laziness. The way the ball was sped around was a fair indication of the
-candidates’ eagerness. Practice was rudimentary. There was some batting
-at the net, with Toby Williams and Carl Moran doing the tossing, a
-half-hour of fielding, Coach Talbot hitting to the infield, and Manager
-Mifflin knocking fungoes to the outfield, and, finally, a short period
-of work on the paths. The weather gave them of its best. The March sun
-shone warmly and, although there was still a tinge of winter in the
-air, spring was genuinely in possession. The sod was not yet dry and
-the base-paths were pretty soft, but no one minded a bit; not even
-“Buster” Healey when, in a desperate attempt to get from second to
-third on the throw to the plate, he lost his footing and reached the
-bag flat on his back. Practice was delayed while most of the infield
-scraped the mud from him.
-
-Joe had a session with Tom Pollock in front of the backstop. Sam Craig
-was catching at the plate, Speyer taking the throws for Mifflin, and so
-Bat told Joe to get a glove and let Tom pitch to him. Joe was doubtful
-of his ability to hold the redoubtable Mr. Pollock, but he got along
-very well. Tom used little speed and, although some of the breaks and
-hooks were at first confusing, Joe soon discovered that the ball might
-be depended on to straighten out before it reached him. After that he
-was put on second and handled Sam’s throw-downs fairly well and found
-that his own throwing arm was quite equal to the task of snapping the
-ball across to first or third or back to the plate. Frank Foley held
-down first base today and Joe secretly admired and envied the easy,
-finished way in which that tall youth with the long reach handled the
-throws. The work was pretty crude, which was natural enough, and Coach
-Talbot had plenty to say, but when practice ended at a little before
-five everyone was in the best of spirits and the fellows, as they made
-their way back home, discussed eagerly the first game of the year,
-which was due in less than two weeks. This contest was to be, as usual,
-with the Amesville Grammar School nine, and while it was not looked
-on as more than an opportunity for practice, still it was anticipated
-with pleasure. Grammar School was already predicting what it would do
-to High School, and was awaiting the fray with equal eagerness.
-
-High School had arranged a schedule calling for seventeen games this
-Spring, eight of which were to be played away from Amesville. Aside
-from Petersburg High School, Amesville High’s real rival in athletics,
-whom she played the final game with the last of June, the only notable
-foes were Lynton High School and Crowell Academy. There were two games
-scheduled with Lynton and one with Crowell. Besides the scheduled
-contests there were others which might or might not eventuate; as,
-for instance, a game with the nine from the carpet mill and a second,
-possibly a third meeting with the grammar school. Until the middle of
-May only Saturdays were scheduled, but after that midweek games were
-down for the balance of the season.
-
-Outdoor practice continued uninterruptedly for the rest of the first
-week. Then, on Sunday, began a four-day stretch of wretched weather
-and the fellows went disgustedly back to the cage. On Sunday it blew
-a gale and swept a hard rain from the southwest. On Monday the rain
-turned to snow for a while, later changing to sleet and, finally, back
-to rain again. Tuesday it drizzled. Wednesday was a day of mist and
-fog. Thursday noon the sun came out. But by that time the field was a
-quagmire again and all hope of playing the game with Grammar School on
-Saturday had to be abandoned. Consequently the contest was put over
-until Tuesday at four, and Manager Thad Mifflin, who was popularly
-believed to be accountable for weather conditions and the state of the
-diamond, found life a burden.
-
-Meanwhile Joe had performed, if not brilliantly, at least satisfactorily
-as a substitute baseman. He had been tried at first, second and third
-bases, and, on one occasion, had pulled down flies in centre field. At
-the bat he had so far signally failed to distinguish himself. Perhaps he
-did as well as most of the substitutes, but he found that trickling
-bunts across the floor of the cage was not the same as standing in front
-of Tom Pollock, or even Carl Moran, and trying to connect with their
-various offerings. The best Joe could expect, or, so he told himself,
-was a place on the Second Team――The Scrubs, they called them――when that
-was formed. Jack was plainly disappointed in the proficiency of his
-chum, although he tried not to show the fact, and never ceased to offer
-encouragement.
-
-“You’ll find your batting eye presently,” Jack would assert stoutly.
-“A fellow can’t play decent ball, anyway, until the weather settles
-down and gets warm. I never could. Along about the middle of May――――”
-
-Joe interrupted with a laugh. “Along about the middle of May,” he
-replied, “will be a bit late, Jack. If I’m going to do anything this
-year I’ll have to do it pretty quick, I’m thinking.”
-
-“Ye-e-es――I’ll tell you, Joey, the trouble is you don’t go at it right;
-batting, I mean.”
-
-“I suppose I don’t,” owned Joe. “Anyway, I don’t accomplish much.”
-
-“Try swinging slower. I watched you yesterday. You start your bat away
-around behind you and then swing like lightning. Maybe if you’ll take a
-short swing and a slow one, just meet the ball, as they say, you might
-do better.”
-
-“Just meeting the ball doesn’t get you hits, though,” demurred the
-other.
-
-“That’s where you’re wrong, old man. Even if you only hold your bat out
-still, a hard-pitched ball will bound off it away across the infield.
-I think it’s a mistake to try to slug at first; before――well, before
-you’ve got where you’re certain, if you see what I mean!”
-
-“You mean that I ought to get so I can hit the ball before I――before I
-hit it!” laughed Joe.
-
-“Before you try to knock the cover off it, yes. Between you and me,
-that’s the reason a lot of chaps don’t hit better than they do,”
-continued Jack. “They want to make home-runs or three-baggers, and they
-don’t stop to think that a short hit that gets you to first is a lot
-better than a home-run that doesn’t happen!”
-
-“You talk like one of those little blue books,” jeered Joe. “‘How to
-Become a Ball-Player’ or ‘The Art of Batting’!”
-
-“I’m telling you what I’ve learned,” replied Jack unruffledly. “I’m
-not much of a player myself, but I’ve kept my eyes open. Look here,
-Joey, I’ll tell you what we might do, you and I, and it wouldn’t hurt
-either of us a mite. Let’s go down to the cage at recess every noon and
-practise. We’ll keep a bat and ball at school and I’ll pitch to you
-and you bat, and you can pitch to me and I’ll bat. I don’t mean really
-pitch, of course, because I can’t do it; nor you, either; but just
-serve ’em up, you know, and let the other fellow see how many he can
-hit. Bet you anything you like if we do that long enough we can get so
-we can connect with anything! It’s the eye that does the trick, Joey.
-It’s getting the eye trained so that, no matter where the ball comes,
-you can put the bat in front of it. Want to try it?”
-
-“I’ll try anything,” responded Joe. “Still, it seems to me all that
-batting practice I had in the cage before we went outdoors didn’t do me
-much good.”
-
-“This’ll be different. You know the way you do when you take a tennis
-racket and try to keep the ball bouncing against a wall or a floor?
-Well, that’s the same idea. It teaches you quickness and sureness,
-doesn’t it?”
-
-“I guess so. All right, we’ll have a go at it tomorrow. Have you a bat
-at home?”
-
-“Yes, and some old balls. I’ll bring them down tomorrow and we’ll try
-the scheme. We’ve got to do something to beat Handsome Frank, that’s
-certain!”
-
-“You do hate him, don’t you?” laughed Joe.
-
-“No, I don’t hate him one mite,” replied Jack seriously. “I even have a
-sort of sneaking liking for the chump. But I do love to take him down a
-notch or two whenever I can. Besides, I want that bat-case!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-THE FIRST GAME
-
-
-The game with the grammar school team came off the following Tuesday
-on extremely damp grounds and under weather conditions far from ideal.
-Although it was the first of April, the wind was in the northeast and
-it blew across the playing field with a most unfriendly ferocity. The
-game didn’t begin until ten minutes past four, and by that time the few
-spectators who had courageously turned out to witness the team’s début
-were shivering with the cold and had deserted the stands to keep their
-blood in circulation by moving about.
-
-Joe, wrapped in a sweater, hands in pockets, sat with a dozen other
-substitutes on the home bench and tried to keep his teeth from
-chattering. It had been agreed that, because of the weather conditions
-and the lateness of the starting time, the game was to go but six
-innings. High School presented a batting-list composed, with two
-exceptions, of seasoned material. Gordon Smith, shortstop, led off,
-followed by Sidney Morris and Jack Strobe. Sidney played centre field
-and was a good hitter. Smith could be relied on to get his base five
-times out of ten under ordinary circumstances, and Jack was in third
-place as cleanup hitter. Buster Healey, second baseman; Steve Hale,
-third baseman; Frank Foley, first baseman, batted in that order,
-following Jack. Healey was a good but erratic hitter, Foley at best
-could be called fair, and Hale, a newcomer on the team this spring,
-was still an unknown quantity. Captain Craig followed Frank Foley.
-Then came Walter Cummings, another unproved hitter, and, finally, the
-pitcher, who today happened to be Toby Williams.
-
-Toby got himself into a bit of a mess in the very first inning when
-he allowed the second grammar school batter to walk and followed that
-by offering a straight ball to the opposing team’s captain, who had a
-local reputation as a hitter. Captain Gandy sent that ball straight
-down the alley between shortstop and third baseman and took two bases
-on the hit, promoting the man ahead to third. Toby struck out the next
-boy, and with two gone, the prospect of escaping being scored on became
-brighter. But a glaring error by Healey let in two runs and put the
-fourth batsman safely on first, from whence he departed for second a
-moment later and was thrown out, Craig to Smith.
-
-The handful of grammar school youths shouted and exulted and swaggered,
-reminding each other that “I told you so!” But their delight didn’t
-last long, for High School fell on their pitcher and swatted the ball
-all over the lot, filling the bases with no one out. Buster Healey
-tried to redeem himself by cleaning them off, but only fouled to third
-baseman, and Hale struck out, more because of a lack of confidence
-than because the pitcher’s offerings were in any way difficult. When
-Foley went to bat there seemed but slight chance of scoring and so Tom
-Pollock, who was coaching behind first, sent out orders for a triple
-steal. Strangely enough, Foley not only connected with the ball as the
-runners sprinted, but actually hit it out safely for two bases! That
-took the heart out of Grammar School’s twirler and he passed Sam Craig,
-in spite of the captain’s very evident desire to earn his way, and
-repeated the compliment in the case of Cummings. That advanced Foley
-to third, and when Toby came to bat he performed very nicely, just as
-he was told to, trickling a bunt along first base line and beating the
-throw to the bag. Foley scored unchallenged.
-
-Grammar School began to despair of ever getting that third out! Gordon
-Smith hit safely, scoring Craig and Cummings and putting Toby Williams
-on second, Sidney Morris drew a pass, and, living up to his reputation,
-Jack Strobe cleaned the bases with a long line-hit that didn’t touch
-the ground until it was able to strike the right field fence on the
-first bound! But Jack, although he barely managed to reach third on
-what should have been only a two-bagger, died there a minute or two
-later when Buster again failed to distinguish himself.
-
-High School jeered and flung derisive remarks in the direction of
-the small but devoted band of grammar school youths, who, in their
-dejection, found successful repartee beyond them.
-
-The second inning found a new pitcher in the points for the grammar
-school, but he was only slightly more puzzling than the deposed
-twirler, and, after turning the enemy down in one, two, three order,
-High School proceeded to indulge in another batting-fest. But this time
-she scored only three runs, bringing her total to twelve. By the end
-of that inning only the more enthusiastic “fans” remained, the others
-seeking warmer surroundings. With a lead of ten runs, Coach Talbot
-decided to begin on his second-string players and made substitutions
-right and left during the remainder of the game. Toby Williams gave
-place to Carl Moran in the fourth, and Moran, heartened by the lead his
-team possessed, pitched a very pretty article of ball. When Amesville
-took the field in the fifth inning only four regulars remained in the
-line-up――Sam Craig, Sidney Morris, Frank Foley and Carl Moran. Buster
-Healey gave way to Joe, who was secretly hoping to be allowed on
-first. When, however, Foley did drop out, in the final inning, it was
-young Farquhar who took his place. Joe wasn’t worried by the rivalry
-of Farquhar, who was as yet by no means varsity material, but how, he
-wondered, was he ever to convince Coach Talbot or Captain Craig or
-anyone else that he could play first base if he never was allowed to
-get there?
-
-On second Joe played a steady game, but had little to do, since Moran
-held the visitors in check throughout the two innings. The contest
-finally ended with the score 17 to 3, the grammar school’s third run
-having been scored in the fourth by a combination of two scratch hits
-and an error by shortstop. By the time the last man was out in the
-sixth the players and the handful of spectators who remained were
-chilled to the bone and heartily glad to get away. On the whole, that
-first baseball game of the season had proved just about what Jack
-dubbed it, a “frost.”
-
-Perversely, the weather changed its tune the next day, and for a week
-blue skies and soft breezes held sway, and practice was once more
-enjoyable. They worked hard, all of them, from Captain Sam himself
-down to the youngest and newest tyro, but it was work they liked. By
-the time another week had passed into history improvement was plainly
-visible. The team was finding itself. Batting was gradually ceasing to
-be a lost art, wild heaves were becoming fewer, and on the base-paths
-the fellows began to show what Coach Talbot called almost human
-intelligence.
-
-The noonday practice in the cage was producing results for Joe and
-Jack. It would have been strange if it had not, for when you put in
-from fifteen to twenty minutes six times a week doing nothing but
-trying to bring a poised bat against a thrown ball you’ve simply got to
-learn something! And Joe learned that the time to judge a pitched ball
-was just before it reached the plate and not when it left the pitcher’s
-glove, and that “the shorter the swing the surer the hit.” They took
-turns standing in front of the wall at one end of the baseball cage
-and trying to hit everything that came. At first they made no special
-effort to direct the hits. The game was to let no ball get past. It was
-fine training for the eye, there could be no doubt of that, and very
-soon the one who pitched had to use all his cunning to get the ball
-by the bat. Then the batter tried to put the ball always toward the
-pitcher, and after he had gained proficiency at that he attempted to
-hit it to the left or the right.
-
-Naturally enough it was Jack who showed the most cleverness at this,
-and when they had been holding these batting practices for some three
-weeks his ability to hit every offering and tap it away to any corner
-of the cage he liked was almost startling. The boys usually had an
-audience of from one or two to a dozen, who, coming first to make fun,
-finally watched with interest and admiration. Many were the requests
-from the spectators to be allowed to try their skill, but Joe and Jack,
-by then very earnest at their work, refused to be interfered with.
-Two other fellows appeared one day with bat and ball and insisted on
-sharing the cage. But their enthusiasm was short-lived. They came the
-next day and the third day following that, but never again.
-
-For a time Joe was deeply disappointed, even disgruntled, because that
-practice in the cage failed to bring about any improvement on the
-field. The fact puzzled Jack, too, and he had no very good explanation
-to offer. The best he could do was to lay it to the difference of
-conditions. Joe agreed that that was probably it and wanted to know
-what use there was in keeping on with the cage stunt. But he did keep
-on, nevertheless, and at last, just when he was reaching a stage of
-abject hopelessness, the practice bore fruit.
-
-It was one Wednesday afternoon, two weeks after the grammar school
-game. Two other unimportant contests had been won and in three days
-Amesville was to play the first of its two scheduled games with Lynton
-High School. Joe, with a half-dozen others, was at the batting-net and
-Williams, a bit bored and listless, was pitching. Buster Healey had
-finally managed to line one to the equally bored substitutes who were
-fielding the balls, and had stepped aside, giving place to Joe. Joe had
-already been up once and had had a hard time getting his hit in spite
-of the fact that Toby was putting very little on the ball. And now he
-was just as hopeless as ever he had been as he hitched his trousers and
-gripped his bat.
-
-“Soak it, Faulkner,” said Cummings lazily. “I want another whack at it
-before Toby’s arm gives out.”
-
-Toby, picking up one of the half-dozen balls that surrounded him,
-grinned: “If he hits before I get three over on him I’ll chase it
-myself.”
-
-“That’s a sporting proposition, Faulkner,” exclaimed Hale. “Go to it!
-I’d love to see Williams trot over to the fence and back!”
-
-Toby was a little more crafty now, took a full wind-up and shot a drop
-over the base-bag which did duty as a plate. Buster, leaning on his bat
-behind the net, announced a strike.
-
-“It was a peach, Toby. Now don’t let him work you again, Joe. Watch for
-a slow one.”
-
-“This is going to be a beaner,” laughed Toby. “Look out!”
-
-But it came waist-high, broke to the left, and failed to win Buster’s
-approval.
-
-“Ball, Toby,” he said. “Too wide. Come on, now, show your goods!”
-
-Toby’s reply to the challenge was a fast ball with a slight curve and
-Joe guessed it right. Bat and ball met and, although Joe made only
-a half-swing, the sphere sped straight over Toby’s head――he ducked
-involuntarily, to the delight of the batters――and travelled far back
-down the field.
-
-“Don’t touch it!” bawled Buster. “Let it alone, Loomis! Now, then,
-Toby, shake a leg, old scout! You said you’d field it, you know.”
-
-Toby smiled wanly and kept his promise, jogging far down the field to
-the surprise of the fielders and the gleeful chortles of the batting
-squad.
-
-“That was a peach,” declared Steve Hale as Joe, as much surprised
-as Toby Williams, measured the hit and relinquished his place to
-Cummings. Joe looked indifferent, but secretly he was as pleased as
-Punch. There’s something delightfully heartening in the feel and
-sound of a good, clean hit, and as Joe moved back he still felt the
-tingle in his palms and experienced an inward glow of satisfaction.
-That, he reflected, was the first hit he could remember that he had
-been entirely satisfied with! Of course, it had been made in practice
-instead of in a game, but still Toby had really been trying to fool him
-and some measure of credit was due him.
-
-Toby came back, hot and perspiring, from his jaunt, with the recovered
-ball in his hand, and proceeded to wreak vengeance on Hale. The fellows
-at the net still guyed him, however, and Hale speedily found a hit.
-When Buster’s turn came again he asked: “Will you field it, Toby, if I
-get to you inside of three?”
-
-But Toby had had enough and shook his head, which proved fortunate in
-the light of succeeding events. Buster, after fouling two, sent a long
-fly arching out.
-
-When Joe stepped in front of the net Toby waved a hand in sarcastic
-greeting. “Hit ’em as hard as you like, Faulkner,” he called. “All bets
-are off!”
-
-Nevertheless, it was soon evident to Joe and the others that Toby
-didn’t intend his offerings to be hit hard, for he used all his skill,
-“mixing them up” bewilderingly. One went as a ball, the next was a
-foul-tip, the third was a doubtful strike, the fourth was another foul.
-Joe was matching his skill against the pitcher’s, and for the first
-time he was confident of the result. He let a second strike go past
-because, although he was certain he could have taken it, it was too low
-to hit any distance. Again he fouled, going after the ball just as he
-had been doing down in the schoolhouse basement, and still again. Toby
-showed impatience.
-
-“Oh, hit one, Faulkner! I’m giving ’em to you soft!”
-
-“Yes, you are!” jeered Buster, behind the improvised plate. “You’re
-putting everything you’ve got on them! I dare you to put one in the
-groove, Toby!”
-
-Toby took the dare, launching a straight, fast ball to the net that
-looked like a white streak. But Joe glued his eyes to it, swung short
-but from the shoulders, and there was a fine, resounding _crack_! Toby
-turned slowly and watched the ball streak far into the field. Then he
-held up both hands and grinned at Joe.
-
-“You win!” he said.
-
-That was the beginning of Joe’s batting success. After that day
-he faced the pitcher, whoever he might be, with a confident smile
-reflecting the inward conviction that he could hit. There was nothing
-remarkable about his batting that season and he was never spectacular.
-Usually his contribution proved a single, infrequently a double. He
-was in no danger of being dubbed “Home-Run” Faulkner. And frequently
-enough, more frequently than he approved of, you may be sure, he struck
-out just as ingloriously as anyone else on the team. But, somehow, he
-showed a reliability that began to be talked about toward the end of
-the season. It was a fair wager, when he went to the plate, that he
-would deliver a hit. Often he didn’t; more often he did. And what made
-his hits go safe was that practice in the baseball cage, for through
-that he had attained an almost uncanny ability to place them. Few
-pitchers could make him hit where he didn’t want to. Jack once declared
-that Joe, who was a right-handed batter, could hit a fast ball to right
-field and a slow one to left any time he wanted to! This was somewhat
-of an exaggeration, but certain it is that Joe was a clever batter when
-it came to “putting them where they ain’t,” and his title of Lucky
-Faulkner was felt to have been wisely bestowed. But I am ahead of my
-story, for Joe’s batting prowess, although it came into being that
-April afternoon at the net, was of gradual growth. When all is said,
-the way to learn to bat is to bat. And that is the way Joe learned.
-
-Amesville played Lynton one warm, cloudy afternoon on the former’s
-grounds and took her first beating. Lynton had a way of winning from
-Amesville when all the signs pointed toward defeat. She never played
-remarkable ball; never, in fact, won from any other club of Amesville’s
-ability. But, somehow, almost every year Lynton managed to secure
-the decision in one or another of the two games played. And every
-year there came a loud and impatient demand for a third and deciding
-contest. But the third contest seldom occurred, seldom when it was
-demanded, because by that time both teams had filled their dates, and
-never by arrangement at the beginning of the season because at such
-times Amesville smiled confidently and said: “Well, this year we won’t
-have any fooling. We’ll take ’em both!”
-
-Lynton’s perversity had secured for her the compliment of being looked
-on by Amesville as second only to Petersburg as a worthy foeman.
-Sometimes Lynton won by virtue of her enemy’s errors, caused by
-over-eagerness. Sometimes she won by sheer luck, as when, two years
-before, with the score 7 to 6 in Amesville’s favour in the ninth
-inning, the Amesville pitcher had let down long enough to allow two
-tail-enders to get to third and second bases, and then, with two down
-and two strikes on the batsman, had pitched a wild ball that had sent
-the batter staggering away from the plate and had seen in amazement
-the ball hit the shouldered bat, bound away to just behind first base,
-and land fair a yard beyond anyone’s reach while the runners crossed
-the home plate with enough tallies to take the game! That contest had
-become famous in Amesville legends, and nowadays it was the usual thing
-for someone to shout at a crucial moment in a game: “Don’t hit his
-bat, Tom!” Amesville had remained sore over that game for a whole year
-and had only regained her composure when, the following spring, she had
-tied the first Lynton contest and then routed her enemy in the second
-struggle by the generous score of 17 to 6!
-
-This year Amesville appeared a trifle less confident of winning the
-two battles, although she perhaps secretly expected to do so. At all
-events, she took no chances in that first game. Tom Pollock started in
-the box and remained until the seventh inning, at which time Amesville
-had a satisfactory lead of four runs. Toby Williams relieved him, and
-Toby had an off-day if ever pitcher had! For two innings he escaped
-real punishment, although one of several passes resulted in the eighth
-in a tally for Lynton. But in the first half of the ninth, with the
-score then 8 to 5 in the home team’s favour, Toby simply laid down
-in the traces. Afterwards some of the blame was laid at the door of
-coach and captain, for it was said that Jack Speyer, who was put in
-Sam Craig’s place behind the bat in the eighth, showed poor judgment.
-In any case, after getting through the next to the last session at
-the expense of but one run, Toby went to the bad completely. Twice,
-when the batter had three balls and no strikes against him, Speyer and
-Toby met in consultation between plate and mound and Lynton howled and
-hooted. In that disastrous ninth Toby gave two passes, hit a batsman
-and was punished for four hits with a total of six bases! Before Carl
-Moran could even peel his sweater off preparatory to warming up the
-mischief was done. When Carl did go in the score was tied and there
-were runners on second and third, with two men out. The only wonder was
-that Lynton had managed to score so few runs! Carl did his best, which
-was not a very good best, but he was facing a desperate situation and
-was plainly nervous. The next batter hit safely past Hale and two more
-runs were scored. Then Carl gave a pass, just to show that Toby was not
-the only generous pitcher on the team, and, after Speyer had overthrown
-second in an effort to kill a steal and one more runner had scored,
-he persuaded the Lynton catcher to send a long fly to Jack Strobe’s
-waiting hands.
-
-When that fatal half-inning was over the score told a far different
-tale! Lynton was in the lead, eleven runs to Amesville’s eight. Coach
-Talbot used all his science and shifted and substituted bewilderingly
-in the last of the ninth, and it was then that Joe made his début.
-Foley, while playing a clean game at the bag, had been hitting
-miserably all the afternoon, and when Mr. Talbot looked about for
-someone to bat in his stead Joe was about the only fellow left on the
-bench eligible to play. By that time Morris had struck out, Jack was
-on second and Healey on first. Joe faced the Lynton pitcher calmly
-and smilingly, but he confessed afterwards to Jack that he was a bit
-weak in the knees! However, that weakness didn’t prevent him from
-out-guessing the pitcher on the first delivery and driving the ball
-down the alley between first and second basemen, scoring Jack, putting
-Buster on third, and reaching second himself on his stomach with no
-time to spare! But that was the last sputter, for Loomis, rushed into
-the breach to bat for Speyer, took the count without a swing, and once
-more Lynton, the incorrigible, pesky varmint, had won!
-
-The visitors went off with laughter and song, cheering and jeering,
-leaving Amesville to comfort herself with the knowledge of a future
-meeting and to once more raise the cry of “_Give us a third game!_”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-A TRY-OUT AT FIRST
-
-
-The Second Team was formed the third week in April. Joe found, rather
-to his surprise, that he was to be retained with the first squad as
-substitute infielder and was not to be relegated to the second. That
-was, certainly, a compliment to his playing ability, and he was duly
-pleased, but there were moments during the succeeding fortnight when
-he almost wished that he had been placed on the scrub, since in that
-case he would undoubtedly have been put at first and would be playing
-there regularly instead of sitting half of the time on the bench and
-trying not to hope that Frank Foley would break a finger or sprain an
-ankle! When Joe did get in it was more likely to be at second base than
-first, since Buster Healey, the regular incumbent of that position,
-was playing a decidedly erratic game and Coach Talbot was becoming
-discouraged with him and was constantly pulling him out in favour of a
-substitute. Buster had it in him to play fine ball, but this spring he
-was badly off his game. Joe was always glad to get a chance to play,
-and would have gone behind the bat, had he been told to, or even into
-the outfield, rather than remain on the bench, but he did wish that Bat
-would give him a chance at first.
-
-Jack suggested once when Joe was mourning the lack of opportunity to
-exhibit his skill at the first sack that they enter into a deep, dark
-conspiracy against Handsome Frank. “We might,” said Jack thoughtfully,
-“decoy him to the soda fountain and slip poison in his drink. Or we
-might wait for him outside his house some night and stab him full of
-holes. If we did that it might be best to leave a Black Hand note
-attached to the stiletto in order to avert suspicion. They’d probably
-arrest Tony, the bootblack, and might hang him. Tony never did anything
-to me, and――No, I guess it wouldn’t be fair to have Tony hung. How
-would a bomb do? We could put it under his seat at school and――――”
-
-“And blow ourselves up, too?” asked Joe. “No, I don’t like that idea so
-much, Jack.”
-
-Jack acknowledged that it had its drawbacks. “Just the same,” he
-asserted decisively, “something must be done. Frank has a nasty way
-of grinning at me nowadays, and yesterday he wanted to know if I was
-feeling well. Said I looked a bit pale. And the funny thing is, Joey,
-that I don’t feel awfully smart; haven’t for nearly a week. I suppose
-it’s the warm weather, but if I caught scarlet fever or anything
-and had to lay off for a couple of weeks I’d lose that bet sure as
-shooting!”
-
-“Well, I guess you needn’t count on me to help you win it,” replied
-Joe hopelessly. “Bat seems to think that I’m only good on second, or,
-sometimes, third.”
-
-“If Buster doesn’t take a brace you’ll find yourself on second for
-keeps,” said Jack. “I’d like to know what’s the matter with that
-chap. Last year, and the year before, too, he was a mighty good
-second-sacker, but now――Great Scott, did you see that heave of his to
-Frank yesterday? It went three yards wide of the base if it went an
-inch, and Buster declares that he threw straight as an arrow! And even
-his hitting is punk. I don’t see Bat’s idea of trying to make a first
-baseman of Farquhar this season. The kid’s too green for it.”
-
-“Maybe if Healey would brace up,” said Joe, “I’d lose my job at second
-and might get a chance to substitute Foley. I sometimes wish they’d let
-me go to the Scrubs.”
-
-“Piffle! At least, you’re a member of the First Team, even if you don’t
-play all the time, and you’ll get your letter, too, before the season’s
-over. Next month Bat will be putting you in somewhere for four or five
-innings at a whack. Then, if you get into the Petersburg game you’ll
-get your A.”
-
-“Yes, but what’s to keep Bat from getting tired of seeing me sitting
-around and letting me go long before that?” asked Joe dismally.
-
-“Everything! He’s got to have at least two substitute infielders,
-hasn’t he? And you’re one of them, aren’t you? Anyway, if you keep on
-batting as well as you’ve been doing it he won’t dare to let you go.
-Speaking of that, Joey, I guess we’ve done about all we can with that
-parlour baseball stunt of ours in the cage. We might as well call that
-off, I think.”
-
-“Especially as we’ve missed about every other day lately,” Joe laughed.
-
-“I know. It’s too warm now to feel ambitious. All a fellow wants to do
-at recess is lie on his back and watch the clouds go over and wonder
-where they get the energy to do it! You can’t say, though, that that
-scheme of mine hasn’t worked.”
-
-“I don’t try to. It did me a lot of good, Jack. I――I almost think that
-by next year I’ll be a fairly good hitter.”
-
-“You’ll be that this year if you keep on improving. Tom is the only
-fellow you can’t hit about as you like. And that’s no disgrace to you,
-because Tom Pollock is about as good a pitcher as you’ll find in the
-State, and I’m not excepting professionals, either!”
-
-“Toby told me the other day that Tom has a chance to go to a league
-team whenever he wants to.”
-
-“I should say he had! Why, three or four teams have been after him. He
-could get a try-out with Detroit tomorrow if he wanted it. But Tom says
-he’s going to college next Fall, and, of course, he wants to play ball
-there.”
-
-“I should think he would. I wish I thought I could go to college, Jack.”
-
-“Why can’t you? In another year you’ll have so much money saved up that
-you’ll be able to do as you like! The stand’s doing better every month,
-and the first thing we know we’ll be millionaires!”
-
-“We fooled ourselves about Young, all right, didn’t we? Honest, Jack, I
-expected long before this that he’d have shown a yellow streak.”
-
-“Me, too. And the funny thing is that I still don’t altogether trust
-him. But everything seems perfectly straight, doesn’t it?”
-
-“Absolutely. I don’t believe he’s done a thing shady except swipe a box
-of cigarettes now and then. I guess he’s about as good a fellow as we
-could have found for the job.”
-
-“He sure is. By the way, when we engaged him we said something about
-giving him a raise, didn’t we, if he got along all right?”
-
-“Yes, we did, and I suppose we’d better be thinking about doing it.
-Still, he’s been working only about two months. We’ll let it go until
-next month, Jack.”
-
-“All right. I dare say he isn’t looking for a raise just yet. He hasn’t
-made any hints to me, anyway. The thing that puzzles me, though, is how
-he can wear the flossy clothes he does on ten dollars per. He’s almost
-as beautiful as Frank Foley!”
-
-“I can answer that,” replied Joe drily. “He has accounts with a lot of
-the stores. A chap came in the other day when I was at the stand and
-wanted me to pay a bill of sixteen dollars for underwear and ties and
-things. Thought I was Young. I told him to try again. If he has many
-bills around town like that one he won’t be with us much longer, I
-guess, and that’s one reason I think it’ll be just as well to wait a
-bit longer before we make that raise. It doesn’t do much good to raise
-a chap’s wages and have him leave you in the lurch a few weeks later.”
-
-“Well, if he’s got creditors after him,” laughed Jack, “he needs the
-raise pretty badly right now! But I guess you’re right. We’ll wait
-and see what happens. He’s an idiot to blow in money like that for
-pink-striped shirts and things. I’d love to hitch him and Handsome
-Frank up and drive them tandem down Main Street some afternoon!” And
-Jack chuckled merrily.
-
-“Do you suppose,” asked Joe, after a minute’s silence, “that it would
-do to ask Bat for a try-out at first? I mean, tell him I’ve played
-the position and think I could do it again; make a bid for the job to
-substitute Foley.”
-
-“Don’t do it. Bat wouldn’t like it a bit, old man. Bat’s peculiar
-that way. Tell you what you might do, though. You might sort of hint
-something of the sort to Sam. Sam wouldn’t mind it, I guess. I believe
-I’d do that, Joey, some time before long. As I’ve previously remarked,
-something’s just got to be done about Mr. Foley if we don’t want him to
-cop that bet we made.”
-
-“I don’t see,” said Joe innocently, “how that interests me any. _I_
-didn’t bet with him.”
-
-“Why, you――you――you ungrateful chump!” exclaimed Jack. “Do you mean to
-say that you’re going to leave me in the lurch? Didn’t you agree to
-oust Frank from first base? Didn’t you――――”
-
-“No, I didn’t,” Joe laughed. “That was your idea entirely. Besides,
-what would I get out of it? You couldn’t cut that bat-case in half,
-could you?”
-
-“I’ll let you use it on Sundays,” replied Jack generously.
-
-Joe pondered for several days the plan of confiding to Sam Craig his
-desire to become a first baseman. Once he got his courage almost to
-the sticking-point, but a troublesome conviction that Sam would think
-him “fresh” held him back. And then, before he again reached the
-determination to take the plunge, events made it unnecessary.
-
-During the last half of April, Amesville played three games, one with
-Grammar School on a Thursday and two with outside teams of no great
-importance. In the Grammar School contest High School was again easily
-victorious, although the score was somewhat more even than in the
-first meeting. The Grammar School pitcher who had been so unmercifully
-drubbed came back strong and proved rather a hard nut to crack,
-holding High School to eight hits for a total of twelve bases in the
-seven innings he pitched. The score at the end was 8 to 3. The team
-journeyed to Sinclair one Saturday and played the high school team
-there, winning easily, with Tom Pollock pitching five innings and Toby
-Williams four, by the tune of 11 to 5. On the last Saturday of the
-month Corby High School came to Amesville and was walloped 14 to 6,
-Carl Moran presiding on the mound for eight innings and pitching very
-good ball until a tired arm threatened to bring his downfall, and Tom
-Pollock was hurried to the rescue.
-
-Every afternoon, save when an outside team was to be played, the First
-Team and Scrubs came together and some very close, hotly-contested
-battles ensued. Oddly enough, Joe’s first opportunity to show what he
-could do as a first baseman found him playing with the Scrubs. One
-afternoon the Scrubs’ regular first baseman was missing and when its
-shortstop got mixed up at second with Sidney Morris and was helped off
-the field with a badly-wrenched knee, the Scrubs’ coach, a high school
-graduate named Meyers, was in a quandary and was forced to borrow
-a player from the First. The choice fell on Joe, and as Joe was a
-stranger to the shortstop position Meyer put his third baseman there,
-transferred his first baseman to third, and put Joe at first. Joe was
-rather too nervous during the first inning to make much of a showing,
-but, fortunately, Carl Moran, who was pitching for the Scrubs, held the
-First fairly tight and Joe was able to get by without anything worse
-than a doubtful error when he failed to get a wide throw in time to
-make the out. But in the succeeding innings, five in all, he covered
-the bag in a style which opened Mr. Talbot’s eyes and brought good
-words from his friends. If he did not have the reach that Frank Foley
-had, he was so much quicker than that other youth that he quite made up
-for the fact, while at bat he was easily the superior of that player.
-Joe did not, however, greatly distinguish himself with the stick that
-afternoon, for Tom Pollock pitched the whole six innings for the First,
-and Tom, when he tried, could hold any fellow on the team helpless.
-Still, Joe did do better than any other member of the Scrubs, getting
-two hits, one of the scratch variety, as his earnings. The First Team
-nosed out of the game with a two-run lead, but had to work hard that
-day for their victory.
-
-The result of Joe’s exhibition with the Scrubs that afternoon was
-that two days later he was substituted for Foley in the fifth inning
-of a game with the Second Team, much to Foley’s surprise and, I fancy,
-disgust. Again he got through creditably, although a poor heave
-from Buster Healey got past him on one occasion and led him in the
-subsequent confusion to himself make a hurried and ragged throw to
-third. But the misplay did not appear in the results and he more than
-atoned with two stops that brought applause from the stand and the
-benches and by lacing out a two-bagger in the fourth inning that sent
-two runs across.
-
-Jack was jubilant as they walked back to town after that game. “You’ve
-been and gone and done it, Joey!” he said. “You’ve shown Bat at last
-that you’re the man for the job! I saw him and Sam put their heads
-together when you cracked out that two-bagger, and I’ll bet you
-anything they mean to find a place for you. Why shouldn’t they, anyway?
-Don’t they need all the batting strength they can get? And don’t you
-hit a lot better than Foley, or three or four others, for that matter?
-What Bat’s trying to do now, I guess, is to figure out some way of
-getting you in the line-up. Well, he will either have to put you at
-first or second. Hale has made good at third, all right. If I were he
-I’d switch Buster and Gordon Smith around. Gordon’s a good shortstop,
-of course, but I dare say he could play second just as well. That would
-give Buster a chance to redeem himself, you see. Still, that wouldn’t
-make a place for you, Joey.” Jack frowned intently a moment and then
-continued: “No, sir, the only thing to do is to shelve Frank!”
-
-“Don’t be an idiot! Why should he shelve Foley? Foley can play first
-better than I can.”
-
-“That’s all right. With a week’s practice you could do just as well
-as he’s doing. And when it comes to batting you’re away ahead of him.
-And I want to tell you, Joey, that what this team is going to need
-when we run up against Petersburg is fellows who can roll the pill!
-Well, anyway, you wait and see. Something will happen to Handsome Frank
-before long, mark my words. I’m a prophet, Joey!”
-
-“You’re a chump, you mean. Walk up and let’s get somewhere. Speaking of
-profits, I’d like to find out what ours have been today.”
-
-“All you think of is filthy money,” mourned Jack.
-
-“And all you think of,” Joe retorted, “is that old bat-case!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-BUSTER DROPS OUT
-
-
-The following day the team went to Crawford Mills and played a nine
-made up of the youths of that small but busy town. About half of the
-members were high school boys and the rest were from the offices of the
-steel mills, many of the latter youths of twenty or even twenty-two
-years. In the field the Crawford Mills aggregation presented a
-peculiar spectacle, for their shortstop was a chubby youth of no more
-than fifteen, while their catcher was at least twenty-one, and their
-pitcher, a sort of human bean-pole, wore a mustache! Lack of practice,
-however, was against the “Millers” and, although Amesville had
-difficulty with that pitcher, she nevertheless won out in the seventh
-inning with a mixture of hits, daring base running, and errors, the
-latter by the opponent.
-
-Joe, who had had hopes since the day before of getting another chance
-at first base, was considerably disappointed at being left idle on
-the bench until the eighth inning, when he was put in to run for Tom
-Pollock, that youth having turned his ankle at first base. That was
-all the playing Joe did, and he sat disgruntledly during the rest of
-the game and watched Amesville hold her lead and ultimately emerge the
-victor, eight runs to six.
-
-The “Millers” were good losers and cheered the visitors heartily when
-the contest was over, and their captain, the tall, mustached pitcher,
-shook hands with Tom Pollock and hoped his ankle wasn’t hurt much. Tom
-was able to reassure him. Then a request was made for a second game at
-Amesville, and Sam Craig agreed to see what could be done about one.
-High School journeyed home at dusk, very well satisfied with an almost
-errorless performance――Buster Healey had alone sinned――and very hungry.
-Joe was wedged in between Jack and Walter Cummings in the trolley car
-going back, with Frank Foley directly in front on the next seat. Jack,
-who had outshone himself that afternoon in left field, was feeling
-especially cheerful and, before they had been buzzing across country
-very long, began to heckle Handsome Frank, to the amusement of the
-others within hearing.
-
-“Say, Frank,” he began, leaning over, “we’ve got a fellow working for
-us at the news-stand who makes you look like a faded leaf, old top.
-Honest, Frank, he’s got it all over you as a swell dresser. You’ll have
-to look to your laurels right smart. That’s no josh, either. Why, that
-fellow’s got a pink-and-green-striped shirt that would simply fill you
-with envy!”
-
-“Hello, Jack,” was the response. “You jabbering again?”
-
-“Yep, jabbering again, Frankie. Listen. You’re months behind the style,
-old chap. They’re not wearing those all-leather shoes any more. You
-want to get some with cloth tops. They’re the only proper dress for the
-Johnnies. I’m afraid you haven’t read your fashion journal this month!”
-
-“The trouble with you and Faulkner,” replied Frank over his shoulder,
-“is that you dress so like tramps that when you see a fellow with a
-clean collar on you don’t know what to make of it!”
-
-That produced chuckles from the nearby seats. Jack smiled serenely.
-“Yes, there’s something in what you say. That’s where you have it on
-the rest of us, Frank. Your collars are so plaguey high that no one
-can see whether they’re clean or not on top! But what I’m telling you
-about the cloth-top shoes is right as rain. They’re positively the
-last cry. Get after ’em, Frank.”
-
-“Don’t worry about my shoes,” was the reply. “Look after your own,
-Jack. There’s a place down town where you can get them shined for a
-nickel. You and your partner had better drop in there some day.”
-
-“They’d never do Jack’s for a nickel,” remarked Buster. “His feet are
-too big.”
-
-“Oh, I shine mine at home,” said Jack cheerfully. “I save a nickel
-every week or two, you see. When I get a quarter saved up I’m going to
-get one of those manicures like Frank’s. They’re great! Every time he
-puts his hand up you get blinded.”
-
-“Every time you put your hand up,” chuckled Frank, “I think someone’s
-dead!”
-
-“Now what’s he mean by that?” asked Jack, as the others laughed.
-
-“You’d better dry up,” advised Joe amusedly.
-
-“Good advice, Faulkner,” Foley commented. “Wash his hands when you get
-him home. Your own, too.”
-
-“I’ll leave it to the crowd if my hands aren’t clean,” exclaimed
-Jack indignantly, holding them up for inspection. “I washed them
-only yesterday. Frank, you’re almost insulting. For two cents I’d
-disarrange your scarf and break your heart!”
-
-“Oh, cut it out,” growled Foley. “You’re not smart; you just think you
-are. I wear whatever clothes I please, and it doesn’t concern you.”
-
-“Doesn’t it, though? My word! It concerns me a lot, old chap. Many’s
-the time I’ve got up in the morning feeling blue and depressed and then
-seen you glide by in a pink shirt and a green hat and white spats and
-perked right up, Frank! Why, you’re our little blob of local colour,
-that’s what you are. We’re all better for you, Frank. Amesville would
-be pale and commonplace without you. Why, just the other day I walked
-along a block or two behind you inhaling the aroma that floated back,
-and life seemed different right away. That was the day everyone was
-calling up the gas company and complaining of leaks!”
-
-This sally brought a burst of laughter that dissipated the final
-remnant of Foley’s good-temper, and he turned to face Jack with an
-angry countenance. Unfortunately, he caught the grin on Joe’s features
-and straightway transferred his attention to that youth.
-
-“What are you smirking about, you fresh kid?” he demanded. “You go and
-sell your five-cent cigars and let me alone. You’re a joke, anyway,
-and you’re the biggest joke when you try to play ball. You grin at me
-and I’ll reach back there and wipe it off!”
-
-“Cut it out, Frank,” said Tom Pollock from the seat behind Joe’s. “Keep
-your temper, old man. No one’s hurting you.”
-
-“Well, those cheap guys can keep their mouths closed, then. I wasn’t
-saying anything to them, was I?”
-
-“You began it,” retorted Jack mendaciously. “You’re jealous because I
-told you there was a fellow in town with cloth-top shoes. I only said
-it for your own good, and――――”
-
-“Dry up, Jack,” commanded Tom. “You’re tiresome.”
-
-“All right,” grieved Jack. “That’s all the thanks I get for trying to
-be kind and helpful!”
-
-Just then they had to pile out and change to another trolley, and when
-they were reseated Jack discovered that Foley had placed himself the
-length of the car away. He sighed. “No more fun,” he murmured. “I shall
-go to sleep.”
-
-That incident, unimportant as it seemed, bore results. Frank Foley
-evidently reached the conclusion that it was Joe and not Jack who was
-at the bottom of the heckling, for whenever they met Joe was regarded
-with scowling dislike. It didn’t bother Joe much, but it amused Jack
-immensely. “Honestly, Joey,” he would chuckle, “you oughtn’t to put
-me up to saying things about Frank. It isn’t nice. If he speaks to me
-about it I’ll just have to tell him that I don’t approve of it a bit.”
-
-“I wish you and your Frank were at the bottom of the river,” replied
-Joe vigorously. “It’s bad enough being after a fellow’s position
-without having a lot of ill-feeling besides. If I should beat him
-out, either this year or next, he’d always think I did it unfairly, I
-suppose.”
-
-“I’m afraid he would,” grieved Jack. “Try and be decent to him, Joey.
-Don’t make fun of him the way you do. The things you say――――”
-
-“Oh, dry up!” muttered Joe. Jack obeyed, chuckling wickedly.
-
-High School continued to win most of her games, coming a cropper now
-and then, however, as when she received a decisive beating at the
-hands of Lima. Amesville was shut out for the first time that season,
-while her opponent managed to get seven runs. Toby Williams started
-for Amesville, but lasted only three innings. By that time Lima had
-four runs to her credit. Tom Pollock kept her at bay until the sixth
-inning, when an error by Healey, coming on the heels of a dropped fly
-by Cummings, let three more runs across. Amesville was utterly unable
-to bunch the few hits she managed to make off the Lima pitcher and so
-travelled home with banners trailing. The direct outcome of that game
-was the replacing of Buster Healey at second base with young Farquhar.
-Farquhar, however, only lasted through three days of practice and was
-then relegated to the Scrubs. In his place Coach Talbot requisitioned
-George Peddie, and Peddie was tried at third while Hale went to second.
-Healey was heartbroken. It was understood that he was to have his
-position again as soon as he recovered from his present slump, but
-Buster viewed the situation hopelessly.
-
-One afternoon when he and Joe were together on the bench during the
-first inning of a game with the Scrubs he confided his perplexities.
-“I don’t know what the dickens is the matter with me, Joe,” he said.
-“I didn’t use to have any trouble. Last year I played through with
-only fourteen errors all season, and that’s not so bad, is it? But
-this spring”――he shook his head puzzledly――“I can’t even seem to bat
-any more. It’s funny, too. I hit where the ball looks to be and never
-touch it. Same way in fielding. I see the old thing shooting along
-to me and make a grab for it and as often as not it gets clean past.
-The other day, when I plugged to Frank that time, I aimed as straight
-as you please and got the ball away all right. I _know_ that! But
-when it got to first it was two yards to the left!” He examined his
-hands as if seeking a solution to his trouble there. Joe, interested
-in the new batting arrangement that Mr. Talbot had introduced that
-afternoon, heard Buster’s lamentations with but half an ear. He nodded
-sympathetically, though, when young Peddie had been retired at first,
-making the third out.
-
-“It’s too bad,” he said. “What do you suppose the reason is?”
-
-“I’m telling you I don’t know,” replied Buster a trifle impatiently.
-“Maybe I’m not well. I――I have headaches sometimes.” He made the
-acknowledgment rather shamefacedly. Buster didn’t have much sympathy
-for fellows with ailments.
-
-For the first time Joe’s interest was really aroused. “Whereabouts?” he
-asked quickly.
-
-“Whereabouts what?”
-
-“Whereabouts are the headaches?”
-
-“In my head, of course! Oh, you mean――Well, sort of up here.” He
-placed his hands over his temples. “Maybe,” he added with a grin,
-“maybe I’m studying too hard.”
-
-“You get a ball,” said Joe, “and come over here with me.”
-
-“What for?”
-
-“Never mind what for, Buster. Come on.”
-
-Buster borrowed a baseball from the bag and followed Joe across to the
-stretch used by pitchers when they warmed up. “What’s the big idea?” he
-asked.
-
-“Shoot it to me,” said Joe. He held his hands in front of his chest.
-“Don’t curve it, Buster. Just put it to me straight.”
-
-“It’s got to curve some,” objected Buster. “Here you are.”
-
-Joe made a stab well to the left of him and saved himself a trip down
-the field.
-
-“Try again,” he said, throwing the ball back. “Try to hit my hands,
-Buster. See if you can’t throw right into them.”
-
-“Come a little nearer. I can’t see your hands so well. That’s better.”
-
-Buster sped the ball off again, and again it went wide, although not
-so wide as before. When the ball came back to him he made rather an
-awkward task of catching it. Joe followed the ball.
-
-“Let’s have it,” he said quietly. Buster yielded it, troubledly.
-“Catch,” said Joe and tossed the ball to the other from some four feet
-away. Buster put up his hands quickly, his forehead a mass of wrinkles
-and his eyes half-closed, and the ball tipped his fingers and struck
-his chest.
-
-“What are you scowling for?” asked Joe.
-
-“Scowling?”
-
-“Yes, your forehead’s all screwed up. Your eyes, too. Can’t you catch a
-ball without doing that?”
-
-“I don’t know. I guess so.”
-
-“Try it.” This time Buster caught, but, as before, he frowned and
-squinted terrifically over the operation.
-
-“That’ll do,” said Joe. “You go and see an oculist, Buster.”
-
-“Oculist!”
-
-“Surest thing you know. Something’s wrong with your eyes. You can’t
-see, Buster!”
-
-“Great Scott!” murmured the other. “I――I believe you’re dead right,
-Joe!”
-
-“I know I am. I had headaches like yours a couple of years ago and my
-mother sent me to a doctor. He snipped a couple of muscles and I was
-all right.”
-
-“Snipped! Say, didn’t it hurt?”
-
-“Mm, a little; not much. Maybe your trouble’s something else, though.
-Maybe you need glasses, Buster.”
-
-“Glasses! Gee, wouldn’t I be a sight with glasses? Do you really think
-that’s what’s wrong, Joe?”
-
-“Positive! You can’t throw a ball straight because you don’t see what
-you’re throwing at plainly. Now, can you?”
-
-Buster considered a moment. Then: “I don’t believe I do, come to think
-of it. Things are――are sort of indistinct at a distance. You don’t
-suppose”――Buster faltered――“you don’t suppose I’m going to be blind, do
-you?”
-
-“Blind your granny! You go and see an oculist and he will fix you up
-right as rain. Do it tomorrow, Buster. I’ll wager you’ll be playing
-second again in a fortnight.”
-
-“Honest, Joe? Say, why didn’t I think of my eyes? Why, now when I think
-of it, I know mighty well that I don’t see like I did a year ago. Why,
-last Spring I could see to the end of the field as plainly as anything!”
-
-“Can’t you today?” asked Joe.
-
-“No, I can’t. I can see, all right, but things are sort of hazy. What’s
-a cataract like, Joe?”
-
-“I never had one. Neither have you. Don’t be an idiot, Buster. Just do
-as I tell you.”
-
-“You bet I will!” They were back on the bench now. “What gets me, Joe,
-is why I never thought it might be my eyes!”
-
-“I guess a fellow thinks of his eyes the last thing of all,” replied
-Joe wisely. “I know when I was having those headaches――――”
-
-But a further account of his experiences was interrupted by the coach.
-
-“Faulkner, you take first. That’ll do for today, Foley. Hale, you go
-back to third. Peddie, see what you can do at second.”
-
-Joe played four innings at the first sack that afternoon, conscious
-all the time of Frank Foley’s malevolent glare from the bench. But he
-didn’t allow that to worry him much and covered the base in good shape.
-The following afternoon it was Joe who started at first and Foley who
-took his place later on. Perhaps the fear of being superseded began to
-wear on Foley, for he played poorly during the three innings he was on
-duty, and Jack exulted on the way home.
-
-“You’ve got him on the run, Joey,” he said. “Keep it up, old man!
-Remember that bat-case is yours every Sunday!”
-
-“Hang your old bat-case, Jack! I wish they’d put me on the second. This
-thing of taking a chap’s job away isn’t funny.”
-
-“To the victor belong the spoils,” replied Jack untroubledly. “Frank
-won’t let sentiment interfere with getting his place back if he can,
-Joey, so why should you――――”
-
-“But he had it first.”
-
-“And couldn’t keep it!”
-
-“Just the same, I don’t like it. I think I’ll quit.”
-
-“You think you’ll quit!” exclaimed the other in horrified tones.
-“You’re crazy underfoot like a radish! Quit nothing! What about that
-bat――――”
-
-Joe turned on him menacingly. “If you say ‘bat-case’ again I’ll punch
-you,” he threatened.
-
-“Oh, all right. I won’t. I was only going to ask what about that
-receptacle for――――”
-
-Joe chased him half a block. When peace had been restored Joe asked:
-“Have you seen Buster Healey today?”
-
-“No, he wasn’t out,” replied Jack.
-
-“I know he wasn’t. I’m sort of worried about Buster. I didn’t say
-anything about it yesterday, Jack, but I’m afraid he’s got something
-wrong with his eyes.” He told of the incident of the day before, ending
-up with: “I don’t know much about cataracts, Jack, but I wouldn’t be
-awfully surprised if that was the trouble.”
-
-“You’re a cheerful little chap, aren’t you? Fellows don’t have those
-things, Joey. Old ladies have ’em when they’re about eighty. My
-grandmother had ’em, and I know.”
-
-“Well, maybe. I hope you’re right. Anyway, I’m going to call him up and
-find out what the oculist said.”
-
-Events, however, proved that unnecessary, for when they turned into
-the Adams Building there was Buster leaning against the counter in
-conversation with the sprightly Mr. Chester Young.
-
-“I was waiting for you, Joe,” he announced. “Thought you’d like to know
-you were dead right yesterday. I went to the doctor man this afternoon
-and he says I’ve got my――my――――Oh, thunder, I’ve forgotten it!”
-
-“Myopia?”
-
-“That’s it! He says I’m so blamed near-sighted that’s it’s a wonder I
-can blow my nose! But it isn’t cataracts, anyway. Say, honest, Joe, I
-was scared blue last night. I told my mother what you’d said and she
-was certain sure I had cataracts!”
-
-“I’m glad you haven’t. What’s the oculist going to do about it?”
-
-“He says he can cure me in a few months. I have to go every day for a
-while and look through a sort of machine he has. And I may have to wear
-glasses, too. And”――and by this time Buster’s cheerfulness was ebbing
-fast――“he says I can’t play ball any more for a while. Isn’t that the
-limit?”
-
-“Too bad, Buster. But if he can cure the trouble――――”
-
-“He says he can. Says when you catch them young, these myopias, you can
-chase ’em out of the system, or words like that. I suppose I oughtn’t
-to kick, because it might have been a heap worse, but it’s hard having
-to give up playing baseball.”
-
-“No use troubling about that,” said Jack, who had joined them. “You
-couldn’t play anyhow, Buster, until you got your eyes fixed up right.
-Much better give it up this spring and go back to it next.”
-
-“I suppose so. I haven’t any choice, anyway. Say, Joe, I’m certainly
-much obliged to you for tipping me off. What gets me――――”
-
-“Joe’s a wise guy,” said Jack. “What he doesn’t know isn’t worth
-knowing.”
-
-“Yes, but what gets me――――”
-
-“Oh, that was nothing for Joey! Solomon in all his glory had nothing on
-Joseph!”
-
-“For the love of mud, Jack, shut up! Buster’s trying to tell you――――”
-
-“I was going to say,” began Buster patiently again, “that what gets me
-is why I didn’t realise myself what the trouble was. That’s what gets
-me! You’d think that when a fellow couldn’t see decently he’d take a
-tumble and――――”
-
-“Sure, it’s a wonder you haven’t tumbled lots of times,” agreed Jack
-solicitously.
-
-“Oh, you make me tired,” grumbled Buster. “You can’t be serious a
-minute. If you had my――my――――Say, what is it again, Joe?”
-
-“Myopia, Buster.”
-
-“From the Greek, Buster; myo, close, and opsis, sight. My word, I wish
-old Dennison could have heard me!”
-
-“Yes, you’re a swell Greek scholar!” jeered Buster. “Well, I just
-thought you’d like to hear about it, Joe. And I hope you get my place
-at second――if you want it.”
-
-“Give it to Foley,” said Jack. “Joe doesn’t need it. But, honestly,
-Buster, I’m dead sorry you’re out of it this year. We’re going to miss
-you, old man. But you’ll be in better shape for next, eh?”
-
-“If Frank’s going to have my place,” replied Buster dismally, “I’m
-sorrier than ever!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-FOLEY IS WORRIED
-
-
-The next day Joe found himself playing third base. Gordon Smith was
-changed from shortstop to second and George Peddie was at short. But
-this arrangement lasted only a few innings. Peddie was out of place at
-short and Joe was equally miscast as third baseman. Then Steve Hale
-was put in at short and Joe and Frank Foley were instructed to change
-places. The game with the Scrubs was finished with that arrangement of
-the infield, and, while it produced better results than any previous
-combination, still it was far from perfect. After all, Hale was a third
-baseman first, last, and all the time, and Foley was not fast enough
-to fill his shoes. Joe secretly hoped that the arrangement would last,
-for he was in possession of his coveted position at first, and, in
-order that it might, he played the very best he knew how that afternoon
-and won applause more than once. Now that there were no wild pegs from
-Buster Healey to be stopped the position was far easier.
-
-But the next day Foley was back at first in practice and Hale was
-once more cavorting around third. Gordon Smith was reinstated to his
-old position at short and the task of covering the middle bag fell to
-George Peddie. That, of course, put Joe once more on the bench, and
-once more Joe gave way to discouragement and Jack about made up his
-mind to lose that wager. But neither Coach Talbot nor Captain Craig was
-satisfied with a line-up that left out the hitting possibilities of
-Joe Faulkner, and when the two teams had battled through four innings
-Foley was taken out and again Joe went to first. By now the school in
-general, or as much of it as followed the fortunes of the baseball
-club, was watching the struggle for first base position with much
-interest. It seemed as though Coach Talbot had decided to give the two
-contestants equal chances and let them decide the matter themselves!
-Every day Joe and Frank Foley divided the position. It is not to be
-denied that Foley was still a more brilliant first baseman than his
-rival. Foley had a long reach that helped him considerably, had more
-experience, and was, in fact, a first-class man for the position. It
-was at the bat that he was forced to play second fiddle. Joe could
-outhit him two to one. Not only that, but on bases Foley was awkward
-and slow. He had a positive genius for being caught off the bags, and
-his attempts to slide were sad failures. Each of the boys had his
-following amongst the “fans” and whether Faulkner or Foley was to play
-first base in the Petersburg game became a question that was hotly
-argued.
-
-Foley had at last realised that, contrary to his early season
-conviction, he did not hold the position securely; that if he meant
-to retain it he had to play his hardest and, if possible, improve his
-batting. It was something of a blow to Foley’s self-conceit, for last
-year he had faced no real rival and had come to look on the place as
-his. He was no “quitter,” and he made a hard fight of it. He tried his
-level best to increase his batting average, but without much success.
-He had heretofore considered that it was enough to field his position
-and leave the hitting to others, and now he discovered that batting was
-not a trick to be learned in a few short weeks.
-
-Amesville played every Saturday save one until the middle of May,
-reaching that period with a showing of seven wins, three defeats, and
-one tie. The missed game was with Curtis School, rain prohibiting.
-Of the regular schedule of seventeen games nine remained, and after
-the middle of the month Wednesday afternoon contests began. The
-“Millers” secured their return game, coming to Amesville on less than
-a day’s notice when Arkwright High School announced its inability to
-fill her date. The “Millers” were again beaten, 9 to 3, Tom Pollock
-pitching most of the game for the home team. Joe played five of the
-nine innings at first, getting six put-outs, an assist, and no errors
-as his share, thereby bettering Foley’s record for one less inning by
-two put-outs and an assist. At bat Joe had a gala day, being up three
-times and securing as many hits. Foley, as usual, failed to come across
-with anything. It was after that Wednesday contest that Joe’s stock
-arose appreciably and Jack got Tom Pollock to put that bat-case on
-the counter for him to examine! Perhaps, however, that game with the
-“Millers” was mainly notable for bringing into prominence young Peddie.
-Peddie, now regularly established at second, performed in a way that
-was little short of marvellous, taking part in two doubles and working
-with Smith even more smoothly than Buster Healey had ever done. He also
-secured a timely hit to add to his laurels. George Peddie, in short,
-was the hero of that encounter.
-
-The weather settled down to warm days that made playing a delight and
-that brought out the best in everyone. High School’s batting improved
-remarkably during the last two weeks in May, and the pitchers began
-to come into their own. Toby Williams showed more improvement than
-either of the others, but was still far from being the pitcher that Tom
-Pollock was. Carl Moran went through six or seven innings occasionally
-without misadventure, but was not yet equal to twirling a full game.
-Behind the bat Sam Craig was still the same reliable, heady player as
-ever, while Jack Speyer was rapidly getting experience as a substitute.
-Amesville had a fine outfield in Sidney Morris, Jack Strobe, and Walter
-Cummings. Sidney and Jack were especially clever players, with Cummings
-promising to be quite as good with more experience. On the whole,
-the school looked forward to the Petersburg game on the twenty-first
-of June with more confidence than usual. Petersburg had won a scant
-majority of the annual contests to date and was always considered
-dangerous. But this year, with a fast, smoothly-working infield, two
-first-class pitchers, and an outfield of proved excellence, Amesville
-considered that she was more than the equal of her old rival. Someone,
-however, has said that baseball is two-thirds skill and one-third
-luck, and that one-third has often upset the wisest calculations.
-
-So far Jack and Frank Foley were nip-and-tuck in their race. Neither
-had missed a game. Jack tried to say that since Foley scarcely ever
-played an entire contest through he was already defeated, but Handsome
-Frank――more handsome than ever now that Summer was at hand, with its
-better opportunities for sartorial display――reminded his rival of the
-terms of the wager. “I said I’d play in more games with outside teams
-than you would. I don’t have to play a game through from start to
-finish.”
-
-“It’s a good thing you don’t, then,” laughed Jack. “If you did I’d be
-carrying my bat around in that nice leather case right now! All right,
-old chap. Go to it. But you’ll have hard work stealing a game on me!”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know. You might break something or have measles, Jack. I
-hear there’s lots of measles around town.”
-
-“Don’t worry. I’ve had ’em.”
-
-“I know, but some folks have them two or three times.” Foley grinned
-exasperatingly. “Haven’t you got a sort of rash on your forehead there
-now?”
-
-“No, I haven’t! That’s sunburn, you idiot!”
-
-“Well, take care of yourself, Jack. You never can tell what’s going to
-happen.”
-
-Foley sauntered away, a picturesque figure in immaculate blue serge
-and a pale yellow shirt, and Jack watched his departure with mingled
-sentiments of admiration and contempt. “Of all the high-faluting
-dudes,” muttered Jack, “he’s the high-falutingest! Did you see that
-brown straw hat, Chester, with the pleated silk scarf around it? Say,
-he’s gone you one better, hasn’t he?”
-
-The encounter had taken place in the lobby of the Adams Building on a
-Saturday morning. Foley and Mr. Chester Young, doubtless drawn together
-by their mutual fondness for startling attire, had become very good
-friends, and Foley was quite frequently to be found at the news-stand.
-Mr. Chester Young, flicking the ashes from his cigarette, smiled
-untroubledly.
-
-“Old stuff,” he said. “They were wearing those in the East last Summer.
-The latest straws are higher and just off the straw-colour. I’ve got
-one on the way. You have to send to Chicago for them.”
-
-Joe, who was taking stock of the cigars on hand, smiled and winked at
-his partner. “Oh, those are too cheap for Foley,” he said carelessly.
-
-“Cheap!” exclaimed Young. “Oh, yes, they’re cheap like anything! Ten
-dollars is what they stand you, Faulkner.”
-
-“For one?” gasped Jack.
-
-“Well, you didn’t think it was for a dozen, did you?” asked Young
-pityingly. “That lid Foley’s sporting cost about six. He thinks he’s a
-pretty swell little dresser, Foley does. Well, he ain’t so bad, only he
-just sort of misses it about every crack he makes. See his socks? Dark
-blue they were. They ain’t wearing colours this season.”
-
-[Illustration: “He thinks he’s a pretty swell little dresser, Foley
-does”]
-
-“They’re not? Help!” Jack regarded his own brown stockings in dismay.
-“I’ve got to go home and change, Joe. Honest, this thing of keeping up
-with the styles is killing, isn’t it?”
-
-“It don’t trouble you much,” said Mr. Chester Young indulgently. “If it
-did you’d call in that collar you’re wearing.”
-
-“What’s the matter with my collar?”
-
-“Nothing, only they don’t wear ’em like that now.” Young put a hand to
-his throat and pulled his terra-cotta silk scarf into place. “More like
-this.”
-
-“Oh, I see,” said Jack. “Sort of low and rakish, eh? All right. Live
-and learn. Say, Joe, that thing you’re wearing is worse than mine. I
-should think you’d be ashamed of yourself!”
-
-“I’d be ashamed to be seen in one like his,” answered Joe. “Get Meyers
-and Fink and tell them to send us a hundred Adams Building conchas and
-two boxes of Vistas panatellas, will you? Don’t forget to give these
-returns to the news company, Young, when they come today. I’ve been
-falling over them for two or three days.”
-
-“We’re out of City Hall post-cards,” said Young. “And we’re getting
-short on some of the others.”
-
-“They’re on order, thanks. That reminds me, Jack. Those chocolates
-aren’t as good as they sent us first. Guess we’d better switch back to
-the Cleveland folks. Their packages aren’t quite as dressy, but the
-chocolates are a lot better.”
-
-“There was a fellow in here just before you came,” observed Young,
-“trying to sell us candy. I told him to come back later. He had some
-new stuff, all right; glazed boxes with crimson ribbons across ’em.
-Pretty good-looking line, I thought.”
-
-“Tell him we don’t want anything when he comes again. How are you off
-for magazines there, Young?”
-
-“Pretty fair. We’ve sold about twenty of those Murray’s. Ought to
-order more, I guess.”
-
-“All right. How many are there there?”
-
-“Four――no, five. They’ll sell today, I guess. And we’re short of
-Mid-Wests. Only two of those here.”
-
-“I’ll order twenty more Murray’s and ten Mid-Wests.” Joe reached for
-the telephone with one hand and searched for a nickel with the other.
-“The telephone company is after Mr. Adams to put in a couple of booths
-here, Jack. If he lets them do it it’ll make this ’phone cost us money.
-Hello! Amesville 430! As it is we’re making about seven dollars a month
-on this thing. Hello? News company? This is Adams Building. Send around
-twenty Murray’s Monthlies and ten Mid-Wests this noon, will you? I beg
-your pardon? No, that’s all. Murray’s and――Yes, I think you’d better.
-Make it fifty Murray’s and twenty-five Mid-Wests after this. Good-bye.”
-Joe hung up the receiver and put the instrument back in place, and when
-Mr. Chester Young had served a customer, remarked:
-
-“By the way, Young, you don’t seem to be keeping that gang of yours out
-of here much better. Yesterday there were six or seven hanging around.
-We’ve spoken two or three times about it, you know. We don’t want this
-to become a loafing place. Mr. Adams doesn’t like it, and we don’t,
-either.”
-
-“Well, you can’t turn away custom, can you? Those guys spend their
-money with you, don’t they?”
-
-“Not a great deal, I guess,” replied Joe drily. “Anyhow, they don’t pay
-rent for this lobby, Young. Keep them moving, please.”
-
-“All right. But you’d better hire a ‘bouncer,’ Faulkner. I don’t get
-paid for insulting my friends.”
-
-“You tell your friends to come and see you somewhere else,” replied Joe
-tartly. “This place looks like a hog-wallow after that crowd has been
-standing around a while.”
-
-“Meaning my friends are hogs, eh?” Mr. Chester Young laughed, but not
-with amusement.
-
-“If they’re friends of yours, Chester,” said Jack, “you’d better shake
-them. They’re a cheap lot of corner loafers. They used to hang out
-around Foster’s until they got on to the fact that they could come in
-here and keep warm. We don’t want them. Get that?”
-
-“Sure! After this as soon as a customer gets his change I’ll duck out
-from here and throw him through the door! That’s fine!”
-
-“Don’t talk sick,” said Jack shortly. “You know what we mean. If you
-don’t encourage them by talking with them they’ll go along, I guess. We
-don’t want Mr. Adams putting us out of here, you know.”
-
-Mr. Chester Young forebore to reply, but there was a world of eloquence
-in the way in which he puffed his cigarette and winked at the elevator
-attendant across the lobby.
-
-Later, when the chums were on their way to the field for the game with
-Morristown High School, they reverted to Mr. Chester Young. “What do
-you know about his paying ten dollars for a straw hat?” demanded Jack.
-
-“He’s probably adding about five to the price,” said Joe. “Where would
-he get that much to pay for a hat? He certainly can’t do it on the
-wages we’re paying him.”
-
-“You said he was having things charged, didn’t you?”
-
-“Yes, but he told us he was getting the hat from Chicago.”
-
-“Having Keller send for it, I dare say. Keller’s is the place he buys
-hats, because I saw him in there one day looking at some. The first
-thing we know, Joey, the sheriff or someone will be descending on us
-and taking away the stand!”
-
-“They can’t do that. We’re not responsible for his debts, thank
-goodness! What is pretty certain is that he must be getting near the
-end of his rope. We’ll have to be looking for a new clerk pretty soon,
-I guess.”
-
-“If he will hang out until school is over we won’t have to have one.
-You can take the stand half the day and I can take it the other half.”
-
-“Yes, but that won’t be for nearly a month, and I don’t believe Mr.
-Chester Young will last that long.”
-
-“He will probably light out some fine day,” said Jack pessimistically,
-“with the cash-register under one arm and the showcase under the other.
-I try awfully hard to believe him a fine, honest youth, Joey, but I
-never can quite do it!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-IN THE TWELFTH INNING
-
-
-Joe started the game at first that afternoon and had a busy five
-innings, for Morristown was a hard-hitting aggregation and slammed Carl
-Moran all over the lot during two innings and then tried its best to
-do the same with Toby Williams. Sharp fielding alone allowed Carl to
-last as long as he did, and it was not until the fourth inning that
-the visitors got their first run across. In the meanwhile Amesville
-had scored twice, once in the first and once in the third. Sam Craig’s
-three-bagger, with George Peddie on first, did the trick in the first
-inning, and two hits and a stolen base accounted for the second run.
-
-It was a snappy game from start to finish, and a good-sized audience
-was on hand to enjoy it. Morristown played in hard luck during the
-first part of the contest, for, although she hit hard and often, her
-hits didn’t earn runs. In fact, it was a dropped ball at the plate that
-gave her her single tally in the fourth. Smith’s throw may have been
-a bit low, but Sam Craig ought to have held it and had the runner out
-by a yard. He didn’t, however, and so when the home team came to bat in
-the last of that inning the score was 2 to 1.
-
-The batting order had been changed subsequent to Buster Healey’s
-departure and Hale was hitting in fourth place, followed by Peddie,
-Craig, and Faulkner, or Foley. Cummings and the pitcher ended the list.
-The new arrangement had not, however, been producing very satisfactory
-results. In the fourth Steve Hale started off well by banging out a
-liner that was too hot for shortstop to hold and reaching his base
-before that player could recover the ball and peg it across. Joe had
-two strikes against him before he found one that he liked, and then hit
-a slow one to first and sacrificed Hale to second. Sam Craig fouled off
-three and finally flied out to left fielder. Cummings made the second
-out, third to first, and Toby Williams came up with the task of scoring
-Hale from second. Toby wasn’t very much of a batsman, although when he
-hit the ball usually travelled far. The Morristown pitcher had been
-putting the first delivery over time after time and Toby was instructed
-to go after it. He did and he got it, and it whizzed straight down the
-third base line, just out of reach of the baseman, and rolled gaily
-into deep left while Hale sprinted home and Toby reached second. Smith
-brought the inning to an end when, following Toby’s example, he hit the
-first ball pitched and slapped it squarely into the pitcher’s glove.
-
-Neither side scored in the fifth, although the visiting team got men on
-third and second on errors by Hale and Smith, and Jack Strobe got to
-first on a Texas Leaguer. In neither case could the following batsmen
-bring home the bacon. Joe yielded first base to Frank Foley when the
-sixth inning began and saw the rest of the game from the bench, save
-when, in the eighth, he caught Tom Pollock, who warmed up in case the
-visitors should develop a rally. But the game went through to the end
-with the score 3 to 1. Morristown did her best to even things up in the
-eighth and ninth, but some one of the enemy always managed to get in
-front of the ball, and so, although the visitors knocked the ball to
-every part of the field, they had to submit to defeat.
-
-Amesville’s winning streak held for a fortnight and three other games
-were played and won. Then came the return contest with Lynton. The
-team travelled to the neighbouring town on a cloudy Saturday forenoon,
-much in doubt as to whether their journey would prove worth while.
-But when, after they had partaken of a hilarious dinner at the Lynton
-hotel, they started for the ball grounds, the sun broke through and for
-the rest of the afternoon tried its best to broil them. To Joe that
-was a memorable game, for it marked his elevation to the position of
-regular first baseman. That day, since hitters were needed badly, Frank
-Foley remained on the bench throughout the game, and Jack was jubilant.
-He had a fine time twitting Foley whenever he came to the bench, and
-when the seventh and eighth innings had passed and the deposed first
-baseman still squirmed uneasily there in idleness his temper, which had
-proved equal to Jack’s gibes during the early innings, quite deserted
-him and he earnestly begged Jack to come behind the stand for a few
-minutes and see what would happen! But Jack declined the invitation,
-politely yet firmly, and Foley, angry clear through, was denied even
-that slight consolation.
-
-That was a pitchers’ battle. Tom Pollock twirled for Amesville, for
-Coach Talbot wanted the game, as, you may be certain, did the forty or
-fifty patriotic rooters who accompanied the team. Opposed to Tom was
-one Corrigan, a shock-headed youth who, it was more than suspected,
-would have had difficulty in proving himself a high school pupil in
-good standing. Buster Healey, who was among the devoted youths who made
-the trip to Lynton, afterward said that he had heard that Corrigan was
-an imported article and that he was far more at home in Marion than in
-Lynton. That as may be, Corrigan could certainly pitch, as Amesville
-soon discovered. Not a safety was made off him until the third inning,
-when Tom Pollock smashed out a two-bagger that produced no result.
-Corrigan had a slow ball that was the undoing of batsman after batsman.
-He mixed it up with fast ones and a couple of hooks and had the
-opposing team standing on their heads. And he fielded so well that, as
-Sam Craig remarked disgustedly once, the rest of the Lynton team might
-just as well have remained on the bench.
-
-But Corrigan had an opponent in Tom Pollock that was not to be
-despised. Perhaps, when all is said, Tom, for once, was outpitched
-that day if we go by the final score, but there was little to choose
-between the rival moundsmen. Tom proved better at the bat than did
-Corrigan, for the latter was a typical pitcher when he went to the
-plate and swung harmlessly at the first three deliveries and retired in
-a perfectly matter-of-fact way to the bench. If Amesville had trouble
-hitting Corrigan, Lynton had as much difficulty getting to Tom. Except
-for that two-bagger of Tom’s, not a hit was made by either side until
-the fifth. In the fourth two errors by the visitors put a Lynton runner
-as far as second, but he died there. Joe was guilty of one of those
-miscues when he dropped a perfectly good throw of Hale’s, and Smith
-made the other when he fumbled Sam’s throw-down and let the runner
-steal second. Lynton made errors, too, but nothing came of them until
-the first of the fifth.
-
-In that inning Sam, the first man up, fouled out to catcher. Joe struck
-out and Cummings, with two strikes on him, swung desperately at a
-poor one and rolled it toward third base. Third baseman over-ran it,
-threw hurriedly and pegged wide of first, and Cummings legged it to
-second with lots of time to spare. Amesville’s rooters became audible
-for almost the first time since Sam had made his hit, and Tom Pollock
-strode to the bat. Discretion seeming the better part of valor, Tom was
-promptly passed. That brought Gordon Smith up, with runners on first
-and second, and Gordon was not just the batter Coach Talbot would have
-chosen for the situation. But the shortstop proved, after all, the man
-for the job, for, after cunningly allowing Corrigan to get himself in
-a hole, he leaned against a fast ball and streaked it into short right,
-scoring Cummings and placing Tom on third.
-
-Sidney Morris tried very hard to come across, but Corrigan was too
-much for him, and Sidney fanned. One run, however, looked very big in
-that game, and Amesville breathed a bit easier until, in the last of
-the sixth, Lynton tied up the score by a combination of one hit, a
-barefaced steal of second and a sacrifice fly. One to one the score
-remained until the eighth. Then Corrigan showed the first signs of
-weariness and passed Smith. Smith stole second when Morris tried for
-a hit and missed it, the catcher getting the throw away too late.
-Morris again fanned and Jack, who had determined to profit by his own
-advice to Joe, shortened his swing and managed to connect with one
-of Corrigan’s offerings. The hit was pretty scratchy, but it placed
-Smith on third and left Jack himself safe on first. Hale fouled off
-two, spoiling as many attempted steals by Jack, and finally bunted
-toward the box. Corrigan held Smith at third and threw out the runner
-at first. With Peddie up there seemed a chance for a tally, for Peddie
-had been delivering the goods quite regularly. But when Corrigan had
-scored two strikes against him the outlook darkened and Sam Craig,
-coaching at third, sent Smith to the plate on the wind-up. But Corrigan
-was too old a bird to be unsteadied and he slammed the ball swiftly to
-the catcher and Smith was nailed a yard away.
-
-Lynton went out in one, two, three order in her half and the ninth
-started with the score still 1 to 1. Peddie struck out and Sam walked.
-Joe sacrificed. Cummings hit past third baseman, but Sam Craig was out
-at the plate on a fine throw-in by left fielder. The tenth inning was
-profitless to both sides. In the first of the eleventh Corrigan wobbled
-a little and a base on balls followed by a safe bunt placed two runners
-on bases. But Morris, Jack, and Steve Hale went out in order. It was
-Tom Pollock’s turn to let down and he did it until Lynton had men on
-second and third with but one out. After that, however, Tom steadied,
-fanning the next batter and causing the succeeding one to pop up a fly
-to Joe.
-
-It looked very much like a tie game when Peddie had gone out, shortstop
-to first baseman, and Sam Craig had fanned in the first of the twelfth
-inning, for the visiting team would have to get the five-twelve train
-back to Amesville, and it was then well after four o’clock. But many
-a game has been pulled out of the fire with two men down, and this
-was to prove one of them. Joe went to bat with his mind made up to
-hit somehow, somewhere. This would, he was sure, be his last chance
-to do anything worth while against the crafty Mr. Corrigan, and he
-did want to have something more to show than two weak sacrifices.
-He had profited by experience and close study of Corrigan’s methods
-and was heartened by assurance when he gripped his bat and faced the
-shock-headed twirler. Corrigan seldom pitched the first ball over, and
-Joe knew it, and so, although he made a fine show of being anxious
-to swing at it, he let it go by and had his judgment sustained by
-the umpire’s decision. The next one was a fast ball that looked good
-until it broke in front of the plate and just escaped a corner. With
-two balls and no strikes, Corrigan became careful. Joe swung at the
-third offering and missed it. Corrigan smiled at him, and the catcher,
-who usually kept up a running fire of comment, told Joe that he was
-a fine, free swinger, “just like a gate, old man, just like a gate!”
-Corrigan concluded that the batter was ready to take a chance now and
-so he uncorked a fast and high one that had Joe feeling anxious until
-the umpire decided that it was a ball. After that, Corrigan had to
-make them good, but, with two down, he wasn’t troubled much. His next
-offering was one of his famous slow balls, and Joe, having one to
-spare, let it severely alone. It proved a strike.
-
-“One more, now, just like the last!” called the catcher. “Let’s have
-it, Jimmy!”
-
-But Joe knew very well that it wouldn’t be like the last at all, that
-Corrigan would change his pace, and, in all likelihood, put a fast one
-over in the groove. And that is what happened. And Joe, staking all on
-his “hunch,” swung and caught it fairly and streaked down the base-path
-and was waved onward by Toby Williams, who was dancing about in the
-coacher’s box, and finally pulled up at second, standing, just as the
-ball came back from right field. Somehow, that unexpected hit changed
-the luck, it seemed. Cummings got his second hit of the game and sent
-Joe to third. Tom Pollock was again passed, filling the bases, and Jack
-Speyer went in to bat for Gordon Smith. Speyer wasn’t any phenomenon
-with the stick, but he had been known to hit lustily. Perhaps in nine
-cases out of ten a pinch-hitter proves a broken reed, but this must
-have been the tenth time, for there was nothing broken about Speyer.
-Probably the fact that he had not been playing kept him from any awe
-of Corrigan. At all events, he let the first ball go past unheeded,
-untroubledly heard it called a strike, and then swung hard on the next
-one. Second baseman made a heroic try for it, but it went a foot over
-his upthrust glove and Joe and Walter Cummings trotted over the home
-plate.
-
-That ended the scoring. Sidney Morris hit into third baseman’s hands
-and was an easy out. Then all that Amesville had to do was to retire
-Lynton in her half of the twelfth, a feat not at all difficult as it
-proved. Tom struck out the first man, the second laid down a bunt and
-beat out the throw to first, and the third batsman hit into a double,
-Smith to Peddie to Joe, and the game was over, the score 3 to 1.
-Amesville, cheered and cheering, made a wild dash for the station and
-got the five-twelve train by a minute’s margin.
-
-On the way home Jack tried to sympathise with Frank Foley, but Frank
-was in a particularly disagreeable frame of mind, and Jack gave him up
-as a bad job. Instead, huddled in a seat with Joe, hugging his knees
-ecstatically, he spoke of that bat-case with the air of a proprietor.
-“I’m two games ahead of him, Joey,” he exulted. “He will have to play
-in two more than I do now to win, and he will never do it! Not this
-year! You’ve cabbaged that place for keeps, Joey. Why, even if you
-dropped half the throws you got, Bat couldn’t do without you! Not after
-the way you lambasted that old pill today, son! It’s a cinch!”
-
-“You can’t tell,” began Joe.
-
-But Jack would have nothing to do with doubts. “Piffle! It’s all over
-with Handsome Frank, I tell you. You win!” Jack was silent a moment.
-Then he laughed rather queerly, and, in answer to Joe’s questioning
-look, said: “It’s funny, but, do you know, I’m sort of sorry for Frank!
-Isn’t that silly?”
-
-“So am I,” replied Joe truthfully.
-
-“Well!” Jack took a deep breath and abandoned regrets. “To the victor
-belong the spoils, as the poet so beautifully puts it! And it’s been a
-pretty little fight!”
-
-However, had Jack but known it, his sympathy for Frank Foley was, in a
-measure, at least, somewhat premature!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-EMPTY BOXES
-
-
-June had come and the end of school loomed close at hand. So, too,
-loomed the final baseball game with Petersburg. It is an unfortunate
-thing for ardent athletes that the crowning contests of the year arrive
-simultaneously with final examinations! There is no doubt in the
-world but that examinations seriously interfere with a whole-hearted
-application to sports. Most of the members of the Amesville team were
-agreed that something ought to be done about it; such, for instance, as
-abolishing the examinations! However, Petersburg was in no better case,
-and that evened matters up.
-
-Amesville dropped a couple of games the second week in June, just to
-vary the monotony, perhaps, and then came back and overwhelmed Crowell
-Academy with a score of 10 to 1. Crowell was a much-heralded team from
-a down-State preparatory school, and Amesville did well to pile up the
-score she did, especially as, at the last moment, Tom Pollock found
-that he couldn’t pitch and Jack Strobe sent word that someone would
-have to take his place in left field! Jack, who had been complaining
-for a day or two of a sore throat, was, it seemed, prohibited from
-playing by an unfeeling doctor. Loomis went into left field and Toby
-Williams took the mound, and both performed creditably. In fact, Toby
-rather covered himself with glory that day, having eight strike-outs
-to his credit when the fray was over. Joe played all through at first,
-as he had been doing since the second Lynton engagement, and put up a
-rattling good game. Even Frank Foley’s adherents had to acknowledge
-that the new first baseman had everything the deposed one had, and,
-when it came to batting, a good deal more. Joe didn’t particularly
-distinguish himself at the bat this day, but he got a clean single and
-a base on balls in four times up. Foley had been used in the last two
-contests for an inning or two at second base, but it was generally
-conceded that he was now only a substitute, with small likelihood of
-getting into either of the two remaining contests.
-
-After the game that Wednesday afternoon Joe hurried to Jack’s house
-and demanded audience of that afflicted person. But, to his surprise
-and dismay, Mrs. Strobe met him with the information that Jack was
-suffering from a severe attack of quinsy and that the doctor had
-prohibited visitors, since the disease was more or less contagious. Joe
-had to be satisfied with sending a message to his chum. That evening,
-however, Jack called him up on the telephone and bewailed his luck. The
-only comfort Jack appeared able to derive from the situation lay in the
-fact that Frank Foley had not stolen a march on him by playing that
-afternoon.
-
-“The doc says I’ll have to stay at home until Monday, at least,” he
-said. “I’ll lose Saturday’s game. If Frank manages to get into that and
-then should play for an inning against Petersburg, as he’s likely to,
-it’s all off! Isn’t that the dickens? Just when I thought I had that
-wager cinched, too!”
-
-Joe was properly sympathetic and Jack finally rang off, exacting a
-promise from Joe to call up the next day. Aunt Sarah insisted that Joe
-should spray his throat after the interview. It didn’t do, she said,
-to take risks, and for her part she was far from convinced that folks
-couldn’t catch things over the telephone!
-
-When, the next afternoon, on the way to the field, Joe stopped in at
-a drug store and called up Jack it was Mrs. Strobe who answered.
-Jack, she said, was not so well today and she thought it best for him
-not to try to talk. Joe went on to practice feeling rather worried
-about his chum, and wasn’t comforted until Mr. Talbot had assured
-him that quinsy seldom, if ever, resulted fatally. On Friday there
-was no practice for the players, and Joe, rather at a loose-end,
-accepted Sidney Morris’s invitation to go to the “movies.” It was well
-after five when he reached the Adams Building. Mr. Chester Young was
-talking in a low voice with a man who looked to Joe very much like a
-bill-collector. Whoever he was, he presently departed with no great
-show of satisfaction. The day’s business had been, Joe discovered,
-surprisingly poor, the register showing less than nine dollars. And
-when Young reminded Joe that it was pay-day, Joe had to dig into his
-pocket for enough to make up the difference between the cash on hand
-and the amount of the clerk’s wages.
-
-He called up the Strobes on the telephone after supper and talked for
-a few minutes with Mr. Strobe. That gentleman announced that Jack was
-feeling pretty mean, but that the doctor thought he was doing as well
-as could be expected and that he would probably be out and about by
-the first of the week. After that Joe settled down to two hours of hard
-study in preparation for next week’s examinations, wrote a long letter
-to his mother and finally went to bed just as midnight sounded.
-
-In the morning he went back to the news-stand and remained there until
-noon. Saturday was usually the best day of the week for business,
-possibly because many of the offices paid off their employees then,
-and today both Joe and Young were kept busy attending to the wants of
-customers. When Joe went home for dinner the sales had already mounted
-to over fifteen dollars and gave promise of atoning for the poor
-business of the day previous.
-
-The game that afternoon was with Chelmsford High School and was looked
-on as more of a practice contest than a real game. It was the last
-contest before the Petersburg battle on the following Wednesday, and
-Amesville had purposely chosen an easy victim for the occasion. But at
-that the home team had to work fairly hard for half a dozen innings
-before the game was safely laid away, and, as it happened, it was Joe
-who was chiefly instrumental in that ceremony.
-
-Chelmsford had two runs and Amesville three when the last of the sixth
-started. Amesville had been playing raggedly and batting weakly
-against an easy pitcher, and only the fact that her opponent had been
-unable to do much with Tom Pollock’s delivery had kept her ahead. Tom
-gave place to Carl Moran in the fifth and, ultimately, Carl retired
-in favour of Toby Williams. In that last of the sixth Sam Craig, who
-was batting in third place owing to Jack’s absence, got to first on
-a scratch hit. Hale was an easy out, third to first, and Peddie was
-passed. The watchers were eager for runs and when Joe went to the
-plate, swinging his bat, there came cries of “All right, Lucky! Smash
-it out!” “Bring ’em in, Lucky! Make it a homer!” Joe had never made
-a home-run in his life and didn’t expect to now, but when, after the
-runners had attempted a double steal and got away with it, he found a
-nice, straight ball coming right for the middle of the plate, Joe took
-a little longer swing, put a little more strength into it, and the deed
-was done! It was a long way around those bases, he thought, but he
-didn’t have to hurry after he got to third, for the ball had gone into
-the left corner of the field and rolled up against the fence! He jogged
-across the plate finally to the laughing applause of the stands and was
-thumped on the back by hilarious team-mates.
-
-Perhaps Coach Talbot thought Joe had done enough for one afternoon,
-for, when the seventh inning began, Joe found, to his surprise, that he
-was superseded at first base by Frank Foley!
-
-“I’m glad,” he said to himself, “that Jack can’t hear of it. He’d
-probably have a relapse and die!”
-
-Joe watched the rest of the game from the bench and tried not to be a
-little bit glad when Foley failed to capture an easy infield fly. The
-game finally ended with the score 7 to 3, and he walked back to town
-with the rest and reached the Adams Building at a little after five
-to find, to his surprise, that the stand was deserted. Supposing that
-Young would be back in a moment, Joe went behind the counter and waited
-on a customer. But no Mr. Chester Young appeared, and when Joe rang
-up the sale and so viewed the drawer of the cash register he thought
-he knew why! There was not a cent in it except the dime he had just
-dropped there!
-
-His first sensation was, oddly enough, one of satisfaction over the
-fact that his original impression of the shifty-eyed young man had
-been, after all, correct! But that satisfaction didn’t last long. The
-realization that he and Jack had been barefacedly robbed of at least
-twenty-five dollars took its place and Joe’s countenance became grim.
-To add insult to injury, he reflected, Young had had the cheek to
-demand his wages on the eve of his flight――and get them! Inquiry of
-Walter, the elevator boy, elicited the information that Mr. Chester
-Young had complained of feeling unwell and had announced that he was
-going over to the drug store for some medicine. That had been, as near
-as Walter could recall, about a quarter to five. It might have been a
-little before that. Walter evidently had no suspicions and Joe didn’t
-enlighten him.
-
-The exodus from the building was under way now and for a good half-hour
-Joe was busy selling papers and cigars and cigarettes, together with
-an occasional box of candy. But he had plenty of time for thinking,
-and long before the elevators had brought down their last loads he had
-determined his course. A hasty survey of the stock in sight showed
-conclusively that the stand had done a phenomenal business since
-morning, but it was not until he thought to look under the counter that
-the real extent of Mr. Young’s depredations came to light.
-
-On the shelves they kept anywhere from thirty to sixty dollars’ worth
-of cigars, cigarettes and other goods for which there was not room
-above. At first glance everything seemed all right, but when Joe
-picked up a box of “Adams Building” conchas and, bringing it to light,
-discovered it to be quite empty, he knew what to expect of the rest
-of the stock. When he had pulled all the boxes and packages out their
-contents would not have fetched two dollars! Only one cigar box held
-cigars, and then only a handful. Evidently Mr. Young had craftily
-replaced the full boxes with empty ones and, not having enough of the
-latter, had been forced to put in one from the case that still held a
-few cigars. It was the same with the cigarette cartons. Only one was
-not absolutely empty.
-
-Joe surveyed the litter behind the counter and tried to think it out.
-At first he couldn’t understand what use the cigars could be to Young.
-Of course, he might take them away to another town and sell them, but
-eight boxes of them, as well as several packages of cigarettes and
-smoking tobacco, would make rather a conspicuous bundle to carry.
-Then a light broke on him and he quickly lifted the receiver from the
-telephone instrument on the counter and called up Meyers and Fink.
-Fortunately, they were still open, and after a moment Joe got the
-information he expected.
-
-“Yes, that clerk of yours came in here about three o’clock today with
-seven boxes of cigars and some cigarettes and smoking tobacco. Said
-you were overstocked and wanted to return them. We paid him cash for
-them. We were going to credit them, but he said you wanted the money.
-Anything wrong?”
-
-“How much did you pay him?” asked Joe.
-
-“Forty-six dollars and something; I’ll give you the exact amount if
-you’ll wait a minute.”
-
-“Thanks, that’s near enough,” replied Joe. “I’ll be around to see you
-Monday. Good-night.”
-
-“Forty-six from them,” reckoned Joe, “about twenty-five from today’s
-sales and, unless I’m mistaken, a knock-down yesterday of perhaps five
-more. About seventy-five dollars altogether. That’s going to make an
-awful dent in this month’s profits if we don’t get it back! But,” he
-added grimly to himself as he locked up for the night and turned the
-light out, “I think we will!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-JOE ACCEPTS A LOAN
-
-
-The notion of calling up Jack and acquainting him with what had
-happened came to him, but was dismissed after a moment’s reflection.
-Jack was ill and the news would only worry and excite him. Instead, as
-he hurried up Main Street, Joe decided to call up Aunt Sarah and excuse
-himself from supper on a plea of business. Aunt Sarah wouldn’t like it,
-for she still viewed the news-stand with suspicion. But perhaps Aunt
-Sarah detected the anxiety in Joe’s voice when he telephoned, for she
-asked no questions and was really quite pleasant, only informing him a
-trifle wistfully that there was beefstew this evening and that Amanda
-was making some of her delectable dumplings!
-
-After that hurried talk over the wire Joe turned into Aspen Street,
-walked three blocks west and finally rang the bell at the door of a
-rather down-at-heels brick house that stood by itself almost in the
-shadow of the frowning carpet mills. When a dejected and at the
-same time suspicious-looking middle-aged woman answered the bell Joe
-inquired if she were Mrs. Young.
-
-“There’s no Mrs. Young lives around here,” was the reply. “My name’s
-Bennett.”
-
-“Does Chester Young live here, ma’am?”
-
-“Are you a friend of his?” was the quick demand.
-
-“My name is Faulkner, Mrs. Bennett. He worked for me in the Adams
-Building.”
-
-“He did, eh? Then maybe you’ll be payin’ me two weeks’ board he’s
-owin’. Did he send you with the money?”
-
-“No, I haven’t seen him since noon. That’s why I came over here. I
-thought perhaps I’d find him.”
-
-“Well, you won’t, then. He’s skipped!”
-
-“Skipped?” exclaimed Joe. “Gone for good, you mean?”
-
-“He’s gone owin’ me two weeks’ board, which is nine dollars, and fifty
-cents he borrowed off me the day he came here. He was always promisin’
-to pay it, but he never done it, and him bein’ out of work I didn’t
-press him at first and then afterwards he kept sayin’ he’d pay me every
-day. I’m a poor, hard-workin’ woman, and I need the money. Maybe
-you’re after owin’ him wages, now?”
-
-“I’m not. I wish I were, Mrs. Bennett. I’m sorry he left without
-settling with you, ma’am. Could you tell me where he’s gone?”
-
-“I can not. If I knew I’d be settin’ the police on him, never fear!
-From the first I suspicioned him, the dirty rascal, but he had a smooth
-tongue on him and was always promisin’ he’d pay tomorrow. If I knew
-where he’d gone to I’d not be gabbin’ here in the doorway! ’Twas while
-I was out to the store after dinner he sneaked in and packed his bag
-and took it away with him, knowin’ I’d not stand for it if I was by.
-Two weeks’ money and the half-dollar――――”
-
-“And you can’t tell me whether he’s left town or just changed his
-lodgings, Mrs. Bennett?”
-
-“All I know is he’s gone, bad luck to him! Is he maybe owin’ you money,
-too, sir?”
-
-“A little, yes. I’m much obliged, ma’am. Good-night.”
-
-“If you find him now, let me know, sir. That’s all I’m askin’ you.
-Just you let me know, sir! The dirty scallawag! Cheatin’ a poor,
-hard-workin’ woman out of her money!”
-
-The door slammed and Joe stumbled back to the uncertain sidewalk and
-retraced his steps along the ill-lighted street. When he reached
-Indiana Street he unhesitatingly turned southward and five minutes
-later saw the lights of the railroad ahead. His course had already been
-determined and the visit to Mr. Chester Young’s lodgings had been made
-with little hope of either finding the defaulting clerk or gaining
-useful information. Chester had given Joe the impression that he lived
-with his mother, which accounted for the latter mistaking the identity
-of the woman at the door. Chester, it seemed, was a very tricky young
-man.
-
-At the station Joe examined the time-table in the waiting-room. Chester
-had left the building somewhere about a quarter to five. At five-two
-a train had left for Fostoria, Fremont and Sandusky, connecting at
-Fremont for Toledo. There was no train between that and a quarter
-to five and none afterwards until twenty minutes to six, when the
-south-bound express had left for Columbus. Everything indicated the
-five-two as the train Chester had taken if, as Joe suspected, he had
-really left Amesville. The ticket window was closed, but a rap on the
-door gained him admittance to the little room wherein the agent was
-seated at the telegraph instrument. He looked up inquiringly, nodded,
-worked the key a moment, listened to the reply, and then swung around
-in his swivel chair.
-
-“Well, sir, what’s troubling you?” he asked gaily.
-
-“I wanted to ask if you remembered selling a ticket to a fellow for the
-five-two train,” stated Joe.
-
-“Maybe. What sort of a fellow? There were only nine passengers from
-here on Number 14, so far as I know. What did he look like?”
-
-Joe’s description was clear and concise and the agent nodded again. “I
-remember the chap,” he said. “He bought to――Hold on, now. What business
-is it of yours, my boy? Is he a friend of yours, or what’s the game?”
-
-“He worked for me at the news-stand in the Adams Building and left
-suddenly about a quarter to five. I went to his house and the landlady
-said he’d taken his baggage and gone. I――I want to see him and ask him
-something.”
-
-“Do, eh?” The agent grinned. “How much did he touch you for?”
-
-Joe smiled non-committingly.
-
-“Well, that’s not my business, eh?” laughed the agent. “All right, son,
-I’ll tell you what I know about the lad. He bought a ticket to Upper
-Newton. I remember it distinctly because he called for a Fostoria
-ticket first and changed his mind just as I stamped it. I asked him if
-he was quite sure this time and he said he guessed he was. Yep, Upper
-Newton, that was it. He carried a yellow suit-case. I noticed that as
-he went out to the platform just before I closed the window.”
-
-“And where’s Upper Newton?” asked Joe. “Is it very far?”
-
-“About twenty-four or -five miles.”
-
-“When does the next train go there?”
-
-“Seven-thirty-six. But, say, if you’re thinking of going after him I
-wouldn’t count a whole lot on finding him at Upper Newton. That’s not
-much more than a flag station. I wouldn’t wonder if he bought for there
-just to throw folks off the track. Dare say he’ll pay his way on to
-Fostoria or, maybe, Fremont. At Fremont he could get east or west as
-he liked. There’s a through train connects there for Toledo and beyond
-and one going east about eleven tonight. Take my advice and stay where
-you are, son. You’ll never catch him unless you want to put the police
-after him. If you care for that I’d advise you to go back up-town and
-tell your story to the chief. How much did he pinch from you?”
-
-“I didn’t say he’d stolen anything,” said Joe.
-
-“I know you didn’t. But, if he had, how much would it have been?”
-
-Joe hesitated. Then, smiling: “About seventy-five dollars,” he said.
-“But I’d rather you didn’t say anything.”
-
-“I’m dumb. Say, where does he live when he’s at home?”
-
-“I don’t know. He worked in Columbus before he came here.”
-
-“Well, he’s headed straight away from Columbus, hasn’t he? I guess
-he’s maybe going to Sandusky and take a boat. Still, seventy dollars
-won’t take him far.” The agent was silent a moment, rapping a pencil
-thoughtfully on the desk in front of him. Then: “Tell you what I’ll
-do,” he exclaimed, sitting up with a thump of his chair. “I’ll wire
-Harris on Fourteen and ask him if the fellow got off at Upper Newton or
-paid his fare on the train to Fostoria or beyond! How’s that?”
-
-“I wish you would! It’s very kind of you. I suppose I couldn’t catch
-him if he’s gone on, though.”
-
-“Well, we’ll find out, anyhow.” The agent flicked a time-table to
-him, ran a finger down a column, glanced at the clock and then began
-jabbing the telegraph key. “I’ll get Tiverton to give him the
-message,” he explained as he waited a reply. “Fourteen gets there in
-seven minutes if she’s on time. Here we are!” The sounder in its little
-box ticked rapidly and stopped and the agent busied himself again with
-the key. Joe, who had seated himself in a chair, watched and waited.
-Presently the agent’s hand left the key and he faced around again.
-
-“Twelve minutes late, he says. I’ve asked Harris to answer from
-Mittenton. We ought to get a reply in about twenty-five minutes.”
-
-“Is Tiverton beyond Upper Newton?” inquired Joe.
-
-“Yes, about six miles. Harris will know if your man got off there,
-because there wouldn’t be more than two or three for a small station
-like that. If he didn’t he’d have to buy to some place further along
-and Harris would remember making out his check.”
-
-“I see. What did you say to that agent?”
-
-“I said, ‘Harris, Conductor Number 14. Did slick guy about twenty-two
-old leave train at Upper Newton? If not, what’s his destination?
-Important. Reply from Mittenton. CHASE, Agent, Amesville.’”
-
-“Thanks,” said Joe. “Then we’d ought to get an answer about twenty
-minutes past seven. What time does that train go? Seven-thirty?”
-
-“Thirty-six. Mittenton will shoot that right back. So you’ll have
-plenty of time to get Number 49 if you want it.”
-
-“Fostoria is the first big town, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yep. He might be stopping off there. Anyway, he asked for Fostoria
-first. That might be his home. I guess, though, he wouldn’t be fool
-enough to go home. He’d know folks would look for him there right away.”
-
-“How much is the fare to Fostoria, please?”
-
-“One-twenty-four.”
-
-“And how much is it to that other place where you said he might change?”
-
-“Fremont? Fremont’s a dollar and forty-five.”
-
-Joe looked thoughtful. He had, as he knew, only something like a dollar
-and eighty cents in his pocket, which would come very far from being
-sufficient. If he went back to the house he might borrow enough from
-Aunt Sarah and he might not. Aunt Sarah seldom kept more than a dollar
-or two on hand, and it would be folly to start out for Fremont or
-Sandusky with less than six or seven dollars in his pocket. He tried to
-think of some other place to get the money. There was Mr. Strobe, but
-Joe had a dim idea that Jack had said something about his father going
-to Chicago the day before. Perhaps the agent would know whether Mr.
-Strobe was out of town. He looked across to find that person viewing
-him smilingly.
-
-“Not enough, eh?” he asked.
-
-Joe grinned and shook his head. “Not nearly enough. I guess I ought to
-have six or seven dollars. Do you know whether Mr. Strobe’s in town?”
-
-“I know he left for the West yesterday morning. Whether he’s back or
-not I can’t say. He carries mileage, so I don’t know where he started
-for. Is he a friend of yours?”
-
-“Yes. His son, Jack, and I run that news-stand together. I thought if
-he was at home I’d run up there while we’re waiting and ask him to lend
-me about five dollars.”
-
-“I guess you wouldn’t find him. Where’s the son?”
-
-“He’s at home, but he’s ill with quinsy. I wouldn’t want to trouble
-Jack with the business right now.”
-
-“What’s your name?”
-
-“Joseph Faulkner.”
-
-“All right, son, I’ll be your banker.” The agent thrust a hand in his
-pocket and brought out some crumpled bills and a lot of silver. “Five
-enough? You’d better have more, hadn’t you?”
-
-“Oh, no, thanks; five is quite enough. It’s mighty good of you,
-Mister――Mister――――”
-
-“Chase. Don’t mention it. Pay it back some time in a week and I shan’t
-miss it. Here you are.”
-
-Joe accepted the crumpled bills and repeated his thanks. At that moment
-the assistant came in and the agent, greeting him, introduced Joe.
-“Faulkner,” he explained, “is waiting for a message from Harris on
-Fourteen. It’ll probably come in from Mittenton before I get back, Jim.
-Get it straight, will you, and give to him?” He turned to Joe as he
-reached for his coat and hat behind the door. “Had your supper yet?” he
-asked. “No? Well, you don’t want to start off without something inside
-you. Come on over to the Palace and coal-up.”
-
-The Palace proved to be the identical small restaurant which had
-exhaled that enticing fragrance of coffee the morning of Joe’s arrival
-in Amesville. The repast, though simple, was well cooked, and Joe, who
-had forgotten all about supper, now discovered himself to be extremely
-hungry. Under the benign influence of a cup of steaming-hot coffee he
-confided the whole story to Mr. Chase and the latter gave flattering
-attention.
-
-“I remember reading in the paper about that cigar-stand of yours,” he
-said. “You had a box and let folks put their money in it, didn’t you?
-Did it work?”
-
-“Yes, but sometimes folks didn’t have the right change and then we lost
-a sale. So Jack and I decided we’d better hire someone to be there when
-we couldn’t. We neither of us liked the looks of Young very much, but
-we put in a cash register and thought it would be all right.”
-
-“What you needed, I guess, was a safe,” replied the agent drily.
-“Well, I hope you catch him, but, to be honest about it, Faulkner, I
-don’t believe you will. If he gets off at Upper Newton you’ll be able
-to trace him, I dare say, and you may if he goes on to Fostoria or
-Fremont; they’re smallish towns; but if he reaches Sandusky or Toledo
-it’ll be like looking for a needle in a haystack! What I’d do if I were
-you is go right to the police and put it up to them.”
-
-“Maybe that would be the best way,” agreed Joe doubtfully. “But,
-somehow, I don’t like to. Everyone would know about it, you see, and
-if――if Young didn’t exactly mean to pinch the money――――”
-
-“Didn’t mean to! You don’t suppose, do you, that it got stuck to his
-fingers and he couldn’t get it off?” asked the agent ironically.
-
-“No.” Joe flushed faintly. “What I mean is that it would be too bad to
-have him arrested, because he might never do a thing like that again.”
-
-“Well, please yourself. I don’t think he deserves much consideration,
-though.” He chuckled. “It would be a good plan to get him back here and
-let that landlady you told about get at him! I’ll bet that would be
-worse than a year in jail! If you’re through we’ll hike across and see
-if that answer has come.”
-
-There was some discussion as to who was to pay for Joe’s repast, but
-the agent finally silenced protest by agreeing to accept a handful of
-cigars if Joe’s mission succeeded. It was twenty minutes past seven
-by the waiting-room clock when they got back to the station and the
-message was awaiting them.
-
-“Passenger held ticket to Upper Newton, but stayed on and bought to
-Fremont. Made inquiry about east-bound trains tonight. If you want him
-pinched say the word. HARRIS.”
-
-“Fremont, eh?” Mr. Chase seized the time-table and studied it a moment.
-“He can’t get an east-bound until ten-fifty-five. There’s a local to
-Norwalk, though, at nine-forty-seven. He might take that. Or he may
-have asked about the east-bound trains just to throw us off the track!”
-He looked thoughtfully at Joe a moment. Then, decisively: “That’s
-his game all right! He means to take the eight o’clock express to
-Toledo! If he does――Hold on, though! Jim, ask how late Fourteen was at
-Fostoria. That express doesn’t wait but five minutes for connections
-and Fourteen was twelve minutes late at Mittenton. She might make that
-up, but she makes all stops and I don’t believe she will. If he misses
-the eight o’clock he can’t get west until ten-four.”
-
-“Fourteen was nineteen minutes late at Fostoria,” announced the
-assistant. “Left there at twenty-two.”
-
-“Good!” exclaimed Mr. Chase. “That’ll bring her to Fremont about
-eight-seventeen if she doesn’t lose any more time, and she’s likely to
-keep on losing now. If you take the thirty-six”――he glanced swiftly at
-the clock――“you’re due in Fremont at nine-forty-eight. That’ll give you
-sixteen minutes there before the west-bound pulls out. If he means
-to take that he will be waiting around the station and you’ll catch
-him.” He swung around toward the assistant. “Jim, send this to Harris
-at Fremont: ‘Did passenger get off at Fremont? If so, do you know his
-destination? CHASE.’ If Harris wires back that he got off this side
-or has gone on to Sandusky I’ll telegraph you at Fostoria. If you
-don’t get any message it’ll mean that your party got off at Fremont
-and Harris doesn’t know where he’s headed for. You’d better loosen
-up now and get your ticket. Your train will be here in four minutes.
-Forty-nine’s on time, isn’t she, Jim?”
-
-“O. T. at Fountain,” was the reply. “There she whistles now.”
-
-Five minutes later, having set Aunt Sarah’s mind at rest by telephone,
-Joe was seated in a day-coach and Number 49 was leaving the Amesville
-lights behind her on her northward journey.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-PURSUIT
-
-
-Forty-nine was a faster train than the one on which Mr. Chester Young
-had embarked and made but five stops between Amesville and Fremont,
-but to Joe it seemed that she took things in an irritatingly leisurely
-manner. With but sixteen minutes’ leeway at the end of his journey, he
-was momentarily in fear that something would happen to detain them, and
-he viewed his watch anxiously as, having made a perfectly ridiculous
-stop of four minutes at Folkstone, Forty-nine rolled off again into
-the night. However, a comparison of his time and that indicated on the
-time-table with which he had armed himself showed no discrepancy, and
-he settled back in his seat with a sigh of relief. Fostoria was the
-next stop and he anxiously awaited it, wondering whether he would find
-a message from the agent.
-
-Now that he was absolutely embarked on his mission he began to wonder
-if he was not undertaking a foolish and hopeless quest. It had looked
-quite simple and easy back there at Amesville, but doubts assailed him
-now. There were so many chances against success. Young might go on
-to Sandusky or he might lose himself in Fremont, deciding to remain
-the night there, or he might take that local to Norwalk. Even if Joe
-found him he might be no better off! How was he to persuade Young to
-give up the money? If he called on the police for help there might be
-all sorts of complications. Joe wasn’t certain that it would not be
-necessary for him to swear out a warrant first, by which time Young
-would be on his way to Toledo or elsewhere. He took out his money and
-counted it over. He had exactly five dollars and thirty-seven cents
-left after purchasing his ticket to Fremont. Of that amount a dollar
-and forty-five cents would be needed for his journey back to Amesville.
-A dollar-forty-five from five-thirty-seven left three dollars and
-ninety-two cents. On that he could travel something like a hundred and
-thirty miles, he reflected. Very well, then. He would go along with
-Young until that youth made restitution or until he had exhausted what
-money he had. After that he would telegraph to Aunt Sarah for money
-to get home with. In any case, the police were to have no part in the
-affair!
-
-The train slowed down while he was reaching this decision and the
-trainman, opening the door ahead, let in a gust of cold air and
-announced Fostoria. Another seemingly interminable wait, and then the
-train went on again, and just as Joe had given up hope of that message
-it came.
-
-“Telegram for Joseph Faulkner,” said the conductor questioningly as he
-came through the car.
-
-“That’s me, please,” said Joe.
-
-“Here you are, then, my boy.” Joe took the sheet of buff paper and
-read: “Amesville. Jos. Faulkner, on No. 49, Fostoria. Harris wires
-party got off Fremont and said he was going to Cleveland. Think that’s
-a stall. Toledo the best guess. Good luck. CHASE.”
-
-Joe folded the message and put it in his pocket. Undoubtedly Mr. Chase
-was right about it. Young would not announce his real destination and
-if he had said Cleveland it was safe to say that he meant to journey in
-another direction. Joe settled back again, tipped his cap over his eyes
-to keep the light out and tried to plan what he should do and say if
-he was lucky enough to discover Young at Fremont. In the end, though,
-he reached no very clear conclusion, and while he was still trying to
-formulate a speech with which to greet the absconding clerk the train
-rattled over the switches, green and purple and red and white lights
-flashed past the window and the trainman was bawling:
-
-“Fremont! Fremont! Change for Norwalk, Elyria, Cleveland, Toledo, and
-points east and west! This train for Sandusky and Port Clinton!”
-
-Joe followed a dozen other passengers through the car door and down
-to the platform. A glance at his watch had shown him that Forty-nine,
-in spite of her unhurried progress, had arrived exactly on time.
-Consequently he had sixteen minutes in which to search the station and
-platform before the west-bound express drew out. He still kept his
-cap pulled down in front, trusting that if Mr. Chester Young saw him
-he would not recognise him. The platform was fairly crowded and Joe
-made his way along to the door of the waiting-room, keeping as much as
-possible out of sight. It took but a moment to satisfy himself that
-his quarry was not inside. Then he went on to the end of the platform
-without result, retraced his steps, reached the other end and paused
-there in the shadow of a piled-up truck. Mr. Chester Young was not
-to be seen. Five minutes had already gone by. Joe’s hope began to
-dwindle. After all, he reflected, it had been too much to expect;
-given a start of two hours and a half, Young would have been an idiot
-if he had not eluded pursuit. And yet, on the other hand, what reason
-had Young to suppose that either of the boys whose money he had taken
-would go to the length of chasing him down? Joe didn’t believe that
-Young would give either him or Jack credit for having enough enterprise
-to do that. And if he didn’t really expect pursuit he wouldn’t try very
-hard to elude it.
-
-Joe gathered courage again and sought the ticket-window in the
-waiting-room. By this time the platform had almost emptied, but at the
-ticket-window several persons were in line and now and then the door
-opened to admit other passengers for the west-bound train. Joe gave up
-the idea of inquiring of the ticket-seller and inspected a time-table
-instead. The west-bound arrived in Fremont at nine-fifty-nine and
-remained there five minutes. It would come in, then, in just five
-minutes if it was on time. That put another idea in his head and he
-went back to the platform, keeping his eyes peeled, and sought the
-bulletin board there. “No. 16,” he read, “due 9:59, 15 mins. late.”
-
-That, he told himself, would give him more time. He remained where he
-was and kept his gaze on the door of the waiting-room. The platform
-began to fill up again. A four-car local pulled in, emptied its
-contents and puffed out. The clock pointed to one minute of ten now.
-It was chilly out there on the platform, for a north wind was blowing
-down from Lake Erie, and Joe’s thoughts travelled toward the gleaming
-coffee-urn he had glimpsed a few minutes back. For a moment he debated
-whether he should seek it and spend a nickel of his small fund, but
-he decided not to. If Young did put in an appearance he wanted to
-know it as soon as possible. And at that moment his gaze, travelling
-over the platform, alighted on the form of a man carrying a suit-case
-and making his way along toward where Joe was standing with his
-back to the building. For an instant Joe thought that the other had
-seen him and was going to speak. But it was the bulletin board that
-was the attraction, and Joe, turning aside to escape detection in a
-sudden spasm of nervousness, smelt the odour of a cigarette that was
-very familiar, heard the other’s grunt of impatience as he read the
-inscription on the board, and the tread of his feet as he strode away
-again.
-
-Then a mild panic seized Joe and he darted forward. Someone got in
-front of him. He dodged around and his heart sank, for his first
-anxious look failed to discover the form it sought. He was already
-regretting his timorousness when he spied his quarry entering the
-waiting-room. Joe sped after him. Mr. Chester Young was making his
-way to the ticket window. Joe made a detour and closed in behind
-him. At the window he stood at his elbow while he purchased a ticket
-for Toledo. Young had, it appeared, plenty of money, for he gave a
-twenty-dollar bill to the ticket-seller and caused that busy gentleman
-to scowl as he made change. Then Young turned away, walked to the end
-of a bench, set his bag down, and proceeded to place the bills and
-silver in his purse.
-
-Joe, his heart thumping hard, walked across to him, a slight smile
-around his mouth. When he was a yard away Young glanced up and a look
-of surprise and consternation came into his face.
-
-“Hello, Young,” said Joe pleasantly. “I was afraid I’d missed you.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-ON THE WEST-BOUND
-
-
-Young’s first act was to slip the purse into a pocket of his overcoat,
-even as his gaze darted stealthily around the waiting-room, and he
-summoned a smile, not a particularly gladsome smile, to his face. Joe
-noticed the eternal cigarette tremble between his lips. Then:
-
-“Why, hello, Faulkner,” said Mr. Chester Young. “How are you?”
-
-“All right, thanks,” replied Joe, his eyes unconsciously dropping for
-an instant to that pocket into which the fat purse had disappeared.
-“Sit down a minute, will you; I want to talk to you.”
-
-“Can’t do it,” answered the other briskly, buttoning his coat with none
-too steady fingers. “Fact is, I’m running up to Detroit and my train is
-leaving in about half a minute. I suppose you were surprised to find
-me gone, eh? Well, you see, I got a telegram this afternoon telling me
-that my father was very ill and I had to beat it off on the five-two. I
-was going to write and explain to you. I’ll do that, anyway. Glad to
-have seen you again. You keep that job open for me until Saturday and
-I’ll be back for it. Good-night.” He held out his hand and Joe took it.
-
-“Your train’s fifteen minutes late,” said Joe calmly. “So there’s no
-hurry. Sit down.” He still held Young’s hand and now pulled him gently
-toward the seat. Young resisted, but Joe’s clasp was a strong one, and
-unless he wanted to indulge in a scuffle there was nothing to do but
-give in. But it was a different Mr. Chester Young who faced Joe now. He
-tossed aside his cigarette and observed his captor defiantly.
-
-“Well, what you got to say, Faulkner?” he demanded.
-
-“I suppose you know why I’m here?” asked Joe.
-
-“Never mind what I know. Get down to business. What’s your game?”
-
-“My game’s to collect seventy-five dollars from you, Young. I ought to
-charge the costs of collection, too, I guess, but we’ll let that go. If
-you want to send nine dollars back by me to Mrs. Bennett, though, I’ll
-be glad to take it.”
-
-Young laughed softly. “And why should I hand seventy-five dollars over
-to you, Faulkner? What do you think I am, a national bank?”
-
-“If you want an itemized account,” responded Joe patiently, “I can
-oblige you. But your train will be leaving in about twelve minutes, you
-know. Roughly, the cigars and things you turned back to the dealers
-amounted to forty-seven dollars――――”
-
-Young’s expression changed enough to show that he had not expected Joe
-to have knowledge of that transaction.
-
-“And you got about thirty out of the cash register yesterday and today.
-That foots up to seventy-seven, and――――”
-
-“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” interrupted Young angrily,
-but without raising his voice. “Someone’s been stalling you. You’d
-better go back to Amesville and soak your head, sport. You’re too
-innocent to be so far from home.”
-
-“Ten minutes to train time now,” said Joe. “Come across, Young. You’re
-beaten, and you know it.”
-
-“Why, you silly chump, you can’t hold me up for money like this! I
-haven’t got that much, anyway, and if I had I wouldn’t be likely to
-pass it over to you. You must be crazy! You ought to get a job in a
-squirrel cage!”
-
-“If you haven’t seventy-five it’s going to be awkward,” said Joe
-reflectively. “I thought that probably you’d hand it over and there
-wouldn’t have to be any trouble about it. I hate to get my name in the
-papers, but if I have to all right.”
-
-“Quit your joking,” growled Young. “For two cents I’d knock your
-head off. There’s my train and I can’t stop here chewing the rag any
-longer.” He got up, bag in hand and grinned mockingly down at the
-other. “Give my love to Strobe when you get back, sport. So long.”
-
-Joe sighed regretfully and stood up. “All right,” he murmured. “There’s
-no hurry. I don’t mind seeing a little of the world while I’m at it. I
-dare say Toledo or Detroit is quite worth visiting.”
-
-Young, who had started toward the door, turned. “If you try to follow
-me,” he said menacingly, “I’ll do for you, kid!”
-
-“You won’t get a chance,” replied Joe simply. “I’d rather go home from
-here, of course, but if you want to be silly I’ll give you as far as
-Toledo to think it over.”
-
-“What would you do in Toledo?” sneered the other.
-
-“Have you arrested, of course. That’s the only thing I can do if you
-don’t make good before. I might have done it here, but I thought
-you’d prefer to keep out of trouble, and now”――he looked around the
-waiting-room――“there isn’t a policeman in sight.”
-
-“Have me arrested!” jeered Young. “Try it, kid! Go ahead and try it!
-Why, I never saw you before in my life! Tell that yarn to a cop and see
-what will happen.”
-
-“All right, let’s go out on the platform. There’s one there, I guess.”
-
-Young’s eyes dropped, but after an instant’s hesitation he turned
-toward the door again. “Sure! Come on and find him!”
-
-Joe kept close at his elbow and they passed through the door and into
-the throng on the long platform. The west-bound train had pulled
-into the station a few minutes before and outside all was bustle and
-confusion. Young paused and looked up and down the platform.
-
-“There’s a cop down there,” he exclaimed. “Come on and we’ll finish
-this up right now.”
-
-He pushed past Joe and made his way with difficulty in and out of the
-crowd. Joe followed close on his heels. Above the sound of escaping
-steam and the noise of the crowd he heard the cry of “All abo-o-oard!”
-He was quite certain that Young had not seen a policeman in the
-direction he was taking and was wondering whether the former meant
-to make a sudden dash for liberty when he was once free of the throng
-or, at the last instant, leap aboard the train. There was a sound of
-releasing brakes, at the other end of the long train a bell clanged
-warningly, and, an instant later, the cars began to move slowly past.
-They were out of the crowd now and near the end of the train. Joe saw
-Young turn his head a little in the direction of the moving train and
-something warned him to be on his guard. Young swung around and faced
-him.
-
-“I was sure I saw a cop down here,” he said puzzledly. “Where do you
-suppose he got to? See him anywhere?”
-
-Perhaps Young expected Joe to look away for a moment, for he suddenly
-shot out his right fist straight at the younger boy’s face. But Joe had
-not moved his gaze a fraction from Young’s countenance and he read what
-was coming before the arm was drawn back for the blow. Instinctively
-he dodged to the right and Young’s fist went harmlessly past his head.
-Then something took him in the knees――he surmised afterwards that it
-was Young’s suit-case――and he went staggering back against the station
-wall.
-
-When he recovered himself Young was darting across the platform, bag
-swinging wildly, and even as he started in pursuit his quarry tossed
-the suit-case onto the forward platform of the last car, trotted
-alongside and, aided by the porter, who had been in the act of closing
-the vestibule door, sprang aboard!
-
-A dozen strides told Joe that he could never reach that platform. The
-train, gaining speed every instant, was now moving rapidly out of the
-station and beside him the lighted windows of the last car slipped
-past. There was but one thing to do and he determined to do it, or, at
-least, make a try. Slackening his pace a little, he let the length of
-the car go past him and then, spurting desperately, heedless of the
-warning shouts of lookers-on, he managed to grasp the forward rail of
-the last steps!
-
-The speed of the train lifted him from his feet and hurled him against
-the rear railing. He made a clutch for this, but failed, and swung
-outward again, dangling, his feet trailing along the planks of the
-station platform. Cries of alarm arose from the watchers behind. But
-Joe held on, searched with his left hand for a hold, knocked his knees
-bruisingly against the car steps, got one on the lower ledge, and,
-somehow, dragged himself to his feet, clinging at last to the brass
-gate that closed the platform off and fighting for breath!
-
-For a full minute he clung there, dizzy, conscious of smarting
-contusions about his knees and of a dull ache in one hip where he
-had collided with the railing. Finally he climbed over the gate,
-tried the door and found it unlocked and stepped inside a handsome
-library-compartment in which a half-dozen men were seated about in the
-cane easy-chairs reading. His appearance elicited no surprise. Perhaps
-they thought he had been on the platform while the train was in the
-station. At all events, although the occupants of the compartment
-raised their eyes as the door opened, only one of the number displayed
-any interest in the boy’s advent.
-
-The single exception was a tall, loose-jointed man, who, with his chair
-turned toward the windows, sat with long legs doubled up almost to his
-chin and a book face-down in his lap. As the door opened he turned
-his head and looked attentively at the breathless and still somewhat
-white-faced youth who entered. Joe paused to take another full breath
-before undertaking the passage of the swaying car and in that moment
-his eyes encountered those of the man. The man raised a long, lean hand
-and beckoned with a finger. Joe made his way to him and the passenger,
-undoubling himself, stretched a foot out, hooked it about the leg of
-the next chair and pulled it beside his own.
-
-“Sit down,” he said. He had a remarkable voice, Joe thought, and
-equally remarkable eyes, very light blue-gray in colour, that somehow
-compelled obedience. Joe embarrassedly seated himself.
-
-“That’s a good way to get killed,” said the man calmly. “Don’t you know
-that?”
-
-“I suppose it is, sir. I didn’t stop to think much about it.”
-
-“I wouldn’t make a practice of it. I take it that the other fellow got
-aboard all right.”
-
-“The other fellow?” faltered Joe.
-
-“Yes, the――ah――the gentleman who tried to put his fist in your face.”
-
-“Oh! You saw――――”
-
-“I happened to be looking out the window. You side-stepped very neatly.
-Fellow a friend of yours?”
-
-“Not exactly.” Joe smiled faintly. There was an answering twinkle in
-the light blue eyes.
-
-“No? But you evidently couldn’t bear to part with him. It’s not my
-business, but I’m curious to know the story. Fact is, I make my living
-from stories. I get chaps like you to tell them to me and then I write
-them down and sell them. It’s a very simple way to make a fortune.”
-
-Joe smiled uncertainly. It sounded as if the other was joking, but his
-expression was quite serious. He had a lean, clean-shaven face, with
-many deep wrinkles. His nose was long and straight and his mouth rather
-large. Somehow, though, it was a nice face and inspired confidence.
-“There isn’t much story,” said Joe hesitantly. “The――the other fellow
-has something that belongs to me and I want to get it.”
-
-“Situation Number Three,” murmured the man. “Hackneyed, but capable of
-interesting and even novel variations.”
-
-“Sir?” asked Joe.
-
-“May I ask what is the value of the something the other chap has of
-yours? It’s interesting sometimes to know for what amount a person
-will risk his life. Personally I wouldn’t do it for less than two
-hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Not now, that is. There was a time,
-when I was considerably younger, when I dare say I’d have done it for
-considerably less; say for five thousand――or nothing at all. In your
-case now――――”
-
-“It’s only about seventy-five dollars,” replied Joe. “He――he stole it.”
-
-The man nodded. “Naturally. Seventy-five dollars, though, seems an
-inadequate reward for a broken neck. Any kind of a respectable funeral
-would cost all of that. I don’t see that you stood to win much.”
-
-“I’m afraid I didn’t stop to think of all that, sir. He jumped on the
-train and so I――I jumped on, too!”
-
-“I see. And now?”
-
-Joe hesitated. “I suppose I’ll have to get him arrested in Toledo if he
-won’t give it up without.”
-
-“Why didn’t you call a policeman at that last place?”
-
-“I didn’t see one. Besides, I thought he’d give the money back without
-any fuss when he saw that I had caught him.”
-
-“But he wouldn’t?”
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-“Perhaps he hasn’t got it with him. Perhaps he’s spent it.”
-
-“I don’t think so. You see――――”
-
-“But I don’t see,” said the man, with a smile. “I want to, though.
-Starting at the beginning, now――――” He doubled his long legs up
-again, clasped his hands around them and observed Joe expectantly
-and encouragingly. Joe hesitated, smiled, and told his story. During
-the recital the gray-blue eyes watched him intently and their owner
-maintained absolute silence. There was but one interruption, and that
-was when the conductor came in. Joe reached for his money, but the man
-gently pushed his hand away from his pocket.
-
-“Pardon me,” he said gently, “but it’s my party.” He took out a very
-stunning gold-trimmed pocket-book, pulled a five-dollar note from it
-and handed it to the conductor.
-
-“Where to?” asked the latter. Joe’s new acquaintance questioned
-silently.
-
-“Toledo, I guess,” said Joe. “Do we stop before we get there?”
-
-The conductor shook his head, made out the check, returned the change
-and took his departure.
-
-“I’m much obliged,” said Joe, “but I didn’t mean for you to pay my
-fare, sir.”
-
-“I know you didn’t. But as you’re my guest it was only right that I
-should. So you guessed that that punch was coming, did you?”
-
-“Yes, sir, sort of. And then, when he swung around his bag struck me on
-the knees and I went back against the wall.”
-
-“To be continued in our next,” murmured the other. He examined his
-watch. “We’ll be in Toledo in about ten minutes, I think. So perhaps
-you’d better go and see your friend. Afterwards come back here and tell
-me what the result is. It would be too commonplace to bring the police
-into this. So we’ll just put our heads together and find an artistic
-dénoûement.”
-
-Joe hurried through the three Pullman cars and through an equal number
-of day-coaches without finding Mr. Chester Young. But in the next, the
-smoking car, the sight of that gentleman rewarded him as he closed the
-door. Young was seated half-way along the car, smoking a cigarette and
-figuring on the back of an envelope. Beside him, on the other half of
-the seat, rested the suit-case.
-
-Joe walked quietly down the aisle. Young didn’t see him until he had
-laid hand on the bag. Then, with an alarmed grasp at the suit-case,
-Young raised his eyes. His jaw dropped ludicrously and the cigarette
-in his mouth rolled to the floor, and while Joe set the suit-case
-aside and seated himself Young continued to regard him in stupefied
-amazement.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-THE AMATEUR DETECTIVE
-
-
-“Well,” said Joe finally, “thought better of it, Young?”
-
-Young found his voice then and for at least two minutes gave vent to
-his feelings, which, judging from the expressions he made use of, were
-far from pleasant. When, at last, breath or fresh invectives failed
-him, Joe said: “Young, you might as well be sensible about this. We’ll
-be in Toledo in a few minutes and there’ll be an officer waiting for
-us. What’s the good of going to jail for seventy-five dollars? Why
-don’t you give me back what you stole and have an end of it?”
-
-Young, having regained his breath, indulged in a few more well-chosen
-remarks derogatory to Joe’s character. After which he declared that
-he knew nothing about the money, never saw it, didn’t have it, and
-wouldn’t give it up if he had!
-
-“Well,” said Joe impatiently, “you’ve had plenty of chances to give it
-back without fuss, Young. So don’t blame me for anything that happens
-after this.” He got up and went off down the aisle, leaving Mr. Chester
-Young scowling somewhat anxiously after him. In the library compartment
-Joe reported the result of his mission.
-
-“I guess,” he said regretfully, “there’s nothing to do now but try to
-get him arrested.”
-
-“Are you certain he means to get off at Toledo?” asked the man.
-
-“N-no, I’m not. He bought a ticket for Toledo, though.”
-
-“Hm. Well, we’d better be ready in case he does. I’ll go and get my
-things ready.”
-
-“Are you getting off there?” asked Joe as the other pulled his six feet
-and four or five inches from the chair.
-
-“Do you know,” replied the man, “I’m never certain when I start out
-where I’ll fetch up? It’s queer that way.” He stretched his long arms
-and smiled whimsically down at the boy. “Once I started off for Chicago
-and brought up in Buenos Aires. After all, it’s the uncertainty that
-makes life interesting, eh?”
-
-The stranger proceeded to the second car ahead, changed the cap he
-was wearing for a derby, strapped up a battered kit-bag, took his
-overcoat from the hook, and went forward again. Near the rear door of
-the smoking car was an unoccupied seat, and in this the two seated
-themselves. Joe pointed out the refractory Mr. Young to his companion,
-who examined what was to be seen of his back with a disappointed
-expression.
-
-“Very weak,” he muttered. “Hardly worthy of our talents, my friend.
-Observe the narrowness of the head between the ears. A sure sign of
-weakness of character. I have it myself. I think we can safely assume
-that he is not going to leave us here. If he were he’d be stirring
-around.”
-
-The train was running into the yard at Toledo now and many of the
-occupants of the car were donning coats and rounding up their luggage.
-The prediction proved correct. The train rolled into the station, but
-Mr. Chester Young kept his place. That he was nervous was evident from
-the manner in which he peered through the window and more than once
-looked anxiously back along the car. He did not, however, see Joe,
-since the latter was hidden by his companion. The train remained in
-the station for some five minutes before it started off again towards
-Detroit, and during that time, it is natural to suppose, Mr. Chester
-Young was by no means enjoying himself. It seemed to Joe that he could
-almost hear Young’s sigh of relief when the station lights slipped away
-from them again!
-
-Presently Joe’s companion, who had been silent most of the time during
-the stop, arose and signalled the former to follow him. Down the aisle
-they went. The seat directly in front of Young had just been vacated,
-and the tall man turned the back over, set his bag down, and seated
-himself facing Young, draping his overcoat across his knees and patting
-the seat beside him invitingly as Joe hesitated.
-
-“Sit down,” he said pleasantly. “That’s it. Now, then, here we are all
-together.” He turned to the astonished Mr. Chester Young and regarded
-him smilingly. “I guess,” he went on, “we can settle this all up nicely
-before we reach Detroit, eh? We’ve got a lot of time ahead of us and
-needn’t hurry.”
-
-“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” sputtered Young, darting a
-venomous look at Joe. “You haven’t anything on me.”
-
-“Now, now!” The intruder lifted a lean hand deprecatingly. “Don’t let
-us start off that way, my friend. Let’s be good-natured and just talk
-things over a bit. Why, bless you, I’m not complaining a mite, am I?
-When the chief called me up and said, ‘Beat it to the station and
-find a fellow named Young,’ I was just getting ready for a nice, long
-snooze. I was up most of last night and was counting a lot on my sleep.
-Well, it’s all in the day’s work with us Central Office tecs, and I’m a
-natural-born philosopher. So here I am, and no hard feelings.”
-
-The expression on Young’s face changed from angry defiance to alarm.
-He swallowed once with difficulty, almost losing his cigarette in the
-operation, and then his gaze darted quickly about as though seeking an
-avenue of escape. The man opposite leaned over and patted his knee.
-
-“Don’t think of that,” he said soothingly. “You couldn’t get away if
-you tried. Besides, you’d break your neck if you slipped off with the
-train going forty miles. Don’t try any foolish business, my friend.
-Just keep calm and good-tempered and let’s talk it all over nicely.”
-
-“I haven’t got anything to talk over,” muttered Young.
-
-“Sure you have!” The man chuckled. “You’ve got seventy-five dollars! We
-can do a lot of talking about seventy-five dollars, eh? Come on now,
-cards on the table, Young. What’s your idea of it?”
-
-“Idea of what?” Young was rather pale, but he managed to put some
-assurance into his question. The man lighted a cigar with much
-deliberation.
-
-“Why, I mean what are you thinking of doing? Now, here’s my advice
-to you. You don’t need to take it, you know. I shan’t mind if you
-don’t. If I were you I’d get together what you’ve got left of that
-seventy-five and hand it over. See? Then we’d just wish each other
-luck and I’d drop off at the first stop and report ‘nothing doing’ at
-the office. That would be the simplest thing. But you can come on back
-to Toledo if you want to and face the music. Only that makes a lot of
-trouble for you and me and this fellow here. You spend the night in a
-cell, I don’t get to sleep before one o’clock, and this fellow has to
-lie around until your case comes up in the morning. Still, I don’t want
-to persuade you against your own judgment. It’s all in the day’s work
-for me.” He leaned back and smiled pleasantly at Young.
-
-“You’ve only got his say-so for it,” exclaimed Young desperately. “Why,
-I never saw him until he came up to me in the station at Fremont! I
-don’t know anything about him. It――it’s a frame-up, that’s what it
-is! If you arrest me you’ll get into trouble. I――I’ve got friends in
-Toledo, and they’ll make it hot for you, all right!”
-
-“Sure, I know. We get that line of talk all the time,” was the
-untroubled response. “You know your own business better than I do. If
-you didn’t take this fellow’s money, why, all right.”
-
-“Of course I didn’t! Why, look here, I’ll show you!” Young pulled a
-purse from his pocket and eagerly spread its contents out. “That’s
-every cent I’ve got to my name! Seventy-five dollars! Gee, if I had
-seventy-five dollars I’d be back there in a Pullman, believe me!”
-
-“That’s so. Still, you might have spent the difference. How much you
-got there?”
-
-“Nineteen, about! I had twenty-five when I――when I was in Fremont, and
-this fellow”――he darted a triumphant look at Joe――“braced me for a
-dollar to get something to eat. Then, when he saw I had more, he began
-some wild yarn about my stealing money from him. Why, I guess he’s
-crazy!”
-
-The tall man turned and looked attentively at Joe. “Is that right?” he
-asked. “Did you get a dollar from him at Fremont?”
-
-Joe shook his head, not trusting himself to speak for fear he would
-laugh. The supposed detective sighed.
-
-“Well, I don’t know! Of course, if they find only nineteen dollars on
-you when they frisk you at the station――――”
-
-“Frisk me?” faltered Young.
-
-“Sure; search you; go through your clothes. And your bag.”
-
-Young shot a troubled look at the suit-case beside him. “No one’s got
-any right to search me,” he muttered. “And――and you can’t arrest me,
-either, without a warrant!”
-
-“Bless your heart, friend, if we waited for warrants we’d miss half the
-fun! Here comes the conductor. Better not buy beyond Monroe. We’ll get
-off there and beat it back.”
-
-“Why don’t you believe what I’m telling you?” demanded Young anxiously.
-“I never saw this fellow or his money. Say, you aren’t really going to
-take me just on what he says, are you?”
-
-“Orders are orders, friend, and I got mine,” was the reply. “But don’t
-you bother. If you didn’t get his money you’ll get off all right
-tomorrow morning. And we’ve got a good, comfortable jail in Toledo,
-too.”
-
-“That’s all right,” faltered Young, his gaze on the approaching
-conductor, “but――but if he tells them a pack of lies, how do I know
-they won’t believe him instead of me? You do yourself!”
-
-“Me? Pshaw, now, I don’t believe anyone. This fellow says you did
-and you say you didn’t. It doesn’t make a scrap of difference to me,
-anyway. It’s up to the judge in the morning.”
-
-“Well, but――say――――” Young leaned across confidentially, lowering his
-voice. “Now, look here, sir. I don’t want to have to go back to Toledo.
-I’m in a hurry. I’ve got a sick father in Detroit, I have. Now, say I
-give this fellow what I’ve got with me? Eh? I’d pay that not to have to
-go back. What do you say?”
-
-“Well, that’s up to him,” was the reply, “What do you say?” The man
-turned inquiringly to Joe.
-
-“If he will give me all the money he has with him, all right,” Joe
-answered. “I’ll be satisfied. I dare say he’s spent a good bit of it.”
-
-“But I’ve got to keep enough to pay my fare to Detroit,” said Young
-eagerly.
-
-Joe nodded. “All right. Pay your fare to Detroit and give me the rest.”
-
-“Well, that’s what I call sensible,” said the impromptu detective.
-“What’s the use of going to a heap of trouble when you can avoid it,
-eh? Hello, Conductor. One to Detroit and”――he looked a question at Joe.
-
-“I guess I’ll go to Detroit, too,” was the response.
-
-“Two Detroits, eh? All right, gentlemen. Thank you. Let me see,
-you’re――――” He observed the tall man doubtfully.
-
-“Yes, you know me,” was the response, accompanied by a nod toward the
-rear of the train.
-
-“I thought so.” The conductor returned the change to Young and to Joe
-and passed on. Young, his purse still in his hand, counted out the
-remaining contents of it.
-
-“There’s nearly eighteen dollars,” he said easily. “You might leave me
-enough for car-fare to get to my house with, but I won’t ask it.”
-
-“Keep out the silver,” said Joe, “and give me the bills.”
-
-Young obeyed and passed over a ten, a five, and two ones. “You’re
-witness that I paid this to him,” he challenged the third member of the
-group. The tall man nodded.
-
-“I’m witness you’ve paid him seventeen dollars,” he agreed. “Go ahead.”
-
-“Go ahead? What do you mean, go ahead?” asked Young with a scowl.
-
-“Why, I mean go ahead and pay him the rest of it.”
-
-“The rest of it! He agreed to take what I had here――――”
-
-“What you had with you, my friend,” interrupted the other. “Be good now
-and don’t let’s have any more trouble.” He reached across and pushed
-Young’s suit-case toward him. “Open her up, friend, and dig down!”
-
-“I tell you I ain’t got――――”
-
-“I heard you, too,” was the wearied response. “But we’ll take the money
-that’s in the suit-case, I think. Come across with it, Young!”
-
-“You’re a couple of thieves! There ain’t any money in there! I――――”
-
-“Seeing’s believing, my friend. Just open that up and show us.”
-
-“I won’t! You’ve got all you’re going to get!” He took the suit-case on
-his knees and hugged his arms over it. “What’s in here is mine!”
-
-“Oh, so there is some in there, eh?” The tall man chuckled. “Well, pass
-it over. Stand by your bargain and don’t play baby. And get a move on,
-too. We’ll be in Monroe in about ten minutes and then it’ll be too
-late.”
-
-Young glared at the other in impotent rage, but the make-believe Central
-Office man returned his gaze calmly, untroubledly, compellingly. For a
-long moment Young hesitated. Then, with a shrug of his shoulders, he
-tugged at the straps, opened the suit-case and drew a cigarette box from
-under the layers of clothing.
-
-“There,” he growled, and tossed the box into the man’s lap. Inside it
-were five folded ten-dollar bills. The man smoothed them out, counted
-them and passed them silently to Joe.
-
-“Fifty and seventeen is sixty-seven,” he said. “That good enough?” he
-asked.
-
-Joe nodded as he stowed the money safely in a pocket. “That’s near
-enough,” he said. “I ought to make him pay back what it’s cost me to
-get it, but I won’t.” He turned to Young. “I’m going to hand nine and a
-half of this to Mrs. Bennett,” he said. “She needs it more than I do, I
-guess.”
-
-Young sneered. “What do I care what you do with it? You’re easy,
-anyway. If I hadn’t been a fool I’d have got clean away.” Then, fearing
-perhaps that he had admitted too much, he glanced furtively at the man.
-“We’re quits now, ain’t we?”
-
-“Oh, yes, we’re quits. Or, rather, we’re more than quits, Young. I’m
-really in your debt for an interesting experience. It’s the first time
-I ever impersonated a detective and, although I may be taking too much
-credit, I think I did it rather well, eh?”
-
-“_What!_” squealed Young. “You ain’t a――a――――”
-
-[Illustration: “_What!_” squealed Young. “You ain’t a――a――――”]
-
-“My friend,” was the smiling reply, “I’m only a poor writer of tales
-who has been doing his best to relieve the tedium of a dull journey.
-The next time you have dealings with a detective, and something tells
-me there’s going to be a next time, you ask to be shown his badge.
-Never take anything for granted, my friend. It’s a wicked world and
-there are, unfortunately, folks in it ever ready to impose on the
-credulity of the young and――ah――innocent. Good-night, Mr. Young. And
-thanks for the amusement you’ve so kindly afforded.”
-
-They left him crumpled up in the corner, still holding his open
-suit-case, an expression of mingled wrath and incredulity on his face.
-
-Joe’s new friend led the way back to his chair in the Pullman, where
-he deposited bag and coat and again changed from derby to cap. Then
-they returned to the library car and viewed each other smilingly from
-opposite chairs.
-
-“I was right about the narrowness of the skull between the ears,”
-observed the man reflectively. “Mr. Young is weak, lamentably weak, and
-will not, I feel sure, ever make a success in his chosen profession.”
-
-“His chosen profession?” repeated Joe questioningly.
-
-“Yes, thieving. Perhaps it’s all for the best, however. Finding himself
-unable to prosper in that line, he may turn honest. Let us hope so. And
-now there’s one small formality we’ve neglected. Suppose we learn each
-other’s names?”
-
-“Mine is Joseph Faulkner, sir.”
-
-“And mine is Graham――J. W. Graham. The J stands for John and the W for
-Westley.”
-
-“Westley Graham!” exclaimed Joe. “Why, I know who you are! I mean I’ve
-read stories――――”
-
-“Yes, I don’t doubt it. You could scarcely fail to, my boy, for I
-write a horrible lot of them. I try not to, but they will out, like
-murder――or measles! Ever read any you liked?”
-
-“Why, I like them all!” cried Joe. “They’re dandy! There was one last
-month about a man who discovered an island that nobody knew about,
-and――――”
-
-“Yes, I recall that. Well, I’m glad you like them, my boy. I do myself,
-when I’m writing them, but afterwards I try hard to forget them.”
-
-“But why, sir?” Joe’s eyes opened very wide. “I wish I could write
-stories like those!”
-
-“Do you? I try to forget them because I come of Puritan ancestry. Know
-anything about the Puritans, Faulkner?”
-
-“Why, I know what it tells in the history, sir.”
-
-“Perhaps history doesn’t particularly emphasise the quality I have in
-mind, however. The Puritans were endowed with the ineradicable belief
-that whatever gave one pleasure in the doing was wrong. All my life
-I have been at odds with my inherited Puritan principles. Every time
-I write one of those stories Conscience sits at my elbow and weeps.
-I try to console myself with the promise that some day before I pass
-on I shall write something very dull and very learned and very, very
-difficult, something that I shall utterly detest doing. But never mind
-my soul worries now. Tell me something about you, Faulkner. What do
-you do when you don’t chase over the country apprehending defaulting
-clerks? You told me you were going to school, I think?”
-
-So Joe talked then and, prompted by questions, told more about himself
-than he ever remembered confessing to anyone. But Mr. Graham had a
-way of making one talk that Joe couldn’t resist. In the midst of his
-narrative the conductor bore down on them again and Mr. Graham, despite
-Joe’s protest, paid for the latter’s seat in the Pullman to Detroit.
-And, later, although it scarcely seemed a half-hour since they had
-parted from the overwhelmed Mr. Chester Young in the smoking car, they
-rolled into Detroit and it was after midnight!
-
-“When I come to this town,” said Mr. Graham as they waited in the
-vestibule for the train to stop, “I always put up at a small hotel on
-Grand River Avenue. It isn’t sumptuous, but it’s neat and quiet and
-they allow me to sleep late. Now, I propose that we walk leisurely up
-there, in order to stretch our legs, and that you become my guest for
-the night. In the morning we’ll have some breakfast together and then
-I’ll see you on your way back.”
-
-“But I don’t think,” stammered Joe. “I mean I oughtn’t to let you do so
-much for me, Mr. Graham! I’ve got enough money to pay――――”
-
-“The money you have, Faulkner, belongs, as I understand it, to the firm
-of Faulkner and――well, whatever the other chap’s name is. And if you
-dissipate it in riotous living you’ll be a defaulter yourself. No, I
-think――Look, isn’t that our friend Mr. Young there? It is. I wonder,
-now, what he’s going to do in this town without money. Excuse me a
-minute.”
-
-Mr. Graham left Joe at the car steps and dived hurriedly through the
-crowd about the train. Joe followed his course easily enough, since
-he was a head taller than most persons there, and so was witness to
-the little scene enacted on the platform beyond the crowd. Mr. Graham
-overtook Young there and for a moment they talked. Then the former put
-his hand in his pocket, drew forth his purse and passed some money to
-the other. After that, a hand on Young’s shoulder, Mr. Graham talked a
-moment longer. When he returned to Joe he picked up his bag and led the
-way out to Fort Street.
-
-“I’m wondering,” he said as they stepped out briskly in search of the
-hotel where one could sleep late in the morning, “how much a promise is
-worth, Faulkner.”
-
-“How much did you pay for it, sir?” asked Joe.
-
-Mr. Graham laughed softly. “So you spied on me, eh? Well, it didn’t
-cost me much, Faulkner, but at that I’m afraid I overpaid. Here we are.
-Four blocks up Second Street and we’re almost there. I’m beginning to
-be a little bit sleepy. How about you?”
-
-“I’m dead tired, sir.”
-
-“Are you? Well, you can sleep as late as you like in the morning!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-“BATTER UP!”
-
-
-Joe returned to Amesville at a little before three on Sunday afternoon.
-He had meant to get back much earlier, but several things had
-prevented. In the first place, he had unintentionally taken advantage
-of the privilege of late slumber afforded by the quiet hotel and had
-not awakened until after eight o’clock, a most unusual proceeding
-for Joe! But, late as he had been, he had dressed and was reading a
-morning newspaper before Mr. Graham appeared. Breakfast was a leisurely
-ceremony and a surprisingly pleasant one. Joe had never seen anyone
-pay so much attention to the ordering of a meal as the writer did, and
-when it came it was quite unlike any breakfast Joe had ever partaken
-of. Strawberries were served with the stems on, a half-dozen big,
-luscious ones arranged in a circle about a pyramid of powdered sugar.
-Joe waited, at a loss as to how to proceed, until Mr. Graham had shown
-the way by lifting a berry by its stem, dipping it in the sugar and
-transferring it to his mouth. His host, without appearing to observe
-Joe’s hesitation, explained that strawberries eaten in that way were
-far easier to digest than when accompanied by cream. Then had arrived,
-after finger-bowls, two half chickens, broiled and laid on toast,
-Julienne potatoes――only Joe called them “shoestring”――tiny crisp,
-crescent-shaped rolls, orange marmalade, coffee――this, too, without
-cream, fashioned on the table in some bewildering way with boiled milk
-and a tiny pat of sweet butter!――and, last but by no means least,
-golden-brown griddle-cakes served with honey.
-
-That had been a wonderful breakfast, indeed, and Joe had eaten until
-he felt ashamed of himself, but without, since they spent all of an
-hour at the table with the June sunshine lying across the white napery
-and glistening on the silver, any after discomfort. Later, when Joe
-had spoken of a ten o’clock train, Mr. Graham vetoed the plan at once,
-lightly but firmly, and they had taken a long walk, during which the
-writer, who seemed to know everything in the city worth seeing and the
-shortest way to reach it, had made Joe work his shorter legs to the
-utmost to keep up with his companion’s giant strides!
-
-At the station Mr. Graham had gone to the news-stand and doubtless
-vastly surprised the attendant by selecting four books from the pen of
-Westley Graham. From there they went to the ledge outside the ticket
-office and Mr. Graham wrote Joe’s name and his own on the fly-leaf of
-each and then piled them into the boy’s arms. After that, in spite of
-Joe’s earnest protests, he had bought the latter’s ticket and parlour
-car seat.
-
-“You can get some lunch at Toledo,” said Mr. Graham. “You’ll have
-twenty minutes there.”
-
-“I shan’t ever want to eat again,” replied Joe with a wistful
-recollection of that breakfast.
-
-The other laughed. “Oh, yes, you will. You’ll be hungry by the time you
-reach Toledo. If you’re not, you’re no real boy.” At the parlour car
-steps Mr. Graham shook hands warmly. “Good-bye, Faulkner,” he said.
-“We’ve had rather a jolly little party, haven’t we? I’ve enjoyed it,
-anyhow. Good luck to you, my boy. You’ll find an address in one of
-those books that usually gets me. Drop me a line some day and tell me
-how you’re getting on. Let me know who wins that game on Wednesday. I’d
-like to see that.”
-
-“I don’t suppose you ever get to Amesville?” asked Joe anxiously.
-
-“Amesville?” Mr. Graham smiled. “I get everywhere sooner or later,
-Faulkner. Whether I do or don’t, we’ll run across each other again some
-day. That’s my experience. It’s a wee bit of a world, after all, and a
-mighty nice thing about it is that friends are always meeting.”
-
-Joe had opened one of the books as soon as he had had his last glimpse
-of Mr. Graham on the station platform, and, in spite of the latter’s
-prediction, had not lunched at Toledo. Instead, he sat on a baggage
-truck and pursued the adventures of the hero of the tale with a
-breathless interest that almost lost him his train to Amesville!
-
-His first act when he got home was to seek Mr. Chase, the station
-agent. But that gentleman was not on duty and so Joe enclosed the
-borrowed money in an envelope, scribbled a note that recounted the
-success of his expedition and thanked Mr. Chase for his assistance, and
-left it at the office.
-
-It was a worried and anxious Aunt Sarah who met him at the door, and
-Joe’s first half-hour at home was devoted to a full and complete
-history of the past twenty-four hours, during which he was made to
-drink two cups of tea and eat three slices of currant cake. Then he
-called up the Strobes’ house, found that Jack had been asking for him
-and was at last able to see him, and forthwith hurried to the meeting.
-Jack was swathed in a dressing-robe and flanked by medicines and an
-atomiser when Joe found him, but he looked pretty healthy and declared
-that he felt fine today and was to go out tomorrow unless the pesky
-doctor changed his mind in the morning.
-
-“I was frightened to death I wouldn’t be able to play Wednesday,” he
-said; “but I can. Say, did Frank play Saturday?”
-
-“Yes, he did, Jack, for a couple of innings; no, three.”
-
-Jack groaned. “It’s all up, then! Bat will put him in Wednesday just
-out of kindness. Isn’t that rotten luck? Who invented quinsy, anyway?”
-
-“Edison, I suppose.”
-
-“Oh, it’s all well enough for you to grin, but I lose that wager and
-Handsome Frank will be more conceited than ever! And I won’t get that
-bat-case――――”
-
-“I’ll buy that for you if you’ll shut up about it,” declared Joe
-desperately.
-
-“I don’t want you to. I can buy it myself, for that matter. It――it’s
-beating Frank that matters.”
-
-“And only the other day you were saying that you were sorry for him!”
-
-“Well, I’m not today,” said Jack grimly. “Say, where were you all the
-morning? I thought surely you’d come around or call up.”
-
-“Most of the morning I was in Detroit,” answered Joe soberly.
-
-“In Detroit! What do you mean, Detroit?”
-
-“Detroit, Michigan. There isn’t any other, is there?”
-
-“You mean you’ve been to Detroit today?” asked Jack incredulously. Joe
-shook his head.
-
-“I came from there today. I went last night.”
-
-Jack stared unbelievingly. “What for? What’s the joke?”
-
-“For seventy-five dollars,” replied Joe, smilingly. “And I got it, or
-most of it.”
-
-“Say, are you batty?” demanded Jack impatiently. “What seventy-five
-dollars? What’s the big idea?”
-
-So Joe told his story once more, while Jack’s eyes got bigger and
-rounder and he hurled questions at the narrator breathlessly. And when
-he had heard all about it and had had every last detail explained to
-his satisfaction he deliberately kicked over a chair.
-
-“Wouldn’t that make you sick?” he exclaimed. “I have to go and get
-quinsy and lose all that fun! Of course Young couldn’t have sneaked off
-when I was well! Oh, dear, no! It had to be when I was laid up! Hang
-the luck, anyway! Say, if I’d been along, Joey, I’d have punched his
-head!”
-
-“Just as well you weren’t, then,” laughed Joe. “As it was, everything
-went off quietly and strictly according to the rules-book.”
-
-“Well, what do you know about it!” marvelled Jack. “Joey, when they
-named you ‘Lucky’ Faulkner they hit it just about right! Why, you
-didn’t have one chance in ten thousand to get that money back!”
-
-“I guess that’s so. Come to think of it, Jack, I didn’t get it back. It
-was Mr. Graham did it.”
-
-“Never mind who did it, you brought it home. Now what are we going to
-do for someone to look after the stand?”
-
-“I’ve been thinking that the best thing would be to put the tin box
-back for a few days. School closes Thursday, and after that we can look
-after it ourselves.”
-
-“All right. I dare say four days won’t lose us much. I wonder, though,
-how we’re going to like sticking around that lobby when the hot weather
-comes. That won’t be so pleasant, eh?”
-
-“I don’t believe the Adams Building will be hotter than any other
-place,” replied Joe. “Anyway, if we’re going to earn money we’ve got
-to work for it and put up with some things. I’ve got to be going now,
-Jack.”
-
-“What’s your hurry? I haven’t seen you for an age!”
-
-“I’ll drop around after supper if you can see folks then. But I want to
-go and give this nine-fifty to Mrs. Bennett. I guess she needs it worse
-than we do.”
-
-Jack was back in school Monday morning, a bit weak in the legs, but
-otherwise as good as ever, or so he declared. He had two days of
-examinations to make up and, since he would not have been of much use
-to the team anyway, he stayed away from practice that afternoon and
-toiled over his papers in a deserted class-room under the eagle eye of
-one of the teachers.
-
-On Tuesday there was only an hour of light work for the players. The
-Second Team ended its season with a game with the grammar school, which
-it won in a breath-taking tenth inning rally, and the diamond was given
-over to the workmen who were to put it in shape for the morrow’s battle.
-
-Petersburg descended on Amesville the next day at noon and went to
-lunch at the principal hotel. She arrived nearly a hundred strong and
-armed with a multitude of gay banners, which she waved jubilantly as,
-luncheon over, the team and its followers took trolley cars to the
-field.
-
-Petersburg had gone through a more than usually successful season,
-playing nineteen games, of which she had won twelve and tied one. In
-Calvert she had a pitcher of known ability who had last year proved a
-good deal of a riddle to Amesville’s batters, and her second-choice
-twirler, Gorman, had been coming fast during the last month and had
-only a week ago held Minton School to one hit. For the rest, Petersburg
-had an average team, with a fast, snappy infield and an outfield
-composed of two veterans and one newcomer. Petersburg had not gained
-the reputation of a hard-hitting outfit this year, but an analysis of
-the scores of past conflicts would have shown that she had usually
-secured hits when they were most needed.
-
-Amesville, however, went into the game that afternoon with more
-confidence than usual. There had been seasons when she had had a strong
-pitching staff and a poor fielding team, seasons when she had been
-brilliant at fielding and weak at batting, and seasons when she could
-bat anything and had no talent in the box. But this year it was felt
-that the Brown-and-Blue was an evenly rounded nine with good pitchers,
-clever fielders, and the ability to bat, and most of the local rooters
-who filled the two stands behind first base and flowed over on to the
-field held that it was less a question of which team would win than
-what the score would be!
-
-Petersburg had nearly an hour of practice before Amesville trotted out
-to claim the diamond, and by that time the audience had assembled and
-the stage was set. The umpire had been imported from Lima, and, since
-he had presumably never heard of either Amesville or Petersburg High
-School in his life, was credited with being about as impartial as an
-umpire could be. He was a small, rotund, business-like-looking chap who
-wore the regulation blue flannels and had a voice like a mild-mannered
-bull.
-
-Amesville’s batting order was as follows: Smith, s.; Morris, cf.;
-Strobe, lf.; Hale, 3b.; Peddie, 2b.; Faulkner, 1b.; Cummings, rf.;
-Craig, c.; Pollock, p. Toby Williams hoped to get into the game before
-the curtain fell on the afternoon’s performance, and probably Carl
-Moran entertained a similar hope, but it was pretty certain that Tom
-would remain on the mound as long as the opponent showed its teeth.
-On the bench, when the Amesville players trotted out for the opening
-inning, remained Williams, Moran, Foley, Loomis, Speyer, Johnson, a
-capable hitter from the disbanded Scrubs, and Buster Healey. Buster was
-not in playing togs, however, and he viewed the world from behind a
-pair of horn spectacles with thick lenses that gave him the appearance
-of a wise owl. Manager Mifflin was there, too, with his battered
-score-book spread open on his knees, and so was Coach Talbot, in
-low-voiced conversation with Mr. John Hall, a privileged well-wisher of
-the team.
-
-At half-past two to the second Mr. Reardon, the imported umpire,
-faced the stands in “big-league” fashion and announced the batteries
-in a voice that carried easily to the outfield fence: “Batthery for
-Amesville, Pollock and Craig! For Petthersburg, Calvert and Beale.
-_Batther up!_”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-BUNCHED HITS
-
-
-“First man, Tom!”
-
-Sam Craig pulled his mask down, looked over the field and then knelt
-behind the plate. Tom, his arms at his sides, watched, nodded, himself
-turned and viewed the fielders, and pulled his cap down a bit further
-over his eyes.
-
-“Come on, Tom! Let’s have him!” called Gordon Smith.
-
-“Here we go!” cried Hale.
-
-Tom’s hands came up to his chest, his foot went forward, cunning
-fingers wrapped themselves around the clean, new ball. At the plate
-Wiley, third baseman, squared himself and tentatively swung his bat.
-Behind him Captain Craig placed his feet apart and with slightly bent
-knees and out-thrust hands waited. Behind the third base line the
-visitors were still cheering and two noisy youths were encouraging the
-batsman from the coachers’ boxes. Tom’s arms went back above his head,
-his body lurched forward, his right hand shot out and a white streak
-sped away for the plate. A yellowish flash as the bat swept the air,
-the thud of ball against leather mitt, and the stentorian voice of the
-umpire:
-
-“Shtrike!”
-
-Amesville cheered, while a chorus of approval arose from the fielders,
-and Sam, thumping the ball into the deep hollow of his big mitten,
-cried to Tom: “That’s the stuff, Tom! Keep after him!”
-
-On first, or, to be exact, well off of first and behind the base-path,
-Joe added his encouragement to the rest and, a bit nervously, perhaps,
-hitched at his trousers, which didn’t need a particle of attention.
-Again the wind-up, leisurely and carefully made, and again the sphere
-flew toward the plate. It was a ball this time, and the batsman judged
-it correctly and let it severely alone. The cheers from the stands had
-died away now. A few latecomers were searching for points of vantage
-well back of the foul lines. The hot June sunlight fell radiantly on
-the backs of spectators and straw hats had already begun to wave in
-front of flushed faces. A second ball followed and then a drop that
-fooled the Petersburg third baseman brought the second strike.
-
-“Two and two!” called Sam cheerfully. “Let’s have him, Tom!”
-
-Joe, on his toes, waited. The ball shot forward again, the bat met
-it, Joe leaped to the base as Hale, coming in on the run, scooped up
-the trickling sphere and jerked it across the diamond. Squarely into
-Joe’s glove it thumped, his left foot touched the bag, and the runner,
-puffing hard, swerved aside.
-
-“One gone!” called Joe. “Let’s have the next one, Tom!”
-
-“One!” echoed Sam, pointing a dramatic fore-finger aloft.
-
-The next batsman, however, was not to be disposed of in any such
-manner. He picked out Tom’s second offering and sent it speeding
-between Smith and Peddie and raced across the first bag without
-challenge. The coachers redoubled their vocal energy. Twice Tom threw
-to Joe and twice the runner threw himself back to safety. Then Tom
-gave his attention to the Petersburg shortstop. With a strike and two
-balls on that youth, Tom tried to sneak one across in the groove. The
-shortstop was ready for it and the ball went screeching into right
-field. Cummings came in hard and got it on the bound, throwing to
-second. The first runner was on third by that time and Petersburg was
-yelling madly on stands and bench and coaching lines.
-
-The runner on first stole on the first ball, and Sam, faking a throw
-to second, slammed the ball to Tom. But the man on third held his
-place. With only one gone there was no use taking any chances. The
-Petersburg left fielder got himself into a hole at once, swinging twice
-at deceptive offerings. Then Tom wasted a couple and, finally, cut the
-outer corner of the plate and the batsman withdrew with trailing bat.
-But the trouble was not over yet, for the next man, the Petersburg left
-fielder, was more canny. He disdained the first two deliveries and the
-umpire called them both balls. Tom tried to fool him on an inshoot and
-again missed it. With three balls against him, Tom decided to pass the
-batsman and so threw wide and the bases were filled. A hit meant two
-runs, and the hit was forthcoming a moment later when the Petersburg
-captain, Lyman, picked out something to his liking and raised it far
-and high into centre field. Morris and Cummings both went after it,
-but it was Sid’s ball and Sid should have had it. But when it dropped
-it failed to find its way into his hands, and amidst consternation and
-gloom in the Amesville ranks, two tallies crossed the platter!
-
-There was a pathetic hunch to Sid’s shoulders as he turned and went
-back to his position. Then Smith’s cheerful “Never mind that, Sid!
-Here’s another!” went back to him and he waved a hand answeringly. They
-were certainly finding Tom Pollock, Joe reflected ruefully, and glanced
-toward the bench to see if Toby was pulling off his coat. But there was
-no sign of anxiety there. After all, Joe added consolingly, it was only
-the first inning. Then he stopped thinking about it and sprinted across
-the line to pull down a high foul and make the second out. Then came
-the Petersburg catcher, a sturdy chap with a knowing manner. But Tom
-was taking no chances and presently Beale walked to first, filling the
-bases for the second time, while Petersburg hissed.
-
-“What’s wrong with Pollock?” asked Beale as he put a foot beside Joe’s
-on the bag.
-
-“He’ll settle down in a minute,” answered Joe. “You chaps want to make
-the most of this inning.”
-
-“That’s what we’re doing,” replied Beale with a laugh.
-
-The Petersburg pitcher started toward the plate, but was called back,
-and a tall youth took his place. He was Middleton, a substitute
-fielder, Beale explained as he danced away to a lead. But for once a
-pinch-hitter remained true to precedent. Tom tried him on a low ball,
-put a wide one across and then offered one of his famous “knuckle
-balls.” That did the business effectively, for Middleton struck at it
-and Sam pulled it down three feet behind the plate. Amesville cheered
-encouragingly as their team flocked to the bench, and cheered again
-when Gordon Smith stepped to the plate. Gordon studied two deliveries
-from Calvert and heard one called a ball and the other a strike. Then
-he fouled off two, and, with the score two and one, landed against the
-next offering. But it went straight to shortstop and Gordon was an easy
-out. Sid Morris had no better luck, for his attempt at a hit was pulled
-down by centre fielder. Jack hit safely to left. Hale tried hard to get
-one out of the diamond, but failed, and Jack made the third out, short
-to second baseman.
-
-Tom found himself in the second inning and only four batsmen faced
-him, the third man up getting to first on a weak hit to Hale that
-jumped so erratically that it couldn’t be handled in time. Returning
-the compliment, Calvert also disposed of the enemy in three chapters,
-George Peddie striking out, Joe getting his base on balls, and Cummings
-and Craig fanning.
-
-In the next inning Petersburg got a runner to third, but had to leave
-him there when, with two down, Cummings gathered in an easy fly that
-just escaped going foul. Tom Pollock opened things up in Amesville’s
-half with a smashing drive into deep right that proved good for two
-bases and Amesville waved her banners and shouted wildly in acclaim.
-For awhile, however, it seemed that Tom would get no further, for
-Smith’s best was a fly to second baseman and Sidney Morris, after
-fouling off a half-dozen, struck out. It was Jack who was destined to
-bring in the first tally. With two strikes against him he slammed a
-sizzling hit down the first base line, scoring Tom and taking second
-himself. That unsettled Calvert for the moment and Hale bunted toward
-third and barely beat out the throw. By this time Amesville clamoured
-triumphantly and Sam, at first, and Smith, behind third, added strident
-voices to the bedlam. With Jack on third, Hale’s steal of second went
-unchallenged, Peddie swinging harmlessly. Calvert followed that strike
-with two bad ones, one of which nearly got past the catcher, and then
-made the mistake of offering a fast out-shoot. Peddie was fond of those
-and he liked the present one especially and sent it arching into short
-right field. The fielder scuttled in for it and Captain Lyman, at first
-base, ran back. But the ball fell harmlessly to earth between them, by
-which time Jack had scored, Peddie was on first, and Hale was sprinting
-for the plate. Unfortunately, Hale had pulled up momentarily at third,
-in spite of Gordon Smith’s urging, and Captain Lyman’s quick, straight
-throw to the catcher killed him off at the rubber.
-
-But the score was 2 to 2, and Amesville settled back with sighs of
-satisfaction. Five hits for a total of seven bases was not bad in
-three innings, they argued, and a continuation of such work should win
-without trouble. But a continuation proved more than the Brown-and-Blue
-was capable of. Petersburg went down one, two, three in the fourth
-inning, but so did Amesville, and in the fifth and sixth she did little
-better so far as results were concerned. Calvert, after that first
-wobble, settled down to a fine, steady pace. In the fifth Sid Morris
-got to first on a pass and in the next inning Joe made his first hit
-of the game when two were down. But, although Cummings was passed, Sam
-Craig struck out.
-
-In the meanwhile Petersburg made the most in the fifth inning of a
-pass, a hit, and an error. Tom presented the first batsman with his
-base, thereby paving the way for trouble. The left fielder, who had
-already tasted blood in the third, got a safe hit past Smith and first
-and second bases were occupied with no one out. Captain Lyman’s drive
-got away from Tom Pollock’s glove and when he had recovered it the
-bags were all filled. The next man proved an easy out, retiring after
-four pitched balls, but Catcher Beale came through with a two-bagger
-to right that brought two more tallies across. Tom struck out the next
-pair.
-
-With the score 4 to 2, Amesville, as has been said, failed to help
-herself to anything in that inning or the sixth. Calvert was pitching
-his best, and Calvert at his best was a hard nut to crack. Petersburg
-retired in order in the sixth and seventh, Tom adding two more
-strike-outs to his growing list.
-
-When Tom Pollock went to the bat in the last of the seventh Amesville
-arose and demanded runs. “Here we go! It’s the lucky seventh! All up,
-High School! Here’s where we tie them!”
-
-The cheer leaders waved their megaphones and brought forth lusty
-encouragement, while Petersburg, fewer in numbers, but possessed of
-willing lungs, hurled back defiance from across the sunlit field. Joe,
-squeezed in between Jack and Steve Hale on the home bench, listened
-silently to the discussion. Coach Talbot was talking to Gordon Smith,
-next up, but the others were having it back and forth. Manager
-Mifflin, his black-covered score-book across his knees, was biting the
-end of his pencil nervously.
-
-“Someone’s got to start something this inning,” Sid Morris was saying.
-“He’s going to crack again before this game’s over, you mark my words.
-And when he does we want to be right there, fellows.”
-
-“Calvert’s gone twelve innings,” said Speyer, “without shedding a
-feather, and it looks to me as if he could do it today.”
-
-“He’s shed a few feathers already,” replied Jack. “We had him going
-nicely in the third, and if things had worked right we might have been
-running yet. What happened at third, Walt?”
-
-“My fault, I guess,” answered Hale. “I thought that hit was shorter.
-Still, I ought to have kept on when Gordon was telling me to. I suppose
-I got rattled.”
-
-“I’ll take it on first,” said Captain Craig. “Toby, take third, will
-you? Play this safe till they’re two out and then pull ’em along any
-old way!” He walked apart with Gordon Smith and then hurried down to
-the coacher’s place at first, shouting encouragement to Tom as he went.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-A DOUBLE UNASSISTED
-
-
-At the end of the bench sat Frank Foley, sombre gaze fixed on the
-batsman. Joe, seeing him, felt sorry for his defeated rival and
-wondered whether Mr. Talbot would put him in for an inning or two. He
-surely deserved it, thought Joe. It was hard lines having to sit there
-all through the big game without even a chance to warm his hands! Only,
-he reflected, if Bat did put Foley in Jack would simply throw a fit!
-At that instant Foley happened to turn his head and their looks met.
-If Joe, averting his own glance quickly, had expected to find anger
-or antagonism in the other’s eyes he was wrong. Foley met his gaze
-impersonally, unsmilingly. They were still cheering lustily on the
-stands when Calvert shot the first ball in. Then the noise died away,
-to start again as the umpire called:
-
-“Ball!”
-
-Another ball followed. Then a low one that looked good from the bench
-and, it seemed, looked good to the umpire. Tom Pollock gravely studied
-the plate, took a new grip of his bat, and waited once more. The next
-effort was wild and the ball almost got past the catcher. Amesville
-shouted and jeered and the two coachers danced and waved and made noise
-any way they could. Again Calvert pitched, and once more the ball went
-wide.
-
-“Four balls!” announced Mr. Reardon. “Take your base!”
-
-“Here’s where we start!” cried Jack, excitedly thumping Joe’s knee. “Go
-to it, Gordon, old scout! You know what to do!”
-
-“It’s the lucky seventh!” shouted the Amesville rooters ecstatically.
-“Smash it, Smith! Bring him in! Here we go, fellows!”
-
-After that for many minutes Joe was too excited and anxious to know
-what was going on around him, although once during the subsequent
-proceedings he had a dim notion that Mr. John Hall and Coach Talbot
-were shaking hands and that Walter Cummings had fallen backwards over
-the water carboy! They were cheering Smith now as he faced the pitcher
-with “sacrifice bunt” written large all over him. But Smith wasn’t
-destined to sacrifice. Calvert simply wouldn’t allow him to. He,
-too, ambled to first on a free ticket and bedlam broke loose in the
-Amesville stand. Men on first and second with none out and only two
-runs needed to tie! This was indeed the lucky seventh! Then came Sid
-Morris, after listening to Coach Talbot’s instructions, and Sid was
-there to hit, as he soon proved by swinging at and missing two pretty
-poor balls. With the score two and two Fortune took a hand in the game.
-Calvert was noticeably nervous now and when the fifth delivery shot
-away from his hand――Sid had fouled off one――it twisted straight for
-the batsman. Sid stepped back, but not far enough, and the ball struck
-against his shoulder. He staggered away, dropping his bat and doubling
-over. But by the time two or three of his team-mates had leaped to his
-assistance he was smiling and shaking himself.
-
-“All right,” he said over his shoulder as he trotted down the line.
-
-That was the final undoing of Pitcher Calvert. Already the Petersburg
-second-choice twirler was warming up behind the first base stand.
-Calvert gazed anxiously around the filled bases, heard the frenzied
-shrieks of the coachers and the wild, disconcerting babel from the
-audience and faced the situation a bit wiltedly. The catcher soothed
-and reassured him from in front of the plate and Calvert tried his
-best to come back. But Jack laid his bat against the very first ball
-that came his way and off screeched a line drive into left field,
-scoring Tom and Gordon Smith and placing Sid on third. Jack took second
-on the throw-in.
-
-Petersburg seemed inclined to stop the game then and there and have a
-consultation about it, but Umpire Reardon would allow no post-mortems.
-Calvert, the center of a group of dismayed players, yielded the
-ball and took that long walk from the box to the bench, cheered
-perfunctorily by friend and foe, and Gorman took up his task. Gorman
-was younger, smaller, and slighter, and that he didn’t at once stop the
-havoc being worked against Petersburg’s defences was not to be wondered
-at. Hale was now at bat and the hoarse cries of the Amesville fellows,
-mingled with the shrill shrieks of the coachers, whirled and eddied
-about his head, imploring him to clear the bases. In the meanwhile
-Petersburg’s coaches were rushing about, giving instructions to the
-fielders. Gorman had speed and lots of it, and Petersburg cheered
-loudly when his first offering cut the middle of the plate and went for
-a strike. But Hale was not to be denied and a moment later he connected
-with one of Gorman’s benders and lifted a high fly to deep left. The
-fielder made a nice running catch of it, but could not prevent Morris
-from scoring and putting the game at 5 to 4!
-
-Amesville was now wild with excitement and hats and pennants were
-waving madly. With but one out and a run to the good the game seemed
-won, for Jack Strobe was dancing around at third ready to come across
-on any excuse. It was Peddie’s turn at bat, and Peddie, with one hit
-already to his credit, would surely be good for another. He was. The
-youngster let two wide ones go by him and then swung. _Crack_ went
-bat and ball and the latter sped out into left field, free of the
-outstretched hands of the fielders, and Jack romped home!
-
-Six to four now, and still there was only one down! Amesville sang
-and shouted and tramped and waved flags and acted like so many happy
-lunatics. Down at second Peddie sat on the bag and recovered his breath
-while Gorman and Beale met for a conclave between plate and mound and
-Joe, gripping his bat, strode resolutely to the plate. One hit had
-been the portion of “Lucky” Faulkner that day, and one hit seemed very
-little to him. And so, when the game went on, he watched and waited
-craftily until Gorman had tried him on two wide ones and scored a
-strike. Then Joe found what he wanted and smashed a drive toward third
-baseman and streaked to first. In the ordinary course of events that
-should have been the safest sort of a hit and should have put Peddie
-across the rubber and left Joe on first. But, as it happened, the
-Petersburg shortstop, who had all the afternoon performed remarkably,
-sprinted across at full speed and when the ball eluded the frantic
-glove of the third baseman, got it on the run and, without pausing,
-slammed it to the plate! It was a close decision, but the umpire waved
-Peddie out. That virtually ended the lucky seventh, for, although Joe
-went down to second and slid into the bag an instant ahead of the ball,
-Arthur Cummings proved an easy victim to Gorman’s skill.
-
-So, with the score 6 to 4, Petersburg went desperately to bat in the
-eighth while the shadows lengthened across the diamond and the crowd on
-the stand began to dribble down to the field. Joe made the first out in
-that inning, taking a sizzling drive from Catcher Beale’s bat. After
-that Smith threw out the centre fielder and Pitcher Gorman got a life
-on Smith’s fumble of his grounder and took second when Tom walked the
-head of the list. But it was all over a minute later when a fine throw
-from Sam Craig caught the pitcher flat-footed off second.
-
-Sam led off for Amesville in the last of the eighth with a scratch hit
-that proved too slow for second baseman to field in time. Tom Pollock
-tried hard to get a hit, but finally fanned, and Smith was instructed
-to lay down a bunt and advance Sam Craig. It was at this moment that
-Joe saw Jack leave his place on the bench and speak to Coach Talbot.
-What was said between them Joe couldn’t hear, nor did he try to, but
-after a minute of indecision Mr. Talbot nodded his head and Jack
-returned, looking, as Joe put it afterwards, like the cat who ate the
-canary.
-
-“You and Bat got it all settled?” asked Joe laughingly as his friend
-seated himself again.
-
-Jack rewarded Joe with a somewhat sheepish glance as he nodded. After a
-moment he said in a low voice: “It was about Frank.”
-
-“What about him?” asked Joe, his gaze travelling to the end of the
-bench.
-
-“You’ll see,” replied Jack evasively, and that was all that he would
-say.
-
-Smith’s attempt to bunt resulted disastrously, for Gorman would have
-none of it and the first thing Smith knew he was in the hole. When,
-with two strikes and two balls against him, he tried to hit it out,
-the ball slammed itself into Gorman’s glove and Smith was gone. Sid
-Morris had better success, for he got a hit down the alley between
-second and shortstop and Sam Craig advanced a base. Then Joe learned
-the meaning of Jack’s converse with the coach. Mr. Talbot recalled
-Jack, who had been half-heartedly awaiting his turn, and summoned Frank
-Foley.
-
-“Foley! Take a whack at it. Don’t try to bend your bat. Just put one
-through.”
-
-Foley, surprised, leaped from the bench. “Me, sir?” he asked.
-
-“Yes, hurry up!”
-
-Foley hurried. Half a dozen eager hands stretched out as many bats
-toward him and, seizing a couple, he hurried to the plate, swinging
-them eagerly. Foley’s friends in the stand applauded warmly and Joe
-viewed Jack quizzically as the latter sank back into his place on the
-bench.
-
-“Jack,” began Joe in a whisper.
-
-Jack turned on him rudely. “Oh, dry up!” he muttered.
-
-Joe chuckled. “You’re a fine hater, aren’t you?” he asked.
-
-“That’s got nothing to do with it,” declared Jack, reddening. “Frank’s
-worked hard all spring and――and he deserved to get in.”
-
-“Of course, he did, and I’m glad, Jack, mighty glad. And it was decent
-of you, you old poser, to let him――――”
-
-“Dry up and watch the game,” begged Jack. “I hope he does something!”
-
-And Frank, who seldom came through with a hit, today did the
-unexpected. There was a strike and two balls against him when he took
-his swing, a very healthy swing, too, and off went the ball straight
-down the first base line, and in raced Sam, while Amesville cheered
-another tally. But that was all, for Hale flied out to shortstop the
-next minute and the inning ended.
-
-“All over but the cheering!” cried Jack as the bench emptied. “Hold
-them safe, fellows! Don’t let anything slip, Joey! I’ll be watching
-you!”
-
-Frank Foley trotted into left field and Loomis to right. But those were
-the only substitutions made. Williams and Moran started to warm up by
-Coach Talbot’s orders, but no one looked to see either of them get in.
-The audience was already starting hesitantly toward the gates when
-Petersburg’s right fielder went to bat. Five minutes later many of them
-were scurrying back again, for, after fouling himself into the hole,
-the batsman waited and walked! Petersburg cheered hopefully then and
-when the next man up, who happened to be that redoubtable shortstop,
-smashed a two-bagger over Peddie’s head, advancing the first runner to
-third, she cheered quite madly!
-
-It was Amesville’s turn to show concern and Toby Williams began to
-put on speed where he was pitching to Jack Speyer. But Coach Talbot,
-contenting himself with low-toned instructions, never so much as looked
-at Toby. The opponent’s left fielder was replaced by a pinch-hitter
-and the pinch-hitter won fame and glory. He picked off Tom’s second
-offering and sent it well into short centre, scoring the men from third
-and second, putting himself on first and then going on to the next bag
-when the throw was made to the plate in the attempt to head off the
-shortstop!
-
-Seven to six! And only one out! No wonder Captain Craig walked down
-to the box, amidst the joyful hoots of the visitors, and held a
-consultation there with Tom. No wonder that at last Mr. Talbot’s glance
-wandered along to where Williams and Moran were pitching. Scattered
-cries of “Take him out!” arose from the uneasy throng back of the first
-base line. But the demand was not general and, in any case, Coach
-Talbot had other intentions.
-
-Captain Lyman came to bat, a little pale, very determined, and――struck
-out! It was Amesville’s turn to jeer and rejoice and she did so,
-relieving over-strained nerves. Tom faced the Petersburg second baseman
-calmly and smilingly, got his signals from Sam, wound up and pitched.
-
-“Shtrike!” called the umpire, and the Brown-and-Blue partisans shouted
-stridently. Then came a ball, a low one and wide, followed by a second
-strike across the centre of the plate and shoulder high. Another ball
-then, for Tom could afford to waste one, and then――――
-
-Well, then there was a _crack_ of wood against leather and the batsman
-was speeding to base! The ball went to Tom, but it was bounding crazily
-and he could only knock it down in his first stab for it. When he had
-it in hand he turned toward third to head off the runner from second
-and saw that that youth had changed his mind and was on his way back
-to the middle sack. Wheeling quickly, Tom pegged to Joe at first. But
-by that time the Petersburg runner had rounded first and was dashing
-to second. Joe caught and turned to throw to Smith when he caught
-sight of the further runner doubling back. Sensing a mix-up, Joe held
-the ball and raced for second base. The two runners reached that bag
-simultaneously. The expected happened. Plump into each other they went
-with a bang that doubtless made them see stars as they each rolled
-apart, clear of the base! Joe threw himself between them, his hand with
-the ball shot to the left and then to the right, and the game was over!
-
-Two minutes later, when Joe, with most of the others who had been
-caught on the field, was being borne crazily about through the
-laughing, jubilant throng, swaying and pitching above a sea of faces,
-his bearers brought him for a moment abreast of Frank Foley and their
-glances met.
-
-“That was great, Faulkner!” called Frank warmly.
-
-But Joe, smiling happily, shook his head.
-
-“Only luck,” he answered.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes:
-
- ――Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
-
- ――Except for the frontispiece, illustrations have been moved to
- follow the text that they illustrate.
-
- ――Printer’s, punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently
- corrected.
-
- ――Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.
-
- ――Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: First Base Faulkner</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Christy Mathewson</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: Charles M. Relyea</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 31, 2021 [eBook #64435]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIRST BASE FAULKNER ***</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="cover">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="cover" title="cover" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="noi halftitle">FIRST BASE FAULKNER</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_frontis">
- <img src="images/i_frontis.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_327">Sensing a mix-up, Joe held the ball and raced for
-second base</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h1>First Base Faulkner</h1>
-
-<p class="p2 noic">BY</p>
-
-<p class="noi author">CHRISTY MATHEWSON</p>
-
-<p class="p2 noi works">AUTHOR OF</p>
-
-<p class="noic">CATCHER CRAIG,<br />
-PITCHER POLLOCK, <span class="smcap">Etc.</span></p>
-
-<p class="p4 noi works">ILLUSTRATED BY</p>
-
-<p class="noi illustrator">CHARLES M. RELYEA</p>
-
-<div class="pad4">
-<div class="logocenter" id="logo">
- <img src="images/logo.jpg" alt="logo" title="logo" />
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noic"><span class="adauthor">GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP</span><br />
-PUBLISHERS      NEW YORK</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="noic"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1916, by<br />
-DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY, Inc.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<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">THE NEW HOME</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">II</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">JOE LOOKS FOR WORK</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">16</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">III</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">AUNT SARAH IS SURPRISED</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">28</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">IV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">JOE FINDS A FRIEND</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">45</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">V</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">HOCKEY AND JUST TALK</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">59</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">JOE HAS AN IDEA</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">74</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">PARTNERS</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">86</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">MR. CHESTER YOUNG</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">102</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">IX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">IN THE BASEBALL CAGE</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">117</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">X</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">STRIKING A BALANCE</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">130</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">HANDSOME FRANK</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">138</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">OUTDOOR PRACTICE</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">151</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">THE FIRST GAME</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">161</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">A TRY-OUT AT FIRST</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">178</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">BUSTER DROPS OUT</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">190</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">FOLEY IS WORRIED</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">208</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">IN THE TWELFTH INNING</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">221</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">EMPTY BOXES</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">233</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">JOE ACCEPTS A LOAN</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">243</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">PURSUIT</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">258</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXI</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">ON THE WEST-BOUND</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">265</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXII</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">THE AMATEUR DETECTIVE</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">278</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">“BATTER UP!”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">296</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXIV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">BUNCHED HITS</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">307</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">A DOUBLE UNASSISTED</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">317</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" summary="Illustrations">
-<col style="width: 80%;" />
-<col style="width: 20%;" />
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#i_frontis">Sensing a mix-up, Joe held the ball
-and raced for second base</a> (Page 327)</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="#i_p054">Joe found himself still in the company
-of Strobe</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">54</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#i_p214">“He thinks he’s a pretty swell little
-dresser, Foley does”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">214</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#i_p290">“<em>What!</em>” squealed Young. “You
-ain’t a—a——”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">290</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[1]</span></p>
-
-<p class="noi title">FIRST BASE FAULKNER</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[2]</span></p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br />
-<small>THE NEW HOME</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Lucky” Faulkner arrived in Amesville, Ohio,
-shortly before seven o’clock of a cold morning in
-the first week of January. He wasn’t known as
-“Lucky” then, and he certainly didn’t look especially
-fortunate as he stepped from train to platform
-and blinked drowsily at this first sight of
-the strange city that was to be his new home.
-He had travelled nearly six hours in a day-coach,
-sleeping fitfully with his head on the arm of the
-car seat, and his clothes were creased, his hair
-rumpled and his face tired and pale under its
-coating of train dust. He wore a good-looking
-gray ulster and a cap to match, and carried a big
-valise whose sides bulged tremendously and
-which bore the inscription “J. C. F.” in neat old
-English characters.</p>
-
-<p>On the platform he set the bag down, took a
-trunk-check from a pigskin purse and gazed inquiringly
-about him. The passengers who had
-left the warmth of the cars had hurried to the
-restaurant to make the most of the ten minutes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span>
-allowed them for breakfast, and it was much too
-early in the day for loiterers. It was a boy of
-about his own age—which was sixteen—who,
-stopped in his mad career of dragging a mail-sack
-along the platform, supplied information.</p>
-
-<p>“Huh? Expressman? Sure! Around back.
-Ask for Gus Tenney.”</p>
-
-<p>Gus, a small, crabbed-looking negro, was loading
-a huge sample-trunk into a ramshackle dray
-when discovered.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got a trunk on this train,” said the new
-arrival. “Will you take it to Miss Teele’s, on
-Brewer Street, please? And how much will it
-be?”</p>
-
-<p>“Brewer Street? What’s the number, Boss?”</p>
-
-<p>“One-twenty-eight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fifty cents, Boss.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll give you a quarter. Can you get it there
-by eight?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t tote no trunk ’way up to Brewer Street
-for no quarter, Boss. You’ll have to get someone
-else to do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. Is there anyone else around?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t see anyone, Boss. Reckon I’se the only
-one here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you take my trunk up there first and let
-me ride along with you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I got to deliver this to the Commercial House
-first, Boss.”</p>
-
-<p>“How far is that from Brewer Street?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Most a mile.”</p>
-
-<p>“And Brewer Street’s near the City Hall, isn’t
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it ain’t so mighty far.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the Commercial House is near the City
-Hall, too, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Boss,” said the negro peevishly,
-“maybe you-all knows my business better’n I do
-and maybe you don’t. I got to deliver this trunk
-right away ’cause the gentleman’s waitin’ for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. Don’t let me keep you, then.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you give me that check an’ I’ll get your
-trunk up just as soon as I can, Boss.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’ll wait for someone else. It isn’t worth
-more than a quarter.”</p>
-
-<p>The negro hesitated and muttered as he gave
-the sample-trunk a final shove. Then: “All
-right, Boss, I’ll do it. Seems like folks nowadays
-don’t want anyone to make a livin’, I ’clare to
-goodness it does!”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you get it there by eight?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll get it there in half an hour, Boss, if that
-old mare of mine keeps on her feet. It’s powerful
-mean goin’ today, with so much snow.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span></p>
-
-<p>The boy yielded his check, saw his trunk put on
-the dray, and, after getting directions from the
-negro, trudged across Railroad Avenue and
-turned eastward past the row of cheap stores and
-tenement houses that faced the tracks. There had
-been a good deal of snow since Christmas and it
-was still piled high between sidewalk and street.
-Overhead a gray morning sky threatened more,
-and there was a nip in the air that made the boy
-set his bag down before he had traversed a block
-and slip on a pair of woollen gloves. Behind him
-a door opened and an appealing odour of coffee
-and cooking was wafted out to him. As he took
-up his valise again he looked wistfully through
-the frost-framed window of the little eating-house
-and mentally counted up his change. Evidently
-the result prohibited refreshment, for he went on,
-the heavy valise dragging and bumping as he
-walked, and at last turned the corner and struck
-northward. Here, after a short distance, the
-buildings became comfortable homes, many of
-them surrounded by grounds of some extent.
-From chimneys the gray smoke was ascending in
-the frosty air and now and then the tantalising
-vision of a breakfast table met his sight. The
-sidewalks hereabouts had been cleaned of snow
-and walking was easier, something the boy was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span>
-heartily glad of since that valise was gaining in
-weight at every step.</p>
-
-<p>It was not, he was thinking as he trudged along,
-a very inspiriting morning on which to arrive in a
-strange place. Perhaps if the sun had been shining
-Amesville would have seemed less gloomy and
-inhospitable to him, but as it was he found nothing
-to like about the city. On the contrary, he
-was convinced that it was far inferior in every
-way to Akron and that he would never care for
-it, no matter how long he stayed there. However,
-he forgot to take into consideration the fact that
-he was tired and hungry and cold, neglected to
-realise that almost any city, approached from
-its least attractive quarter and viewed in the dim
-light of a cloudy Winter morning, looks far from
-its best.</p>
-
-<p>He set his valise down at a corner, rubbed his
-chilled fingers, and went on once more with his
-burden in the other hand. He was wondering now
-what Aunt Sarah would prove to be like. He had
-never seen her to remember her, although his
-mother had tried to recall to his recollection an
-occasion when Aunt Sarah had visited them in
-Akron. But that had been when he was only four
-or five years old and his memory failed him.
-Aunt Sarah was not a real, bona-fide aunt, for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span>
-she was his mother’s half-sister. But she was
-the closest relative there was and when it had
-become necessary to break up the home in Akron
-it was Aunt Sarah who had written and offered
-to take them in. There would be practically no
-money left after his father’s affairs had been settled
-up and all the bills paid, and Mrs. Faulkner
-had been very glad to accept Aunt Sarah’s hospitality
-for her son. She herself had obtained,
-through the influence of a friend of her husband’s,
-the position of housekeeper in a hotel in Columbus.
-Since her son could not be with her she had
-decreed that he was to go to Amesville, finish his
-schooling there, and remain with Aunt Sarah until
-enough money had been saved to allow of the
-establishment of a new home. He had pleaded
-hard to be allowed to leave high school and find
-work in Columbus, but Mrs. Faulkner wouldn’t
-hear of it.</p>
-
-<p>“You may not realise it now, dear,” she had
-said, “but an education is something you must
-have if you are ever to amount to anything. And
-there’s just one time to get it, and that’s now. If
-you study hard you’ll be through high school next
-year. You’ll be eighteen, and that’s quite young
-enough to start earning a living. Meanwhile Aunt
-Sarah will give you a good home, dear. I shall<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>
-pay her a little, as much as I can afford, so you
-needn’t feel that you are accepting charity. You
-must try to be nice to her, too. She—she doesn’t
-always show her best side, unless she’s changed
-since I saw her last, but she’s as good as gold,
-for all her sharp tongue. And I want you to try
-and remember that, dear.”</p>
-
-<p>He recalled the words now and tried to banish
-the mental picture of Aunt Sarah which he had
-unconsciously drawn: a tall, thin, elderly maiden
-lady with sharp features and a sharper tongue,
-dressed in a gingham gown of no particular colour
-and wearing a shawl over her shoulders. But the
-preconceived vision wouldn’t be dispelled, and
-consequently, when a few minutes later, the door
-of the little yellow house with chocolate-coloured
-trimmings opened to his ring and Aunt Sarah
-confronted him, he was not a bit surprised. For
-she was, with the exception of gingham dress and
-shawl, so much like what he had imagined that it
-was quite as if he had known her for a long time.</p>
-
-<p>“This is Joseph?” she asked as he took off his
-cap on the threshold. “You’re late. I’ve been
-expecting you for a quarter of an hour and breakfast
-is stone-cold likely. Come in, please, and
-don’t keep the door open. Take your bag right
-upstairs. It’s the first room to the left. When<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-you’ve washed, and dear knows you need it, come
-right down again. I dislike very much having
-folks late to their meals.”</p>
-
-<p>During this announcement, uttered levelly in
-a sharp voice, she shook hands rather limply,
-closed the door, pushed the rug straight again
-with the toe of a sensible boot and smoothed the
-front of her black merino gown. That black
-gown was the only thing that didn’t fit in
-with his picture of her and he rather resented it
-as, tugging his bag behind him, he went up the
-narrow, squeaky staircase. That colourless gingham
-he had mentally attired her in would, he
-thought, have been less depressing than the black
-merino.</p>
-
-<p>The room in which he found himself was small,
-but, in spite of the cheerless weather outside,
-bright and homelike. There were some surprisingly
-gay cretonne curtains at the two windows,
-the paper was blue-and-white in a neat pattern,
-the brass knobs of the single bed shone like globes
-of gold, and Joe noted with approval that the gaslight
-was convenient to the old-fashioned mahogany,
-drop-front desk. On the table at the head of
-the bed were three books, disputing the small
-surface with a candlestick and a match-safe, and
-while he hurriedly prepared for breakfast he stole<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-time to examine the titles. “Every Boy’s Handy
-Book,” he read, “Self-Help,” “Leather Stocking
-Tales.” He smiled as he turned away. On the
-walnut bureau—it had a marble slab and an oval
-mirror and a lidded box at each side—was a Bible.
-He made a quick toilet and returned downstairs.
-A pleasant fragrance of coffee guided him to the
-dining-room. Aunt Sarah was already in place
-and a large black cat was asleep on a chair between
-the windows.</p>
-
-<p>“That will be your place,” said Miss Teele,
-indicating a chair across the table with a nod.
-“Do you eat oatmeal?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, ma’am, thanks,” replied Joe as he settled
-himself and opened his napkin. Aunt Sarah
-helped him and passed the dish. A glass percolator
-was bubbling at her elbow and, after serving
-the oatmeal, she extinguished the alcohol flame
-underneath and poured a generous and fragrant
-cup of coffee. Joe ate hungrily and finished his
-oatmeal in a trice. He would have liked more, but
-none was offered. Then an elderly, stoop-shouldered
-woman entered with a quick, curious
-glance at Joe from a pair of faded eyes and deposited
-a platter of bacon and eggs before her
-mistress.</p>
-
-<p>“This is Mildred Faulkner’s boy, Amanda,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
-announced Miss Teele. “You may hand the
-coffee, please.”</p>
-
-<p>Amanda nodded silently in reply to Joe’s murmured
-“How do you do?” and quickly departed,
-to return a moment later with a toast-rack. Joe
-had never seen toast served that way before and
-was viewing it interestedly when Aunt Sarah,
-having served him with a generous helping of
-bacon and a fried egg, and tasted her coffee, remarked:</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll find the food here plain but wholesome,
-Joseph. And I guess you’ll always get enough.
-If you don’t I want you to tell me. I don’t hold
-with skimping on food. How’s your mother?”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite well, thank you. She goes to Columbus
-today.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Sarah sniffed. “Going to be a housekeeper
-at a hotel, she wrote me. A nice occupation,
-I must say, for a Teele!”</p>
-
-<p>“There didn’t seem to be much else,” replied
-Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“She might have come to me. I offered her
-a home. But she always was dreadfully set and
-independent. Well, I hope she don’t regret it.
-How was it your father didn’t leave anything
-when he died?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know, Aunt Sarah. We always<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
-thought there was plenty of money before. But
-there were a good many bills, and the paper
-hadn’t been paying very well for a year or two,
-and so——”</p>
-
-<p>“I told your mother when she was so set on
-marrying John Faulkner that he’d never be able
-to provide for her. I’m not surprised.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he did provide for my mother,” replied
-Joe indignantly. “We always had everything we
-wanted.”</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t got much now, have you? Giving
-your folks all they want while you’re alive and
-leaving them without a cent when you die isn’t
-exactly my idea of providing.” Aunt Sarah
-sniffed again. “Not that I had anything against
-your father, though. I always liked him. What
-I saw of him, that is, which wasn’t much. He
-just wasn’t practical. Are you like him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Folks say I look like him,” said Joe
-coldly. He felt resentful of Aunt Sarah’s
-criticism.</p>
-
-<p>“So you do, but I guess you’ve got more spunk
-than he ever had. You’ll need it. When do you
-propose to start in school?”</p>
-
-<p>“As soon as I can. I thought I’d go and see the
-principal this morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“The sooner the better, I guess. Idleness<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-never gets a body anywhere. Will you have another
-egg?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, please.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad you haven’t got a finicky appetite.”
-She added bacon to the egg and pushed the toast-rack
-nearer. “Will you have another cup of coffee?”
-Joe would and said so. It seemed to him
-that he would never get enough to eat, which,
-considering that he hadn’t had anything since
-six o’clock the night before wasn’t surprising.
-Aunt Sarah nibbled at a piece of toast and sipped
-her coffee and was silent. Joe felt that he ought
-to attempt conversation and presently said:</p>
-
-<p>“You have a very pleasant home, Aunt Sarah.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not complaining any,” was the brief response.</p>
-
-<p>A minute later he happened to look up and
-caught her gaze. He may have been mistaken,
-but it seemed to him that she was regarding his
-performance with knife and fork quite approvingly.
-When he had finished, Aunt Sarah said
-grace, which to Joe’s thinking was turning things
-around, and arose.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you brought a trunk with you?”
-she questioned.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, ma’am, and it ought to be here. The expressman
-said he would get it around by eight.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Like as not it was Gus Tenney,” said Aunt
-Sarah. “If it was it won’t get here until afternoon,
-I guess. He’s the most worthless, shiftless
-negro in town.” But Aunt Sarah, for once, did
-the coloured gentleman an injustice, for even as
-she finished he backed his team up to the sidewalk.
-“You show him where to put it,” she instructed,
-“and tell him to be careful and not bump the
-walls. And don’t pay him a cent more than a
-quarter of a dollar, Joseph. Have you got any
-money?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, ma’am, thanks.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Sarah, who had begun to look around in
-a mildly distracted way for her purse, stopped
-and said “Hmph!” Then, “Well, don’t you give
-him more than a quarter, now!”</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes later Joe was unpacking his belongings
-and whistling quite merrily. After all,
-things weren’t so bad, he reflected. Aunt Sarah
-was cross-grained beyond a doubt, but she gave
-a fellow plenty to eat!</p>
-
-<p>“And good eats, too!” he murmured contentedly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br />
-<small>JOE LOOKS FOR WORK</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Joseph Faulkner?” inquired Mr. Dennison, the
-high school principal.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m very glad to meet you, Faulkner.” They
-shook hands and Mr. Dennison pulled a chair
-nearer the big, broad-topped desk. “Sit down,
-please. You wrote me a week or so ago from
-Akron, I believe, and enclosed a letter from your
-principal, Mr. Senter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have it here, I think.” Mr. Dennison
-searched for a moment in the file at his elbow
-and drew forth the two communications pinned
-together. He read Mr. Senter’s letter again
-and nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“I see,” he murmured. “Now tell me something
-about yourself, my boy. Your father has
-died recently?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, in November.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m very sorry. I think now I recall reading<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
-of his death in the paper. He was the editor of
-the <cite>Enterprise</cite>, I believe?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. He owned the paper, too. That is,
-most of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your mother is alive, I trust?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you have brothers and sisters?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir; there’s only me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see. I rather expected your mother would
-call with you, Faulkner. It’s the customary
-thing. We rather like to meet the pupils’ parents
-and get in touch with them, so to speak. Possibly
-your mother, however, was not feeling well
-enough to accompany you this morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“She isn’t here, sir. She’s in Columbus. You
-see, father didn’t leave much money and so she—she
-took a position in Columbus and sent me here
-to live with an aunt, a Miss Teele, on Brewer
-Street. Mother wants me to finish high school.
-I thought I’d ought to go to work, but she
-wouldn’t let me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dear, dear!” said Mr. Dennison sympathetically.
-“Most unfortunate! Well, I think your
-mother is quite right, my boy. You’ll be better
-fitted to face the—er—the responsibilities of life
-if you have supplied yourself with an education.
-Hm! Yes. Now, let me see. I gather from what<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
-your former principal writes that you have been
-a very steady, hard-working student. You like
-to study and learn, Faulkner?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. That is, I like to study some things.
-And, of course, I want to learn. Mr. Senter said
-he thought there wouldn’t be any trouble about
-my getting into the junior class here, sir. I’ve
-only missed about seven weeks.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see.” Mr. Dennison thoughtfully folded the
-letters in his hands, observing Joe the while.
-What he saw prepossessed him in the boy’s favour.
-Joe was large for his age, sturdy without being
-heavy, and had the healthful colouring and clear
-eyes of a youth who had divided his time fairly
-between indoors and out. You wouldn’t have
-called him handsome, perhaps, for his nose wasn’t
-at all classic, being rather of the tip-tilted variety,
-and his chin was a bit too square to meet the
-Greek standard of beauty. Perhaps it was the
-chin that had suggested spunk to Aunt Sarah.
-Anyhow, it suggested it to Mr. Dennison. In fact,
-the whole face spoke of eager courage, and the
-gray eyes looked out with a level directness that
-proclaimed honesty. For the rest, he had light-brown
-hair, so light that one hesitated at calling
-it brown, but had to for want of a better description,
-a forehead that matched the chin in breadth<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-and gave the face a square look, and a mouth
-that, no matter how serious the rest of the countenance
-was, seemed on the point of breaking into
-a smile. On the whole, summed up the principal,
-a healthy, honest, capable appearing boy, and one
-likely to be heard from.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Mr. Dennison after a moment’s
-silence, “yes, I think the junior class is where
-you belong. At least, we’ll try you there. I don’t
-want to set you back unless it’s quite necessary.
-You may have to work hard for a month or so
-to catch up, but I think you can do it. How old
-are you, Faulkner?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sixteen, sir, on the fourth of last August.”
-Other questions were asked and answered and
-the answers were entered on a filing card. Then:</p>
-
-<p>“Can you start in tomorrow?” asked the principal.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, I’d like to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well. Then in the morning report in
-Room D to Mr. Whalen. School takes in at eight-thirty.
-Here is a list of books and materials
-you’ll need, many of which you doubtless have
-already. Any books or stationery you need can
-be obtained at the outer office. Books may be
-purchased outright or rented, as you please.
-That’s all, I think. I hope you’ll like us here,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-Faulkner. You must get acquainted with the
-other boys, you know, and then you’ll feel more
-at home. Come and see me in a day or two and
-tell me how you are getting on. And if there’s
-anything you want to know or if there’s any help
-you need don’t hesitate to apply to Mr. Jonson,
-my assistant, or to me.” Mr. Dennison shook
-hands again and Joe, armed with the printed list
-of books and materials, expressed his thanks and
-passed out into the corridor. A gong had sounded
-a moment before and the stairways and halls
-were thronged with students. No one, however,
-paid any attention to Joe and he left the big
-building and walked across the town to Main
-Street and turned southward, his eyes busy as
-he went.</p>
-
-<p>The sky was still gray and Main Street was
-ankle-deep in yellow-brown slush, and Amesville
-did not, perhaps, look its best even yet. But the
-buildings, if not so fine as those of Akron, were
-solid and substantial for the most part, and the
-stores presented enticing windows and leavened
-the grayness with colour and brightness. It
-seemed, he decided, a busy, bustling little city—he
-had already ascertained that it boasted a population
-of twenty-five thousand and the honor of
-being the county seat—and it didn’t require any<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-great effort of imagination to fancy himself back
-in Akron.</p>
-
-<p>Joe not only observed but he studied, and for
-a reason. To let you into a secret which he had
-so far confided to no one, Joe had no intention
-of allowing his mother to pay Aunt Sarah for his
-board and lodging for very long. He meant to
-find some sort of work that he could perform
-before and after school hours. What it was to
-be he did not yet know, although there was one
-job he expected to be able to secure if nothing
-more promising offered. He was fairly certain,
-although his mother had not taken him into her
-confidence to that extent, that hotel housekeepers
-did not receive munificent wages, and he realised
-that his mother, used to having practically every
-comfort money could buy, would find it hard
-enough to get on without having to send a part
-of her monthly salary to Aunt Sarah.</p>
-
-<p>The job that he felt pretty certain of obtaining
-was that of delivering newspapers. Joe was well
-enough acquainted with the newspaper business
-to know that it was always difficult for circulation
-managers to find boys enough to keep the routes
-covered. He had had some experience of the
-kind, for when he was in grammar school he had
-delivered the <cite>Enterprise</cite> all one Summer and part<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-of a Winter, until, in fact, a chronic condition of
-wet feet caused his mother to interfere. His father
-had not at any time approved of the proceeding,
-for Mr. Faulkner had been a man of position in
-Akron and it had seemed to him that in carrying
-a newspaper route Joe was performing labor beneath
-him and, perhaps, casting aspersions on the
-financial and social standing of Mr. John Faulkner.
-Joe had had to beg long for permission and
-his father had agreed with ill-grace. The fun
-had soon worn off, but Joe had kept on with the
-work long after his chum, who had embarked
-in the enterprise with him, had given up. It
-didn’t bring in much money, and Joe didn’t need
-what it did bring, since his father was lavishly
-generous in the matter of pocket-money. It was
-principally the fact that his father had predicted
-that he would soon tire of it that kept him doggedly
-at it when the cold weather came. Getting
-up before light and tramping through snow and
-slush to toss twisted-up papers into doorways
-soon became the veriest drudgery to the fourteen-year-old
-boy, and only pride prevented him from
-crying quits. When, finally, wet boots and continual
-sniffling caused his mother to put her foot
-down Joe was secretly very, very glad!</p>
-
-<p>But delivering newspapers wasn’t the work he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
-wanted now, unless he could find none other, and,
-as he went down Main Street just before noon,
-his eyes and mind were busy with possibilities.
-To find a position as a clerk was out of the question,
-since he wouldn’t be able to work during the
-busiest hours. Some labor that he might perform
-after school in the afternoon and during the evening
-was what he hoped to find. And so, as he
-passed a store or an office, he considered its possibilities.
-He paused for several minutes in front
-of one of the big windows of Miller and Tappen’s
-Department Store, but finally went on with a
-shake of his head. If it had been before instead
-of after the holidays he might have found employment
-there as an extra hand in the wrapping or
-shipping department, but now they would more
-likely be turning help away than taking it on. A
-drug store on the corner engaged his attention
-next, and then a brilliantly red hardware store
-across the street, a hardware store that evidently
-did a large business in athletic goods if one was
-to judge by the attractive display in one broad
-window. But Joe couldn’t think of any position
-in one or the other that he could apply for. Further
-along, a handsome new twelve-story structure
-was nearing completion, and he stopped
-awhile to watch operations. It was the only “skyscraper”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-in sight and consequently stuck up
-above the surrounding five- and six-story edifices
-like, to use Joe’s metaphor, a sore thumb!
-It was a fine-looking building, though, and he
-found himself feeling a civic pride in it, quite as
-though he was already a settled citizen of the
-town. Well, for that matter, he told himself, he
-guessed Amesville wasn’t such a bad place, after
-all, and if only he could find a job that would bring
-him in enough to pay Aunt Sarah for board and
-lodging——</p>
-
-<p>But at that moment the noon whistle blew, a
-bell struck twelve somewhere and Joe turned back
-toward Brewer Street. Aunt Sarah had enjoined
-him to be back before half-past twelve, which was
-dinner time, and he recalled her assertion that
-she disliked having folks tardy at meals. So his
-search for employment must wait until later.</p>
-
-<p>His walking had made him hungry again and he
-viewed veal chops smothered with tomato sauce
-and the riced potatoes piled high in the blue dish
-and the lima beans beside it with vast approval.
-There was a generous plate of graham bread, too,
-and a pyramid of grape jelly that swayed every
-time Amanda crossed the floor. He satisfied Aunt
-Sarah’s curiosity as to the interview with the
-high school principal while satisfying his own<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-appetite. Aunt Sarah said “Hmph!” and that
-she’d heard tell Mr. Dennison was a very competent
-principal. Thereupon she went into the
-past history of the Amesville High School and its
-heads, and Joe, diligently addressing himself to
-the viands, told himself that his Aunt Sarah
-seemed astonishingly well informed on the subject.
-Later he discovered that Aunt Sarah was
-well informed on most subjects and that when it
-came to town news she was better than a paper!</p>
-
-<p>“I had Amanda bake an apple pudding,” she
-informed him presently, when his appetite began
-to languish. “I guess boys usually like something
-sweet to top off with. Do you eat apple
-pudding?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Aunt. Most any kind of pudding. But
-don’t you—don’t you go to any trouble about me,
-please. I—I can eat whatever there is. I’ve got
-a fine old appetite.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hmph! Well, I guess you won’t go hungry
-here. Not that I intend to have things much different
-from usual, though. I don’t hold with humouring
-folks’ notions about food. Food is food,
-I say, so long’s it’s nourishing and decently
-cooked. Your mother, though, was always a great
-one for strange, outlandish dishes and I suppose
-you’ll miss ’em. Well, all I can say is plain food’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-what I was brought up on and I’ve never seen
-anyone hurt none by eatin’ it. I’ve noticed that
-folks who like messed-up dishes generally have
-dyspepsia and are always doctoring themselves.
-Amanda, bring in the pudding.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Sarah seemed slightly surprised when,
-the apple pudding partaken of, Joe announced
-that he thought he’d go and have a look around
-town. “Well,” she said, “you’re old enough to
-look after yourself, I suppose, but for goodness’
-sake, don’t go and get run over or anything!
-Main Street’s getting to be something awful,
-what with these automobiles and all. Seems like
-a body just has to take his life in his hands when
-he goes there nowadays. If those awful things
-don’t run you down they scare you to death, and
-if they can’t do any worse to you they spatter
-you with mud. Gracious sakes, I haven’t dared
-shop on the other side of Main Street for ’most a
-year!”</p>
-
-<p>Joe didn’t confide to her his real errand, just
-why he didn’t exactly know. Perhaps he had a
-dim notion that Aunt Sarah wouldn’t approve of
-his engaging in work that might keep him away
-from home at strange hours of the day or night.
-She watched his departure doubtfully from the
-front door and when he was almost to the corner<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
-of the next street called after him to go to Rice
-and Perry’s and get himself a pair of overshoes.
-“Tell Mr. Perry they’re to be charged to me, and
-see that he gives them to you big enough. If you
-don’t watch him he’ll fit you too snug and then
-they’ll wear out right away!”</p>
-
-<p>Joe didn’t obey instructions, however. Somehow
-he wasn’t yet ready to become indebted to
-Aunt Sarah, and, besides, he didn’t need overshoes
-to get around today. His boots were heavy-soled
-and as nearly waterproof as any “guaranteed
-waterproof” boots ever are. During the
-afternoon he made several inquiries for work. A
-photographer declined his offer to do errands
-after three o’clock in the afternoon, a haberdasher
-failed to discern the benefits to accrue—to
-him—from giving employment to the applicant,
-and four other merchants of different trades answered
-to similar effect. Just before dusk Joe
-sought the office of the Amesville <cite>Recorder</cite>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br />
-<small>AUNT SARAH IS SURPRISED</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The <cite>Recorder</cite> was an evening paper and came off
-the press at half-past three, and for that reason
-Joe had made it first choice over its morning
-rival, the <cite>Gazette</cite>, which was delivered in the early
-morning. Fortunately, he found the circulation
-manager still on duty when he reached the office,
-and although that gentleman, who wore a nervous,
-harassed look, scowled upon him fiercely at
-first, the scowl gradually faded as Joe stated his
-mission. Unknown to him, Joe had timed his
-application extremely well, since one of the carriers
-had that very afternoon been given his dismissal,
-and it didn’t take more than four minutes
-to secure what he was after. The route was not
-a long one and paid less than Joe wished it did,
-but the manager promised to give him something
-better if he proved satisfactory and the opportunity
-occurred. Joe was supplied with a list of
-subscribers on Route 6, told to be on hand
-promptly next afternoon at three-thirty, and took
-himself away well satisfied. The work would<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
-bring him only three dollars a week, which was
-much less than he believed himself capable of earning,
-but the route would take but two hours from
-the time he left the newspaper office and he would
-be through well before supper time. Besides, Joe
-had no intention of delivering papers very long.
-Sooner or later, he believed, a better chance would
-offer. Until then, though, Route 6, with its resultant
-three dollars a week, would be a heap
-better than nothing.</p>
-
-<p>He told Aunt Sarah about it at the supper table
-and Aunt Sarah, instead of expressing disapproval,
-appeared much pleased. Only, she insisted,
-the work mustn’t be allowed to interfere
-with his studies. Joe assured her that it wouldn’t,
-since he would have his evenings free. After supper
-he went upstairs, opened the mahogany desk
-and wrote a long letter to his mother. He tried
-to make it sound very brave and cheerful, but I
-don’t think Mrs. Faulkner had much difficulty in
-reading between the lines and reaching the conclusion
-that Joe was a little bit homesick and
-lonely and that he missed her a lot. He told
-about his interview with Mr. Dennison and about
-the employment he had secured.</p>
-
-<p>“It pays only three dollars,” he wrote, “but
-it won’t take more than an hour and a half or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-two hours and I won’t have to work on Sunday
-because the <cite>Recorder</cite> doesn’t have any Sunday
-edition. I’m going to pay two and a half of it
-to Aunt Sarah every week and so you won’t have
-to send her very much, will you? I’d give it all
-to her, but I guess I’d better keep a half-dollar
-out for pocket-money. Then you won’t have to
-send me any money. After a while I’m going to
-get something to do that will pay me more and
-maybe then you won’t have to send Aunt Sarah
-a cent. Aunt Sarah looks like she would bite my
-head off if I brought any dirt into the house on
-my shoes and she talks mighty crusty, but I guess
-she’s a pretty good sort after all. She had
-Amanda cook me a bully apple pudding for dinner
-today. I’m pretty sure she did it on my account,
-because she didn’t touch it herself. Amanda is a
-funny old woman who does the cooking and so on.
-She’s about sixty, I guess, and hasn’t but three or
-four teeth and sort of mumbles when she talks.
-When I say anything to her she looks scared and
-beats it.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Dennison gave me a list of the books I
-have to have and I’ve got them all but one. I can
-rent that and it won’t cost much. I’ve still got
-nearly four dollars of what you gave me and you
-don’t need to send me any more. I guess I’m<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-going to like this place very much when I get used
-to it. Aunt Sarah wanted me to get a pair of
-overshoes and charge them to her, but I didn’t
-like to, and besides my boots are all right without
-overshoes. Maybe I’ll get a new pair of rubbers
-some time. The ones I brought with me are sort
-of leaky. But I won’t need any other things like
-clothes or shoes or anything for almost a year, I
-guess, so you’re not to worry about me.”</p>
-
-<p>He spent all of an hour over that letter and
-used four sheets of Aunt Sarah’s old-fashioned
-blue-ruled paper, and when it was finished and
-ready for the mail his watch told him that the
-time was half-past nine. He was opening his door
-to go downstairs and say good-night to Aunt
-Sarah when he heard her coming up.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you’ll have enough covers,” she said
-as she came to the doorway. “If you haven’t
-you’ll find another comfortable on the closet shelf.
-Breakfast’s at seven, but if you’re very sleepy
-tomorrow I guess it won’t matter much if you
-don’t come down right on time. Amanda can
-keep something hot for you. ’Twon’t hurt her a
-bit. I suppose you’ll be wanting a bath every
-morning, and I haven’t any objection to your
-having it, only remember the water’s metered
-and don’t let the plug slip out. It’s awful the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-way they charge for water nowadays! First thing
-we know they’ll be putting the air on a meter,
-too, just as likely as not! Well, I hope you sleep
-well and get rested, Joseph. Good-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-night, Aunt Sarah.” Joe hadn’t had any
-intention of doing what he did then, but writing to
-his mother had left him a little bit lonesome,
-and—well, acting on the impulse of the moment,
-he kissed Aunt Sarah on the cheek! I fancy he
-was almost if not quite as surprised as Aunt
-Sarah when he had done it. That Aunt Sarah
-was surprised was very evident. Indeed, something
-very like consternation was expressed on
-her countenance.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Hmph!</em>” she snorted. “Hmph! Well, I declare!”</p>
-
-<p>Joe, embarrassed himself, drew back over the
-threshold, smiling uncertainly. Aunt Sarah, at
-a loss for further words, stared a moment, said
-“Hmph!” again in more thoughtful accents and
-turned away. But when she had gone a few steps
-she paused. “I told Amanda to boil you a couple
-of eggs for breakfast,” she announced, “but
-maybe you don’t care for eggs. Some folks
-don’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, I do. Thanks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, all right, then. I don’t hold with humouring<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-folks with finicky appetites, but if there’s
-anything you’d rather have than the eggs——”</p>
-
-<p>“There isn’t, really. The eggs will be fine!”</p>
-
-<p>“Humph! Good-night.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Sarah’s door closed softly down the hall
-and Joe smiled as he shut his own.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe she minded it at all,” he murmured.
-“I guess—I guess she’s never had very
-many kisses!”</p>
-
-<p>His first day of school passed without special
-incident. Several fellows spoke to him at recess
-and satisfied their curiosity about the newcomer,
-but none of them appealed greatly to Joe and he
-made no effort to pursue the acquaintances. At
-half-past three he was on hand at the <cite>Recorder</cite>
-office, received his bundle of papers, slung them
-at his side by a strap which he had bought on the
-way from school, and started out. His route
-began nearly a mile from the newspaper building
-and it would have saved time if he had taken a
-car on Main Street. But to do that every day
-would cost him thirty cents, and thirty cents
-taken from three dollars leaves quite a hole! So
-he tramped the distance instead. He had already
-studied his route on a map in a copy of the city
-directory and so had little difficulty. He did,
-however, manage to leave out a block and had to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>
-go back to it, but that wouldn’t happen the next
-time. The district was one well over on the west
-side of town and was inhabited for the most part
-by factory workers, although there were a few
-blocks of more prosperous patrons. As a general
-thing the sidewalks were ill paved and held pools
-of slush or water, and Joe’s “waterproof” boots
-belied their reputation by the time he had tossed
-the last of his papers on the final porch. But
-damp feet didn’t trouble him greatly and he
-made up his mind to change to a pair of slippers
-as soon as he got home. It was quite dark by the
-time he reached the little house in Brewer Street
-and Aunt Sarah had begun to be concerned, and
-when he entered the front door, she appeared
-quickly from the sitting-room.</p>
-
-<p>“I was beginning to think one of those automobiles
-had got you,” she said tartly. “It’s ’most
-six o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry to be so late,” replied Joe, “but
-it took longer today than it will the next time. I
-missed some houses and had to go back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I suppose I don’t need to get anxious
-about you, but——” Aunt Sarah paused, her
-gaze on his feet. “Joseph Faulkner, look at your
-boots!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, they’re sort of damp, aren’t they?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Sort of damp! Land sakes, they’re sopping
-wet! You go right upstairs this very minute and
-take them off and change your socks and dry your
-feet and—and don’t you dare come home tomorrow
-without those overshoes I told you to get
-yesterday! First thing I know you’ll be down
-with pneumonia! Tramping around through the
-slush with nothing on but a pair of fancy
-shoes!”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re supposed to be waterproof, Aunt,”
-said Joe meekly.</p>
-
-<p>“Supposed to be! Maybe they are supposed
-to be, but they ain’t. Now, don’t stand there
-arguing, but do as I say, Joseph. I may not be
-your mother, but I guess I know wet shoes when
-I see them! And I don’t see why you didn’t get
-those overshoes like I told you to yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t feel that I could afford them,” said
-Joe defensively, “and I didn’t just like to take
-them as a gift.”</p>
-
-<p>“Land sakes, you needn’t be so proud, Joseph
-Faulkner! I guess I’m your mother’s own half-sister,
-ain’t I? And if that doesn’t give me the
-right to buy a pair of overshoes for you—Hmph!
-I never heard such foolishness. You take those
-wet shoes off directly and I’ll bring you up a cup
-of ginger-tea. Fine thing it would be to have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>
-you sick on my hands the very first week you’re
-here!”</p>
-
-<p>Joe went up, smiling to himself, and obeyed
-directions. Only, when Aunt Sarah passed a
-steaming cup of ginger-tea in to him he didn’t
-play quite fair. He gave it a trial, to be sure,
-but he didn’t like it, and if Aunt Sarah had been
-listening she might have heard one of the guest
-room windows cautiously raised. Let us hope
-that the ginger-tea had no ill effects on Aunt
-Sarah’s shrubs!</p>
-
-<p>Damp feet did not affect Joe’s appetite, and,
-watching him eat, Aunt Sarah dared hope that he
-was not in for a serious illness!</p>
-
-<p>By Saturday he had settled down into his new
-life. He was relieved to find that the few weeks
-away from school had not put him far behind
-and during that first week he proved to his own
-and Mr. Dennison’s satisfaction that he really
-belonged in the junior class. He found much to
-like about the school. For one thing, the building,
-which was fairly new, was quite a model school
-structure, with big, broad rooms lighted by an
-almost continuous row of high windows through
-which the sunlight fairly streamed. Sunlight in
-classrooms makes for cheerfulness, and cheerfulness
-for better work, and better work for more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-cheerfulness! That, at least, was the way Joe
-summed it up. The fellows seemed an average
-lot, some nice, some rather objectionable, some
-neither one thing nor the other. The same was
-probably true also of the girls, but Joe, having
-no sisters of his own, was shy of girls and didn’t
-attempt to decide as to whether they were nice
-or otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>At home he and Aunt Sarah settled down into
-a very pleasant companionship. Although her
-voice remained as acid as ever, it was evident to
-Joe that she was prepared to be fond of him, and
-that, used as he was to affection, was sufficient to
-make him fond of her. She was sometimes fussily
-anxious about him, but she didn’t try to govern
-his movements, and that he appreciated. Aunt
-Sarah’s bark, he soon decided, was far worse
-than her bite. The newspaper route occupied his
-afternoons between school and supper—which
-was more like dinner, since he had only a light
-lunch in the middle of the day—and required no
-great effort. On Monday he collected two dollars
-and a half for the five days he had worked and
-handed the amount over to Aunt Sarah. His
-board and lodging was, he learned, to cost three
-dollars a week.</p>
-
-<p>“That,” said Aunt Sarah, “was the arrangement<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
-your mother made. I told her she didn’t
-need to pay a cent unless she was set on it, but
-she wouldn’t let you come unless I’d take some
-money. So I reckoned that three dollars would
-be about right. I’ve never taken a boarder and
-I don’t pretend to know. If that seems too much,
-though, I’d like you to tell me.”</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t seem enough, Aunt,” replied Joe.
-“I’ll bet I eat more than three dollars’ worth of
-food, and that doesn’t leave anything for the
-room.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wasn’t calculating to charge for the room.
-The room’s there and it might as well be used.
-I just meant to charge for what you ate, Joseph,
-and I guess you won’t eat more’n three dollars’
-worth of food a week.”</p>
-
-<p>But that was on Monday, and today was only
-Saturday, and Joe had a whole morning to dispose
-of as he liked. He had been given a fine new
-pair of skates Christmas before last and had
-learned at school that there was fair skating on
-the river and on one or two ponds around town.
-After breakfast he got his skating boots and
-skates out of his trunk and looked them over.
-The only thing missing was a new lacing, and so
-he went across to Main Street in search of the
-article. But the shoe store in which he had purchased<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-the overshoes didn’t have a leather lacing
-suitable and sent him to Cummings and Wright’s,
-further down the street. This, he discovered, was
-the brilliantly-red hardware store he had noticed
-one day. One side of it was given over to athletic
-goods and when Joe entered two boys were in conversation
-across a counter near the door.</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t get to work too early, Sam,” he
-heard one of them say as he drew near. “Start
-them going about the middle of February. Of
-course there isn’t a whole lot to be done in the
-cage, but you can get in a lot of batting practice,
-and your pitchers can find themselves, and——”</p>
-
-<p>He broke off and walked along behind the counter
-to where Joe was standing. “Good morning,”
-he said cheerfully. “Is there something you
-want?”</p>
-
-<p>He was a well-built chap of seventeen, with
-red-brown hair, very blue eyes and a smile that
-won Joe on the instant.</p>
-
-<p>“I want a lacing for this boot, or a pair of
-them, please. They told me at Rice and Perry’s
-that you kept them.”</p>
-
-<p>“We surely do, and you can have one or two,
-just as you say.” He turned away and pulled a
-box from the shelves. “There you are. Five
-cents apiece.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I’ll take just the one, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. They say the skating’s best at
-Proctor’s Pond. Have you tried it?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I haven’t. I was going down to the river,
-because I thought I could find that. Where is
-this pond, please?”</p>
-
-<p>“Take a Fair Grounds car at Myrtle Street.
-Or you can walk it in twenty minutes. You’ll find
-it better than the river, I guess. You’re a
-stranger here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been here just a few days.”</p>
-
-<p>“That so? I thought I’d seen you around
-somewhere.” He had taken one of the skating
-boots and, despite Joe’s protest, was replacing
-the broken lace with the new one. “I know now;
-I saw you at high school, didn’t I?”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess so. I started there Tuesday. I—I’ve
-been living in Akron.”</p>
-
-<p>“Akron’s a nice town. You’ll like Amesville,
-though, when you get acquainted. Have you met
-many fellows at school yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“N-no, I haven’t. That is, some have spoken
-to me, but I don’t really know anyone yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must, then. Start in by knowing me.
-My name’s Pollock.” He smiled winningly and
-reached a hand across. Joe smiled back and
-clasped it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Thanks. Mine is Faulkner.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sam!” called Pollock. The boy at the front
-of the store, who had been gravely looking out
-into the street, turned inquiringly. He didn’t
-resemble the other in build or features, but there
-was, nevertheless, a similarity between them that
-Joe couldn’t explain. He wasn’t handsome, but
-he had a nice pair of gray eyes and a generously
-wide mouth that, although no smile curved it,
-somehow seemed to proclaim good nature and
-kindliness. In build he was heavier than his
-friend, more sturdy, with a resolute way of planting
-his feet that seemed to defy anything short
-of an explosion of dynamite to move him until
-he was ready to move. He approached in response
-to Pollock’s hail.</p>
-
-<p>“Sam, I want you to know Mr. Faulkner,” said
-Pollock. “Faulkner, this is Sam Craig. Sam’s
-our baseball captain and a gentleman of much
-wisdom.” The two shook hands, Joe a trifle embarrassedly,
-Sam Craig with a slight lifting of
-one corner of his serious mouth and an accompanying
-lighting of the gray eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“How are you, Faulkner? I’ve seen you
-around school, I think. Glad to meet you.” The
-clasp was a very hearty one, almost painfully<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-hearty, and Joe worked his fingers afterwards to
-see that they were still whole.</p>
-
-<p>“Faulkner,” continued Pollock, completing the
-lacing of the boot, “is a stranger in our midst,
-Sam. He’s just come from Akron. He says he
-hasn’t got acquainted much yet. What’ll we do
-about it? Our fair city has a world-wide reputation
-for hospitality, you know, and it mustn’t be
-marred.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve only been here since last Monday,” said
-Joe. “I guess a fellow can’t expect to make
-many acquaintances in that time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Going skating?” asked Sam.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. He says the pond is better than the
-river.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is. I was there yesterday; the river, I
-mean. It isn’t safe more than fifty feet from
-shore. Proctor’s Pond is the best place just now.
-I’m going down there myself. If you’d like to
-come along I’ll show you the way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, yes, I’d be glad to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you play hockey?” asked Pollock.</p>
-
-<p>“No. I’ve never tried it.”</p>
-
-<p>“The team’s practising there this morning
-and I thought that if you played you’d better get
-Sam to work you in with the scrubs for a
-try-out.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, but I don’t. I’m not a very good
-skater, either.”</p>
-
-<p>“That makes no matter. Neither is Sam, but
-they’ve got him playing goal. That’s the reason,
-I guess. If Sam lets go of the goal he always
-falls down.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe smiled politely as he paid for the lacing.
-Sam paid no attention to the slur.</p>
-
-<p>“Tom wants to sell you a hockey-stick,” he
-said calmly. “Just the same, if you’d like to try
-it, now’s the time. We need fellows.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to, but I’d be ashamed to,” laughed
-Joe. “What I’d have to do first is learn to keep
-on my feet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just watch Sam, then,” said Tom Pollock.
-“If he does a thing one way, you do it the other,
-and you’ll be all right. I suppose I can’t sell you
-a pair of gloves or a sweater, Faulkner?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, thanks. Not today, anyway. Maybe another
-time——”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t promise anything,” interrupted Sam.
-“There’s a good store up the street. Shall we
-start along?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m all ready. Thanks for putting that lacing
-in, Pollard.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pollock is the name,” said Tom. “Think of
-a fish.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span></p>
-
-<p>“A fish?” asked Joe vaguely.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. A pollock’s a fish, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“And a mighty ugly, mean-looking fish, too,”
-said Sam with one of his infrequent smiles. “Call
-him what you like, Faulkner. Anything’s good
-enough for him. Where’s that stick of mine,
-Tom?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just where you left it, on top of the case up
-there. Wish I could go along with you chaps. I
-haven’t seen you crack the ice this Winter, Sam.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m getting so I can fall soft now.” He
-picked a hockey-stick, to which were attached
-boots, skates and leg-pads, from the showcase
-and moved toward the door. “See you later,
-Tom. Come on, Faulkner.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe nodded to Tom Pollock and followed his
-new acquaintance outside.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br />
-<small>JOE FINDS A FRIEND</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Walk or ride?” asked Sam, when they were on
-the sidewalk.</p>
-
-<p>“Just as you like,” answered Joe. “Walk, if
-you don’t mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d rather.” And Sam set off along the street
-at a brisk pace. “That’s the new Adams Building,”
-he said presently, nodding toward the tall
-structure across the street. “We’re rather proud
-of it, as it’s our only skyscraper. The old one—it
-wasn’t old, though—burned last Fall. I’ve
-been working for the architects who are putting
-that up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really? It must have been a peach of a fire!
-Was the old building as big as that one?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bigger. It had fourteen floors and this has
-only twelve. The water pressure here isn’t good
-enough yet for high buildings. That’s why we
-left off seventeen feet this time. Still, this new
-building’s fireproof from top to bottom and I
-guess you could start a fire in it and have to lug<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
-fuel to keep it going! Rather good-looking, isn’t
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Awfully,” agreed Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you’ve got office buildings in Akron
-that beat it, but we think it’s some building. We
-turn off here.”</p>
-
-<p>They left the busy part of town and walked
-briskly along a residence street until, at last,
-open country was reached. Sam, having exhausted
-the subject of the new Adams Building,
-didn’t have much to say and conversation was
-desultory until Joe, hunting for a topic, remembered
-baseball.</p>
-
-<p>“Pollock said you were captain of the baseball
-team, didn’t he?” he questioned.</p>
-
-<p>Sam nodded. “Yes. Tom could have had it,
-but he wouldn’t. So they hit on me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pollock, you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. He has charge of the sporting goods
-department there at Cummings and Wright’s
-and thought he wouldn’t have time to look after
-the team. Where have you played?”</p>
-
-<p>“In Akron. Oh, you mean what position?
-Last Spring I played first base for our Second
-Team. How—how did you know I played at all?”</p>
-
-<p>“Felt that crooked finger of yours. Break it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and didn’t know it for a couple of days.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-Thought it was just a strain. Then when it came
-out of the splints it had an out-curve. I guess
-I’ll have to have it broken again some day and
-set right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it didn’t <em>look</em> so bad,” said Sam judicially.
-“I happened to notice it when we shook
-hands. We’ll be glad to have another candidate
-for the bases. You’ll have a couple of pretty
-good fellows to fight, but I wouldn’t be surprised
-if you made good somewhere. How are you at
-the bat?”</p>
-
-<p>Joe shook his head ruefully. “Pretty rotten
-last year. I used to hit pretty well when I was
-on the grammar school team, but I guess the
-pitching was awfully soft. I suppose you begin
-practice indoors some time next month?”</p>
-
-<p>“About the middle. You’ll have a chance to
-get your batting-eye. We usually put the fellows
-through a good deal of bunting work in the cage.
-It seems to help a lot when they get outdoors.
-There’s the pond over there. Let’s cut across
-here; it’s shorter.”</p>
-
-<p>The pond was some three acres in extent, and
-was long and narrow, curving back around the
-shoulder of a hill and looking at first glance like
-a river. As Joe and his guide climbed a rail-fence
-and crossed a snow-covered meadow, following<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>
-a well-trodden track, the pond proved to
-be well populated. Skaters were gliding and
-turning, many armed with hockey-sticks, and at
-the nearer end of the ice two sets of goal-posts
-were in place. Some of the hockey players had
-already thrown aside their coats and were warming
-up, their blue-stockinged legs twinkling over
-the glassy surface.</p>
-
-<p>“We usually practise on the river,” explained
-Sam, “but it isn’t good enough yet. We’ve got
-some nets, but there’s no way of getting them out
-here, and so we just use the posts. They’re mean
-things, though; always getting pushed out of
-place. Come over here and meet some of the
-fellows.”</p>
-
-<p>Sam’s appearance was vociferously hailed by
-a knot of boys at the edge of the ice. Some of
-the younger fellows had started a fire there and
-were scurrying around, far and near, for fuel.
-Joe was introduced to seven or eight chaps, many
-of whose names he either didn’t catch or promptly
-forgot. Those he did recall later were Arbuckle,
-Morris and Strobe. Arbuckle proved to be the
-coach, although he was apparently no older than
-several of the players, and Morris was the captain.
-Morris, whose first name was Sidney and
-who was universally called Sid, was a handsome<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
-chap, lean, well-conditioned, and a marvel on
-skates. He was of about Sam Craig’s age.
-Arbuckle was a heavier fellow of eighteen and
-bore signs on his upper lip of an incipient
-mustache. Strobe Joe remembered chiefly because
-his name was unusual, although the latter
-wasn’t certain whether it was Strobe or Strode
-at the time.</p>
-
-<p>They were all far too interested in hockey to
-pay more than passing attention to the stranger
-and Joe presently retired from the group and
-donned his skates. By the time he was ready for
-the ice Steve Arbuckle had blown his whistle and
-fourteen eager youths were racing and twisting
-about after the flying puck. In front of the First
-Team’s goal Sam Craig, sweatered and padded,
-leaned on his broad-bladed stick and calmly
-watched. Then a Second Team forward somehow
-stole the puck from under Captain Morris’s
-nose and, digging the points of his skates, slanted
-down the rink, dodging and feinting, until only
-the point remained between him and goal-keeper.
-Behind him the pursuit sped, but he was
-due for a shot if he could fool the point, and fool
-the point he did. Away slid the puck to the right,
-the charging Second Team forward twirled, recovered
-as the point missed his check, got the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span>
-puck again before the coverpoint could reach it
-and charged straight at goal from the right.</p>
-
-<p>Sam Craig, still apparently calm and unflustered,
-refused the challenge to go out and meet
-him. Instead, he closed his padded knees together,
-held his stick across his body and waited.
-The Second Team player shot from six feet away,
-shot hard and straight. There was a <em>thud</em>, the
-puck slammed against Sam’s knee and was gently
-brushed aside as Sid Morris, skating like a whirlwind,
-rushed past, hooked it expertly, swung
-around behind the goal and set off again down
-the ice. The Second Team forward, who had so
-nearly scored, was already back in line, quite untroubled
-by his failure, and Joe identified him as
-Strobe. Sidney lost the puck a moment later and
-the whistle shrilled for off-side. Joe watched
-until the First Team had finally penetrated the
-adversary’s defence and scored its first goal and
-then went off up the pond to skate. Since most
-of the fellows were watching the hockey he had
-the upper reaches of the ice practically to himself.</p>
-
-<p>Joe was only a fair skater, and now, swinging
-along and following the curving shore, he found
-himself envying the ability of those chaps on the
-hockey teams. It must, he thought, be fine to be
-able to skate as they did, to feel as much at home<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
-on steel runners as on leather, and he wondered
-if any amount of practice would ever enable him
-to duplicate their marvellous feats. He wished
-he could play hockey, too. It looked mighty exciting.
-Experimentally, he turned and started to
-skate backward, zigzagging as he had seen the
-Second Team’s coverpoint do. All went well for
-a minute, but then he raised his hands to the sky,
-followed them with his feet and went down on
-his head and shoulders. He had quite a nice slide,
-but he wasn’t able to enjoy it much, since he was
-too busy watching the vari-coloured stars that
-flashed in front of his closed eyes. When he
-stopped sliding he felt gingerly of his head,
-grinned and climbed carefully to his feet
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what you get,” he murmured, “for
-trying to be smart.”</p>
-
-<p>However, when he had got his breath again he
-was ready for more experiments and tried the
-inner edge-roll with fair success, and, becoming
-more ambitious, essayed a figure eight. But that
-didn’t go very smoothly, and since by that time
-he had neighbours about him he stopped his
-capers. One of the neighbours skated toward
-him, but Joe paid no heed to him until he swung
-around and came to a stop a few feet away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Do it slower and you’ll get it all right,” observed
-the boy pleasantly. Joe saw then that he
-was Strobe. He had pulled a faded blue sweater
-on and still carried his stick. He was a merry-faced
-fellow, with good features, bright blue eyes
-and a good deal of colour in his cheeks. He was
-evidently about sixteen and rather tall for that
-age. He smiled in friendly fashion as Joe glanced
-up and stopped so awkwardly that he almost fell
-into Strobe’s arms.</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t hard,” the latter continued. “Like
-this. See?” He described a circle on the outer
-edge, changed to the inner and completed the
-figure slowly and gracefully.</p>
-
-<p>“I know very well it isn’t hard,” replied Joe,
-“but it’s hard for me because I’m a perfectly
-punk skater.”</p>
-
-<p>Strobe laughed. “Oh, well, practice is all you
-need. Can you do the ‘Figure 3’?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty well. I guess you have to learn to
-skate when you’re about five years old to do it
-decently. Like swimming. I never skated much
-until two years ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“I started when I was about eight, I guess,”
-laughed Strobe. “Know this one?”</p>
-
-<p>“This one” was a “Maltese Cross” so perfectly
-done that every loop was the same to an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
-inch. Joe watched and sighed in envious admiration.
-“That’s dandy,” he said. “It’s like the
-‘cross-cut’ only there’s more of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, the ‘cross-cut’ repeated three times. It
-isn’t hard, really. You could learn it in an hour.”</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t learn it in a month,” replied Joe
-disgustedly. “I can’t even skate backwards
-without bumping my head on the ice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ve bumped mine often enough. That’s
-part of the education. I’ve seen some perfectly
-wonderful stars in my time!” He started to
-skate and Joe joined him.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re not playing any more?” asked the latter,
-as the shrill sound of a whistle from around
-the shoulder of the hill told him that the game
-was still on.</p>
-
-<p>“No. Sidell’s got my place for this half.
-There’s a half-dozen of us all trying for a wing
-position on the Second, and Steve has his hands
-full giving us each a show.” He chuckled softly.
-“He forgot in the first half and let me play right
-through.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hockey must be good fun,” mused Joe,
-secretly trying to copy his companion’s ease of
-motion.</p>
-
-<p>“Bully. I wish I could play better and make
-the First.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I thought you did finely when you skated
-down and tried that shot,” said Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“Mostly luck. Besides, tries don’t count; it’s
-only goals. And I ought to have got that in that
-time. It was up to me to skate past and push it
-in instead of whanging it. You can’t get the puck
-past Sam Craig that way. I knew it, too, only I
-thought I’d be smart. Let’s go up and watch
-them. Mind?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’d like to,” replied Joe.</p>
-
-<p>They joined the line of spectators along the
-side of the supposititious rink, being frequently
-obliged to flee before the slashing sticks or plunging
-forms of the players, and witnessed the final
-decisive triumph of the First Team by a score
-of seven goals to two. A few of the players remained
-to practise further, but most of them, accompanied
-by a full half of their audience, crossed
-a field to where, a quarter of a mile distant, a
-blue-sided trolley-car was waiting outside the
-board fence of the Fair Grounds to start its noon
-journey townwards. <a href="#i_p054">Joe found himself still in
-the company of Strobe</a>, and was well satisfied,
-since there was something about the other chap
-that drew him. They were chatting quite intimately
-by the time the car was reached, and when
-they got out at Main Street Strobe lengthened<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
-his own journey homeward by several blocks in
-order to pursue the new acquaintanceship.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_p054">
- <img src="images/i_p054.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_54">Joe found himself still in the company of Strobe</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Joe found out then and during the next meeting
-that Jack Strobe—his full name was Jackson—was
-in Joe’s class at school, that he lived
-on Temple Street, that he played left field on the
-nine, that he was two months older than Joe, that
-his father was the senior partner of Strobe and
-Wonson, whose big jewelry store Joe had noticed
-on Main Street, and several other more or less
-interesting facts. It was only when Joe was in
-the house that he recollected that he had failed
-to take leave of Sam Craig. He had meant to
-thank him for taking him out to the pond, but
-had been so absorbed in this red-cheeked, blue-eyed
-Strobe chap that he had quite forgotten
-Sam’s existence. He hoped the latter wasn’t
-thinking him uncivil, and resolved to make an
-apology at the first opportunity. He had agreed
-to go around in the afternoon and call on Jack
-Strobe, and at a little after two was being ushered
-by a maid through the rather ornate front door
-of the Strobe mansion and into a cosy sitting-room—or
-perhaps it was a library, since there
-were two large bookcases flanking the fireplace,
-in which a soft-coal fire was sputtering greasily.
-Jack came charging down the stairs and at once<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>
-haled the visitor up to the third floor, where, on
-the back of the house, overlooking a wide vista
-of snowy roofs and distant country, Jack had his
-own particular sanctum.</p>
-
-<p>It was a big square room lighted by three windows
-set close together, and at first glance looked
-like a museum or a curio shop. Almost every
-inch of wall space was covered with pictures,
-posters or trophies of some kind, with snowshoes,
-tennis rackets, foils and mask, Indian moccasins,
-a couple of small-bore rifles, a battered lacrosse
-stick depended against them. A long, cushioned
-seat stood under the windows and was piled with
-brightly-coloured pillows. The floor was bare
-save for a few scattered rugs. A brass bed, a
-chiffonier, an immense study table, two comfortable
-armchairs and several straight-backed chairs
-comprised the principal furnishings, but by no
-means all. Near the windows was a smaller table,
-holding wireless instruments. A set of bookshelves,
-evidently home-made—Jack referred to
-them as being “near-Mission”—held a miscellaneous
-collection of volumes ranging from “Zig-Zag
-Journeys” to the latest juvenile thriller, presented
-last Christmas, and including all sorts of
-old school-books with worn backs. An old seaman’s
-chest stood against a wall, the repository<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
-for abandoned toys and devices. One end was
-decorated with the legend, apparently inscribed
-with a brush dipped in shoe-blacking: “Captain
-Kidd His Chest! Beware!!” One corner of the
-room held an assortment of fishing-rods, golf-clubs
-and hockey-sticks, and another a pair of
-skiis, two canoe paddles, and a camera tripod.
-The camera itself stood nearby, neighboured by a
-jig-saw, and a stereopticon sat beside it. Joe
-gazed and marvelled.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got about everything there is up here,
-haven’t you?” he exclaimed. “Is that a wireless
-set? How’s it work? I never saw one near-to.”</p>
-
-<p>The instruments were duly explained, not over-enthusiastically,
-since Jack had lost interest in
-wireless telegraphy after a year of devotion, and
-then Joe made a tour of the room, examining and
-questioning and enjoying himself hugely. Later
-various scrap-books and stamp-books were pulled
-from under the window-seat and looked over, and
-finally, having still only partly exhausted the
-wonders, the two boys settled down amongst the
-cushions and talked. That afternoon sped like
-magic. Almost before they realised it the room
-was in twilight and from across town came the
-hoarse sound of the five o’clock whistle at the
-carpet mills. Whereupon Joe said he must go,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-and Jack, remonstrating, led him downstairs,
-helped him on with his coat, and accompanied
-him to the steps. There:</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing tonight?” he asked very
-carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing special,” replied Joe quite as disinterestedly.</p>
-
-<p>There was a pause. Finally:</p>
-
-<p>“I might run in for a minute,” announced Jack.
-“I’m going downtown anyway and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Wish you would.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your aunt won’t mind?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not. I haven’t much to show you,
-though. My room’s just a box, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right. We can talk some more.
-About eight?”</p>
-
-<p>“Before, if you can.”</p>
-
-<p>“Half-past seven?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Don’t forget.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t. So long, Faulkner.”</p>
-
-<p>“So long. And thanks for—everything.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack laughed shortly. “I haven’t done anything.
-See you later.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br />
-<small>HOCKEY AND JUST TALK</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>That was the beginning of a friendship that
-lasted—well, so far as I know, it’s still lasting
-and seems likely to continue lasting indefinitely.
-In the course of time the inseparable chums were
-facetiously referred to as the “two Jays” or the
-“Joejacks.” Months later each acknowledged,
-a trifle shamefacedly, since the acknowledgment
-bordered on sentiment, that he had taken to the
-other at the moment of their first meeting. That
-was as near an expression of affection as they
-came to, but within a week of that day at Proctor’s
-Pond Joe would have jumped off the top
-of the Adams Building if by so doing he could
-have benefited his friend, and Jack would have
-just as readily plunged into the river from the
-railroad bridge had a similar result impended.
-And since Jack at that time couldn’t swim a
-stroke, his deed would have compared favourably
-with Joe’s as a token of esteem!</p>
-
-<p>Neither, however, was required to undertake<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-such feats of self-sacrifice. Perhaps the nearest
-approach to them occurred when Joe stood about
-on the ice, with the thermometer hovering around
-zero, his feet numb and his fingers aching, while
-he admiringly watched Jack struggle for a position
-on the First Team, or when Jack, as became
-his custom when duties allowed, tramped by Joe’s
-side through slush or sleet or rain over Route 6!
-They were together whenever it was possible,
-and when it wasn’t they were either signalling
-across schoolrooms or using up Mr. Strobe’s and
-Aunt Sarah’s monthly allowance of telephone
-calls.</p>
-
-<p>January passed into history very happily for
-Joe. He was earning enough to pay Aunt Sarah
-all but fifty cents a week for his accommodations,
-he was doing well at his studies, he was getting
-cheerful letters every few days from his mother,
-and he was enjoying the jolliest, finest sort of
-friendship. When the hockey team journeyed to
-Preston Mills to play the academy fellows and
-Jack went along as a possible necessary substitute
-forward, Joe went along also and huddled
-in his coat on a settee and held Jack’s ulster and
-saw the Brown-and-Blue go down in defeat to the
-tune of four to three in an overtime contest, and
-mourned with the others on the way back, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>
-with them vowed dire vengeance when Preston
-paid a return visit. That day a substitute delivered
-Joe’s papers and he was short fifty cents
-the following Monday and went without pocket-money
-for a whole week. But he didn’t mind—much.
-It was worth more than that, much more,
-to accompany Jack to Preston Mills.</p>
-
-<p>The hockey team didn’t meet with defeat on
-all occasions, however, although it can’t be denied
-that, in spite of the best endeavours of coach,
-captain, and players, they ended the season with
-fewer victories than beatings. But they did overwhelm
-Preston Academy nicely the first week in
-February and found the revenge sweet. The ice
-was in miserable shape that afternoon, for there
-had been a thaw, and the visitors suffered more in
-consequence than did the home team, for the
-latter had cannily spent the forenoon practising
-under the adverse conditions. The game was
-played on the river and inside a regular barrier
-and with net goals. Jack had at last proven his
-right to a place amongst the First Team substitutes,
-and in the second period that afternoon he
-went further and showed that he was as good a
-right-wing as high school could put on the ice.
-And Joe, excitedly and noisily admiring, was
-filled with triumph.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span></p>
-
-<p>The score was two to one in Amesville’s favour
-when the whistle started the second half and Sid
-Morris faced off with the opposing centre. Each
-seven had shown a good defence and Amesville’s
-second goal had been rather in the nature of an
-accident, the puck slipping around the corner of
-the net when four or five sticks had been poking
-and hooking at it in a half-inch of water and the
-goal-tender’s skate had for an instant slipped
-aside. It was still anybody’s battle from all indications
-and both teams started in in whirlwind
-fashion. Preston’s gray-legged warriors kept
-the Brown-and-Blue busy for the first five minutes
-and hammered shot after shot at Sam Craig’s
-anatomy. Amesville forgot team-play in the
-effort to keep the enemy away from the goal, with
-the result that Preston fooled her time and again
-and forced the playing until Sid’s shrill appeals
-to “Take it away from them, High School!”
-rose high above the rattling of sticks, the grinding
-of skates, and the inarticulate cries of the
-players. Only an off-side play prevented a score
-for Preston four minutes after the whistle, for a
-hard, low shot got safely past Sam’s shins and
-into the net. But on the face-off it was Jack
-Strobe who stole the disc from between the feet
-of the two opponents and who, passing once<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-across the rink to Captain Morris and drawing
-the coverpoint from position, took the puck on
-the return, upset the point and slashed past the
-goal-tender for Amesville’s third tally.</p>
-
-<p>How Joe cheered and shouted! And how all
-the others did, too; all save the handful of faithful
-Prestonians who had journeyed down with
-their team! There was still nearly fifteen minutes
-of actual time left and Amesville, encouraged,
-recovered from her confusion and took the
-whip-hand. Time and again Jack and Sidney
-Morris, working together as though they had
-played side by side for years, swept the enemy
-off its feet and rushed down the ice with the puck,
-eluding the defence more often than not, and
-making shot after shot at goal. That Preston
-Academy was only tallied on five times in that
-second half was only because neither Sidney nor
-Jack nor the other forwards, Hale and Simpson,
-who infrequently found an opportunity to bombard
-the net, were especially clever shots. But
-Amesville was well satisfied with the final result
-of the game. Seven to one was decisive enough
-to more than atone for the defeat at Preston
-Mills. Joe walked back with his hero and was as
-proud as Punch.</p>
-
-<p>It was that evening that Joe voiced a regret<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>
-that had been troubling him for some time. The
-two boys were in Joe’s room, and Jack, a bit lame
-and more or less bruised, was stretched on the
-bed, something that Aunt Sarah would not have
-approved of. Aunt Sarah, however, was getting
-used to having boys around and was making the
-discovery that laws made for grown-up folks cannot
-always be applied to youths. At first Jack’s
-almost daily appearance at the door, followed by
-his polite inquiry, “Is Joe in, Miss Teele?” was
-greeted by doubtful, sharp glances. Then Jack’s
-smiles melted the ice, and Aunt Sarah confided
-to Joe one day that that Strobe boy seemed real
-nice. A day or two later, Joe, returning from his
-newspaper delivering, found that a strip of gray
-linen had been laid over the stair carpet and continued
-along the upper hallway to his door. Aunt
-Sarah, while reconciled to visitors, was not going
-to have her carpet worn out.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish,” said Joe this evening, “that I could
-do something.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean, do something?” asked
-Jack lazily, turning slightly to take his weight off
-a lame hip.</p>
-
-<p>“Something like other fellows,” explained
-Joe frowningly. “I can’t play hockey or basketball
-or tennis or—or even skate! I can’t play<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>
-football, either. Most fellows can do two or three
-things well. I’m no good at anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“Piffle!” said Jack. “You play baseball,
-don’t you? And you can skate pretty well.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, like a ton of bricks! As for baseball,
-well, yes, I can catch a ball if it’s thrown at me
-and I can bat a little and I’m fairly fast on bases.
-But I’m no wonder at it. I want to play something
-decently, Jack.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you’re making things out worse
-than they really are. Any fellow can do those
-stunts if he tries hard enough. Funny you don’t
-play tennis, though. Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“I never cared for it. I guess the reason I
-don’t do things is because I never wanted to
-much before. Beside, at home—in Akron—I was
-always pretty busy with other things. I—I
-studied pretty hard——”</p>
-
-<p>“There you are, then!” said Jack triumphantly.
-“Don’t you know that a fellow can’t be
-a grind and a great athlete, too? Look at me.
-You don’t find me being pointed out as an example
-of conduct, do you? You didn’t see my bookcase
-stuffed with prize volumes, did you? Ever
-hear of me getting an A, or even a B-plus, in
-anything? Answer, <em>No</em>, with a capital N! A
-chap simply has to choose, Joey, whether he is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-to make his mark one way or the other. I chose
-the other. It’s more fun.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re talking a lot of rot. I happen to know
-that you were pretty near the head in your class
-last year. And you never have any trouble with
-your studies. Besides, I was reading not long
-ago that the principal athletes at one of the colleges
-in the East—either Yale or Harvard, I
-think—were ’way up in their studies; honour men
-and things like that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, if you believe the newspapers——”</p>
-
-<p>“Newspapers are a heap more truthful than
-folks,” interrupted Joe. “I’ve heard my father
-say that lots of times. Anyway, it’s silly to say
-a fellow can’t study and go in for athletics, too.
-Look at Sam Craig. He plays baseball, football,
-and hockey, you told me. And he’s ’way up in
-his class.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you’re going to prove things I shan’t
-argue,” sighed Jack. “It’s no fun arguing when
-the other fellow insists on proving he’s right.
-It—it puts you at a disadvantage. Anyway, all
-that’s got nothing to do with what we were talking
-about. You said you wished you could do
-something. I say you can play baseball. That’s
-something, isn’t it? I’d rather make the nine
-than the hockey team any day.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You’ve made both,” replied Joe disconsolately.
-“I don’t believe I’ll ever make anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“A couple of piffles! In two months you’ll be
-holding down first or second base. I wish you’d
-beat out Frank Foley for first, Joe. If you’ll do
-that I’ll present you with anything I own. I’ll
-give you an order on dad for a diamond sun-burst
-or a chest of silver. Mind, I don’t say you’d get
-the things; but I’ll give you the order.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s Frank Foley?” asked Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“What? You’ve never heard of ‘Handsome
-Frank’? For the love of lemons, don’t let him
-hear you, Joey! Why, Frank is our Adonis, our
-Beau Brummel, our—our——”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what is he when he isn’t Brummeling?”</p>
-
-<p>“There ain’t no such time. He’s always on
-that job. Frank is the life of our little parties
-on all occasions. He has his nails manicured
-every day and sends to Cleveland or Chicago or
-somewhere for his neckties—only he calls them
-scarves. Frank is some swell, believe me! You
-surely must have seen him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tall and sort of bored-looking? Wears a
-greenish Norfolk suit?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep, that’s Frank. You can’t always tell
-him by that green suit, though, for he has half a
-dozen if he has one. I don’t see how he does it,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
-because his father hasn’t much coin, they say.
-He’s division superintendent on the railroad.
-I’ll bet he keeps his father poor. Anyway, he’s
-our best little dresser and we’re mighty proud
-of him.”</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t sound so a moment ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll tell you.” Jack changed his position
-with a suppressed groan. “As a thing of
-beauty, so to speak, as a—a picturesque feature
-of the local landscape—say, that’s pretty good,
-isn’t it? Picturesque feature of the local landscape!—Well,
-as one of those things he’s fine and
-we’re proud as can be of him. If a circus came
-to town we’d trot Frank out and simply run away
-with the honors. But as a—a regular fellow he
-won’t do. He’s too—oh, I don’t know what he
-is. I don’t like him for so many reasons that I
-can’t think of the first one. I always have a
-fearful temptation to walk on his shoes and take
-the shine off or bang a snowball against his hat
-or tie him down and put a little natural dirt
-under his finger-nails. Mind you, Joey, I love
-clean finger-nails”—he shoved his hands under
-him as he spoke—“but I hate to have a fellow
-dazzle my eyes every time he moves his hands!
-Besides, I object to green Norfolks and green
-hats with the bows in the wrong place and fancy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-vests—waistcoats, I mean! Gee, I’m glad Frank
-didn’t hear me call ’em vests! The trouble with
-Handsome Frank is that he’s a good-looker and
-someone’s told him about it. He can’t forget it
-for a minute. Now, I’m a handsome brute, Joey,
-and you’re not as homely as you might be, but
-we don’t go around throwing our chests out and
-trying to look like—like a work of art, do we?
-And we don’t dress up like a horse, do we? And
-we don’t polish our finger-nails till they shine
-like nice little pink pearls, do we? Let’s see
-yours. No, we don’t!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if he’s like that I shouldn’t expect him
-to play anything as rough and rude as baseball,”
-said Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“No, would you? And yet he does. And he
-plays football, too, which is a degree and a half
-rougher and ruder. As a matter of fact, Joe,
-Handsome Frank is a corking good first baseman,
-and no slouch of a tackle. He’s the fellow you’ll
-have to fight hardest for first, if you’ve set your
-heart on that position.”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t. I’d be a silly chump to. I don’t
-believe I play well enough to get a show with the
-Second Team.”</p>
-
-<p>“Two more orders of piffle, and have them
-hot! Don’t assume that attitude, Joey. Don’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>
-tell folks you’re no good. They might believe
-you. I’ve noticed folks are more likely
-to believe you when you tell them you’re rotten
-than when you crack yourself up. You keep a
-still mouth, old chap, and if anyone says ‘What
-was your batting average last year, Mr. Faulkner?’
-or ‘What was your fielding average?’ you
-dust a speck off your sleeve and look ’em square
-in the eye and say, careless-like, ‘I batted for
-three-twenty-seven and fielded for a little over
-four hundred!’ They won’t believe you, but
-they’ll think ‘If he can lie as well as that he
-must play a pretty good game of ball!’”</p>
-
-<p>“Jack, you’re an awful chump tonight,”
-laughed his chum. “What does your friend
-Frank do when he gets some dust on his hands
-fielding a ball or soils his trousers sliding to
-base? Does he stop the game and telephone for
-a manicure and a whisk-broom?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. He bears it wonderfully. Oh, I suppose
-I’ve made him out worse than he is. I just don’t
-like him. Still, I’m not the only one, by a long
-shot. You’d have trouble finding many fellows
-who do like him. But he can play baseball and
-he’s a peach of a baseman. He’s not much at
-hitting, though. Are you, Joe?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fairly rotten, thanks.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, that won’t do. You dig hard when
-practice begins. Find your batting-eye, Joey.
-Then, if you can hold down first base decently
-well, you might oust Mr. Foley. I’d consider it
-a personal favour if you did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to me it’s a good thing you don’t actually
-hate Foley. If you did you’d insist on having
-him thrown into the river or browned in oil!
-When you take a dislike to me, please let me
-know, Jack, so I can beat it while the beating’s
-good.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” replied Jack cheerfully, “I’m like
-that, I guess. If I like a fellow I like him a lot.
-If I dislike him I haven’t any use for him. I
-suppose it’s my ardent Spanish nature.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your <em>what</em>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep. You see, Joey, about three or maybe
-four hundred years ago I had a Spanish ancestor.
-Spaniards, you know, are hot-blooded, desperate
-rascals. Whenever I do anything real
-wicked I lay it to that ancestor. It’s a convenience.”</p>
-
-<p>“You and your old ancestor!” scoffed Joe.
-“Say, what sort of practice do we do in the baseball
-cage?”</p>
-
-<p>“Naturally, we do tatting and plain sewing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, cut it out, Jack! Honest, what can you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
-do indoors? I never saw anyone practise baseball
-in a cage.”</p>
-
-<p>“Batteries get the most out of it, Joe. But
-we all go through a certain amount of stuff.
-Bat’s a great believer in setting-up exercises, for
-one thing. He keeps us at that for a week or so
-before we’re allowed to touch a ball. Then the
-pitchers and catchers work together and we have
-a batting session each day and we slide to base
-and—and pass, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bat’s the coach, isn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep. Mr. Bennet A. Talbot; B, A, T, Bat.
-He’s a good sort, too. And knows a baseball
-from a rosy-cheeked apple, if anyone should enquire.
-He’s all right. I’m strong for Bat.”</p>
-
-<p>“A good name for a baseball coach,” laughed
-Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“The fact has been suggested before,” replied
-Jack with a grin.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I didn’t suppose I was getting off a new
-one. But, look here, you can’t do much hitting
-in a little old cage, can you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not if Tom Pollock’s pitching,” chuckled
-Jack. “Why, you see, my ignorant friend, the
-idea is not to knock the ball through the wires,
-but to tap it politely. Bat will tell you that if
-you can get your bat against the ball in the cage<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>
-you can do it when you get on the field. I don’t
-know that he’s terrifically right about it, though.
-I don’t believe it does any harm to roll bunts
-around in the gym, but I do know that in my
-own case as soon as we move outdoors and I take
-a healthy swing at the ball it isn’t there! And
-it takes me a week or so at the net to find it.”</p>
-
-<p>“They tell me you’re a peach of a batter,” said
-Joe admiringly and a trifle enviously.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I connect sometimes. When I do they
-travel. That’s all. I’m no H. R. Baker.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s he?” asked Joe innocently.</p>
-
-<p>“Ball-player. I’m going home. Your ignorance
-may be catching. See you in the morning.
-Who swiped my—Oh, here it is. So long, Joey!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br />
-<small>JOE HAS AN IDEA</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Joe’s circle of friends and acquaintances widened.
-He met many fellows through Jack, and
-Jack seemed to know most of the better sort of
-boys in the town. What sometimes puzzled Joe
-was how it had happened that Jack, with so many
-friends to choose from, had remained without a
-special chum and had finally chosen him. Joe
-got on very friendly terms with Tom Pollock and
-became a great admirer of that youth. Anyone
-with such a reputation as a pitcher and all-around
-ball-player as Tom had would have won Joe’s
-respect and regard in any case, but Tom was a
-very likable chap besides. Sam Craig he saw
-less of, although Sam was nice when they met,
-and more than once reminded him of the approaching
-fifteenth of February, on which day
-baseball practice was to start indoors.</p>
-
-<p>By the beginning of February Joe was quite at
-home in Amesville and had grown to like the place
-thoroughly. He and Aunt Sarah were getting on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>
-finely. Aunt Sarah was outwardly still the same
-stern-visaged, sharp-voiced person, but Joe had
-discovered that under that rather forbidding exterior
-lay a very kind heart. Nowadays Aunt
-Sarah’s principal mission in life appeared to be
-the finding of new ways to please Joe, without,
-if possible, allowing him to suspect it!</p>
-
-<p>Joe’s only cause for dissatisfaction was his
-after-school work. In less than a fortnight indoor
-practice would begin for the baseball squad,
-and that meant that either he would have to give
-up his newspaper route or abandon his hope of
-making the nine. Consequently, he began to look
-around harder than ever for some labour that he
-might perform in the evenings. He consulted
-Jack, of course, and Jack, while eager to aid, had
-nothing to offer in the way of practical suggestions.
-In the end, Joe solved the problem without
-assistance.</p>
-
-<p>He and Jack happened to be in Pryor’s stationery
-store one afternoon. Jack was buying
-some fountain-pen ink and Joe strayed over to
-the counter that held a not very large assortment
-of magazines, together with the local newspapers
-and a few papers from other cities of the State.
-While he was turning the pages of a magazine a
-well-dressed, middle-aged man came in and asked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>
-for a Chicago <cite>Tribune</cite>. He was a travelling
-salesman, Joe concluded. Whether he was or not,
-he was contemptuously impatient when the clerk
-informed him that they didn’t keep Chicago
-papers.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t, eh?” he demanded. “No, I suppose
-you wouldn’t! I ought to have known it. You
-folks in this town don’t seem to know there’s any
-other place in the country. Still, you might have
-heard of Chicago. It’s a little village in Illinois,
-down near the lower end of Lake Michigan.
-There’s a tree in front of it. They were talking
-of building a horse-car line when I left. Got a
-Cleveland paper, then?”</p>
-
-<p>The sarcasm was quite lost on the youthful
-clerk. He only gazed in a puzzled fashion at the
-annoyed customer and shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“There ain’t any left,” he said indifferently.
-“We had one this morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“You did? Think of that! One whole paper!
-Say, you folks take a lot of risks, don’t you?
-Just suppose you hadn’t sold it!” The irate
-gentleman left the store abruptly and Joe followed
-his departing figure with thoughtful eyes.
-A moment later Jack completed his purchase and
-they left the shop. It was well after five and,
-although it was the custom for Joe to walk home<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-with Jack, this afternoon he pleaded duties and,
-promising to go around after supper, watched
-his friend lose himself in the throng. What Joe
-did next would have occasioned Jack some curiosity
-had he been there to see. Joe crossed the
-street—the other side of the thoroughfare was
-less congested at this time—and went slowly
-northward for six blocks, his eyes busy all the
-way. Then he crossed again and returned on the
-first side. His travels took him over the busiest
-portion of the street and left him finally four
-blocks below the Adams Building. But what he
-was looking for he hadn’t seen, and he shook his
-head as he turned his steps northward again.
-In front of the Adams Building a small newsboy
-was selling the evening paper and Joe stopped.</p>
-
-<p>“Got a Cleveland paper?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>The boy shook his head. “I don’t carry ’em,”
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Columbus?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t got nothin’ but the <cite>Recorder</cite>.”</p>
-
-<p>“That all you ever carry?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know where I can buy a Cleveland or
-a Columbus paper?”</p>
-
-<p>“You might get ’em at Pryor’s, three blocks
-up.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span></p>
-
-<p>Joe retreated to the front of the building and
-again looked about him. From the entrance beside
-him quite a stream of folks were emerging
-to hurry homewards. At least every other one
-stopped to purchase a paper before going to the
-car or walking away.</p>
-
-<p>“Hm,” said Joe thoughtfully. “I wonder,
-now!”</p>
-
-<p>He entered the lobby of the office building and
-studied it. On one side were the elevators. Behind
-them a broad marble stairway started upward,
-turning behind the cages, to the floor above.
-The lobby was not large, but it was large enough
-for the purpose Joe had in mind, and presently,
-when the occupants of one elevator had pushed
-out through the revolving doors, he stepped off
-the little space between the first elevator and the
-front wall of the building. A little less than
-three yards he made it. The depth was five
-feet. Joe half closed his eyes and studied it.
-Then, jostled by another carful of departing occupants,
-he made his way across to the directory
-beside the elevators. It was evident that many
-of the offices, and Joe decided that there must be
-some two hundred of them, were still unoccupied,
-although the building was now complete as to its
-interior. A placard near at hand notified the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
-public that offices were to be rented of Joseph
-Adams, Room 129. At that moment an elevator
-descended and emptied itself, and the operator,
-observing Joe at the directory, asked who he was
-looking for.</p>
-
-<p>“Strobe,” replied Joe, giving the first name
-that came to his mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Not here. Maybe he’s coming later. If you
-mean John P. Strobe, his place is across the
-street there, on the opposite corner. Jeweler, is
-he?”</p>
-
-<p>Joe said he was and thanked the youth for the
-direction. Then, looking about him at the unsurfaced
-walls: “This is a pretty good building,”
-he observed. The other nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Best in this town, anyway. It wouldn’t cut
-much ice in Cincinnati, I guess, but it’s pretty
-good for Amesville.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are there many in it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, and it’s filling up fast. The old man’s
-renting two or three offices a day, I hear.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose there’ll be a news-stand here, won’t
-there?”</p>
-
-<p>“News-stand? Search me! I haven’t heard of
-any.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think you’d need one. You must
-have two or three hundred people in here.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Easy! There’s two hundred and eight offices,
-and some has two or three people in ’em. Course,
-they ain’t all rented yet, but——”</p>
-
-<p>The signal buzzed and the operator slammed
-the door and shot out of sight just as another car
-arrived. Joe made his way out with the throng
-and hurried homeward, his mind very busy all
-the way. At supper he was so preoccupied and
-silent that Aunt Sarah tried to get him to describe
-his symptoms and watched him depart for
-Jack’s house with misgivings. Up in the big
-room on the third floor Joe laid the scheme
-before his chum. Jack was instantly enthusiastic.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s simply great!” he declared. “How’d
-you ever think of it? But you’d sell other things
-besides newspapers, wouldn’t you, Joey?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Cigars, candy, magazines—anything I
-could. You see, Jack, if folks who work in the
-building know they can get such things right
-there they’re pretty sure to deal with me. I
-ought to sell a lot of cigars——”</p>
-
-<p>“And chewing-gum,” laughed Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“And newspapers, too. And I’d make a
-specialty of carrying the Cincinnati and Cleveland
-and Columbus papers, and the Chicago, too;
-and maybe one of the New York papers. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
-trouble is, though, that I’d have to have money
-to start with, and I haven’t got it.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so.” Jack’s face fell. “How much
-would you need?” he asked after a minute.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s hard to tell. Of course, I don’t know
-what rent Mr. Adams would charge me, in the
-first place. In fact, I don’t know yet that he will
-rent the space at all. I wondered if your father
-knew him well enough to speak a good word for
-me, Jack.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course he does! They’re thick as thieves.
-I’ll get dad to go and see him with you if you
-like. Want to go down and ask him now?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; wait a while. I was wondering——”
-Joe was silent a minute. Then: “Have you any
-money, Jack?”</p>
-
-<p>“Me? About a dollar. Want it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wondered whether you had any in the bank
-or——”</p>
-
-<p>“I have! I’d forgotten it. I’ve got about
-sixty dollars, I think. But I don’t know whether
-dad would want me to take it out, Joe. I’d lend
-it to you in a minute if he’d let me, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wasn’t thinking of borrowing it,” said Joe.
-“I was going to suggest that we go in together.
-I think we could start with about fifty dollars.
-We needn’t put in much of a stock at first, you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
-know. There’d be a month’s rent, say twenty
-dollars, and we’d have to buy a few boxes of
-cigars and we’d have to have a counter built.
-Maybe we’d better say sixty dollars, to be on the
-safe side. I haven’t figured on it yet, but I believe
-we could do it for sixty. I thought that if
-you’d put in half and take half the profits until
-you were square——”</p>
-
-<p>“I get you, Joey! Half would be only thirty
-dollars, wouldn’t it? I don’t believe dad would
-mind my taking out that much. But could you
-get the other thirty, Joey?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think so. I—I’ve got an idea that may
-work. Anyway——”</p>
-
-<p>“Why couldn’t I put in the whole sixty if dad
-will let me? In that way you wouldn’t have——”</p>
-
-<p>“It wouldn’t be wise,” said Joe. “I’m pretty
-sure I can make the thing go and pay a good
-profit, Jack, but if I happened to be wrong you’d
-stand to lose your money. And sixty dollars
-would be too much to drop. Besides, your father
-wouldn’t let you put in that much when I wasn’t
-putting in any.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe not. Let’s go down and talk to him
-about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, let’s go over it first. There may be something
-I’ve missed. Now, say Mr. Adams lets us<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
-have the space for twenty a month; that’s enough,
-although he may not think so; then we’ve got to
-have a counter built and that will cost, say, ten
-dollars. It’ll have to be made to look pretty
-neat, you know; maybe it had better be imitation
-mahogany. Then we’d arrange with the news
-company for a small list of magazines. We’d
-have to pay cash for those at first, but they don’t
-cost much. Same way with the papers. There’s
-good money in the <cite>Gazette</cite> and the <cite>Recorder</cite> at
-two cents if you sell enough of them. Then we’d
-want to put in some confectionery, like gum and
-chocolate and package things. We can buy that
-in Cincinnati and get as little as we want to start
-on. At the end of the month we ought to have
-enough for the next month’s rent and enough to
-put in new stock. My idea would be to make the
-stock bigger all the time, as we could afford it.
-There wouldn’t be any other expenses, would
-there? Can you think of any?”</p>
-
-<p>Jack couldn’t. “It looks perfectly safe to me,”
-he said, “because the rent is the only thing we’d
-have to worry about, isn’t it? I mean, we needn’t
-have more cigars and other things at a time than
-we could sell right away.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the idea. We’ve got to begin in a
-small way and expand. We won’t lay out a cent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-more than we have to. Then, if it shouldn’t prove
-a go we wouldn’t be stung very much. The
-papers, you know, are returnable, so we wouldn’t
-get stuck on those. Some of the magazines are,
-too, I think.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on!” exclaimed Jack suddenly. “Who’s
-going to tend shop? We’ll be in school all day
-up to three o’clock. Bet you hadn’t thought of
-that!”</p>
-
-<p>“You must think I’m a good deal of an idiot,”
-laughed Joe. “I’ll tell you my scheme. I
-thought I could go down there in the morning
-and get things fixed. We’d have a box on the
-corner with a slot in it and when anyone bought
-anything they could drop the money in the box.
-Then, after school——”</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose they didn’t!” interrupted his chum.
-“Seems to me that’s pretty risky!”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe so. You put folks on their
-honour like that and they’ll appreciate it and act
-square. I’ll bet we won’t lose half a dollar a
-month, Jack.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ve got a lot of faith, Joey. Still,
-you may be right at that. Come to think of it,
-I guess you are. All right. And then after school
-we could go down there and tend shop, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“When we didn’t have to practise.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That’s so. I’d forgotten practice. Well, on
-Saturdays we could be there all day, eh? That
-would be a lot of fun. I’ve always wanted to be
-a merchant and sell things. ‘Cigars? Yes, sir.
-I think you’ll like these. We make them ourselves
-and know just what goes into them, sir.
-Two for five, please. Thank you, sir. Come
-again if you live!’ That’s the stuff, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fine!” laughed Joe. “Now let’s go down
-and hear what your father says.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br />
-<small>PARTNERS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Five days later the news-stand in the lobby of the
-Adams Building was ready for business.</p>
-
-<p>It had all been extremely simple and easy. Mr.
-Strobe had not only consented to use his influence
-with Mr. Adams, but had declared that he believed
-the investment of thirty dollars in the enterprise
-to be a good stroke of business. In fact,
-Jack’s father became the most enthusiastic of the
-three that evening when the matter was broached
-to him. If, he said, Jack didn’t want to go into
-partnership with Joe he’d be glad to take a half
-interest himself! A news-stand in the Adams
-Building ought to be a money-maker, and he wondered
-that someone hadn’t thought of it before.
-Thereupon Joe suggested anxiously that perhaps
-someone had, and wasn’t satisfied until Jack’s
-father had called Mr. Adams up on the telephone
-and ascertained that the privilege had not been
-disposed of and that Mr. Adams was quite willing
-to confer with them tomorrow in the matter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Joseph Adams was president and principal
-owner of the big carpet mills and held title to
-much residence and store property throughout
-the town. He was about forty-two years of age,
-a much younger man than Joe had expected to
-find when, led by Mr. Strobe, they entered his
-office in the new building early the next morning.
-The business was completed in rather less than
-five minutes. Mr. Strobe stated what was wanted,
-Joe answered a question as to proposed location
-of the stand, they all descended to view the spot,
-and Mr. Adams then said: “I’m agreeable.
-Rent free until the first of March. After that,
-eighteen dollars a month. Keep everything clean
-and neat. Come around this afternoon and I’ll
-have a lease ready for you.”</p>
-
-<p>When they returned at half-past three Mr.
-Adams said: “One thing I neglected to speak
-of, boys. About your counter and showcase, now;
-better let me attend to those, I guess. I don’t
-want anything that clashes with the finish down
-there. I’ve got Mayer coming here in about ten
-minutes. He’s the boss-carpenter. I thought
-we’d decide what was wanted and he could go
-ahead and put it up. The walls are cream white
-down there and I think we’d ought to have the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>
-stand to match. That suit you? What had you
-thought of?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mahogany, sir,” replied Joe. “That is, imitation
-mahogany. But I think cream white would
-look better.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess so. Now, look here.” Mr. Adams
-drew a sheet of paper towards him and sketched
-roughly. “A row of shelves across to here; sliding
-doors at the back; panelled in front. Then a
-flap counter the rest of the way; lift it up to get
-in, you know; crawl under if you’d rather. Now
-what about shelves at the back? Need them?
-They wouldn’t look well, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think so,” replied Joe. “I guess we’d
-have room for everything on the counter and in
-the showcase. I—I hadn’t thought about a
-showcase, though, Mr. Adams. Won’t it cost a
-good deal?”</p>
-
-<p>“Twelve dollars and sixty cents. I priced it.
-That needn’t worry you, though; I’m paying for
-the whole thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” murmured Joe. “I didn’t understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s great!” exclaimed Jack.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Adams smiled. “Doing it for my own protection.
-I’d rather have something that looked
-solid and substantial there. I don’t want anything<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
-cheap, you know. Here’s Mayer now,” he
-added as a clerk appeared at the door. “Let’s
-go down and see what’s to be done.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe thought he had never encountered anyone
-who could rush a thing through as Mr. Adams
-could. It took him about three minutes to explain
-his ideas to the carpenter and when he had
-finished, that gentleman, a taciturn man with a
-long head and a Scotch burr, could suggest no
-improvements.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, then,” said Mr. Adams briskly.
-“Get right at it, Mayer. Have it done—when do
-you want it, boys?”</p>
-
-<p>“Whenever it’s convenient, sir. There’s
-no——”</p>
-
-<p>“This is Saturday. Get it done by Wednesday,
-Mayer. See that you get a good dull enamel on
-it, like the walls. Make a good, finished job.”</p>
-
-<p>The boss-carpenter nodded. Then: “How
-about the light, sir?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Light? That’s so. Ought to be one back of
-the counter. See Purley and Ferris about that
-and tell them to put up a small dome light, same
-design as the others here. That’s all, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>A moment later he was being shot upwards in
-an elevator, Mr. Mayer was silently measuring
-with a pocket rule, and Joe and Jack, their lease<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-in Joe’s pocket, sought the sidewalk. Outside,
-Jack capered gleefully. “Nearly a month’s rent
-free, Joey,” he exclaimed, “and we don’t have
-to pay for building the stand! He’s a brick, isn’t
-he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” agreed Joe. “I’m wondering——”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” demanded the other impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we won’t need so much money as we
-thought, you see. I guess we can get started on
-about half of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll buy more stock!”</p>
-
-<p>“N-no, we’d better start easy, as we agreed to.
-What I was thinking was this, Jack. When I
-said I thought I could get hold of my half the
-money I had Aunt Sarah in mind. I think she’d
-loan me thirty dollars if she had it. But I don’t
-know whether she’d have that much, you see,
-and——”</p>
-
-<p>Jack interrupted with a laugh. “Not have
-thirty dollars!” he cried. “Why, your Aunt
-Sarah is one of the richest women in Amesville,
-you booby! Everyone knows that!”</p>
-
-<p>“She is?” asked Joe in surprise. “I didn’t
-know it. She’s always so—so careful——”</p>
-
-<p>“Stingy, you mean, don’t you?” laughed Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t mean that, really. She isn’t a bit
-stingy. She’s just careful. About putting the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>
-light out when you’re not using it, and bargaining
-with the tradespeople, and—and like that, you
-know. Well, anyway, I’d rather not ask her for
-the money. I’d much rather borrow it from you.
-If we only need thirty dollars altogether, your
-share would be fifteen and mine would be fifteen.
-Well, if you can take thirty out of the savings
-bank you might put fifteen into the business and
-loan the other fifteen to me at the regular rate
-of interest. Would you be willing to do that?
-No matter whether the business got along or not,
-I’d pay you the fifteen back, of course, because
-I could get it from Aunt Sarah.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! That’s the ticket! Only I don’t want
-any interest, you old Shylock!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d rather, though. I’d pay Aunt Sarah interest,
-and why not you?”</p>
-
-<p>Jack was hard to persuade, but Joe ultimately
-got him to agree. “We’ll ask your father about
-it, though. If he says it’s all right——”</p>
-
-<p>“He will,” laughed Jack. “Dad thinks you’re
-a sort of young Napoleon of Finance, Joey, and
-anything you do is all right. Fact is, I believe
-he’s a bit sore because we didn’t let him in on
-this.”</p>
-
-<p>During the succeeding four days—with the exception
-of Sunday—the boys spent most of their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-spare time in the lobby of the Adams Building
-watching the construction of the news-stand. Mr.
-Mayer called it a “booth,” and since they had
-every wish to keep him good-humoured, they
-adopted that name for it themselves. On Tuesday
-morning it was in place and had received its
-first coat of paint. The enamel went on Tuesday
-afternoon and a second coat was to be applied
-two days later. But as the final application could
-be made while business was going on, the boys
-decided to open the stand Wednesday afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>Joe had already ordered a small assortment of
-package candies, chewing-gum, and such things
-from Cincinnati, had made arrangements with
-the news company for current magazines and certain
-out-of-town papers, had arranged with the
-two Amesville journals for fifty copies to be delivered
-daily, and had spent the larger part of
-their principal in the purchase of cigars, cigarettes,
-and tobacco. Although he brought as little
-of everything as he could, he discovered to his
-dismay that on Wednesday morning he had but
-seven dollars of the original thirty left. I don’t
-think either Joe or Jack did very well at lessons
-that day. It was frightfully hard to keep their
-minds on their school work, so impatient were
-they to get to the stand and start business. Joe<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-went over his newspaper route on Tuesday for
-the last time. He had some slight misgivings
-about abandoning that employment, for although
-it brought him but three dollars, the money was
-certain. However, nothing venture, nothing
-have; and he was pretty certain, too, that he could
-find work again with the <cite>Recorder</cite> if necessary.</p>
-
-<p>So just as soon as school was dismissed the two
-boys hurried down town to their place of business,
-as Jack importantly phrased it. The counter
-shone freshly white and the handsome showcase,
-three feet in length by twenty-two inches in
-breadth, nickel-trimmed, with mirrors set in the
-sliding panels at the back, had been cleaned and
-polished until it was speckless. They raised
-the hinged end of the counter and stepped
-inside. Joe turned a switch and a flood
-of mellow light shone down from the neat
-ground-glass dome above. Many bundles had
-already been unpacked and their contents
-stowed on the shelves under the counter, but
-others awaited them, and they set to work.
-There was not much room between counter and
-wall, but there was enough to move about in.
-The counter was two feet wide, leaving the space
-behind it not quite three feet. The showcase had
-been placed midway between wall and hinged flap<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-and there was two feet of solid counter on each
-side of it. If necessary they could make use of
-the hinged portion as well and pass under it instead
-of lifting it up. But at present there was
-plenty of room for all their goods without availing
-themselves of that section. The shelves underneath
-were roomy and the sliding doors were
-supplied with a neat Yale lock. Joe inserted his
-key in it, pushed aside a panel and revealed their
-store of smokers’ articles. It was a quarter to
-four and they worked busily to get things in shape
-against the time the occupants of the building
-began to leave. They expected to sell no more
-today than a few evening papers, but they wanted
-the public to know that the stand was opened for
-business.</p>
-
-<p>The cigars and tobacco and cigarettes went into
-the case. Joe had to do a lot of arranging before
-he managed to make them occupy enough of the
-space to satisfy him. Even then the showcase
-looked pretty empty. “We ought to have about
-a dozen boxes of cigars,” he said, “to make a
-showing. I’ll have to spread everything out in
-here or else it will look as if we didn’t have anything!”</p>
-
-<p>Jack, struggling with a bundle of confectionery
-on the counter, grunted assent. Joe, finally closing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>
-the showcase, pulled out a dozen or so magazines
-from underneath and arranged them on the
-counter. Then came the candy, most of it in half-pound
-boxes, and a varied assortment of gum and
-enticing confections put up in tiny tin boxes.
-There was some discussion as to where these
-things should be placed. In the end some were
-put on top the showcase and the rest ranged between
-the magazines and the wall. The space at
-the other side of the case was reserved for newspapers
-and a few minutes later the fifty copies of
-the <cite>Recorder</cite> arrived, were paid for, and spread
-on the counter. With them were a half-dozen
-copies of morning papers from Cleveland, Columbus,
-Springfield, Sandusky, Cincinnati, and
-Dayton. At last everything was in place and the
-boys emerged into the corridor to view the result.
-It certainly looked attractive and business-like,
-and they were hugely pleased. Joe rearranged
-the boxes of candy so that the colored tops would
-show better and then Jack went back behind the
-counter and between them they distributed the
-price cards. These were small squares or oblongs
-of gray cardboard with black lettering and had
-been done by the man who performed such work
-for Strobe and Wonson. A number of small,
-weighted holders had been purchased—an extravagance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
-that Joe had resisted at first—and the
-cards were slipped between the wire loops. Jack
-again emerged to view the effect.</p>
-
-<p>“Looks swell, doesn’t it?” he asked. Joe
-agreed that it did, and one of the elevator boys,
-who had been an interested observer at intervals,
-now stepped from his car and joined them. He
-was a tall, raw-boned youth of seventeen or
-eighteen, by name Martin Olson, but generally
-known as Ole. Ole had a shock of carroty red
-hair and an unattractive flat face liberally sprinkled
-with large freckles that matched his hair.
-Neither Joe nor Jack had taken to Ole much, but
-his praise of the news-stand now inclined them
-more favourably toward him.</p>
-
-<p>“Best looking little shop in town,” he announced
-enthusiastically. “That’s a swell glass
-case you’ve got there, too.” He examined the
-contents. “You ought to have some Dobbins,
-though. Dobbins are the best five-cent smoke
-there is. What kind of cigarettes have you got?
-Uh-huh, I see. There’s lots of fellows in the
-building smokes Scimitars, though. You’d ought
-to lay in some of those, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll find out pretty quick what’s wanted,”
-replied Joe. “What we should have, though, is
-a lighter. Guess we’d better have some matches<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>
-on the showcase until we can get a lighter. You
-tend shop, Jack, and I’ll go and get some.” When
-he returned from a trip around the corner to
-the nearest grocery Ole had departed, but the
-second elevator attendant had taken his place.
-He was a younger lad, short and stocky and red-cheeked,
-with a wealth of assurance and a fine
-command of slang. His name was Walter. There
-was probably more to it, but the boys never
-learned it. Walter was equally complimentary.</p>
-
-<p>“Some stand, kiddoes, believe me,” he
-affirmed. “All to the cheese. Say, what kind o’
-cigs do you handle? Got any Moorish Beauties?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, we haven’t,” said Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“You ought to, then. They’re the best. Lots
-o’ fellers smokes Beauties.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve got six sorts there,” laughed Joe,
-“and it seems we haven’t the right ones yet.
-Ole says we ought to keep Scimitars.”</p>
-
-<p>Walter sniffed. “Huh, they ain’t no good.
-Punk! Beauties is the brand for you. Got any
-novels?”</p>
-
-<p>“Novels? No. Just magazines.”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean nickel novels. ‘Dick Dashaway’ and
-‘Bull’s-Eye Bob’ and them. Ain’t you goin’ to
-have none o’ them?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I think not,” replied Joe drily. “You see,
-if we kept them we might not attend to business
-we’d be so busy reading them.”</p>
-
-<p>The irony was lost on Walter, however.
-“That’s so. They’re swell novels, take it from
-me. There’s one of ’em—Oh, gee, there’s a guy
-wants to be dropped!” And Walter disgustedly
-returned to his car, slammed the door and shot
-upward.</p>
-
-<p>“What time is it?” asked Jack. “My watch
-has stopped.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nearly half-past four,” replied Joe. “I
-wonder who will be our first customer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe there won’t be one! Say, we’ve forgotten
-the money box.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know. But we don’t need to put that out
-except when we’re not here. We—we might see
-how it looks, though.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe went behind, produced a japanned tin box
-with a slot in the lid and a small brass padlock
-on the hasp and set it on the showcase. On the
-front of the box was printed in white letters:
-“Help yourself and drop the money here.”</p>
-
-<p>“How does it look?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“All right. But, say, Joey, wouldn’t it be a
-joke if someone absent-mindedly walked off with
-the box some day?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The funniest kind of a joke!”</p>
-
-<p>“How would it do to chain it?” continued
-Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it would look a bit funny, wouldn’t it,
-to trust folks as to put their money in the box
-and then chain the box down?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see——” began Jack. But just then
-an elevator descended, the door opened, and out
-walked Mr. Adams.</p>
-
-<p>“Ready for business, eh, boys? Well, you look
-very nice, very nice, indeed. Hm; cigars, cigarettes,
-magazines, candy—quite a stock of goods.
-Got any Vista de Isla cigars? I see you haven’t,
-though. It might pay you to keep a box, boys.
-I run out of them now and then and I might as
-well get them from you as send around to the
-club for them. Well, I’ll take a <cite>Recorder</cite>, I
-guess. Have to patronise home industries, you
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Adams laid down his two pennies and took
-a paper from the pile. Then:</p>
-
-<p>“Hello,” he said, “you’ve got the Springfield
-paper, eh? Good idea. I’ll take that. And
-Cleveland and Cincinnati and—Well, you’re enterprising!
-Are these today’s? Guess I’ll take
-the Cincinnati paper, too. Will you have these
-regularly?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, and others besides; Chicago and
-Pittsburg and probably New York.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Adams viewed Joe curiously across the
-counter. “You ought to get on, my boy,” he said
-finally as he counted out an additional ten cents.
-“You’re the first person in this city ever thought
-of keeping a Chicago paper. I don’t know that
-you’ll ever sell one, but you certainly deserve to.
-Business good so far?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” replied Joe, with a twinkle, “we’ve
-sold three newspapers for twelve cents.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? Oh, then I’m the first customer, am I?
-Quite an honour, I’m sure. I’ll have to continue
-my patronage, boys. Good luck to you and good-night.”</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes later the exodus from the building
-began and no one passed out of the building
-without pausing to look at the news-stand,
-whether he purchased or not. But many did purchase.
-The pile of evening papers went fast and
-long before the building had emptied itself Joe
-had to make a hurried trip down to the <cite>Recorder</cite>
-Building and get a new supply. Several sales of
-cigars and cigarettes were made as well, while
-a young lady typewriter smilingly purchased a
-box of candy. The only department of the establishment
-not patronised was the magazine department,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
-and when, at six, they closed up shop
-for the night, Jack remedied that by buying a
-copy of a monthly devoted to scientific achievements.</p>
-
-<p>Before they went they counted their receipts
-and found that they totalled three dollars and
-ten cents. Just how much of that amount represented
-profit they could not reckon off-hand, but
-they were very well satisfied with the result of a
-little more than an hour’s business. After everything
-had been stowed away under the counter
-and locked up for the night the partners took
-themselves off, arm in arm, looking as much as
-possible like prosperous merchants.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-<small>MR. CHESTER YOUNG</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The Adams Building News Stand prospered
-from the first. There was never a doubtful moment.
-On Thursday business started off with a
-rush and when, just before half-past eight, Joe
-and Jack had to hurry unwillingly away to
-school, even Joe, now the more pessimistic of the
-two, had to acknowledge that success seemed assured.
-After school they flew back again to discover
-that the stand was well-nigh exhausted of
-aught save magazines and that even those were
-half gone! They had placed what they supposed
-to be a sufficient supply of cigars, cigarettes, and
-tobacco on top of the case, but one cigar-box was
-utterly empty, another held but three cigars, all
-but two packages of cigarettes had disappeared,
-and the candy was down to the final layer of
-boxes! The morning papers had been pretty
-nearly sold out before they had left, and so the
-sight of the empty counter to the left of the showcase
-produced no surprise. But the inroad made<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>
-on the rest of their stock brought gasps of astonishment.
-An awful fear assailed the partners
-and with one accord they grabbed at the cash-box.
-But its weight and the pleasant clinking
-sound it gave out reassured them, and when,
-after they had taken account of stock and had
-reckoned up the contents of the box, they discovered
-that not only had every purchase been
-honestly paid for, but that someone had dropped
-in five cents too much, they viewed each other
-triumphantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Eight dollars and fifty-five cents!” exclaimed
-Jack awedly. “What do you know about that?
-And it’s not four o’clock yet!”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s troubling me,” replied Joe happily,
-“is how we are to stock up again by morning!
-We can get the cigars, all right, but we’ve got
-to have more candy and it takes a day or two to
-get that. And the magazines are more than half
-gone, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Couldn’t we telegraph to Cincinnati for the
-candy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but I guess we’d better buy some here
-meanwhile.”</p>
-
-<p>“But there won’t be any profit on it!” wailed
-Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“No, but we can’t help that. We’ve got to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>
-keep the stock up. We’ll telegraph the Cincinnati
-folks to send fifty pounds this time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fifty!” exclaimed Jack doubtfully. “Isn’t
-that a lot?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but we’ve sold five pounds already and
-we don’t want to have to order oftener than a
-week. The way they pack it, it keeps fresh for
-a long time. Maybe it would be a good idea
-to put in a few pound boxes of a better
-grade. Guess I’d better go around to the
-cigar folks now and get a couple more boxes.
-What was that brand that Mr. Adams mentioned?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mister Dyler, or something like that,”
-answered Jack. “I didn’t get it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Neither did I. But I guess they’ll know what
-I’m after. And we ought to have some more
-magazines, I suppose, if only for show. It’s
-most time for the March numbers to come out,
-though, and we don’t want to overstock on the
-February. I’ll telephone to the news company
-and ask them to send a half-dozen with the out-of-town
-papers. I’d better hurry, too, or they’ll
-be here. Where is the nearest telephone? Look
-here, Jack, Mr. Adams ought to have a public
-booth down here in the lobby.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so. It would be sort of handy for us,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>
-wouldn’t it? Do you suppose he would if we
-asked him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know, but I’m not afraid to ask.
-Maybe, though, we could afford one of our own.”</p>
-
-<p>“At thirty-six dollars a year? You must be
-crazy!”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that what it costs? How about a two-party
-line? Or——” Joe stopped and regarded
-his partner thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Out with it!” demanded Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“Why couldn’t we have a public ’phone—one
-of those drop-a-nickel affairs, you know, and set
-it here by the wall? I wouldn’t be surprised if
-we made enough to get our own calls for nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“We might,” agreed Jack hesitantly. “How
-much would we have to pay the telephone company?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. Tomorrow I’ll go around
-there and ask. Well, I’m off. Pay the news company
-when they come. And pay for the
-<cite>Recorders</cite>, too. I’ll be back as soon as I can.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you go across to the store?”
-asked Jack. “The telephone’s in the outer
-office. Just tell them I said you were to use it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Too cheeky. I’d rather pay for the call myself.
-Out of the firm’s money!” he added laughingly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
-as he disappeared through the revolving
-doors.</p>
-
-<p>He was back some twenty minutes later.
-“Anything doing?” he asked as he deposited two
-bundles on the counter.</p>
-
-<p>“Lots,” replied Jack. “I sold two cigars, a
-package of cigarettes, one <cite>Recorder</cite>, and a box
-of these mints. And I paid for the evening
-papers and a dollar and twelve cents to the news
-company.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you put down what you’d paid out?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. Should I?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you don’t we’ll get all mixed up. I’ve got
-a small blankbook here and I guess we’d better
-start in and keep a careful account of everything.
-What papers did the news company bring?”</p>
-
-<p>“All sorts. There’s one from New York.
-We’ll never sell that, Joey.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe we will, but it doesn’t matter.
-After a week or so we’ll find out just what papers
-we can sell, and how many, and then we’ll confine
-ourselves to those. They brought the magazines
-I asked them to? Oh, I see. All right. Things
-begin to look a bit more business-like again.
-Undo this candy, will you, while I get the cigars
-out. By the way, what do you think? That cigar
-that Mr. Adams smokes is called Vista de Isla<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
-and it costs seventeen dollars and twenty cents a
-hundred!”</p>
-
-<p>“Great Scott! You didn’t buy any, I hope?”</p>
-
-<p>“Twenty-five; four dollars and thirty cents.
-Here they are.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but, say, Joey, that’s pretty steep!
-Suppose he doesn’t buy any?”</p>
-
-<p>“He will. He said he would. And the chap
-who sold these says we must have a wet sponge
-in the case to keep the cigars moist. So I got
-one. Also a five-cent glass dish to put it in. Run
-upstairs and get it wet, will you, while I arrange
-these?”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. How much do those cigars sell for
-apiece, Joey?”</p>
-
-<p>“The man said twenty-five cents, but I don’t
-suppose Mr. Adams pays that much at his club
-for them. I thought I’d ask him. We can sell
-them at twenty cents and still make a good
-profit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Twenty-five cents!” murmured Jack. “Think
-of paying that much for one cigar! And they
-don’t look much, either.”</p>
-
-<p>“You happen to be looking at the ten-centers,”
-laughed Joe. “The others are here.” He
-opened the lid of the flat box and revealed a row
-of greenish-black cigars quite different from the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-others in appearance and aroma. “I guess these
-are something extra, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Must be, but I think anyone’s a chump to pay
-a quarter for a cigar,” responded Jack.
-“Where’s your old sponge?”</p>
-
-<p>Business that evening was brisk and the seventy-five
-copies of the <cite>Recorder</cite> disappeared like
-magic and Jack had to hurry out on the sidewalk
-and buy extra copies from a newsboy. “Tomorrow
-we’ll get a hundred,” said Joe. “If we don’t
-sell them they can go back.” By closing time
-three dollars and thirty-four cents had been
-added to the amount in the box, swelling the total
-sales for the day to over fourteen dollars!</p>
-
-<p>That evening, in Jack’s room, they tried to
-figure their profits. They had taken in in the
-two days exactly seventeen dollars and forty-four
-cents. Since, however, they had not been able to
-enter each sale as made, it was difficult to arrive
-at the desired result. They knew that on each
-morning or afternoon paper they made a profit
-of one cent, that on each half-pound box of candy
-they made eight cents, that magazines netted
-from four to six cents, and that cigars, cigarettes,
-and tobacco sold for from ten to twenty-five per
-cent. above cost. After much figuring they came
-to the conclusion that their profits were represented<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>
-by about one-quarter of the amount taken
-in, or practically four dollars and thirty cents.</p>
-
-<p>“And at that rate,” said Joe, “we ought to
-make a monthly profit of about one hundred and
-twelve dollars!”</p>
-
-<p>Jack stared unbelievingly. Then his face fell.
-“But we’ve got to pay the rent out of that,” he
-mourned.</p>
-
-<p>Joe laughed. “You’re getting to be a regular
-Shylock, old man! The rent is only eighteen
-and that leaves us ninety-four. And besides that
-we haven’t to pay any this month.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack brightened again. “That makes forty-seven
-dollars a month for each of us, doesn’t it?
-And that’s nearly twelve dollars a week! Joey,
-we’ll be millionaires before we know it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it pays better than carrying that newspaper
-route! Another thing, Jack; there’s no
-reason why we shouldn’t do better as time goes
-on. We can keep other things, you know, like
-post-cards and—Look here, why not get a good
-line of Amesville views?”</p>
-
-<p>“Views? What sort of views?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you know; the City Hall and First
-Presbyterian Church and the Adams Building,
-of course, and City Park and all the rest of
-the show places. Have them made into post-cards,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
-I mean. There’s a firm in Detroit that’ll
-print them for us, and they don’t cost much of
-anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sounds all right. I guess there are lots of
-things we could sell that we haven’t thought of
-yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s one thing I’d like to do,” said Joe
-thoughtfully, “and that’s have a special brand
-of cigars made for us. That is, we don’t have
-them made for us exactly. We just select a good
-brand and then the factory puts a special label
-on them. See what I mean? ‘Adams Building
-Perfecto’ or something like that. If we got a real
-good quality, Jack, and sort of pushed it we
-might get quite a trade. As far as I can see
-there’s no reason why we should depend on the
-folks in the building for our trade. If we carry
-things people want they will come in from outside
-for them. It’s just as easy to drop into the
-Adams Building lobby as it is to go into a regular
-store. We might run an advertisement in the
-paper after we get ahead a bit. ‘Try the Adams
-Building Perfecto, the best ten-cent smoke in the
-city. Sold at the Adams Building News-Stand.’”</p>
-
-<p>“You can think of a lot of ways to spend our
-profits,” said Jack sadly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Advertising pays,” replied Joe. “Anyway,
-we haven’t fairly started yet, Jack. You wait
-until we’ve been there a couple of months and
-I’ll wager our sales will be double what they were
-today. For one thing, the building isn’t filled
-yet. There are lots of offices still vacant. Every
-time one is let we get one or two or maybe a half-dozen
-prospective customers. Come to think of
-it, Jack, there’s no reckoning that, for it isn’t
-only the folks who occupy offices in the building
-who will trade with us, but the folks who have
-business in the building, folks who come in and
-out. I’d like to know, just for fun, how many
-go through that door every day. Bet you there’s
-nearly five hundred of them, or will be when the
-offices are all rented! Suppose, now, that only
-one out of ten stopped and bought from us, and
-that they only spent five cents apiece. That
-would be—fifty times five—two dollars and a half
-right there, besides our regular trade. And I
-guess they’d average nearer ten cents apiece
-than five, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“How much,” asked Jack, “would we have to
-pay a clerk to tend the stand for us?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve thought of that,” replied Joe, “and I
-guess we could get a young chap for about six
-dollars a week.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The fellow we’d get for that price wouldn’t
-be worth having,” said Jack sensibly. “I think
-it would pay us, perhaps not just now, but after
-we’d got going well, to hire a real clerk and pay
-him ten dollars a week; some fellow who had sold
-cigars and things like that and who could make
-sales; talk things up, you know, and hustle.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess you’re right,” answered Joe, after a
-moment’s thought. “And I believe it would pay
-us to do that. I dare say there will be times when
-folks won’t have just the right change with them
-and we’ll lose sales. Besides, when we get to
-playing baseball we won’t either of us be able to
-be at the stand except just for a few minutes in
-the morning and evening. Well, we don’t have
-to think of that quite yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, we do, though, Joey. In another
-week we’ll be staying in the cage until five o’clock
-or so. Of course, that scheme of putting folks
-on their honor has worked all right so far, and
-I don’t say it wouldn’t always work, but someone’s
-got to be at the stand to receive the papers
-and pay for them.”</p>
-
-<p>“We might have a monthly account with the
-papers and the news company,” said Joe
-thoughtfully. “I guess they’d be willing. Still,
-you’re right, Jack. We’ll start out and see if we<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
-can find a clerk. How would it do to advertise?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose that’s the only way. Or, hold on,
-why not look at the advertisements? Some fellow
-may be advertising right now for a job like
-this. I’ll go down and get the paper and we’ll
-have a look.”</p>
-
-<p>They found nothing promising that evening,
-but two days later they did, and in response to
-their reply, left at the <cite>Recorder</cite> office, Mr. Chester
-Young called on them Sunday afternoon. Mr.
-Young was a well-dressed, dapper youth of
-twenty-one or -two who consumed cigarettes
-voluminously and had a pair of somewhat shifty
-black eyes. The boys didn’t fancy his personality
-much, but he convinced them that he knew
-how to sell goods and presented recommendations
-from a former employer in Youngstown
-that read extremely well. They dismissed the
-applicant with a promise to let him hear definitely
-from them on Tuesday, and Mr. Chester
-Young, tucking his bamboo cane under his arm,
-took himself smilingly out.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think?” asked Jack when the
-front door had closed.</p>
-
-<p>“I think,” replied Joe, “that I wouldn’t trust
-that chap around the corner.”</p>
-
-<p>“Me, too. But he looks smart, doesn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I think he’d be just the fellow for us
-if—How much does a small cash register cost?”</p>
-
-<p>“Search me! But if we had one of those——”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I guess Mr. Chester Young wouldn’t
-have much chance to get absent-minded with the
-cash. First of all, though, we’d better get that
-man he worked for on the long distance and see
-what he has to say about Chester. Then, if it’s
-all right, we can price a cash register. I suppose
-we could get one for twenty-five dollars, don’t
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should hope so! Where’d we get the
-twenty-five?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll have it in another day or two. We’re
-pretty well stocked up now and won’t need to
-buy much for a week, I guess. I wish, though,
-that Mr. Chester Young could look you in the eye
-for more than a thousandth part of a second!”</p>
-
-<p>“So do I. And did you see the number of
-cigarettes he smoked in the time he was here?
-Do you suppose he’d help himself from stock?”</p>
-
-<p>“If he did there wouldn’t be any stock very
-long,” laughed Joe. “Let’s go through the advertisements
-in today’s paper again and see if
-we missed any. Seems to me there must be more
-fellows than Mr. Chester Young looking for
-work.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but most of them want to be book-keepers
-or chauffeurs. We may want a chauffeur
-some day, but not quite yet, and as for a
-book-keeper——”</p>
-
-<p>“We need one, but can’t afford him,” ended
-Joe. “You’re right. There’s nothing here. I
-guess Chester’s the only thing in sight.”</p>
-
-<p>Five days later Mr. Chester Young was installed
-behind the counter in the Adams Building
-and at his elbow reposed a neat cash register.
-The former employer of Mr. Chester Young had
-reported most favourably on that gentleman; indeed,
-to hear him one could not help wondering
-why he had deprived himself of Mr. Young’s
-services! Joe left the telephone booth rather
-puzzled, but there seemed no good reason for
-doubting the Youngstown man’s veracity, and
-they decided after some hesitation to give the
-applicant a trial—if they could find a cash register
-they could afford to buy! Fortune favoured
-them. The proprietor of a fruit store whose
-business was expanding had one to sell and they
-closed the bargain with him at seventeen dollars,
-thereby securing a machine that had originally
-cost forty-five.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Chester Young started out well. The sales
-during his first day at the stand were better than<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
-for any other day, and neither Joe nor Jack could
-see that the supply of cigarettes had fallen off
-unduly. Perhaps, as Jack pointed out, this was
-because they did not carry the kind affected by
-their clerk! They did not find that Mr. Young
-improved much on acquaintance, but since he was
-attending to business and seemed to take a genuine
-interest in the venture they tried to be fair
-to him and to like him. In any event, it was lucky
-that they had found someone to tend shop, for on
-the fifteenth day of the month Captain Sam Craig
-called the baseball candidates together in the
-cage in the basement of the school building, and
-for a long time after neither Joe nor his partner
-had much leisure to devote to their business venture.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br />
-<small>IN THE BASEBALL CAGE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The High School building stood by itself in the
-centre of a block in the newer residence district
-of Amesville. It was a handsome structure of
-mottled, yellow-brown brick and sandstone, four
-stories in height. On the top floor was a large
-hall used for meetings and for morning drill.
-When, some six years before, the building had
-been planned those in charge of the work had
-believed that in providing that hall and supplying
-it with a modest amount of gymnastic paraphernalia
-they were providing liberally and for
-all time. To their surprise, no sooner was the
-building occupied than demands came for additional
-contrivances, and no sooner had those demands
-been satisfied than that troublesome body,
-the Alumni Association, put forth a plea for a
-baseball cage in the basement! It was over a
-year before the cage materialised, and another
-year before shower-baths and lockers were installed,
-but at the time of our story those things
-were long-established facts and youthful Amesville<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span>
-was deriding the cage as too small and the
-shower-baths as out of style!</p>
-
-<p>The basement of the school building was but
-half underground, and numerous windows supplied
-light on one side and one end of the cage.
-But in February the days were still short and
-the light did not last long, especially when, as on
-the fifteenth, the sun was hidden by dull clouds.
-Since, however, the first week of baseball practice
-was confined to setting-up exercises and dumb-bell
-work, light was not of great consequence.</p>
-
-<p>Exactly thirty-two boys reported that afternoon
-at a quarter to four in the cage. Of this
-number some fourteen or fifteen were holdovers
-from last season’s First and Second Teams, fellows
-like Sam Craig, “Buster” Healey, Sidney
-Morris, Toby Williams, Gordon Smith, and Jack
-Strobe. Tom Pollock was not present, since his
-duties at the store in which he was employed frequently
-kept him from participation in preliminary
-work. The coach, Mr. Talbot, was a wide-awake-looking
-man of some twenty-eight years,
-a former high school player and now a lawyer
-who, in spite of a growing practice, found time
-every year to take the baseball players in hand.
-Today Mr. Talbot gathered the candidates together
-and spoke energetically and to the point.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry not to see more candidates,” he
-said. “Some of the fellows think that they can
-keep away until we get outdoors and then report.
-Well, they can, but I give them fair warning that
-they will find themselves handicapped. This indoor
-work isn’t designed just to keep you fellows
-out of mischief in the afternoons. It’s real stuff.
-It’s important. You can’t go out on the field and
-make any sort of a showing if your muscles are
-bound. That’s what this indoor practice is for,
-to limber up your muscles, train your eye, get
-your brain working. Some few of you have been
-playing hockey, and that’s good preparation for
-what’s ahead, but most of you haven’t done a
-thing since last Fall and your muscles are tied
-up in knots. First thing, then, is to get so you
-can use them without hurting them, and so, before
-you touch a baseball or a bat, you’ll have a
-week—maybe two—of setting-up drill and dumb-bell
-exercises, and, now and then, a run outdoors
-when the ground gets in shape. It isn’t interesting,
-I know, but it’s necessary, and every one of
-you can help yourself a lot if you’ll keep in mind
-all the time that what you’re doing you’re doing
-for a purpose and not just to pass the time.
-When you stretch a muscle I want you to keep
-your mind on that. Don’t merely go through the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>
-motions thinking about the moving picture show
-you saw last night or wondering how soon you’ll
-get through. Put your mind on what you’re doing.
-Say to yourself, ‘I’m flexing these muscles
-to make them strong and supple.’ It will tell
-later on. If you don’t believe me, ask the fellows
-who have tried it before. Now I’ll ask you to
-form in lines across the floor, just as you do
-upstairs for morning drill. That’s the idea. I
-guess most of you know the drill. Those who
-don’t will watch me and learn it. All right, fellows.
-Attention!</p>
-
-<p>“I can see that a good many of you don’t know
-the position called for. It’s the position of the
-soldier. I supposed you learned that in morning
-drill. Heels on a line, now, and close together,
-and feet turned out at an angle of forty-five degrees.
-Knees straight, but not locked. Stand
-straight from the hips. Put your shoulders back,
-arching your chest a little. Let your arms hang
-naturally, elbows back, hands slightly to the rear
-of the trousers seam. Some of you look as if you
-were frozen. Get out of it! Ease up! You, third
-from the left in the second row, relax a little.
-That’s better. Now, then, heads erect, chins in,
-eyes ahead. There you are. Probably some of
-you are finding the position a bit uncomfortable,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
-which shows that you need just the exercise
-you’re going to get here. First exercise, fellows.
-Remaining at attention, bend the head back as
-far as it will go and then forward. Exercise!
-One—two—three—four—five—six—seven—eight!
-Attention! Now, from side to side, keeping
-the neck muscles tense. First to the right as
-far as you can comfortably go and then to the
-left. Exercise! Right—left—right—left—right—left—right—left!
-Attention!</p>
-
-<p>“Keep your stomach in, Williams. That’s
-better. Second exercise, fellows. Raise your
-arms in front of you, palms down. Now stretch
-them sidewise, turning the palms up, keeping the
-muscles tense always. Exercise! One—two—three—four—five—six—seven—eight!
-Attention!
-Now relax the muscles and swing the arms backward
-and forward like this. Exercise!...
-Now your shoulders. Muscles tense. Move them
-forward, then up, then back, then down into position
-again. Get that? Try it. Exercise! One—two——”</p>
-
-<p>And so it went for thirty minutes, until, in
-spite of numerous brief intervals of rest, more
-than half of those present were out of breath
-and aching in all sorts of unaccustomed places!
-Joe, for one, had never realised that he had so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>
-many muscles in his body as were called into play
-this afternoon! The exercises ended with the
-body-lift while lying face-downwards, and by
-that time even the more seasoned of the candidates
-were ready to quit. Mr. Talbot viewed the
-flushed faces with satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all for today. Tomorrow we’ll try
-more. After that we’ll use the bells. Now give
-your names to Mifflin—Oh, he isn’t here? Well,
-I’ll take them. After that get under the shower
-and don’t stand around too much. It’s easy to
-take cold when your pores are open. Tomorrow
-we’ll start promptly at four. Try not to be late,
-please. Names, now.”</p>
-
-<p>So it went every afternoon for a week. A half-dozen
-more martyrs joined the squad in that
-space of time. Gradually some of the first exercises
-were eliminated from the programme and
-the dumb-bell drill took their place. That dumb-bell
-work certainly gave surprising results, as
-Joe confided to Jack one evening as they hurried
-from school to the Adams Building. “I can turn
-my wrists in all sorts of ways,” laughed Joe.
-“They’re beginning to feel as if they didn’t have
-any bones in them!”</p>
-
-<p>“A few days ago I felt as if I didn’t have anything
-but bones,” replied Jack. “We’re almost<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span>
-through with this business, thank goodness. If
-the weather is all right about Saturday morning
-you’ll see us loping across the landscape, Joey.
-Bat is foxy about that.” Jack chuckled. “He
-always has a press of business when it comes to
-taking a hike!”</p>
-
-<p>“So would I if I was coaching,” laughed Joe.
-“Wonder if he wouldn’t like me to stay behind
-and help him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ask him! I dare you to!”</p>
-
-<p>Jack’s prediction proved right. On Thursday
-of that week the weather turned warm and windy
-and the ground, which had been like a wet sponge,
-dried so that it was possible to set foot to it
-without going in to the ankle. Sam Craig took
-charge and, lightly attired, the squad followed
-him over the better part of a two-mile journey
-that led across fields and over walls and, finally,
-back to town by the road. They alternated walking
-with jogging, but there was no let-up save
-for some five or six fellows who gave out before
-the romp was over. On the following Monday
-the first baseball appeared in the cage, and after
-a short setting-up drill and a brief session with
-the wooden dumb-bells the candidates were lined
-up on opposite sides of the cage and the ball was
-passed from side to side.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Swing your arms, fellows,” instructed the
-coach. “Act as though you were going to throw
-the ball over the building. Get all your muscles
-into play. Don’t hurry it, Smith. Slow and easy.
-That’s the idea. I want you all to get so you can
-put the ball squarely into the next fellow’s
-hands without making him move out of place
-for it.”</p>
-
-<p>Later two more balls were started going, and
-then the idea was to pass back and forth as
-quickly as possible, trying to catch the other fellows
-unawares. That was fun, and the cage was
-soon ringing with laughter. Mr. Talbot, taking
-his place at one side of the floor, enjoyed it as
-much as any of them. A few days after that the
-battery candidates were given a half-hour to
-themselves and practice for the rest began at
-four-fifteen. Occasionally Tom Pollock reported
-and pitched to Sam Craig or to Jack Speyer, who
-was slated as Sam’s understudy. With Tom in
-the pitching practice were Toby Williams and
-Carl Moran. Toby Williams was an able substitute
-for Tom, but Moran, who was only sixteen,
-had a lot to learn. Joe frequently went early to
-the cage and watched the pitching staff at work,
-and his admiration for Tom Pollock increased
-vastly as he noted the ease and certainty with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>
-which that youth shot the ball into Sam Craig’s
-waiting glove.</p>
-
-<p>Batting practice began about the first of March.
-A net was stretched near the further end of the
-cage and the candidates took turns facing either
-Williams or Moran; infrequently, Tom Pollock.
-They were supposed to merely tap the ball, but
-sometimes they became over-eager and the sphere
-would go crashing into the iron netting at the
-other end of the cage and the pitcher, arising
-from the floor, would pathetically request the
-batters to “Cut out the slugging!”</p>
-
-<p>One or two of the early volunteers dropped out
-of the squad for one reason or another and their
-places were taken by newcomers. By the first
-week in March, at which time, if the spring was
-a normal one, they usually got out of doors, the
-baseball candidates were in hard and fit condition.
-Already Coach Talbot was able to form a
-fairly correct idea of the possibilities of most of
-the forty-one or -two fellows who now comprised
-the squad. George Mifflin, the manager, was custodian
-of a mysterious book, in which, opposite
-the various names, was set down much interesting
-information which the fellows would have
-given much to read. In this, at Bat’s command,
-Mifflin set down each day little marks and figures<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>
-after the names, memoranda practically understandable
-by Bat alone. Now and then came one
-of those cross-country jaunts—there were five of
-them that season—and now and then the squad
-was taken outside, where the footing was not
-too soft, and allowed to throw and catch. But
-with these exceptions, no outdoor work was indulged
-in until the second week in March, for on
-the fifth a miniature blizzard swept down the valley,
-undoing the good work performed by a fortnight
-of mild weather and drying winds. That
-blizzard had a lot of harsh things said about it.
-It was probably as unpopular a visitation of snow
-and sleet and ice and, subsequently, rain and
-slush as ever visited Amesville! But there was
-nothing for it but to wait for better conditions
-and, in the meanwhile, continue the drudgery of
-indoor practice, a drudgery that had grown distasteful
-to everyone by this time.</p>
-
-<p>Joe firmly believed that the work in the cage
-had done him a lot of good, even aside from the
-matter of physical conditioning. He had found
-that he could meet the ball in front of the batting
-net and roll it across the floor about as often as
-most of the fellows, and he was perhaps more impatient
-than any of them to get out on the turf
-and discover whether his hitting ability had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>
-really improved. Jack, himself a clever batter,
-predicted that Joe was destined to become one
-of the team’s best hitters that Spring.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got it all over ‘Handsome Frank’
-already,” Jack declared. “If you can cover
-the bag half as well as he can you’ll stand
-a James H. Dandy chance to cop that position,
-Joey.”</p>
-
-<p>“Foley’s been doing fully as well as I have at
-the net,” responded Joe doubtfully. “I don’t
-believe I can beat him out, Jack. He looks like a
-pretty good player. He’s built for a first baseman,
-too, with his height and reach and—and
-everything.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t see that he’s got so terribly
-much on you in height, old man. And as for
-reach, why, even if your arms aren’t quite as long
-as his, you’re a lot spryer on your pins. You’ve
-got a mighty nice, easy way of pulling them in
-to you, Joey. I hope you make it, that’s all I
-hope.”</p>
-
-<p>“So do I, but, as I say, Foley——”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Foley’s no wonder, after all. That’s
-what you want to get into that solid ivory dome
-of yours. You’ve begun to think that you <em>can’t</em>
-beat him; that’s your trouble. What you want
-to do is to make up your mind that you’re better<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
-than he is and that he’s got to prove the contrary.
-That’s the way I beat out Joe Kenney,
-last year. Joe had been holding down the job
-for two years when I got it into my head that
-I’d like to play out there in the left garden. So
-I said to myself, said I: ‘Jack, you may not think
-it now, but you’re a perfectly marvellous left
-fielder, one of the best, regular first chop, whatever
-that is! Try and accustom yourself to the
-fact and hold your head up and stick your chest
-out. And if anyone asks you don’t hesitate to
-tell them.’ Well, sir, in a little while I had myself
-hypnotised into acting like a regular fielder!
-When I’d meet Kenney I’d look at him pityingly
-and say to myself, ‘You poor old has-been, you
-haven’t the ghost of a chance this spring. I’m
-sorry for you, but it’s my turn.’ I got to believing
-it, and so did Kenney! About the middle of
-the season Kenney was sitting on the bench and
-I was pulling ’em down out there. Of course, a
-slight ability to hit the ball now and then had
-something to do with it, but a lot of it was
-just conning myself into thinking I was the real
-goods. You try it, Joey. It’s a great little
-trick.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a silly ape,” laughed Joe. “The
-reason you ousted the other chap was because you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
-batted around three hundred and he didn’t. If
-I bat over two hundred I’ll be doing well.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, you will! How many on the team
-last year hit for over that, do you suppose? I
-don’t believe there were four altogether. Two
-hundred, say you, slightingly! Two hundred’s
-good batting for chaps of our age, and don’t forget
-it. And my average last year wasn’t three
-hundred; it was two-ninety-three. I want credit
-for those seven points you stuck on!”</p>
-
-<p>“Foley doesn’t like me,” observed Joe after a
-moment’s silence. “You can see that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should he?” Jack demanded. “Don’t
-you suppose he knows that you’re after his place
-and that you stand a pretty good chance of getting
-it? What do you expect him to do? Hug
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, but—Oh, well, let’s forget it. I wish,
-though, we could get out of doors. When do you
-suppose we will?”</p>
-
-<p>“In exactly four days,” responded Jack without
-hesitation. “You see if I’m not right. Predicting’s
-the easiest thing I do.”</p>
-
-<p>The prediction proved correct.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X<br />
-<small>STRIKING A BALANCE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It is not to be supposed that devotion to baseball
-dulled the partners’ interest in their business
-venture. That was still absorbingly exciting.
-Every morning at a little before eight either Joe
-or Jack, or sometimes both of them, went to the
-Adams Building and superintended the opening
-of the stand for the day’s business. The counter
-was dressed with its magazines and boxes of confections
-and newspapers, the cash register set up
-and unlocked, and business was talked over with
-Young. In the afternoon, usually a little after
-five, both boys returned and Young, giving an
-account of his stewardship, went off. Young had
-turned out very satisfactorily and his employers
-were a little ashamed of their suspicions regarding
-his integrity. It only proved, Joe declared,
-that it didn’t pay to judge a fellow by his looks.
-Young was a smart salesman, polite in an off-hand
-way, and, so far at least, had neither caused
-shrinkage in the cigarette stock or made away
-with a penny of cash. Consequently both Joe and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>
-Jack tried to be friendly with him. That they
-couldn’t quite succeed was not for the want of
-trying. There was just one thing that they found
-objections to, and that was the fact that the news-stand
-was fast becoming a favourite loafing place
-for a number of the town’s “sports,” men and
-boys of about Young’s age who had no apparent
-occupation save that of smoking cigarettes.
-They had spoken to Young and he had agreed to
-do what he could to keep the fellows away, but
-matters did not seem to mend and the partners
-daily feared to receive a protest from Mr.
-Adams.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the stand had branched out into new
-avenues of trade. The “Adams Building Cigar”
-had appeared on the market and had met with
-favour and rapidly increasing sales. A small advertisement
-in the morning and evening papers
-had drawn attention to the cigar and to the news-stand
-and the latter was no longer dependent on
-the occupants of the building alone for patronage.
-The little shop became a popular place and trade
-increased until, especially during the noon hour,
-it was all Young could do to attend to customers.</p>
-
-<p>A week or so after they had started in business
-they had been called on by a young man who had
-proclaimed himself rather importantly to be a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
-representative of the <cite>Evening Recorder</cite>. The result
-of his visit had been a half-column story in
-the next day’s paper of the novel store where customers
-helped themselves and paid on honour. It
-was a big advertisement for the little establishment
-and for several days afterwards folks came
-in just to see it and, usually, purchased something
-if only because of the novelty.</p>
-
-<p>Post-cards, too, were added, a series of six
-views of Amesville scenes, and attained such
-popularity that Joe’s original order had to be
-quickly duplicated. The picture of the Adams
-Building especially sold like hot cakes. Puzzles
-were another addition to the stock, ingenious contrivances
-of metal or wood or tin that could be
-dropped in the pocket and that sold for exactly
-double what they cost when purchased from the
-news company. The cigar trade, however, was
-what accounted for most of the business done.
-The little showcase was no longer too large for
-its contents. On the contrary, it became more
-of a problem every week to find room in it for the
-goods they wished to display. Instead of five
-brands of cigars they now offered twelve, and of
-each brand they had to keep in stock from two to
-four sizes. Cigarettes and smoking tobaccos had
-also multiplied, while the top of the showcase<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
-held an assortment of gum, candies, and small
-confections, as well as the revolving post-card
-rack. In fact, the small space was already overcrowded
-and the boys had been for some time
-contemplating making a request to Mr. Adams
-for a shelf across the back to hold the cash register
-and the overflow from the case.</p>
-
-<p>One evening Joe and Jack arrived at the building
-in a pelting rain which had appeared without
-warning, and the exclamations of dismay which
-he overheard as the feminine population of the
-building faced the alternative of getting wet or
-being late for supper put a new idea in Joe’s
-mind. The next day a sign appeared over the
-stand: “Umbrellas for Rent.” They put in a
-dozen cheap cotton umbrellas which, if not much
-to look at, performed their mission satisfactorily.
-Customers, if they worked in the building, merely
-left their names, paid a quarter and were supplied
-with protection from the rain. In the course of
-time the dozen dwindled to five or six, but by that
-time each had paid for itself thrice over and instead
-of wasting effort in recovering the missing
-ones Joe bought more. About this time an automatic
-telephone instrument was installed on the
-counter and proved a great convenience to the
-boys and to others as well.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span></p>
-
-<p>At the end of the first four weeks of business
-the partners went over their books—or book, to
-be more accurate. They found that they had expended
-for stock, rent, clerk’s wages and incidentals
-the sum of $226.50, that they had taken
-in $324.17, and that their net profit was $97.67.
-While less than the estimate Joe had made, the
-amount was held to be satisfactory, for Joe’s
-estimate had taken no account of clerk’s wages
-and they were paying Mr. Chester Young ten
-dollars a week. Something like thirty per cent.
-profit ought to have satisfied anyone!</p>
-
-<p>They paid off all indebtedness—there were no
-accounts save that with the news company, which
-they settled weekly—set aside the amount due
-Mr. Adams for rent to date and halved the balance,
-each receiving as his share the sum of
-$48.83. The odd cent was left in the treasury!
-Then Joe paid back to his partner the borrowed
-thirty dollars, with interest at six per cent., although
-Jack insisted that Joe should wait until
-the end of the next month at least. But Joe preferred
-to get square, he declared, and proceeded
-to do so by paying most of the eighteen dollars
-remaining to him to Aunt Sarah for board and
-rent.</p>
-
-<p>Jack’s father laughingly told them that he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
-thought they had been in rather a hurry to divide
-the profits and that it might have been a good
-idea to have left a portion of the money in the
-business. Joe, however, explained that they
-would have to buy nothing for nearly a week,
-except the newspapers, and by that time they
-would have accumulated more profits. “You see,
-sir, we’re taking in about fifteen dollars a day on
-an average, and of that nearly four dollars and a
-half is clear profit. So we won’t have to keep
-any balance on hand.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see,” said Mr. Strobe gravely. “And what
-do you intend to do with all the money you make,
-boys?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to put mine in the bank, I guess,”
-answered Jack. “I’ve tried to think of something
-to spend it for, but I can’t!”</p>
-
-<p>“And how about you, Joe?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I’ll start a bank account, too, sir, but
-I won’t be able to for another month at least. I
-pay three dollars a week to Aunt Sarah, you
-know, and I’d like to send a little money to my
-mother.”</p>
-
-<p>“You could have done that now if you hadn’t
-paid back that thirty,” said Jack reproachfully.</p>
-
-<p>“I know, but I like to feel that I’m squared up
-with everyone. When I get, say, five hundred<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>
-in the bank, if I ever do, I’d like to invest it in
-something, Mr. Strobe. Could I, do you suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly. An excellent idea, Joe. You
-might find a small mortgage through the bank,
-or you could buy a few shares of some safe stock
-that would pay from four and a half to five per
-cent. You’ll get only three and a half from the
-savings bank. When you get ready to invest you
-let me know and I’ll help you find something.”</p>
-
-<p>One Saturday evening Joe boarded a train and
-went to Columbus to visit his mother, spending a
-very pleasant Sunday with her and returning to
-Amesville late that night.</p>
-
-<p>If there was anyone even distantly connected
-with Joe’s business venture who did not thoroughly
-approve of it, it was Miss Sarah Teele.
-Aunt Sarah was doubtless pleased that Joe was
-earning money; she had a very healthy admiration
-for folks who could do that, and a correspondingly
-poor opinion of those who couldn’t;
-but the fly in Aunt Sarah’s ointment was the fact
-that her nephew’s prosperity was due to the sale
-of cigars and cigarettes and tobacco. That rather
-spoiled it all in her eyes, for she was a fervidly
-outspoken foe to tobacco in all forms, and considered
-the use of it closely akin to the use of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
-intoxicating liquors. Aunt Sarah made one exception.
-A decoction of tobacco and water was
-an excellent preventive of bugs on her window
-plants! If she could have had her way she would
-have limited its use to that purpose. Consequently,
-from the first, she had viewed Joe’s
-venture askance, hinting darkly that money
-earned by catering to the vice of smoking was
-tainted money and would bring no benefit to its
-possessor. Joe argued with her politely, but was
-quite unable to shake her conviction. In the end
-they agreed to disagree, Aunt Sarah comforting
-herself with Joe’s solemn promise not to allow
-the association with what Aunt Sarah termed
-“the filthy weed” to undermine his morals to the
-extent of causing him to smoke. For some weeks
-Joe frequently found Aunt Sarah regarding him
-anxiously as though seeking for signs of moral
-degeneracy produced by traffic in the obnoxious
-article. Not discovering any, however, Aunt
-Sarah accepted the state of affairs with the best
-philosophy she could command, and, to Joe’s satisfaction,
-said no more about it. When he announced
-the result of that first month’s balance
-his aunt’s struggle between pleasure and disapproval
-was almost ludicrous.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br />
-<small>HANDSOME FRANK</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The Saturday forenoon following their conversation
-regarding Frank Foley found Joe and his
-chum leaning against the counter in Cummings
-and Wright’s hardware store. Jack was purchasing
-a new sweater and Joe was assisting at
-the task. Joe would have liked just such a garment
-as Jack was choosing, himself, but the next
-division of profits was a long way off and until
-that occurred he was bound to be in straitened
-circumstances. Jack had virtually decided on a
-handsome brown sweater with a broad band of
-blue across the chest and Tom Pollock, who had
-momentarily absented himself to sell a “Junior
-League” ball to a grammar school youth, returned
-to inquire:</p>
-
-<p>“This one, Jack?”</p>
-
-<p>Jack nodded doubtfully. “I guess so, Tom.
-It’s sort of heavy for spring, but I suppose I’d
-better buy one that’ll be all right for next fall,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span></p>
-
-<p>Tom agreed, adding: “The new uniforms will
-be along next week, I think. They’re going to be
-the best ever. I’m getting them from a different
-maker this year and he’s putting a lot better material
-into them. You’ll need one, I suppose,
-Faulkner.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe smiled “I’d like to think so,” he replied,
-“but I’m not counting on it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You might as well,” said Jack. “You’ll
-get in as a sub, anyway. Don’t you say so,
-Tom?”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope so. I haven’t seen Faulkner work, as
-a matter of fact, Jack. Anyhow, with all due
-respect to Bat, I think it’s the outdoor work that
-shows a chap up.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I say,” agreed Jack. “Fellows
-who can lay down the cutest, darlingest little
-bunts on the cement floor swing like gates when
-they get out on the turf and have the sky in front
-of them instead of the wall of the cage. I’ve seen
-it happen often.”</p>
-
-<p>“Still,” demurred Joe, “it seems to me all
-that work indoors must be of some value. Don’t
-you consider it is, Pollock?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, I do. I think it’s fine for getting
-fellows in shape and on edge, especially for the
-new chaps. What I mean is that when it comes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>
-to actual playing the conditions out of doors are
-so different that a fellow has to practically start
-all over again. At least that’s been my experience.
-I’m talking of batting and fielding, you
-understand, and not pitching. A pitcher can get
-his wing in shape anywhere there’s room. Although,
-at that, I think working in the air is away
-ahead of working down there with the steam
-pipes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think we’ll get out next week?” inquired
-Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I wouldn’t be surprised if we started
-Monday. Sam tells me the field’s in pretty good
-shape; a bit soft in places, but nothing much.”
-Tom chuckled as he snapped the string around
-the bundle and laid it in front of Jack. “Mr.
-Hall told a funny yarn one day in here, fellows.
-You don’t know him, maybe, Faulkner, but you
-will soon. He’s a dandy chap, and a double-dyed
-‘fan.’”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve seen him,” replied Joe. “He knows the
-right place to buy cigars.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he told one day about a coach they had
-at college when he was a freshman. I forget
-what college he went to; Sam could tell you. But
-it seems that they had an awfully wet spring
-that year and the diamond was on a rather low<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
-piece of ground, anyway, and it wouldn’t dry out
-for them. So this coach got the idea of having
-the players wear rubbers! Said it would be dangerous
-to have them work on such wet ground
-without them because they might get rheumatism
-and sciatica and grippe and various other things,
-and he didn’t intend to lose half his team through
-illness just when it was needed most. So he sent
-in a requisition to the athletic committee or whoever
-attended to purchasing supplies—probably
-the manager—for three or four dozen pairs of
-rubbers of assorted sizes. There was a lot of
-argument about the expense and finally the coach
-got his dander up and bought the rubbers himself,
-and one day the fellows put them on and
-went out for their first practice on the field. The
-field was as soft as mush and whenever you put
-your foot down it went out of sight as far as
-your shin-bones! Mr. Hall said it was the funniest
-thing he ever saw. About every man in
-college was out to see what they called the ‘Gumshoe
-Nine,’ and they almost laughed themselves
-to death. Every time a fielder started after a
-ball he’d leave one or both of his rubbers sticking
-in the mud and have to go back and hunt for them.
-Mr. Hall said that at one time there were three
-pairs of rubbers sticking out of the base-path<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span>
-between second base and the plate where the runners
-had left them in their hurry to get around!
-Finally the coach sent back to town and got a
-box of elastic bands and made the fellows snap
-them around their ankles over the rubbers.
-Practice went better after that, but there was
-almost a riot once, when one chap, who had stolen
-second, went back to get his rubbers and the second
-baseman tagged him out!”</p>
-
-<p>The laughter of Tom’s audience was interrupted
-by the opening of the door and the advent
-of Frank Foley. Handsome Frank quite deserved
-the title this morning. For a day or two there
-had been unmistakable indications of spring, and
-Foley had responded to them today by donning a
-Norfolk suit of very light homespun material with
-knickerbockers, a pair of very green golf stockings,
-and a cap that matched his suit. A pale heliotrope
-“sport shirt” from under whose flaring
-collar emerged a vividly green scarf completed
-the costume, except that he was, naturally, appropriately
-shod with brown rubber-soled shoes.
-Even Tom was a bit taken back by the radiance
-of the vision which sought the athletic goods department,
-and his “Hello, Frank,” sounded
-rather feeble. The other boys nodded, Jack adding
-a murmured salutation to the nod. Foley<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
-returned the greetings with a remarkable absence
-of self-consciousness and joined the group.</p>
-
-<p>“What about a baseman’s glove, Tom?” he
-asked. “Anything new in that line this spring?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, nothing much different,” was the answer
-as Tom pulled some boxes from a shelf. “You
-had one of these last year, didn’t you?” he continued,
-placing a glove on the counter. Foley
-examined it indifferently.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that’s like the one I’ve got now. I
-thought maybe there was something new on the
-market. How’s everything, Jack?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty good, Frank. My eyes are troubling
-me a bit, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with them? They seemed
-all right at practice yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know.” Jack gravely blinked.
-“They seem sort of weak. I guess it’s the glare
-that hurts them, Frank. You couldn’t turn your
-coat collar up, could you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s the idea?” said Foley calmly.
-“Don’t you like what I wear, Jack?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I like it, all right, but my eyes sort of go
-back on me. What are you impersonating, Frank,
-a custard pie?”</p>
-
-<p>“You chaps have a lot of fun with my clothes,
-don’t you?” inquired Foley good-naturedly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>
-enough. “I don’t mind, though. I’d certainly
-hate to go around looking like a tramp, the way
-some of you do.” Foley seated himself on the
-counter, swinging his brightly-hued legs, and
-viewed Jack smilingly. “Any come-back to
-that?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a come-back from me,” said Tom
-quietly. “Gentlemen will not, others must not,
-sit on the counters, Frank.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, all right; I’ll try to stand up a bit longer.
-I don’t believe you’ve got anything there I want,
-Tom.” He glanced unenthusiastically at the several
-gloves displayed. “I’ll use the one I’ve got.
-It went all right last year and I guess it’s still
-good.”</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t need a glove much this spring,”
-said the irrepressible Jack. “They’re not worn
-on the bench, Frank.”</p>
-
-<p>Foley winked untroubledly. “Don’t worry
-about me, old chap. I may not be any McInnes,
-you know, but I never noticed much resemblance
-between you and Tris Speaker. You watch out
-that you don’t keep that bench warm yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Frank, you know very well,” replied Jack
-severely, “that when it comes to playing baseball
-I’ve got it all over you. You’re not a bad
-first baseman when you’ve got time for it, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>
-you know mighty well you can’t bat over a hundred.
-I like you, Frank; I appreciate your many
-fine qualities, and I just love your picturesqueness,
-but I don’t just see you holding down that
-first sack beyond the middle of March. I’m saying
-this to you so you won’t be too awfully disappointed
-when you lose your job.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks.” Foley laughed amusedly. “Just
-who is the coming wonder that gets my position,
-Jack? Is it Faulkner here? Is he telling you
-how good you are, Faulkner?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s just talking,” replied Joe uncomfortably.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not saying who it is, Frank,” said Jack.
-“There are two or three who look good to me in
-your place. I’d be sorry to see you go, though.
-I certainly do like you, Frank.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you do—like poison,” responded Foley
-with a grin. “Tell you what I’ll do, Jack. I’ll
-bet you anything you like that I’ll play in more
-games—contests with outside teams, I mean—than
-you do this spring. Want to take that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ger-ladly, old sport! I’ll bet you”—Jack’s
-eyes twinkled about the cases and shelves—“I’ll
-bet you one of those nice leather bat-cases,
-Frank. I’ve always wanted a bat-case. How
-much are they, Tom?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span></p>
-
-<p>“A dollar and a quarter and two seventy-five.”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean the all-leather ones.”</p>
-
-<p>“Two seventy-five.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the idea. How does that strike you,
-Frank? Feel like spending that much to make
-me happy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but I don’t happen to want a bat-case,
-thanks. Think of something else.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ll buy you a couple of pairs of lavender
-gloves to wear to the parties.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quit fooling and say something. What do I
-get if I win?”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you want that doesn’t cost more
-than the bat-bag?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. Leave it that I’m to pick out
-anything I like up to that amount, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly. Gentlemen, you’ve heard the
-terms of the wager. If, at the end of the season,
-Frank has played in more games than I have he
-comes in here and goes the limit—up to two dollars
-and three-quarters. If, on the other
-hand——”</p>
-
-<p>“Why do I have to buy the thing here?” asked
-Frank.</p>
-
-<p>“Because I want to see my friend Mr. Pollock
-make a little money. Tom ought to get something
-out of it, Frank.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, all right. I’ll find something I want, I
-guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“As I was saying when so rudely interrupted,”
-resumed Jack, “if, on the other hand, Frank
-plays in no more games than I do he comes across
-with one of those perfectly beautiful and useless
-bat-bags which Tom prices at two dollars and
-seventy-five cents and which you can get
-from the mail-order house for a dollar sixty-nine.”</p>
-
-<p>“You try it,” laughed Tom.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t need to. The cost doesn’t interest me
-a bit. Well, that is the wager, gentlemen. May
-the best man win—so long as it’s me. Come on,
-Joey. So long, Tom. Bye, Frank. By the way,
-which way are you going from here?”</p>
-
-<p>“You wait around and find out, old chap.”</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t tell? Sorry. I wanted to stand on
-the corner and see you go by.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did you do that for?” remonstrated
-Joe when they were on the sidewalk again.</p>
-
-<p>“Do what? Make that bet? Oh, just for fun.
-Besides, I’m pretty sure to win it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t mean the bet, you chump. I meant
-why did you rag him like that? He thinks you
-meant that I’m the one who’s to beat him out at
-first.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span></p>
-
-<p>“So you are,” answered Jack calmly. “As
-for why I did it, I did it because I couldn’t help
-it, Joey. Frank gives me a severe pain every
-time I meet him and I just can’t resist the
-temptation to have a little fun with him.”</p>
-
-<p>“He took it all right,” said Joe. “He’s good-natured,
-I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“You guess again,” said Jack grimly. “He’s
-good-natured when he knows it would look silly
-to get mad, but he’s got a disposition like a—a—What
-is it that has a disposition?”</p>
-
-<p>“You!” laughed Joe. “You’ve got a nasty
-one at times.”</p>
-
-<p>“Meaning just now? Was I specially rude,
-Joey? Maybe I was a bit nasty. Well, never
-mind. You can’t really hurt Handsome Frank’s
-feelings. If you could he’d be black-and-blue by
-this time!”</p>
-
-<p>“Black and blue are the only things he wasn’t,”
-said Joe. “He was about every other colour; buff
-and green and purple and lavender——”</p>
-
-<p>“Shucks! He was dressed real quietly today;
-almost unostentatiously, so to speak! You ought
-to see him when he’s really dolled up! Now, look
-here, Joey. If you don’t buckle down and play
-ball and beat him out of his position at first I’ll
-never forgive you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But, Jack, I can’t play first the way he can!”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know? You’ve never seen him
-play. Besides, you can out-hit him. Leastways,
-if you can’t you ought to be ashamed. And it’s
-batting that’s going to count this spring, old
-man. Petersburg has got a line of good pitchers
-this year and Bat will be going on the policy that
-hits mean runs. So you get your eye peeled,
-Joey, and win that bet for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think I’ll ever be much of a batter,”
-said Joe sadly.</p>
-
-<p>“Poppycock and piffle! You can hit the merry
-sphere just as well as anyone can if you’ll only
-tell yourself so. Look here, what you want to do
-is to go out there and when the ball comes say to
-yourself, ‘It’s so big I can’t miss it if I try!
-Why, it’s a cinch. <em>Bing!</em> That for you,
-Mr. Ball!’ Try it and see how well it will
-work.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re great on the psychology stuff, aren’t
-you?” laughed Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know the gentleman,” answered Jack
-serenely. “I only know that no chap ever became
-a decent batsman by telling himself that he was
-no good! Confidence, my friend, confidence!
-That’s the—er—the password, no, the keynote,
-to success! Think it over. Now, let’s go in and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>
-see how much money we’ve taken in this morning.
-Ah, as usual, Young has his Roman mob
-around the place. If he doesn’t make those
-loafers stay away we’ll get notice to quit, I’m
-thinking.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII<br />
-<small>OUTDOOR PRACTICE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="noic"><em>BASEBALL</em></p>
-
-<p>“Candidates report at the field dressed to play
-at 3:30.</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Craig.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This notice met the gaze of Joe on Monday
-morning as he paused in front of the bulletin
-board in the school corridor. Sidney Morris and
-a companion came up and read the announcement
-over his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s good news, Faulkner,” said Sidney.
-“Last year we were out a week earlier. By the
-way, do you know Toby Williams?”</p>
-
-<p>The boys shook hands and the trio walked together
-along the corridor. Williams was a nice-looking
-chap of about Joe’s age, rather solidly
-built, with a natural talent for pitching a baseball
-that had won for him the position of Tom Pollock’s
-understudy, Tom, it was said, showing
-Toby everything the former knew in the science
-so that next year Toby might come as near as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
-possible to filling Tom’s shoes. There was still,
-however, a fairly long road for the younger boy
-to travel before he attained Tom Pollock’s
-standing.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re trying for the infield, aren’t you,
-Faulkner?” Toby asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but I don’t believe——” He paused,
-recalling Jack’s oft-repeated advice. “I don’t
-believe I’ll get what I want,” he resumed with
-assumed assurance. “The bases look to be pretty
-well occupied, and I want to play first or
-second.”</p>
-
-<p>Toby seemed impressed, but Sidney laughed as
-he said, not ill-naturedly: “There’s nothing like
-knowing what you want, Faulkner.”</p>
-
-<p>“And going after it?” asked Joe smilingly.</p>
-
-<p>Sidney nodded. “That’s right. How’s the
-business getting on?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, thanks.”</p>
-
-<p>“We were talking about you the other day,
-Tom Pollock and Sam Craig and I,” said Sidney,
-“and Tom said he thought you were the luckiest
-chap he knew, and I guess I agree with him.
-You’ve been here in Amesville only a couple of
-months and you’ve got a good business and are
-making money at it. Sam said he guessed luck
-had less to do with it than pluck, though.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I think Tom Pollock was nearer right,” replied
-Joe modestly. “It’s been mostly luck, I
-guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jack Strobe’s in that with you, isn’t he?”
-inquired Toby.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it was Jack put in most of the money to
-start. About all I had was the idea!”</p>
-
-<p>“And the luck,” laughed Sidney. “‘Lucky’
-Faulkner is your real name, I guess. Well, I
-hope your luck keeps on. If it does, maybe you’ll
-get what you want on the team!”</p>
-
-<p>The gong put an end to the talk and they hurried
-off to their rooms. Whether that was the
-beginning of it Joe never knew, but a month later
-he suddenly awoke to the fact that he was very
-generally known throughout school as “Lucky”
-Faulkner! He was inclined to dislike the nickname
-at first, since to him it seemed to preclude
-more desirable attributes, but Jack insisted that
-to be called lucky was a great compliment because,
-after all, what was called luck was in reality
-the reward for skill or forethought or some
-other quality of merit. Jack didn’t put it in quite
-those words, but that was the idea he managed
-to convey, and Joe, considering it, became reconciled.
-It was perhaps just as well he did, for by
-that time the nickname had come to stay, and his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
-approval or disapproval would have had small
-effect.</p>
-
-<p>That Monday afternoon it was a gay-hearted
-lot of fellows who gathered at the field, which lay
-some ten blocks north of the high school. To be
-out of doors again filled everyone with delight
-and neither coach nor captain had any cause for
-complaint that day on the score of laziness. The
-way the ball was sped around was a fair indication
-of the candidates’ eagerness. Practice was
-rudimentary. There was some batting at the net,
-with Toby Williams and Carl Moran doing the
-tossing, a half-hour of fielding, Coach Talbot hitting
-to the infield, and Manager Mifflin knocking
-fungoes to the outfield, and, finally, a short period
-of work on the paths. The weather gave them
-of its best. The March sun shone warmly and,
-although there was still a tinge of winter in the
-air, spring was genuinely in possession. The
-sod was not yet dry and the base-paths were
-pretty soft, but no one minded a bit; not even
-“Buster” Healey when, in a desperate attempt
-to get from second to third on the throw to the
-plate, he lost his footing and reached the bag flat
-on his back. Practice was delayed while most of
-the infield scraped the mud from him.</p>
-
-<p>Joe had a session with Tom Pollock in front of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
-the backstop. Sam Craig was catching at the
-plate, Speyer taking the throws for Mifflin, and
-so Bat told Joe to get a glove and let Tom
-pitch to him. Joe was doubtful of his ability to
-hold the redoubtable Mr. Pollock, but he got along
-very well. Tom used little speed and, although
-some of the breaks and hooks were at first confusing,
-Joe soon discovered that the ball might
-be depended on to straighten out before it reached
-him. After that he was put on second and
-handled Sam’s throw-downs fairly well and found
-that his own throwing arm was quite equal to
-the task of snapping the ball across to first or
-third or back to the plate. Frank Foley held
-down first base today and Joe secretly admired
-and envied the easy, finished way in which that
-tall youth with the long reach handled the throws.
-The work was pretty crude, which was natural
-enough, and Coach Talbot had plenty to say, but
-when practice ended at a little before five everyone
-was in the best of spirits and the fellows, as
-they made their way back home, discussed eagerly
-the first game of the year, which was due in less
-than two weeks. This contest was to be, as usual,
-with the Amesville Grammar School nine, and
-while it was not looked on as more than an opportunity
-for practice, still it was anticipated with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>
-pleasure. Grammar School was already predicting
-what it would do to High School, and was
-awaiting the fray with equal eagerness.</p>
-
-<p>High School had arranged a schedule calling
-for seventeen games this Spring, eight of which
-were to be played away from Amesville. Aside
-from Petersburg High School, Amesville High’s
-real rival in athletics, whom she played the final
-game with the last of June, the only notable foes
-were Lynton High School and Crowell Academy.
-There were two games scheduled with Lynton
-and one with Crowell. Besides the scheduled
-contests there were others which might or might
-not eventuate; as, for instance, a game with the
-nine from the carpet mill and a second, possibly
-a third meeting with the grammar school. Until
-the middle of May only Saturdays were scheduled,
-but after that midweek games were down
-for the balance of the season.</p>
-
-<p>Outdoor practice continued uninterruptedly
-for the rest of the first week. Then, on Sunday,
-began a four-day stretch of wretched weather and
-the fellows went disgustedly back to the cage.
-On Sunday it blew a gale and swept a hard rain
-from the southwest. On Monday the rain turned
-to snow for a while, later changing to sleet and,
-finally, back to rain again. Tuesday it drizzled.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>
-Wednesday was a day of mist and fog. Thursday
-noon the sun came out. But by that time the field
-was a quagmire again and all hope of playing the
-game with Grammar School on Saturday had to
-be abandoned. Consequently the contest was put
-over until Tuesday at four, and Manager Thad
-Mifflin, who was popularly believed to be accountable
-for weather conditions and the state of the
-diamond, found life a burden.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Joe had performed, if not brilliantly,
-at least satisfactorily as a substitute
-baseman. He had been tried at first, second and
-third bases, and, on one occasion, had pulled down
-flies in centre field. At the bat he had so far
-signally failed to distinguish himself. Perhaps
-he did as well as most of the substitutes, but he
-found that trickling bunts across the floor of the
-cage was not the same as standing in front of
-Tom Pollock, or even Carl Moran, and trying to
-connect with their various offerings. The best
-Joe could expect, or, so he told himself, was a
-place on the Second Team—The Scrubs, they
-called them—when that was formed. Jack was
-plainly disappointed in the proficiency of his
-chum, although he tried not to show the fact, and
-never ceased to offer encouragement.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll find your batting eye presently,” Jack<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span>
-would assert stoutly. “A fellow can’t play decent
-ball, anyway, until the weather settles down
-and gets warm. I never could. Along about the
-middle of May——”</p>
-
-<p>Joe interrupted with a laugh. “Along about
-the middle of May,” he replied, “will be a bit
-late, Jack. If I’m going to do anything this year
-I’ll have to do it pretty quick, I’m thinking.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye-e-es—I’ll tell you, Joey, the trouble is you
-don’t go at it right; batting, I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose I don’t,” owned Joe. “Anyway, I
-don’t accomplish much.”</p>
-
-<p>“Try swinging slower. I watched you yesterday.
-You start your bat away around behind you
-and then swing like lightning. Maybe if you’ll
-take a short swing and a slow one, just meet the
-ball, as they say, you might do better.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just meeting the ball doesn’t get you hits,
-though,” demurred the other.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s where you’re wrong, old man. Even
-if you only hold your bat out still, a hard-pitched
-ball will bound off it away across the infield. I
-think it’s a mistake to try to slug at first; before—well,
-before you’ve got where you’re certain,
-if you see what I mean!”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that I ought to get so I can hit the
-ball before I—before I hit it!” laughed Joe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Before you try to knock the cover off it, yes.
-Between you and me, that’s the reason a lot of
-chaps don’t hit better than they do,” continued
-Jack. “They want to make home-runs or three-baggers,
-and they don’t stop to think that a short
-hit that gets you to first is a lot better than a
-home-run that doesn’t happen!”</p>
-
-<p>“You talk like one of those little blue books,”
-jeered Joe. “‘How to Become a Ball-Player’ or
-‘The Art of Batting’!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m telling you what I’ve learned,” replied
-Jack unruffledly. “I’m not much of a player myself,
-but I’ve kept my eyes open. Look here,
-Joey, I’ll tell you what we might do, you and I,
-and it wouldn’t hurt either of us a mite. Let’s
-go down to the cage at recess every noon and
-practise. We’ll keep a bat and ball at school
-and I’ll pitch to you and you bat, and you can
-pitch to me and I’ll bat. I don’t mean really
-pitch, of course, because I can’t do it; nor you,
-either; but just serve ’em up, you know, and let
-the other fellow see how many he can hit. Bet
-you anything you like if we do that long enough
-we can get so we can connect with anything! It’s
-the eye that does the trick, Joey. It’s getting the
-eye trained so that, no matter where the ball<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>
-comes, you can put the bat in front of it. Want
-to try it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll try anything,” responded Joe. “Still, it
-seems to me all that batting practice I had in the
-cage before we went outdoors didn’t do me much
-good.”</p>
-
-<p>“This’ll be different. You know the way you do
-when you take a tennis racket and try to keep the
-ball bouncing against a wall or a floor? Well,
-that’s the same idea. It teaches you quickness
-and sureness, doesn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess so. All right, we’ll have a go at it
-tomorrow. Have you a bat at home?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and some old balls. I’ll bring them down
-tomorrow and we’ll try the scheme. We’ve got
-to do something to beat Handsome Frank, that’s
-certain!”</p>
-
-<p>“You do hate him, don’t you?” laughed Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t hate him one mite,” replied Jack
-seriously. “I even have a sort of sneaking liking
-for the chump. But I do love to take him down
-a notch or two whenever I can. Besides, I want
-that bat-case!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-<small>THE FIRST GAME</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The game with the grammar school team came
-off the following Tuesday on extremely damp
-grounds and under weather conditions far from
-ideal. Although it was the first of April, the wind
-was in the northeast and it blew across the playing
-field with a most unfriendly ferocity. The
-game didn’t begin until ten minutes past four,
-and by that time the few spectators who had
-courageously turned out to witness the team’s
-début were shivering with the cold and had deserted
-the stands to keep their blood in circulation
-by moving about.</p>
-
-<p>Joe, wrapped in a sweater, hands in pockets,
-sat with a dozen other substitutes on the home
-bench and tried to keep his teeth from chattering.
-It had been agreed that, because of the weather
-conditions and the lateness of the starting time,
-the game was to go but six innings. High School
-presented a batting-list composed, with two exceptions,
-of seasoned material. Gordon Smith,
-shortstop, led off, followed by Sidney Morris and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
-Jack Strobe. Sidney played centre field and was
-a good hitter. Smith could be relied on to get
-his base five times out of ten under ordinary circumstances,
-and Jack was in third place as cleanup
-hitter. Buster Healey, second baseman; Steve
-Hale, third baseman; Frank Foley, first baseman,
-batted in that order, following Jack. Healey
-was a good but erratic hitter, Foley at best could
-be called fair, and Hale, a newcomer on the team
-this spring, was still an unknown quantity.
-Captain Craig followed Frank Foley. Then came
-Walter Cummings, another unproved hitter, and,
-finally, the pitcher, who today happened to be
-Toby Williams.</p>
-
-<p>Toby got himself into a bit of a mess in the
-very first inning when he allowed the second
-grammar school batter to walk and followed that
-by offering a straight ball to the opposing team’s
-captain, who had a local reputation as a hitter.
-Captain Gandy sent that ball straight down the
-alley between shortstop and third baseman and
-took two bases on the hit, promoting the man
-ahead to third. Toby struck out the next boy,
-and with two gone, the prospect of escaping
-being scored on became brighter. But a glaring
-error by Healey let in two runs and put the fourth
-batsman safely on first, from whence he departed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-for second a moment later and was thrown out,
-Craig to Smith.</p>
-
-<p>The handful of grammar school youths shouted
-and exulted and swaggered, reminding each
-other that “I told you so!” But their delight
-didn’t last long, for High School fell on
-their pitcher and swatted the ball all over the
-lot, filling the bases with no one out. Buster
-Healey tried to redeem himself by cleaning them
-off, but only fouled to third baseman, and Hale
-struck out, more because of a lack of confidence
-than because the pitcher’s offerings were in any
-way difficult. When Foley went to bat there
-seemed but slight chance of scoring and so Tom
-Pollock, who was coaching behind first, sent out
-orders for a triple steal. Strangely enough,
-Foley not only connected with the ball as the
-runners sprinted, but actually hit it out safely for
-two bases! That took the heart out of Grammar
-School’s twirler and he passed Sam Craig, in
-spite of the captain’s very evident desire to earn
-his way, and repeated the compliment in the case
-of Cummings. That advanced Foley to third,
-and when Toby came to bat he performed very
-nicely, just as he was told to, trickling a bunt
-along first base line and beating the throw to the
-bag. Foley scored unchallenged.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span></p>
-
-<p>Grammar School began to despair of ever getting
-that third out! Gordon Smith hit safely,
-scoring Craig and Cummings and putting Toby
-Williams on second, Sidney Morris drew a pass,
-and, living up to his reputation, Jack Strobe
-cleaned the bases with a long line-hit that didn’t
-touch the ground until it was able to strike the
-right field fence on the first bound! But Jack,
-although he barely managed to reach third on
-what should have been only a two-bagger, died
-there a minute or two later when Buster again
-failed to distinguish himself.</p>
-
-<p>High School jeered and flung derisive remarks
-in the direction of the small but devoted
-band of grammar school youths, who, in their
-dejection, found successful repartee beyond them.</p>
-
-<p>The second inning found a new pitcher in the
-points for the grammar school, but he was only
-slightly more puzzling than the deposed twirler,
-and, after turning the enemy down in one, two,
-three order, High School proceeded to indulge
-in another batting-fest. But this time she scored
-only three runs, bringing her total to twelve. By
-the end of that inning only the more enthusiastic
-“fans” remained, the others seeking warmer surroundings.
-With a lead of ten runs, Coach Talbot
-decided to begin on his second-string players and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span>
-made substitutions right and left during the remainder
-of the game. Toby Williams gave place
-to Carl Moran in the fourth, and Moran, heartened
-by the lead his team possessed, pitched a
-very pretty article of ball. When Amesville took
-the field in the fifth inning only four regulars remained
-in the line-up—Sam Craig, Sidney Morris,
-Frank Foley and Carl Moran. Buster Healey
-gave way to Joe, who was secretly hoping to be
-allowed on first. When, however, Foley did drop
-out, in the final inning, it was young Farquhar
-who took his place. Joe wasn’t worried by the
-rivalry of Farquhar, who was as yet by no means
-varsity material, but how, he wondered, was he
-ever to convince Coach Talbot or Captain Craig
-or anyone else that he could play first base if he
-never was allowed to get there?</p>
-
-<p>On second Joe played a steady game, but had
-little to do, since Moran held the visitors in check
-throughout the two innings. The contest finally
-ended with the score 17 to 3, the grammar
-school’s third run having been scored in the
-fourth by a combination of two scratch hits and
-an error by shortstop. By the time the last man
-was out in the sixth the players and the handful
-of spectators who remained were chilled to the
-bone and heartily glad to get away. On the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-whole, that first baseball game of the season had
-proved just about what Jack dubbed it, a “frost.”</p>
-
-<p>Perversely, the weather changed its tune the
-next day, and for a week blue skies and soft
-breezes held sway, and practice was once more
-enjoyable. They worked hard, all of them, from
-Captain Sam himself down to the youngest and
-newest tyro, but it was work they liked. By the
-time another week had passed into history improvement
-was plainly visible. The team was
-finding itself. Batting was gradually ceasing to
-be a lost art, wild heaves were becoming fewer,
-and on the base-paths the fellows began to show
-what Coach Talbot called almost human intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>The noonday practice in the cage was producing
-results for Joe and Jack. It would have been
-strange if it had not, for when you put in from
-fifteen to twenty minutes six times a week doing
-nothing but trying to bring a poised bat against
-a thrown ball you’ve simply got to learn something!
-And Joe learned that the time to judge
-a pitched ball was just before it reached the plate
-and not when it left the pitcher’s glove, and that
-“the shorter the swing the surer the hit.” They
-took turns standing in front of the wall at one
-end of the baseball cage and trying to hit everything<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>
-that came. At first they made no special
-effort to direct the hits. The game was to let no
-ball get past. It was fine training for the eye,
-there could be no doubt of that, and very soon
-the one who pitched had to use all his cunning
-to get the ball by the bat. Then the batter tried
-to put the ball always toward the pitcher, and
-after he had gained proficiency at that he attempted
-to hit it to the left or the right.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally enough it was Jack who showed the
-most cleverness at this, and when they had been
-holding these batting practices for some three
-weeks his ability to hit every offering and tap it
-away to any corner of the cage he liked was
-almost startling. The boys usually had an audience
-of from one or two to a dozen, who, coming
-first to make fun, finally watched with interest
-and admiration. Many were the requests from
-the spectators to be allowed to try their skill,
-but Joe and Jack, by then very earnest at their
-work, refused to be interfered with. Two other
-fellows appeared one day with bat and ball and
-insisted on sharing the cage. But their enthusiasm
-was short-lived. They came the next day
-and the third day following that, but never again.</p>
-
-<p>For a time Joe was deeply disappointed, even
-disgruntled, because that practice in the cage<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
-failed to bring about any improvement on the
-field. The fact puzzled Jack, too, and he had no
-very good explanation to offer. The best he could
-do was to lay it to the difference of conditions.
-Joe agreed that that was probably it and wanted
-to know what use there was in keeping on with
-the cage stunt. But he did keep on, nevertheless,
-and at last, just when he was reaching a
-stage of abject hopelessness, the practice bore
-fruit.</p>
-
-<p>It was one Wednesday afternoon, two weeks
-after the grammar school game. Two other unimportant
-contests had been won and in three
-days Amesville was to play the first of its two
-scheduled games with Lynton High School. Joe,
-with a half-dozen others, was at the batting-net
-and Williams, a bit bored and listless, was pitching.
-Buster Healey had finally managed to line
-one to the equally bored substitutes who
-were fielding the balls, and had stepped aside,
-giving place to Joe. Joe had already been up
-once and had had a hard time getting his hit in
-spite of the fact that Toby was putting very little
-on the ball. And now he was just as hopeless as
-ever he had been as he hitched his trousers and
-gripped his bat.</p>
-
-<p>“Soak it, Faulkner,” said Cummings lazily.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
-“I want another whack at it before Toby’s arm
-gives out.”</p>
-
-<p>Toby, picking up one of the half-dozen balls
-that surrounded him, grinned: “If he hits before
-I get three over on him I’ll chase it myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a sporting proposition, Faulkner,”
-exclaimed Hale. “Go to it! I’d love to see
-Williams trot over to the fence and back!”</p>
-
-<p>Toby was a little more crafty now, took a full
-wind-up and shot a drop over the base-bag which
-did duty as a plate. Buster, leaning on his bat
-behind the net, announced a strike.</p>
-
-<p>“It was a peach, Toby. Now don’t let him
-work you again, Joe. Watch for a slow one.”</p>
-
-<p>“This is going to be a beaner,” laughed Toby.
-“Look out!”</p>
-
-<p>But it came waist-high, broke to the left, and
-failed to win Buster’s approval.</p>
-
-<p>“Ball, Toby,” he said. “Too wide. Come on,
-now, show your goods!”</p>
-
-<p>Toby’s reply to the challenge was a fast ball
-with a slight curve and Joe guessed it right. Bat
-and ball met and, although Joe made only a half-swing,
-the sphere sped straight over Toby’s
-head—he ducked involuntarily, to the delight of
-the batters—and travelled far back down the
-field.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Don’t touch it!” bawled Buster. “Let it
-alone, Loomis! Now, then, Toby, shake a
-leg, old scout! You said you’d field it, you
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>Toby smiled wanly and kept his promise, jogging
-far down the field to the surprise of the
-fielders and the gleeful chortles of the batting
-squad.</p>
-
-<p>“That was a peach,” declared Steve Hale as
-Joe, as much surprised as Toby Williams, measured
-the hit and relinquished his place to Cummings.
-Joe looked indifferent, but secretly he
-was as pleased as Punch. There’s something delightfully
-heartening in the feel and sound of a
-good, clean hit, and as Joe moved back he still
-felt the tingle in his palms and experienced an
-inward glow of satisfaction. That, he reflected,
-was the first hit he could remember that he had
-been entirely satisfied with! Of course, it had
-been made in practice instead of in a game, but
-still Toby had really been trying to fool him and
-some measure of credit was due him.</p>
-
-<p>Toby came back, hot and perspiring, from his
-jaunt, with the recovered ball in his hand, and
-proceeded to wreak vengeance on Hale. The fellows
-at the net still guyed him, however, and Hale
-speedily found a hit. When Buster’s turn came<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>
-again he asked: “Will you field it, Toby, if I
-get to you inside of three?”</p>
-
-<p>But Toby had had enough and shook his head,
-which proved fortunate in the light of succeeding
-events. Buster, after fouling two, sent a long
-fly arching out.</p>
-
-<p>When Joe stepped in front of the net Toby
-waved a hand in sarcastic greeting. “Hit ’em
-as hard as you like, Faulkner,” he called. “All
-bets are off!”</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, it was soon evident to Joe and
-the others that Toby didn’t intend his offerings
-to be hit hard, for he used all his skill, “mixing
-them up” bewilderingly. One went as a ball, the
-next was a foul-tip, the third was a doubtful strike,
-the fourth was another foul. Joe was matching
-his skill against the pitcher’s, and for the first
-time he was confident of the result. He let a
-second strike go past because, although he was
-certain he could have taken it, it was too low to
-hit any distance. Again he fouled, going after
-the ball just as he had been doing down in the
-schoolhouse basement, and still again. Toby
-showed impatience.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, hit one, Faulkner! I’m giving ’em to
-you soft!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you are!” jeered Buster, behind the improvised<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span>
-plate. “You’re putting everything
-you’ve got on them! I dare you to put one in the
-groove, Toby!”</p>
-
-<p>Toby took the dare, launching a straight, fast
-ball to the net that looked like a white streak.
-But Joe glued his eyes to it, swung short but from
-the shoulders, and there was a fine, resounding
-<em>crack</em>! Toby turned slowly and watched the ball
-streak far into the field. Then he held up both
-hands and grinned at Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“You win!” he said.</p>
-
-<p>That was the beginning of Joe’s batting success.
-After that day he faced the pitcher, whoever
-he might be, with a confident smile reflecting
-the inward conviction that he could hit.
-There was nothing remarkable about his batting
-that season and he was never spectacular.
-Usually his contribution proved a single, infrequently
-a double. He was in no danger of being
-dubbed “Home-Run” Faulkner. And frequently
-enough, more frequently than he approved of,
-you may be sure, he struck out just as ingloriously
-as anyone else on the team. But, somehow,
-he showed a reliability that began to be talked
-about toward the end of the season. It was a
-fair wager, when he went to the plate, that he
-would deliver a hit. Often he didn’t; more often<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
-he did. And what made his hits go safe was that
-practice in the baseball cage, for through that
-he had attained an almost uncanny ability to
-place them. Few pitchers could make him hit
-where he didn’t want to. Jack once declared
-that Joe, who was a right-handed batter, could
-hit a fast ball to right field and a slow one to
-left any time he wanted to! This was somewhat
-of an exaggeration, but certain it is that Joe was
-a clever batter when it came to “putting them
-where they ain’t,” and his title of Lucky Faulkner
-was felt to have been wisely bestowed. But
-I am ahead of my story, for Joe’s batting prowess,
-although it came into being that April afternoon
-at the net, was of gradual growth. When
-all is said, the way to learn to bat is to bat. And
-that is the way Joe learned.</p>
-
-<p>Amesville played Lynton one warm, cloudy
-afternoon on the former’s grounds and took her
-first beating. Lynton had a way of winning from
-Amesville when all the signs pointed toward defeat.
-She never played remarkable ball; never,
-in fact, won from any other club of Amesville’s
-ability. But, somehow, almost every year Lynton
-managed to secure the decision in one or another
-of the two games played. And every year
-there came a loud and impatient demand for a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span>
-third and deciding contest. But the third contest
-seldom occurred, seldom when it was demanded,
-because by that time both teams had
-filled their dates, and never by arrangement at
-the beginning of the season because at such times
-Amesville smiled confidently and said: “Well,
-this year we won’t have any fooling. We’ll take
-’em both!”</p>
-
-<p>Lynton’s perversity had secured for her the
-compliment of being looked on by Amesville as
-second only to Petersburg as a worthy foeman.
-Sometimes Lynton won by virtue of her enemy’s
-errors, caused by over-eagerness. Sometimes she
-won by sheer luck, as when, two years before,
-with the score 7 to 6 in Amesville’s favour in the
-ninth inning, the Amesville pitcher had let down
-long enough to allow two tail-enders to get to
-third and second bases, and then, with two down
-and two strikes on the batsman, had pitched a
-wild ball that had sent the batter staggering
-away from the plate and had seen in amazement
-the ball hit the shouldered bat, bound away to
-just behind first base, and land fair a yard beyond
-anyone’s reach while the runners crossed the
-home plate with enough tallies to take the game!
-That contest had become famous in Amesville
-legends, and nowadays it was the usual thing for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-someone to shout at a crucial moment in a game:
-“Don’t hit his bat, Tom!” Amesville had remained
-sore over that game for a whole year
-and had only regained her composure when, the
-following spring, she had tied the first Lynton
-contest and then routed her enemy in the second
-struggle by the generous score of 17 to 6!</p>
-
-<p>This year Amesville appeared a trifle less confident
-of winning the two battles, although she
-perhaps secretly expected to do so. At all events,
-she took no chances in that first game. Tom
-Pollock started in the box and remained until the
-seventh inning, at which time Amesville had a
-satisfactory lead of four runs. Toby Williams
-relieved him, and Toby had an off-day if ever
-pitcher had! For two innings he escaped real
-punishment, although one of several passes resulted
-in the eighth in a tally for Lynton. But
-in the first half of the ninth, with the score then
-8 to 5 in the home team’s favour, Toby simply laid
-down in the traces. Afterwards some of the
-blame was laid at the door of coach and captain,
-for it was said that Jack Speyer, who was put in
-Sam Craig’s place behind the bat in the eighth,
-showed poor judgment. In any case, after getting
-through the next to the last session at the
-expense of but one run, Toby went to the bad<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-completely. Twice, when the batter had three
-balls and no strikes against him, Speyer and
-Toby met in consultation between plate and
-mound and Lynton howled and hooted. In that
-disastrous ninth Toby gave two passes, hit a batsman
-and was punished for four hits with a total
-of six bases! Before Carl Moran could even peel
-his sweater off preparatory to warming up the
-mischief was done. When Carl did go in the
-score was tied and there were runners on second
-and third, with two men out. The only wonder
-was that Lynton had managed to score so few
-runs! Carl did his best, which was not a very
-good best, but he was facing a desperate situation
-and was plainly nervous. The next batter hit
-safely past Hale and two more runs were scored.
-Then Carl gave a pass, just to show that Toby
-was not the only generous pitcher on the team,
-and, after Speyer had overthrown second in an
-effort to kill a steal and one more runner had
-scored, he persuaded the Lynton catcher to send
-a long fly to Jack Strobe’s waiting hands.</p>
-
-<p>When that fatal half-inning was over the score
-told a far different tale! Lynton was in the lead,
-eleven runs to Amesville’s eight. Coach Talbot
-used all his science and shifted and substituted
-bewilderingly in the last of the ninth, and it was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
-then that Joe made his début. Foley, while playing
-a clean game at the bag, had been hitting miserably
-all the afternoon, and when Mr. Talbot
-looked about for someone to bat in his stead Joe
-was about the only fellow left on the bench eligible
-to play. By that time Morris had struck out,
-Jack was on second and Healey on first. Joe
-faced the Lynton pitcher calmly and smilingly,
-but he confessed afterwards to Jack that he was
-a bit weak in the knees! However, that weakness
-didn’t prevent him from out-guessing the pitcher
-on the first delivery and driving the ball down
-the alley between first and second basemen, scoring
-Jack, putting Buster on third, and reaching
-second himself on his stomach with no time to
-spare! But that was the last sputter, for Loomis,
-rushed into the breach to bat for Speyer, took
-the count without a swing, and once more Lynton,
-the incorrigible, pesky varmint, had won!</p>
-
-<p>The visitors went off with laughter and song,
-cheering and jeering, leaving Amesville to comfort
-herself with the knowledge of a future meeting
-and to once more raise the cry of “<em>Give us a
-third game!</em>”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-<small>A TRY-OUT AT FIRST</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The Second Team was formed the third week in
-April. Joe found, rather to his surprise, that he
-was to be retained with the first squad as substitute
-infielder and was not to be relegated to the
-second. That was, certainly, a compliment to his
-playing ability, and he was duly pleased, but there
-were moments during the succeeding fortnight
-when he almost wished that he had been placed
-on the scrub, since in that case he would undoubtedly
-have been put at first and would be playing
-there regularly instead of sitting half of the time
-on the bench and trying not to hope that Frank
-Foley would break a finger or sprain an ankle!
-When Joe did get in it was more likely to be at
-second base than first, since Buster Healey, the
-regular incumbent of that position, was playing
-a decidedly erratic game and Coach Talbot was
-becoming discouraged with him and was constantly
-pulling him out in favour of a substitute.
-Buster had it in him to play fine ball, but this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
-spring he was badly off his game. Joe was
-always glad to get a chance to play, and would
-have gone behind the bat, had he been told to, or
-even into the outfield, rather than remain on the
-bench, but he did wish that Bat would give him
-a chance at first.</p>
-
-<p>Jack suggested once when Joe was mourning
-the lack of opportunity to exhibit his skill at the
-first sack that they enter into a deep, dark conspiracy
-against Handsome Frank. “We might,”
-said Jack thoughtfully, “decoy him to the soda
-fountain and slip poison in his drink. Or we
-might wait for him outside his house some night
-and stab him full of holes. If we did that it
-might be best to leave a Black Hand note attached
-to the stiletto in order to avert suspicion.
-They’d probably arrest Tony, the bootblack, and
-might hang him. Tony never did anything to me,
-and—No, I guess it wouldn’t be fair to have Tony
-hung. How would a bomb do? We could put it
-under his seat at school and——”</p>
-
-<p>“And blow ourselves up, too?” asked Joe.
-“No, I don’t like that idea so much, Jack.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack acknowledged that it had its drawbacks.
-“Just the same,” he asserted decisively, “something
-must be done. Frank has a nasty way of
-grinning at me nowadays, and yesterday he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-wanted to know if I was feeling well. Said I
-looked a bit pale. And the funny thing is, Joey,
-that I don’t feel awfully smart; haven’t for
-nearly a week. I suppose it’s the warm weather,
-but if I caught scarlet fever or anything and had
-to lay off for a couple of weeks I’d lose that bet
-sure as shooting!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I guess you needn’t count on me to help
-you win it,” replied Joe hopelessly. “Bat seems
-to think that I’m only good on second, or, sometimes,
-third.”</p>
-
-<p>“If Buster doesn’t take a brace you’ll find
-yourself on second for keeps,” said Jack. “I’d
-like to know what’s the matter with that chap.
-Last year, and the year before, too, he was a
-mighty good second-sacker, but now—Great
-Scott, did you see that heave of his to Frank yesterday?
-It went three yards wide of the base if
-it went an inch, and Buster declares that he threw
-straight as an arrow! And even his hitting is
-punk. I don’t see Bat’s idea of trying to make
-a first baseman of Farquhar this season. The
-kid’s too green for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe if Healey would brace up,” said Joe,
-“I’d lose my job at second and might get a chance
-to substitute Foley. I sometimes wish they’d let
-me go to the Scrubs.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Piffle! At least, you’re a member of the First
-Team, even if you don’t play all the time, and
-you’ll get your letter, too, before the season’s
-over. Next month Bat will be putting you in
-somewhere for four or five innings at a whack.
-Then, if you get into the Petersburg game you’ll
-get your A.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but what’s to keep Bat from getting
-tired of seeing me sitting around and letting me
-go long before that?” asked Joe dismally.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything! He’s got to have at least two
-substitute infielders, hasn’t he? And you’re one
-of them, aren’t you? Anyway, if you keep on
-batting as well as you’ve been doing it he won’t
-dare to let you go. Speaking of that, Joey, I
-guess we’ve done about all we can with that
-parlour baseball stunt of ours in the cage. We
-might as well call that off, I think.”</p>
-
-<p>“Especially as we’ve missed about every other
-day lately,” Joe laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“I know. It’s too warm now to feel ambitious.
-All a fellow wants to do at recess is lie on his
-back and watch the clouds go over and wonder
-where they get the energy to do it! You can’t
-say, though, that that scheme of mine hasn’t
-worked.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t try to. It did me a lot of good, Jack.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span>
-I—I almost think that by next year I’ll be a fairly
-good hitter.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be that this year if you keep on improving.
-Tom is the only fellow you can’t hit
-about as you like. And that’s no disgrace to you,
-because Tom Pollock is about as good a pitcher
-as you’ll find in the State, and I’m not excepting
-professionals, either!”</p>
-
-<p>“Toby told me the other day that Tom has a
-chance to go to a league team whenever he wants
-to.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should say he had! Why, three or four
-teams have been after him. He could get a try-out
-with Detroit tomorrow if he wanted it. But
-Tom says he’s going to college next Fall, and, of
-course, he wants to play ball there.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think he would. I wish I thought I
-could go to college, Jack.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why can’t you? In another year you’ll have
-so much money saved up that you’ll be able to do
-as you like! The stand’s doing better every
-month, and the first thing we know we’ll be millionaires!”</p>
-
-<p>“We fooled ourselves about Young, all right,
-didn’t we? Honest, Jack, I expected long before
-this that he’d have shown a yellow streak.”</p>
-
-<p>“Me, too. And the funny thing is that I still<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
-don’t altogether trust him. But everything
-seems perfectly straight, doesn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Absolutely. I don’t believe he’s done a thing
-shady except swipe a box of cigarettes now and
-then. I guess he’s about as good a fellow as we
-could have found for the job.”</p>
-
-<p>“He sure is. By the way, when we engaged
-him we said something about giving him a raise,
-didn’t we, if he got along all right?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, we did, and I suppose we’d better be
-thinking about doing it. Still, he’s been working
-only about two months. We’ll let it go until next
-month, Jack.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. I dare say he isn’t looking for a
-raise just yet. He hasn’t made any hints to me,
-anyway. The thing that puzzles me, though, is
-how he can wear the flossy clothes he does on ten
-dollars per. He’s almost as beautiful as Frank
-Foley!”</p>
-
-<p>“I can answer that,” replied Joe drily. “He
-has accounts with a lot of the stores. A chap
-came in the other day when I was at the stand
-and wanted me to pay a bill of sixteen dollars
-for underwear and ties and things. Thought I
-was Young. I told him to try again. If he has
-many bills around town like that one he won’t be
-with us much longer, I guess, and that’s one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>
-reason I think it’ll be just as well to wait a bit
-longer before we make that raise. It doesn’t do
-much good to raise a chap’s wages and have him
-leave you in the lurch a few weeks later.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if he’s got creditors after him,” laughed
-Jack, “he needs the raise pretty badly right now!
-But I guess you’re right. We’ll wait and see
-what happens. He’s an idiot to blow in money
-like that for pink-striped shirts and things. I’d
-love to hitch him and Handsome Frank up and
-drive them tandem down Main Street some afternoon!”
-And Jack chuckled merrily.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you suppose,” asked Joe, after a minute’s
-silence, “that it would do to ask Bat for a try-out
-at first? I mean, tell him I’ve played the
-position and think I could do it again; make a
-bid for the job to substitute Foley.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t do it. Bat wouldn’t like it a bit, old
-man. Bat’s peculiar that way. Tell you what
-you might do, though. You might sort of hint
-something of the sort to Sam. Sam wouldn’t
-mind it, I guess. I believe I’d do that, Joey, some
-time before long. As I’ve previously remarked,
-something’s just got to be done about Mr. Foley
-if we don’t want him to cop that bet we made.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see,” said Joe innocently, “how that
-interests me any. <em>I</em> didn’t bet with him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why, you—you—you ungrateful chump!”
-exclaimed Jack. “Do you mean to say that
-you’re going to leave me in the lurch? Didn’t
-you agree to oust Frank from first base? Didn’t
-you——”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I didn’t,” Joe laughed. “That was your
-idea entirely. Besides, what would I get out of
-it? You couldn’t cut that bat-case in half, could
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll let you use it on Sundays,” replied Jack
-generously.</p>
-
-<p>Joe pondered for several days the plan of confiding
-to Sam Craig his desire to become a first
-baseman. Once he got his courage almost to the
-sticking-point, but a troublesome conviction that
-Sam would think him “fresh” held him back.
-And then, before he again reached the determination
-to take the plunge, events made it unnecessary.</p>
-
-<p>During the last half of April, Amesville played
-three games, one with Grammar School on a
-Thursday and two with outside teams of no great
-importance. In the Grammar School contest
-High School was again easily victorious, although
-the score was somewhat more even than in the
-first meeting. The Grammar School pitcher who
-had been so unmercifully drubbed came back<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>
-strong and proved rather a hard nut to crack,
-holding High School to eight hits for a total of
-twelve bases in the seven innings he pitched. The
-score at the end was 8 to 3. The team journeyed
-to Sinclair one Saturday and played the high
-school team there, winning easily, with Tom Pollock
-pitching five innings and Toby Williams four,
-by the tune of 11 to 5. On the last Saturday of
-the month Corby High School came to Amesville
-and was walloped 14 to 6, Carl Moran presiding
-on the mound for eight innings and pitching very
-good ball until a tired arm threatened to bring
-his downfall, and Tom Pollock was hurried to the
-rescue.</p>
-
-<p>Every afternoon, save when an outside team
-was to be played, the First Team and Scrubs came
-together and some very close, hotly-contested
-battles ensued. Oddly enough, Joe’s first opportunity
-to show what he could do as a first baseman
-found him playing with the Scrubs. One
-afternoon the Scrubs’ regular first baseman was
-missing and when its shortstop got mixed up at
-second with Sidney Morris and was helped off
-the field with a badly-wrenched knee, the Scrubs’
-coach, a high school graduate named Meyers,
-was in a quandary and was forced to borrow a
-player from the First. The choice fell on Joe,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>
-and as Joe was a stranger to the shortstop position
-Meyer put his third baseman there, transferred
-his first baseman to third, and put Joe
-at first. Joe was rather too nervous during the
-first inning to make much of a showing, but, fortunately,
-Carl Moran, who was pitching for the
-Scrubs, held the First fairly tight and Joe was
-able to get by without anything worse than a
-doubtful error when he failed to get a wide throw
-in time to make the out. But in the succeeding
-innings, five in all, he covered the bag in a style
-which opened Mr. Talbot’s eyes and brought good
-words from his friends. If he did not have the
-reach that Frank Foley had, he was so much
-quicker than that other youth that he quite made
-up for the fact, while at bat he was easily the
-superior of that player. Joe did not, however,
-greatly distinguish himself with the stick that
-afternoon, for Tom Pollock pitched the whole six
-innings for the First, and Tom, when he tried,
-could hold any fellow on the team helpless. Still,
-Joe did do better than any other member of the
-Scrubs, getting two hits, one of the scratch variety,
-as his earnings. The First Team nosed out
-of the game with a two-run lead, but had to work
-hard that day for their victory.</p>
-
-<p>The result of Joe’s exhibition with the Scrubs<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>
-that afternoon was that two days later he was
-substituted for Foley in the fifth inning of a game
-with the Second Team, much to Foley’s surprise
-and, I fancy, disgust. Again he got through creditably,
-although a poor heave from Buster Healey
-got past him on one occasion and led him in the
-subsequent confusion to himself make a hurried
-and ragged throw to third. But the misplay did
-not appear in the results and he more than atoned
-with two stops that brought applause from the
-stand and the benches and by lacing out a two-bagger
-in the fourth inning that sent two runs
-across.</p>
-
-<p>Jack was jubilant as they walked back to town
-after that game. “You’ve been and gone and done
-it, Joey!” he said. “You’ve shown Bat at last
-that you’re the man for the job! I saw him and
-Sam put their heads together when you cracked
-out that two-bagger, and I’ll bet you anything
-they mean to find a place for you. Why shouldn’t
-they, anyway? Don’t they need all the batting
-strength they can get? And don’t you hit a lot
-better than Foley, or three or four others, for
-that matter? What Bat’s trying to do now, I
-guess, is to figure out some way of getting you
-in the line-up. Well, he will either have to put
-you at first or second. Hale has made good at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
-third, all right. If I were he I’d switch Buster
-and Gordon Smith around. Gordon’s a good
-shortstop, of course, but I dare say he could play
-second just as well. That would give Buster a
-chance to redeem himself, you see. Still, that
-wouldn’t make a place for you, Joey.” Jack
-frowned intently a moment and then continued:
-“No, sir, the only thing to do is to shelve Frank!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be an idiot! Why should he shelve
-Foley? Foley can play first better than I can.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right. With a week’s practice you
-could do just as well as he’s doing. And when
-it comes to batting you’re away ahead of him.
-And I want to tell you, Joey, that what this team
-is going to need when we run up against Petersburg
-is fellows who can roll the pill! Well, anyway,
-you wait and see. Something will happen
-to Handsome Frank before long, mark my words.
-I’m a prophet, Joey!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a chump, you mean. Walk up and
-let’s get somewhere. Speaking of profits, I’d
-like to find out what ours have been today.”</p>
-
-<p>“All you think of is filthy money,” mourned
-Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“And all you think of,” Joe retorted, “is that
-old bat-case!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV<br />
-<small>BUSTER DROPS OUT</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The following day the team went to Crawford
-Mills and played a nine made up of the youths
-of that small but busy town. About half of the
-members were high school boys and the rest
-were from the offices of the steel mills, many of
-the latter youths of twenty or even twenty-two
-years. In the field the Crawford Mills aggregation
-presented a peculiar spectacle, for their
-shortstop was a chubby youth of no more than
-fifteen, while their catcher was at least twenty-one,
-and their pitcher, a sort of human bean-pole,
-wore a mustache! Lack of practice, however,
-was against the “Millers” and, although Amesville
-had difficulty with that pitcher, she nevertheless
-won out in the seventh inning with a mixture
-of hits, daring base running, and errors, the
-latter by the opponent.</p>
-
-<p>Joe, who had had hopes since the day before of
-getting another chance at first base, was considerably
-disappointed at being left idle on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
-bench until the eighth inning, when he was put
-in to run for Tom Pollock, that youth having
-turned his ankle at first base. That was all the
-playing Joe did, and he sat disgruntledly during
-the rest of the game and watched Amesville hold
-her lead and ultimately emerge the victor, eight
-runs to six.</p>
-
-<p>The “Millers” were good losers and cheered
-the visitors heartily when the contest was over,
-and their captain, the tall, mustached pitcher,
-shook hands with Tom Pollock and hoped his
-ankle wasn’t hurt much. Tom was able to reassure
-him. Then a request was made for a
-second game at Amesville, and Sam Craig agreed
-to see what could be done about one. High School
-journeyed home at dusk, very well satisfied with
-an almost errorless performance—Buster Healey
-had alone sinned—and very hungry. Joe was
-wedged in between Jack and Walter Cummings
-in the trolley car going back, with Frank Foley
-directly in front on the next seat. Jack, who had
-outshone himself that afternoon in left field, was
-feeling especially cheerful and, before they had
-been buzzing across country very long, began to
-heckle Handsome Frank, to the amusement of the
-others within hearing.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, Frank,” he began, leaning over, “we’ve<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span>
-got a fellow working for us at the news-stand
-who makes you look like a faded leaf, old top.
-Honest, Frank, he’s got it all over you as a swell
-dresser. You’ll have to look to your laurels
-right smart. That’s no josh, either. Why, that
-fellow’s got a pink-and-green-striped shirt that
-would simply fill you with envy!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Jack,” was the response. “You jabbering
-again?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep, jabbering again, Frankie. Listen.
-You’re months behind the style, old chap.
-They’re not wearing those all-leather shoes any
-more. You want to get some with cloth tops.
-They’re the only proper dress for the Johnnies.
-I’m afraid you haven’t read your fashion journal
-this month!”</p>
-
-<p>“The trouble with you and Faulkner,” replied
-Frank over his shoulder, “is that you dress so
-like tramps that when you see a fellow with a
-clean collar on you don’t know what to make of
-it!”</p>
-
-<p>That produced chuckles from the nearby seats.
-Jack smiled serenely. “Yes, there’s something
-in what you say. That’s where you have it on the
-rest of us, Frank. Your collars are so plaguey
-high that no one can see whether they’re clean
-or not on top! But what I’m telling you about<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>
-the cloth-top shoes is right as rain. They’re positively
-the last cry. Get after ’em, Frank.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t worry about my shoes,” was the reply.
-“Look after your own, Jack. There’s a place
-down town where you can get them shined for a
-nickel. You and your partner had better drop in
-there some day.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’d never do Jack’s for a nickel,” remarked
-Buster. “His feet are too big.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I shine mine at home,” said Jack cheerfully.
-“I save a nickel every week or two, you
-see. When I get a quarter saved up I’m going to
-get one of those manicures like Frank’s. They’re
-great! Every time he puts his hand up you get
-blinded.”</p>
-
-<p>“Every time you put your hand up,” chuckled
-Frank, “I think someone’s dead!”</p>
-
-<p>“Now what’s he mean by that?” asked Jack,
-as the others laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“You’d better dry up,” advised Joe amusedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Good advice, Faulkner,” Foley commented.
-“Wash his hands when you get him home. Your
-own, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll leave it to the crowd if my hands aren’t
-clean,” exclaimed Jack indignantly, holding them
-up for inspection. “I washed them only yesterday.
-Frank, you’re almost insulting. For two<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>
-cents I’d disarrange your scarf and break your
-heart!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, cut it out,” growled Foley. “You’re not
-smart; you just think you are. I wear whatever
-clothes I please, and it doesn’t concern you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Doesn’t it, though? My word! It concerns
-me a lot, old chap. Many’s the time I’ve got up
-in the morning feeling blue and depressed and
-then seen you glide by in a pink shirt and a green
-hat and white spats and perked right up, Frank!
-Why, you’re our little blob of local colour, that’s
-what you are. We’re all better for you, Frank.
-Amesville would be pale and commonplace without
-you. Why, just the other day I walked along
-a block or two behind you inhaling the aroma
-that floated back, and life seemed different right
-away. That was the day everyone was calling
-up the gas company and complaining of
-leaks!”</p>
-
-<p>This sally brought a burst of laughter that dissipated
-the final remnant of Foley’s good-temper,
-and he turned to face Jack with an angry countenance.
-Unfortunately, he caught the grin on
-Joe’s features and straightway transferred his
-attention to that youth.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you smirking about, you fresh
-kid?” he demanded. “You go and sell your five-cent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>
-cigars and let me alone. You’re a joke, anyway,
-and you’re the biggest joke when you try
-to play ball. You grin at me and I’ll reach back
-there and wipe it off!”</p>
-
-<p>“Cut it out, Frank,” said Tom Pollock from
-the seat behind Joe’s. “Keep your temper, old
-man. No one’s hurting you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, those cheap guys can keep their mouths
-closed, then. I wasn’t saying anything to them,
-was I?”</p>
-
-<p>“You began it,” retorted Jack mendaciously.
-“You’re jealous because I told you there was a
-fellow in town with cloth-top shoes. I only said
-it for your own good, and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Dry up, Jack,” commanded Tom. “You’re
-tiresome.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” grieved Jack. “That’s all the
-thanks I get for trying to be kind and helpful!”</p>
-
-<p>Just then they had to pile out and change to
-another trolley, and when they were reseated
-Jack discovered that Foley had placed himself
-the length of the car away. He sighed. “No
-more fun,” he murmured. “I shall go to
-sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>That incident, unimportant as it seemed, bore
-results. Frank Foley evidently reached the conclusion
-that it was Joe and not Jack who was at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>
-the bottom of the heckling, for whenever they
-met Joe was regarded with scowling dislike. It
-didn’t bother Joe much, but it amused Jack immensely.
-“Honestly, Joey,” he would chuckle,
-“you oughtn’t to put me up to saying things
-about Frank. It isn’t nice. If he speaks to me
-about it I’ll just have to tell him that I don’t
-approve of it a bit.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you and your Frank were at the bottom
-of the river,” replied Joe vigorously. “It’s bad
-enough being after a fellow’s position without
-having a lot of ill-feeling besides. If I should
-beat him out, either this year or next, he’d always
-think I did it unfairly, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid he would,” grieved Jack. “Try
-and be decent to him, Joey. Don’t make fun of
-him the way you do. The things you say——”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dry up!” muttered Joe. Jack obeyed,
-chuckling wickedly.</p>
-
-<p>High School continued to win most of her
-games, coming a cropper now and then, however,
-as when she received a decisive beating at the
-hands of Lima. Amesville was shut out for the
-first time that season, while her opponent managed
-to get seven runs. Toby Williams started
-for Amesville, but lasted only three innings. By
-that time Lima had four runs to her credit. Tom<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
-Pollock kept her at bay until the sixth inning,
-when an error by Healey, coming on the heels of
-a dropped fly by Cummings, let three more runs
-across. Amesville was utterly unable to bunch
-the few hits she managed to make off the Lima
-pitcher and so travelled home with banners trailing.
-The direct outcome of that game was the
-replacing of Buster Healey at second base with
-young Farquhar. Farquhar, however, only lasted
-through three days of practice and was then
-relegated to the Scrubs. In his place Coach Talbot
-requisitioned George Peddie, and Peddie was
-tried at third while Hale went to second. Healey
-was heartbroken. It was understood that he was
-to have his position again as soon as he recovered
-from his present slump, but Buster viewed the
-situation hopelessly.</p>
-
-<p>One afternoon when he and Joe were together
-on the bench during the first inning of a game
-with the Scrubs he confided his perplexities. “I
-don’t know what the dickens is the matter with
-me, Joe,” he said. “I didn’t use to have any
-trouble. Last year I played through with only
-fourteen errors all season, and that’s not so bad,
-is it? But this spring”—he shook his head
-puzzledly—“I can’t even seem to bat any more.
-It’s funny, too. I hit where the ball looks to be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>
-and never touch it. Same way in fielding. I see
-the old thing shooting along to me and make a
-grab for it and as often as not it gets clean past.
-The other day, when I plugged to Frank that
-time, I aimed as straight as you please and got
-the ball away all right. I <em>know</em> that! But when
-it got to first it was two yards to the left!” He
-examined his hands as if seeking a solution to his
-trouble there. Joe, interested in the new batting
-arrangement that Mr. Talbot had introduced that
-afternoon, heard Buster’s lamentations with but
-half an ear. He nodded sympathetically, though,
-when young Peddie had been retired at first, making
-the third out.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s too bad,” he said. “What do you suppose
-the reason is?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m telling you I don’t know,” replied Buster
-a trifle impatiently. “Maybe I’m not well. I—I
-have headaches sometimes.” He made the acknowledgment
-rather shamefacedly. Buster
-didn’t have much sympathy for fellows with ailments.</p>
-
-<p>For the first time Joe’s interest was really
-aroused. “Whereabouts?” he asked quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“Whereabouts what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Whereabouts are the headaches?”</p>
-
-<p>“In my head, of course! Oh, you mean—Well,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
-sort of up here.” He placed his hands over his
-temples. “Maybe,” he added with a grin,
-“maybe I’m studying too hard.”</p>
-
-<p>“You get a ball,” said Joe, “and come over
-here with me.”</p>
-
-<p>“What for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind what for, Buster. Come on.”</p>
-
-<p>Buster borrowed a baseball from the bag and
-followed Joe across to the stretch used by pitchers
-when they warmed up. “What’s the big
-idea?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Shoot it to me,” said Joe. He held his hands
-in front of his chest. “Don’t curve it, Buster.
-Just put it to me straight.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s got to curve some,” objected Buster.
-“Here you are.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe made a stab well to the left of him and
-saved himself a trip down the field.</p>
-
-<p>“Try again,” he said, throwing the ball back.
-“Try to hit my hands, Buster. See if you can’t
-throw right into them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come a little nearer. I can’t see your hands
-so well. That’s better.”</p>
-
-<p>Buster sped the ball off again, and again it
-went wide, although not so wide as before. When
-the ball came back to him he made rather an awkward
-task of catching it. Joe followed the ball.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Let’s have it,” he said quietly. Buster
-yielded it, troubledly. “Catch,” said Joe and
-tossed the ball to the other from some four feet
-away. Buster put up his hands quickly, his forehead
-a mass of wrinkles and his eyes half-closed,
-and the ball tipped his fingers and struck his
-chest.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you scowling for?” asked Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“Scowling?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, your forehead’s all screwed up. Your
-eyes, too. Can’t you catch a ball without doing
-that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. I guess so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Try it.” This time Buster caught, but, as
-before, he frowned and squinted terrifically over
-the operation.</p>
-
-<p>“That’ll do,” said Joe. “You go and see an
-oculist, Buster.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oculist!”</p>
-
-<p>“Surest thing you know. Something’s wrong
-with your eyes. You can’t see, Buster!”</p>
-
-<p>“Great Scott!” murmured the other. “I—I
-believe you’re dead right, Joe!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know I am. I had headaches like yours a
-couple of years ago and my mother sent me to
-a doctor. He snipped a couple of muscles and I
-was all right.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Snipped! Say, didn’t it hurt?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mm, a little; not much. Maybe your trouble’s
-something else, though. Maybe you need glasses,
-Buster.”</p>
-
-<p>“Glasses! Gee, wouldn’t I be a sight with
-glasses? Do you really think that’s what’s wrong,
-Joe?”</p>
-
-<p>“Positive! You can’t throw a ball straight
-because you don’t see what you’re throwing at
-plainly. Now, can you?”</p>
-
-<p>Buster considered a moment. Then: “I don’t
-believe I do, come to think of it. Things are—are
-sort of indistinct at a distance. You don’t
-suppose”—Buster faltered—“you don’t suppose
-I’m going to be blind, do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Blind your granny! You go and see an oculist
-and he will fix you up right as rain. Do it
-tomorrow, Buster. I’ll wager you’ll be playing
-second again in a fortnight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Honest, Joe? Say, why didn’t I think of my
-eyes? Why, now when I think of it, I know
-mighty well that I don’t see like I did a year ago.
-Why, last Spring I could see to the end of the
-field as plainly as anything!”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you today?” asked Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I can’t. I can see, all right, but things
-are sort of hazy. What’s a cataract like, Joe?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I never had one. Neither have you. Don’t
-be an idiot, Buster. Just do as I tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet I will!” They were back on the
-bench now. “What gets me, Joe, is why I never
-thought it might be my eyes!”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess a fellow thinks of his eyes the last
-thing of all,” replied Joe wisely. “I know when
-I was having those headaches——”</p>
-
-<p>But a further account of his experiences was
-interrupted by the coach.</p>
-
-<p>“Faulkner, you take first. That’ll do for today,
-Foley. Hale, you go back to third. Peddie,
-see what you can do at second.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe played four innings at the first sack that
-afternoon, conscious all the time of Frank Foley’s
-malevolent glare from the bench. But he didn’t
-allow that to worry him much and covered the
-base in good shape. The following afternoon it
-was Joe who started at first and Foley who took
-his place later on. Perhaps the fear of being
-superseded began to wear on Foley, for he
-played poorly during the three innings he
-was on duty, and Jack exulted on the way
-home.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got him on the run, Joey,” he said.
-“Keep it up, old man! Remember that bat-case
-is yours every Sunday!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Hang your old bat-case, Jack! I wish they’d
-put me on the second. This thing of taking a
-chap’s job away isn’t funny.”</p>
-
-<p>“To the victor belong the spoils,” replied
-Jack untroubledly. “Frank won’t let sentiment
-interfere with getting his place back if he can,
-Joey, so why should you——”</p>
-
-<p>“But he had it first.”</p>
-
-<p>“And couldn’t keep it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Just the same, I don’t like it. I think I’ll
-quit.”</p>
-
-<p>“You think you’ll quit!” exclaimed the other
-in horrified tones. “You’re crazy underfoot like
-a radish! Quit nothing! What about that
-bat——”</p>
-
-<p>Joe turned on him menacingly. “If you say
-‘bat-case’ again I’ll punch you,” he threatened.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, all right. I won’t. I was only going to
-ask what about that receptacle for——”</p>
-
-<p>Joe chased him half a block. When peace had
-been restored Joe asked: “Have you seen
-Buster Healey today?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he wasn’t out,” replied Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“I know he wasn’t. I’m sort of worried about
-Buster. I didn’t say anything about it yesterday,
-Jack, but I’m afraid he’s got something<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>
-wrong with his eyes.” He told of the incident
-of the day before, ending up with: “I
-don’t know much about cataracts, Jack, but I
-wouldn’t be awfully surprised if that was the
-trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a cheerful little chap, aren’t you?
-Fellows don’t have those things, Joey. Old ladies
-have ’em when they’re about eighty. My grandmother
-had ’em, and I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe. I hope you’re right. Anyway,
-I’m going to call him up and find out what the
-oculist said.”</p>
-
-<p>Events, however, proved that unnecessary, for
-when they turned into the Adams Building there
-was Buster leaning against the counter in
-conversation with the sprightly Mr. Chester
-Young.</p>
-
-<p>“I was waiting for you, Joe,” he announced.
-“Thought you’d like to know you were dead right
-yesterday. I went to the doctor man this afternoon
-and he says I’ve got my—my——Oh, thunder,
-I’ve forgotten it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Myopia?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it! He says I’m so blamed near-sighted
-that’s it’s a wonder I can blow my nose!
-But it isn’t cataracts, anyway. Say, honest, Joe,
-I was scared blue last night. I told my mother<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span>
-what you’d said and she was certain sure I had
-cataracts!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad you haven’t. What’s the oculist
-going to do about it?”</p>
-
-<p>“He says he can cure me in a few months. I
-have to go every day for a while and look through
-a sort of machine he has. And I may have to
-wear glasses, too. And”—and by this time Buster’s
-cheerfulness was ebbing fast—“he says I
-can’t play ball any more for a while. Isn’t that
-the limit?”</p>
-
-<p>“Too bad, Buster. But if he can cure the
-trouble——”</p>
-
-<p>“He says he can. Says when you catch them
-young, these myopias, you can chase ’em out of
-the system, or words like that. I suppose I
-oughtn’t to kick, because it might have been a
-heap worse, but it’s hard having to give up playing
-baseball.”</p>
-
-<p>“No use troubling about that,” said Jack, who
-had joined them. “You couldn’t play anyhow,
-Buster, until you got your eyes fixed up right.
-Much better give it up this spring and go back
-to it next.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose so. I haven’t any choice, anyway.
-Say, Joe, I’m certainly much obliged to you for
-tipping me off. What gets me——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Joe’s a wise guy,” said Jack. “What he
-doesn’t know isn’t worth knowing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but what gets me——”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that was nothing for Joey! Solomon in
-all his glory had nothing on Joseph!”</p>
-
-<p>“For the love of mud, Jack, shut up! Buster’s
-trying to tell you——”</p>
-
-<p>“I was going to say,” began Buster patiently
-again, “that what gets me is why I didn’t realise
-myself what the trouble was. That’s what gets
-me! You’d think that when a fellow couldn’t see
-decently he’d take a tumble and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, it’s a wonder you haven’t tumbled lots
-of times,” agreed Jack solicitously.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you make me tired,” grumbled Buster.
-“You can’t be serious a minute. If you had my—my——Say,
-what is it again, Joe?”</p>
-
-<p>“Myopia, Buster.”</p>
-
-<p>“From the Greek, Buster; myo, close, and
-opsis, sight. My word, I wish old Dennison could
-have heard me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you’re a swell Greek scholar!” jeered
-Buster. “Well, I just thought you’d like to hear
-about it, Joe. And I hope you get my place at
-second—if you want it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Give it to Foley,” said Jack. “Joe doesn’t
-need it. But, honestly, Buster, I’m dead sorry<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span>
-you’re out of it this year. We’re going to miss
-you, old man. But you’ll be in better shape for
-next, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“If Frank’s going to have my place,” replied
-Buster dismally, “I’m sorrier than ever!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI<br />
-<small>FOLEY IS WORRIED</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The next day Joe found himself playing third
-base. Gordon Smith was changed from shortstop
-to second and George Peddie was at short. But
-this arrangement lasted only a few innings.
-Peddie was out of place at short and Joe was
-equally miscast as third baseman. Then Steve
-Hale was put in at short and Joe and Frank
-Foley were instructed to change places. The
-game with the Scrubs was finished with that arrangement
-of the infield, and, while it produced
-better results than any previous combination,
-still it was far from perfect. After all, Hale was
-a third baseman first, last, and all the time, and
-Foley was not fast enough to fill his shoes. Joe
-secretly hoped that the arrangement would last,
-for he was in possession of his coveted position
-at first, and, in order that it might, he played the
-very best he knew how that afternoon and won
-applause more than once. Now that there were
-no wild pegs from Buster Healey to be stopped
-the position was far easier.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span></p>
-
-<p>But the next day Foley was back at first in
-practice and Hale was once more cavorting
-around third. Gordon Smith was reinstated to
-his old position at short and the task of covering
-the middle bag fell to George Peddie. That, of
-course, put Joe once more on the bench, and once
-more Joe gave way to discouragement and Jack
-about made up his mind to lose that wager. But
-neither Coach Talbot nor Captain Craig was
-satisfied with a line-up that left out the hitting
-possibilities of Joe Faulkner, and when the two
-teams had battled through four innings Foley
-was taken out and again Joe went to first. By
-now the school in general, or as much of it as
-followed the fortunes of the baseball club, was
-watching the struggle for first base position with
-much interest. It seemed as though Coach Talbot
-had decided to give the two contestants equal
-chances and let them decide the matter themselves!
-Every day Joe and Frank Foley divided
-the position. It is not to be denied that Foley
-was still a more brilliant first baseman than his
-rival. Foley had a long reach that helped him
-considerably, had more experience, and was, in
-fact, a first-class man for the position. It was at
-the bat that he was forced to play second fiddle.
-Joe could outhit him two to one. Not only that,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>
-but on bases Foley was awkward and slow. He
-had a positive genius for being caught off the
-bags, and his attempts to slide were sad failures.
-Each of the boys had his following amongst the
-“fans” and whether Faulkner or Foley was to
-play first base in the Petersburg game became a
-question that was hotly argued.</p>
-
-<p>Foley had at last realised that, contrary to his
-early season conviction, he did not hold the position
-securely; that if he meant to retain it he had
-to play his hardest and, if possible, improve his
-batting. It was something of a blow to Foley’s
-self-conceit, for last year he had faced no real
-rival and had come to look on the place as his.
-He was no “quitter,” and he made a hard fight
-of it. He tried his level best to increase his batting
-average, but without much success. He had
-heretofore considered that it was enough to field
-his position and leave the hitting to others, and
-now he discovered that batting was not a trick
-to be learned in a few short weeks.</p>
-
-<p>Amesville played every Saturday save one
-until the middle of May, reaching that period
-with a showing of seven wins, three defeats, and
-one tie. The missed game was with Curtis School,
-rain prohibiting. Of the regular schedule of seventeen
-games nine remained, and after the middle<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span>
-of the month Wednesday afternoon contests
-began. The “Millers” secured their return game,
-coming to Amesville on less than a day’s notice
-when Arkwright High School announced its inability
-to fill her date. The “Millers” were again
-beaten, 9 to 3, Tom Pollock pitching most of the
-game for the home team. Joe played five of the
-nine innings at first, getting six put-outs, an assist,
-and no errors as his share, thereby bettering
-Foley’s record for one less inning by two put-outs
-and an assist. At bat Joe had a gala day,
-being up three times and securing as many hits.
-Foley, as usual, failed to come across with anything.
-It was after that Wednesday contest that
-Joe’s stock arose appreciably and Jack got Tom
-Pollock to put that bat-case on the counter for
-him to examine! Perhaps, however, that game
-with the “Millers” was mainly notable for bringing
-into prominence young Peddie. Peddie, now
-regularly established at second, performed in a
-way that was little short of marvellous, taking
-part in two doubles and working with Smith even
-more smoothly than Buster Healey had ever done.
-He also secured a timely hit to add to his laurels.
-George Peddie, in short, was the hero of that
-encounter.</p>
-
-<p>The weather settled down to warm days that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
-made playing a delight and that brought out the
-best in everyone. High School’s batting improved
-remarkably during the last two weeks in
-May, and the pitchers began to come into their
-own. Toby Williams showed more improvement
-than either of the others, but was still far from
-being the pitcher that Tom Pollock was. Carl
-Moran went through six or seven innings occasionally
-without misadventure, but was not yet
-equal to twirling a full game. Behind the bat
-Sam Craig was still the same reliable, heady
-player as ever, while Jack Speyer was rapidly
-getting experience as a substitute. Amesville
-had a fine outfield in Sidney Morris, Jack Strobe,
-and Walter Cummings. Sidney and Jack were
-especially clever players, with Cummings promising
-to be quite as good with more experience.
-On the whole, the school looked forward to the
-Petersburg game on the twenty-first of June with
-more confidence than usual. Petersburg had won
-a scant majority of the annual contests to date
-and was always considered dangerous. But this
-year, with a fast, smoothly-working infield, two
-first-class pitchers, and an outfield of proved excellence,
-Amesville considered that she was more
-than the equal of her old rival. Someone, however,
-has said that baseball is two-thirds skill and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span>
-one-third luck, and that one-third has often upset
-the wisest calculations.</p>
-
-<p>So far Jack and Frank Foley were nip-and-tuck
-in their race. Neither had missed a game.
-Jack tried to say that since Foley scarcely ever
-played an entire contest through he was already
-defeated, but Handsome Frank—more handsome
-than ever now that Summer was at hand, with its
-better opportunities for sartorial display—reminded
-his rival of the terms of the wager. “I
-said I’d play in more games with outside teams
-than you would. I don’t have to play a game
-through from start to finish.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a good thing you don’t, then,” laughed
-Jack. “If you did I’d be carrying my bat around
-in that nice leather case right now! All right,
-old chap. Go to it. But you’ll have hard work
-stealing a game on me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know. You might break something
-or have measles, Jack. I hear there’s lots
-of measles around town.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t worry. I’ve had ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know, but some folks have them two or
-three times.” Foley grinned exasperatingly.
-“Haven’t you got a sort of rash on your forehead
-there now?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I haven’t! That’s sunburn, you idiot!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, take care of yourself, Jack. You never
-can tell what’s going to happen.”</p>
-
-<p>Foley sauntered away, a picturesque figure in
-immaculate blue serge and a pale yellow shirt,
-and Jack watched his departure with mingled
-sentiments of admiration and contempt. “Of all
-the high-faluting dudes,” muttered Jack, “he’s
-the high-falutingest! Did you see that brown
-straw hat, Chester, with the pleated silk scarf
-around it? Say, he’s gone you one better, hasn’t
-he?”</p>
-
-<p>The encounter had taken place in the lobby of
-the Adams Building on a Saturday morning.
-Foley and Mr. Chester Young, doubtless drawn
-together by their mutual fondness for startling
-attire, had become very good friends, and Foley
-was quite frequently to be found at the news-stand.
-Mr. Chester Young, flicking the ashes
-from his cigarette, smiled untroubledly.</p>
-
-<p>“Old stuff,” he said. “They were wearing
-those in the East last Summer. The latest straws
-are higher and just off the straw-colour. I’ve
-got one on the way. You have to send to Chicago
-for them.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe, who was taking stock of the cigars on
-hand, smiled and winked at his partner. “Oh,
-those are too cheap for Foley,” he said carelessly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Cheap!” exclaimed Young. “Oh, yes, they’re
-cheap like anything! Ten dollars is what they
-stand you, Faulkner.”</p>
-
-<p>“For one?” gasped Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you didn’t think it was for a dozen, did
-you?” asked Young pityingly. “That lid Foley’s
-sporting cost about six. <a href="#i_p214">He thinks he’s a pretty
-swell little dresser, Foley does.</a> Well, he ain’t
-so bad, only he just sort of misses it about every
-crack he makes. See his socks? Dark blue they
-were. They ain’t wearing colours this season.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_p214">
- <img src="images/i_p214.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_215">“He thinks he’s a pretty swell little dresser, Foley
-does”</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“They’re not? Help!” Jack regarded his
-own brown stockings in dismay. “I’ve got to go
-home and change, Joe. Honest, this thing of
-keeping up with the styles is killing, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It don’t trouble you much,” said Mr. Chester
-Young indulgently. “If it did you’d call in that
-collar you’re wearing.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with my collar?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing, only they don’t wear ’em like that
-now.” Young put a hand to his throat and pulled
-his terra-cotta silk scarf into place. “More like
-this.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I see,” said Jack. “Sort of low and
-rakish, eh? All right. Live and learn. Say, Joe,
-that thing you’re wearing is worse than mine.
-I should think you’d be ashamed of yourself!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I’d be ashamed to be seen in one like his,”
-answered Joe. “Get Meyers and Fink and tell
-them to send us a hundred Adams Building
-conchas and two boxes of Vistas panatellas, will
-you? Don’t forget to give these returns to the
-news company, Young, when they come today.
-I’ve been falling over them for two or three
-days.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re out of City Hall post-cards,” said
-Young. “And we’re getting short on some of the
-others.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re on order, thanks. That reminds me,
-Jack. Those chocolates aren’t as good as they
-sent us first. Guess we’d better switch back to
-the Cleveland folks. Their packages aren’t
-quite as dressy, but the chocolates are a lot
-better.”</p>
-
-<p>“There was a fellow in here just before you
-came,” observed Young, “trying to sell us candy.
-I told him to come back later. He had some new
-stuff, all right; glazed boxes with crimson ribbons
-across ’em. Pretty good-looking line, I
-thought.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell him we don’t want anything when he
-comes again. How are you off for magazines
-there, Young?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty fair. We’ve sold about twenty of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
-those Murray’s. Ought to order more, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. How many are there there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Four—no, five. They’ll sell today, I guess.
-And we’re short of Mid-Wests. Only two of
-those here.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll order twenty more Murray’s and ten Mid-Wests.”
-Joe reached for the telephone with one
-hand and searched for a nickel with the other.
-“The telephone company is after Mr. Adams to
-put in a couple of booths here, Jack. If he lets
-them do it it’ll make this ’phone cost us money.
-Hello! Amesville 430! As it is we’re making
-about seven dollars a month on this thing.
-Hello? News company? This is Adams Building.
-Send around twenty Murray’s Monthlies
-and ten Mid-Wests this noon, will you? I beg
-your pardon? No, that’s all. Murray’s and—Yes,
-I think you’d better. Make it fifty Murray’s
-and twenty-five Mid-Wests after this. Good-bye.”
-Joe hung up the receiver and put the instrument
-back in place, and when Mr. Chester
-Young had served a customer, remarked:</p>
-
-<p>“By the way, Young, you don’t seem to be
-keeping that gang of yours out of here much better.
-Yesterday there were six or seven hanging
-around. We’ve spoken two or three times about
-it, you know. We don’t want this to become a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
-loafing place. Mr. Adams doesn’t like it, and we
-don’t, either.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you can’t turn away custom, can you?
-Those guys spend their money with you, don’t
-they?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a great deal, I guess,” replied Joe drily.
-“Anyhow, they don’t pay rent for this lobby,
-Young. Keep them moving, please.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. But you’d better hire a ‘bouncer,’
-Faulkner. I don’t get paid for insulting my
-friends.”</p>
-
-<p>“You tell your friends to come and see you
-somewhere else,” replied Joe tartly. “This place
-looks like a hog-wallow after that crowd has been
-standing around a while.”</p>
-
-<p>“Meaning my friends are hogs, eh?” Mr.
-Chester Young laughed, but not with amusement.</p>
-
-<p>“If they’re friends of yours, Chester,” said
-Jack, “you’d better shake them. They’re a cheap
-lot of corner loafers. They used to hang out
-around Foster’s until they got on to the fact that
-they could come in here and keep warm. We
-don’t want them. Get that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! After this as soon as a customer gets
-his change I’ll duck out from here and throw him
-through the door! That’s fine!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t talk sick,” said Jack shortly. “You<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>
-know what we mean. If you don’t encourage
-them by talking with them they’ll go along, I
-guess. We don’t want Mr. Adams putting us out
-of here, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Chester Young forebore to reply, but there
-was a world of eloquence in the way in which he
-puffed his cigarette and winked at the elevator
-attendant across the lobby.</p>
-
-<p>Later, when the chums were on their way to
-the field for the game with Morristown High
-School, they reverted to Mr. Chester Young.
-“What do you know about his paying ten dollars
-for a straw hat?” demanded Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s probably adding about five to the
-price,” said Joe. “Where would he get that
-much to pay for a hat? He certainly can’t do it
-on the wages we’re paying him.”</p>
-
-<p>“You said he was having things charged, didn’t
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but he told us he was getting the hat
-from Chicago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Having Keller send for it, I dare say. Keller’s
-is the place he buys hats, because I saw him
-in there one day looking at some. The first thing
-we know, Joey, the sheriff or someone will be
-descending on us and taking away the stand!”</p>
-
-<p>“They can’t do that. We’re not responsible<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>
-for his debts, thank goodness! What is pretty
-certain is that he must be getting near the end of
-his rope. We’ll have to be looking for a new clerk
-pretty soon, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“If he will hang out until school is over we
-won’t have to have one. You can take the stand
-half the day and I can take it the other half.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but that won’t be for nearly a month,
-and I don’t believe Mr. Chester Young will last
-that long.”</p>
-
-<p>“He will probably light out some fine day,”
-said Jack pessimistically, “with the cash-register
-under one arm and the showcase under the other.
-I try awfully hard to believe him a fine, honest
-youth, Joey, but I never can quite do it!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII<br />
-<small>IN THE TWELFTH INNING</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Joe started the game at first that afternoon and
-had a busy five innings, for Morristown was a
-hard-hitting aggregation and slammed Carl
-Moran all over the lot during two innings and
-then tried its best to do the same with Toby
-Williams. Sharp fielding alone allowed Carl to
-last as long as he did, and it was not until the
-fourth inning that the visitors got their first run
-across. In the meanwhile Amesville had scored
-twice, once in the first and once in the third. Sam
-Craig’s three-bagger, with George Peddie on
-first, did the trick in the first inning, and two hits
-and a stolen base accounted for the second run.</p>
-
-<p>It was a snappy game from start to finish, and
-a good-sized audience was on hand to enjoy it.
-Morristown played in hard luck during the first
-part of the contest, for, although she hit hard
-and often, her hits didn’t earn runs. In fact, it
-was a dropped ball at the plate that gave her her
-single tally in the fourth. Smith’s throw may<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span>
-have been a bit low, but Sam Craig ought to have
-held it and had the runner out by a yard. He
-didn’t, however, and so when the home team came
-to bat in the last of that inning the score was
-2 to 1.</p>
-
-<p>The batting order had been changed subsequent
-to Buster Healey’s departure and Hale was hitting
-in fourth place, followed by Peddie, Craig,
-and Faulkner, or Foley. Cummings and the
-pitcher ended the list. The new arrangement had
-not, however, been producing very satisfactory
-results. In the fourth Steve Hale started off well
-by banging out a liner that was too hot for shortstop
-to hold and reaching his base before that
-player could recover the ball and peg it across.
-Joe had two strikes against him before he found
-one that he liked, and then hit a slow one to first
-and sacrificed Hale to second. Sam Craig fouled
-off three and finally flied out to left fielder. Cummings
-made the second out, third to first, and
-Toby Williams came up with the task of scoring
-Hale from second. Toby wasn’t very much of a
-batsman, although when he hit the ball usually
-travelled far. The Morristown pitcher had been
-putting the first delivery over time after time and
-Toby was instructed to go after it. He did and
-he got it, and it whizzed straight down the third<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
-base line, just out of reach of the baseman, and
-rolled gaily into deep left while Hale sprinted
-home and Toby reached second. Smith brought
-the inning to an end when, following Toby’s example,
-he hit the first ball pitched and slapped it
-squarely into the pitcher’s glove.</p>
-
-<p>Neither side scored in the fifth, although the
-visiting team got men on third and second on
-errors by Hale and Smith, and Jack Strobe got
-to first on a Texas Leaguer. In neither case could
-the following batsmen bring home the bacon. Joe
-yielded first base to Frank Foley when the sixth
-inning began and saw the rest of the game from
-the bench, save when, in the eighth, he caught
-Tom Pollock, who warmed up in case the visitors
-should develop a rally. But the game went
-through to the end with the score 3 to 1. Morristown
-did her best to even things up in the eighth
-and ninth, but some one of the enemy always managed
-to get in front of the ball, and so, although
-the visitors knocked the ball to every part of the
-field, they had to submit to defeat.</p>
-
-<p>Amesville’s winning streak held for a fortnight
-and three other games were played and won.
-Then came the return contest with Lynton. The
-team travelled to the neighbouring town on a
-cloudy Saturday forenoon, much in doubt as to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span>
-whether their journey would prove worth while.
-But when, after they had partaken of a hilarious
-dinner at the Lynton hotel, they started for the
-ball grounds, the sun broke through and for the
-rest of the afternoon tried its best to broil them.
-To Joe that was a memorable game, for it marked
-his elevation to the position of regular first baseman.
-That day, since hitters were needed badly,
-Frank Foley remained on the bench throughout
-the game, and Jack was jubilant. He had a fine
-time twitting Foley whenever he came to the
-bench, and when the seventh and eighth innings
-had passed and the deposed first baseman still
-squirmed uneasily there in idleness his temper,
-which had proved equal to Jack’s gibes during
-the early innings, quite deserted him and he earnestly
-begged Jack to come behind the stand for
-a few minutes and see what would happen! But
-Jack declined the invitation, politely yet firmly,
-and Foley, angry clear through, was denied even
-that slight consolation.</p>
-
-<p>That was a pitchers’ battle. Tom Pollock
-twirled for Amesville, for Coach Talbot wanted
-the game, as, you may be certain, did the forty
-or fifty patriotic rooters who accompanied the
-team. Opposed to Tom was one Corrigan, a
-shock-headed youth who, it was more than suspected,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span>
-would have had difficulty in proving himself
-a high school pupil in good standing.
-Buster Healey, who was among the devoted
-youths who made the trip to Lynton, afterward
-said that he had heard that Corrigan was an imported
-article and that he was far more at home
-in Marion than in Lynton. That as may be, Corrigan
-could certainly pitch, as Amesville soon
-discovered. Not a safety was made off him until
-the third inning, when Tom Pollock smashed out
-a two-bagger that produced no result. Corrigan
-had a slow ball that was the undoing of batsman
-after batsman. He mixed it up with fast ones
-and a couple of hooks and had the opposing team
-standing on their heads. And he fielded so well
-that, as Sam Craig remarked disgustedly once,
-the rest of the Lynton team might just as well
-have remained on the bench.</p>
-
-<p>But Corrigan had an opponent in Tom Pollock
-that was not to be despised. Perhaps, when all
-is said, Tom, for once, was outpitched that day
-if we go by the final score, but there was little
-to choose between the rival moundsmen. Tom
-proved better at the bat than did Corrigan, for
-the latter was a typical pitcher when he went to
-the plate and swung harmlessly at the first three
-deliveries and retired in a perfectly matter-of-fact<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
-way to the bench. If Amesville had trouble
-hitting Corrigan, Lynton had as much difficulty
-getting to Tom. Except for that two-bagger of
-Tom’s, not a hit was made by either side until
-the fifth. In the fourth two errors by the visitors
-put a Lynton runner as far as second, but he died
-there. Joe was guilty of one of those miscues
-when he dropped a perfectly good throw of
-Hale’s, and Smith made the other when he fumbled
-Sam’s throw-down and let the runner steal
-second. Lynton made errors, too, but nothing
-came of them until the first of the fifth.</p>
-
-<p>In that inning Sam, the first man up, fouled
-out to catcher. Joe struck out and Cummings,
-with two strikes on him, swung desperately at a
-poor one and rolled it toward third base. Third
-baseman over-ran it, threw hurriedly and pegged
-wide of first, and Cummings legged it to second
-with lots of time to spare. Amesville’s rooters
-became audible for almost the first time since
-Sam had made his hit, and Tom Pollock strode
-to the bat. Discretion seeming the better part of
-valor, Tom was promptly passed. That brought
-Gordon Smith up, with runners on first and second,
-and Gordon was not just the batter Coach
-Talbot would have chosen for the situation. But
-the shortstop proved, after all, the man for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span>
-job, for, after cunningly allowing Corrigan to
-get himself in a hole, he leaned against a fast
-ball and streaked it into short right, scoring Cummings
-and placing Tom on third.</p>
-
-<p>Sidney Morris tried very hard to come across,
-but Corrigan was too much for him, and Sidney
-fanned. One run, however, looked very big in
-that game, and Amesville breathed a bit easier
-until, in the last of the sixth, Lynton tied up the
-score by a combination of one hit, a barefaced
-steal of second and a sacrifice fly. One to one
-the score remained until the eighth. Then Corrigan
-showed the first signs of weariness and
-passed Smith. Smith stole second when Morris
-tried for a hit and missed it, the catcher getting
-the throw away too late. Morris again fanned
-and Jack, who had determined to profit by his
-own advice to Joe, shortened his swing and managed
-to connect with one of Corrigan’s offerings.
-The hit was pretty scratchy, but it placed Smith
-on third and left Jack himself safe on first. Hale
-fouled off two, spoiling as many attempted steals
-by Jack, and finally bunted toward the box. Corrigan
-held Smith at third and threw out the runner
-at first. With Peddie up there seemed a chance
-for a tally, for Peddie had been delivering the
-goods quite regularly. But when Corrigan had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span>
-scored two strikes against him the outlook darkened
-and Sam Craig, coaching at third, sent
-Smith to the plate on the wind-up. But Corrigan
-was too old a bird to be unsteadied and he
-slammed the ball swiftly to the catcher and Smith
-was nailed a yard away.</p>
-
-<p>Lynton went out in one, two, three order in her
-half and the ninth started with the score still 1
-to 1. Peddie struck out and Sam walked. Joe
-sacrificed. Cummings hit past third baseman,
-but Sam Craig was out at the plate on a fine
-throw-in by left fielder. The tenth inning was
-profitless to both sides. In the first of the eleventh
-Corrigan wobbled a little and a base on balls followed
-by a safe bunt placed two runners on bases.
-But Morris, Jack, and Steve Hale went out in
-order. It was Tom Pollock’s turn to let down
-and he did it until Lynton had men on second and
-third with but one out. After that, however, Tom
-steadied, fanning the next batter and causing the
-succeeding one to pop up a fly to Joe.</p>
-
-<p>It looked very much like a tie game when Peddie
-had gone out, shortstop to first baseman, and
-Sam Craig had fanned in the first of the twelfth
-inning, for the visiting team would have to get
-the five-twelve train back to Amesville, and it was
-then well after four o’clock. But many a game<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span>
-has been pulled out of the fire with two men down,
-and this was to prove one of them. Joe went to
-bat with his mind made up to hit somehow, somewhere.
-This would, he was sure, be his last
-chance to do anything worth while against the
-crafty Mr. Corrigan, and he did want to have
-something more to show than two weak sacrifices.
-He had profited by experience and close study of
-Corrigan’s methods and was heartened by assurance
-when he gripped his bat and faced the shock-headed
-twirler. Corrigan seldom pitched the
-first ball over, and Joe knew it, and so, although
-he made a fine show of being anxious to swing at
-it, he let it go by and had his judgment sustained
-by the umpire’s decision. The next one was a
-fast ball that looked good until it broke in front
-of the plate and just escaped a corner. With two
-balls and no strikes, Corrigan became careful.
-Joe swung at the third offering and missed it.
-Corrigan smiled at him, and the catcher, who
-usually kept up a running fire of comment, told
-Joe that he was a fine, free swinger, “just like
-a gate, old man, just like a gate!” Corrigan concluded
-that the batter was ready to take a chance
-now and so he uncorked a fast and high one that
-had Joe feeling anxious until the umpire decided
-that it was a ball. After that, Corrigan had to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span>
-make them good, but, with two down, he wasn’t
-troubled much. His next offering was one of his
-famous slow balls, and Joe, having one to spare,
-let it severely alone. It proved a strike.</p>
-
-<p>“One more, now, just like the last!” called the
-catcher. “Let’s have it, Jimmy!”</p>
-
-<p>But Joe knew very well that it wouldn’t be like
-the last at all, that Corrigan would change his
-pace, and, in all likelihood, put a fast one over
-in the groove. And that is what happened. And
-Joe, staking all on his “hunch,” swung and
-caught it fairly and streaked down the base-path
-and was waved onward by Toby Williams, who
-was dancing about in the coacher’s box, and
-finally pulled up at second, standing, just as the
-ball came back from right field. Somehow, that
-unexpected hit changed the luck, it seemed.
-Cummings got his second hit of the game and
-sent Joe to third. Tom Pollock was again passed,
-filling the bases, and Jack Speyer went in to bat
-for Gordon Smith. Speyer wasn’t any phenomenon
-with the stick, but he had been known to
-hit lustily. Perhaps in nine cases out of ten a
-pinch-hitter proves a broken reed, but this must
-have been the tenth time, for there was nothing
-broken about Speyer. Probably the fact that he
-had not been playing kept him from any awe of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span>
-Corrigan. At all events, he let the first ball go
-past unheeded, untroubledly heard it called a
-strike, and then swung hard on the next one.
-Second baseman made a heroic try for it, but it
-went a foot over his upthrust glove and Joe and
-Walter Cummings trotted over the home plate.</p>
-
-<p>That ended the scoring. Sidney Morris hit
-into third baseman’s hands and was an easy out.
-Then all that Amesville had to do was to retire
-Lynton in her half of the twelfth, a feat not at
-all difficult as it proved. Tom struck out the first
-man, the second laid down a bunt and beat out
-the throw to first, and the third batsman hit into
-a double, Smith to Peddie to Joe, and the game
-was over, the score 3 to 1. Amesville, cheered
-and cheering, made a wild dash for the station
-and got the five-twelve train by a minute’s
-margin.</p>
-
-<p>On the way home Jack tried to sympathise
-with Frank Foley, but Frank was in a particularly
-disagreeable frame of mind, and Jack gave
-him up as a bad job. Instead, huddled in a seat
-with Joe, hugging his knees ecstatically, he spoke
-of that bat-case with the air of a proprietor.
-“I’m two games ahead of him, Joey,” he exulted.
-“He will have to play in two more than I do now
-to win, and he will never do it! Not this year!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>
-You’ve cabbaged that place for keeps, Joey.
-Why, even if you dropped half the throws you
-got, Bat couldn’t do without you! Not after the
-way you lambasted that old pill today, son! It’s
-a cinch!”</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t tell,” began Joe.</p>
-
-<p>But Jack would have nothing to do with
-doubts. “Piffle! It’s all over with Handsome
-Frank, I tell you. You win!” Jack was silent a
-moment. Then he laughed rather queerly, and,
-in answer to Joe’s questioning look, said: “It’s
-funny, but, do you know, I’m sort of sorry for
-Frank! Isn’t that silly?”</p>
-
-<p>“So am I,” replied Joe truthfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” Jack took a deep breath and abandoned
-regrets. “To the victor belong the spoils,
-as the poet so beautifully puts it! And it’s been
-a pretty little fight!”</p>
-
-<p>However, had Jack but known it, his sympathy
-for Frank Foley was, in a measure, at least, somewhat
-premature!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-<small>EMPTY BOXES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>June had come and the end of school loomed
-close at hand. So, too, loomed the final baseball
-game with Petersburg. It is an unfortunate thing
-for ardent athletes that the crowning contests of
-the year arrive simultaneously with final examinations!
-There is no doubt in the world but that
-examinations seriously interfere with a whole-hearted
-application to sports. Most of the members
-of the Amesville team were agreed that
-something ought to be done about it; such, for
-instance, as abolishing the examinations! However,
-Petersburg was in no better case, and that
-evened matters up.</p>
-
-<p>Amesville dropped a couple of games the second
-week in June, just to vary the monotony,
-perhaps, and then came back and overwhelmed
-Crowell Academy with a score of 10 to 1.
-Crowell was a much-heralded team from a down-State
-preparatory school, and Amesville did well
-to pile up the score she did, especially as, at the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span>
-last moment, Tom Pollock found that he couldn’t
-pitch and Jack Strobe sent word that someone
-would have to take his place in left field! Jack,
-who had been complaining for a day or two of a
-sore throat, was, it seemed, prohibited from playing
-by an unfeeling doctor. Loomis went into
-left field and Toby Williams took the mound, and
-both performed creditably. In fact, Toby rather
-covered himself with glory that day, having eight
-strike-outs to his credit when the fray was over.
-Joe played all through at first, as he had been
-doing since the second Lynton engagement, and
-put up a rattling good game. Even Frank Foley’s
-adherents had to acknowledge that the new first
-baseman had everything the deposed one had,
-and, when it came to batting, a good deal more.
-Joe didn’t particularly distinguish himself at the
-bat this day, but he got a clean single and a base
-on balls in four times up. Foley had been used
-in the last two contests for an inning or two at
-second base, but it was generally conceded that
-he was now only a substitute, with small likelihood
-of getting into either of the two remaining
-contests.</p>
-
-<p>After the game that Wednesday afternoon Joe
-hurried to Jack’s house and demanded audience
-of that afflicted person. But, to his surprise and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span>
-dismay, Mrs. Strobe met him with the information
-that Jack was suffering from a severe attack
-of quinsy and that the doctor had prohibited
-visitors, since the disease was more or less contagious.
-Joe had to be satisfied with sending a
-message to his chum. That evening, however,
-Jack called him up on the telephone and bewailed
-his luck. The only comfort Jack appeared able
-to derive from the situation lay in the fact that
-Frank Foley had not stolen a march on him by
-playing that afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>“The doc says I’ll have to stay at home until
-Monday, at least,” he said. “I’ll lose Saturday’s
-game. If Frank manages to get into that and
-then should play for an inning against Petersburg,
-as he’s likely to, it’s all off! Isn’t that the
-dickens? Just when I thought I had that wager
-cinched, too!”</p>
-
-<p>Joe was properly sympathetic and Jack finally
-rang off, exacting a promise from Joe to call up
-the next day. Aunt Sarah insisted that Joe
-should spray his throat after the interview.
-It didn’t do, she said, to take risks, and for her
-part she was far from convinced that folks
-couldn’t catch things over the telephone!</p>
-
-<p>When, the next afternoon, on the way to the
-field, Joe stopped in at a drug store and called<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
-up Jack it was Mrs. Strobe who answered. Jack,
-she said, was not so well today and she thought
-it best for him not to try to talk. Joe went on
-to practice feeling rather worried about his chum,
-and wasn’t comforted until Mr. Talbot had assured
-him that quinsy seldom, if ever, resulted
-fatally. On Friday there was no practice for the
-players, and Joe, rather at a loose-end, accepted
-Sidney Morris’s invitation to go to the “movies.”
-It was well after five when he reached the Adams
-Building. Mr. Chester Young was talking in a
-low voice with a man who looked to Joe very
-much like a bill-collector. Whoever he was, he
-presently departed with no great show of satisfaction.
-The day’s business had been, Joe discovered,
-surprisingly poor, the register showing
-less than nine dollars. And when Young reminded
-Joe that it was pay-day, Joe had to dig
-into his pocket for enough to make up the difference
-between the cash on hand and the amount
-of the clerk’s wages.</p>
-
-<p>He called up the Strobes on the telephone after
-supper and talked for a few minutes with Mr.
-Strobe. That gentleman announced that Jack
-was feeling pretty mean, but that the doctor
-thought he was doing as well as could be expected
-and that he would probably be out and about by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span>
-the first of the week. After that Joe settled down
-to two hours of hard study in preparation for
-next week’s examinations, wrote a long letter to
-his mother and finally went to bed just as midnight
-sounded.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning he went back to the news-stand
-and remained there until noon. Saturday was
-usually the best day of the week for business,
-possibly because many of the offices paid off their
-employees then, and today both Joe and Young
-were kept busy attending to the wants of customers.
-When Joe went home for dinner the sales
-had already mounted to over fifteen dollars and
-gave promise of atoning for the poor business of
-the day previous.</p>
-
-<p>The game that afternoon was with Chelmsford
-High School and was looked on as more of a
-practice contest than a real game. It was the last
-contest before the Petersburg battle on the following
-Wednesday, and Amesville had purposely
-chosen an easy victim for the occasion. But at
-that the home team had to work fairly hard for
-half a dozen innings before the game was safely
-laid away, and, as it happened, it was Joe who
-was chiefly instrumental in that ceremony.</p>
-
-<p>Chelmsford had two runs and Amesville three
-when the last of the sixth started. Amesville had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span>
-been playing raggedly and batting weakly against
-an easy pitcher, and only the fact that her opponent
-had been unable to do much with Tom
-Pollock’s delivery had kept her ahead. Tom
-gave place to Carl Moran in the fifth and, ultimately,
-Carl retired in favour of Toby Williams.
-In that last of the sixth Sam Craig, who was batting
-in third place owing to Jack’s absence, got
-to first on a scratch hit. Hale was an easy out,
-third to first, and Peddie was passed. The watchers
-were eager for runs and when Joe went to
-the plate, swinging his bat, there came cries of
-“All right, Lucky! Smash it out!” “Bring ’em
-in, Lucky! Make it a homer!” Joe had never
-made a home-run in his life and didn’t expect to
-now, but when, after the runners had attempted
-a double steal and got away with it, he found a
-nice, straight ball coming right for the middle of
-the plate, Joe took a little longer swing, put a
-little more strength into it, and the deed was
-done! It was a long way around those bases, he
-thought, but he didn’t have to hurry after he got
-to third, for the ball had gone into the left corner
-of the field and rolled up against the fence! He
-jogged across the plate finally to the laughing
-applause of the stands and was thumped on the
-back by hilarious team-mates.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span></p>
-
-<p>Perhaps Coach Talbot thought Joe had done
-enough for one afternoon, for, when the seventh
-inning began, Joe found, to his surprise, that he
-was superseded at first base by Frank Foley!</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad,” he said to himself, “that Jack
-can’t hear of it. He’d probably have a relapse
-and die!”</p>
-
-<p>Joe watched the rest of the game from the bench
-and tried not to be a little bit glad when Foley
-failed to capture an easy infield fly. The game
-finally ended with the score 7 to 3, and he walked
-back to town with the rest and reached the Adams
-Building at a little after five to find, to his surprise,
-that the stand was deserted. Supposing that
-Young would be back in a moment, Joe went behind
-the counter and waited on a customer. But
-no Mr. Chester Young appeared, and when Joe
-rang up the sale and so viewed the drawer of the
-cash register he thought he knew why! There
-was not a cent in it except the dime he had just
-dropped there!</p>
-
-<p>His first sensation was, oddly enough, one of
-satisfaction over the fact that his original impression
-of the shifty-eyed young man had been, after
-all, correct! But that satisfaction didn’t last long.
-The realization that he and Jack had been barefacedly
-robbed of at least twenty-five dollars took<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span>
-its place and Joe’s countenance became grim. To
-add insult to injury, he reflected, Young had had
-the cheek to demand his wages on the eve of his
-flight—and get them! Inquiry of Walter, the
-elevator boy, elicited the information that Mr.
-Chester Young had complained of feeling unwell
-and had announced that he was going over to the
-drug store for some medicine. That had been, as
-near as Walter could recall, about a quarter to
-five. It might have been a little before that.
-Walter evidently had no suspicions and Joe didn’t
-enlighten him.</p>
-
-<p>The exodus from the building was under way
-now and for a good half-hour Joe was busy selling
-papers and cigars and cigarettes, together
-with an occasional box of candy. But he had
-plenty of time for thinking, and long before the
-elevators had brought down their last loads he
-had determined his course. A hasty survey of the
-stock in sight showed conclusively that the stand
-had done a phenomenal business since morning,
-but it was not until he thought to look under the
-counter that the real extent of Mr. Young’s depredations
-came to light.</p>
-
-<p>On the shelves they kept anywhere from thirty
-to sixty dollars’ worth of cigars, cigarettes and
-other goods for which there was not room above.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span>
-At first glance everything seemed all right, but
-when Joe picked up a box of “Adams Building”
-conchas and, bringing it to light, discovered it
-to be quite empty, he knew what to expect of the
-rest of the stock. When he had pulled all the
-boxes and packages out their contents would not
-have fetched two dollars! Only one cigar box
-held cigars, and then only a handful. Evidently
-Mr. Young had craftily replaced the full boxes
-with empty ones and, not having enough of the
-latter, had been forced to put in one from the case
-that still held a few cigars. It was the same with
-the cigarette cartons. Only one was not absolutely
-empty.</p>
-
-<p>Joe surveyed the litter behind the counter and
-tried to think it out. At first he couldn’t understand
-what use the cigars could be to Young.
-Of course, he might take them away to another
-town and sell them, but eight boxes of them, as
-well as several packages of cigarettes and smoking
-tobacco, would make rather a conspicuous
-bundle to carry. Then a light broke on him and
-he quickly lifted the receiver from the telephone
-instrument on the counter and called up Meyers
-and Fink. Fortunately, they were still open, and
-after a moment Joe got the information he
-expected.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that clerk of yours came in here about
-three o’clock today with seven boxes of cigars
-and some cigarettes and smoking tobacco. Said
-you were overstocked and wanted to return them.
-We paid him cash for them. We were going to
-credit them, but he said you wanted the money.
-Anything wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>“How much did you pay him?” asked Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“Forty-six dollars and something; I’ll give
-you the exact amount if you’ll wait a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, that’s near enough,” replied Joe.
-“I’ll be around to see you Monday. Good-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Forty-six from them,” reckoned Joe, “about
-twenty-five from today’s sales and, unless I’m
-mistaken, a knock-down yesterday of perhaps
-five more. About seventy-five dollars altogether.
-That’s going to make an awful dent in this
-month’s profits if we don’t get it back! But,”
-he added grimly to himself as he locked up for
-the night and turned the light out, “I think we
-will!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX<br />
-<small>JOE ACCEPTS A LOAN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The notion of calling up Jack and acquainting
-him with what had happened came to him, but
-was dismissed after a moment’s reflection. Jack
-was ill and the news would only worry and excite
-him. Instead, as he hurried up Main Street, Joe
-decided to call up Aunt Sarah and excuse himself
-from supper on a plea of business. Aunt Sarah
-wouldn’t like it, for she still viewed the news-stand
-with suspicion. But perhaps Aunt Sarah
-detected the anxiety in Joe’s voice when he telephoned,
-for she asked no questions and was really
-quite pleasant, only informing him a trifle wistfully
-that there was beefstew this evening and
-that Amanda was making some of her delectable
-dumplings!</p>
-
-<p>After that hurried talk over the wire Joe
-turned into Aspen Street, walked three blocks
-west and finally rang the bell at the door of a
-rather down-at-heels brick house that stood by
-itself almost in the shadow of the frowning carpet<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span>
-mills. When a dejected and at the same
-time suspicious-looking middle-aged woman
-answered the bell Joe inquired if she were Mrs.
-Young.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no Mrs. Young lives around here,”
-was the reply. “My name’s Bennett.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does Chester Young live here, ma’am?”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you a friend of his?” was the quick
-demand.</p>
-
-<p>“My name is Faulkner, Mrs. Bennett. He
-worked for me in the Adams Building.”</p>
-
-<p>“He did, eh? Then maybe you’ll be payin’ me
-two weeks’ board he’s owin’. Did he send you
-with the money?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I haven’t seen him since noon. That’s
-why I came over here. I thought perhaps I’d
-find him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you won’t, then. He’s skipped!”</p>
-
-<p>“Skipped?” exclaimed Joe. “Gone for good,
-you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s gone owin’ me two weeks’ board, which
-is nine dollars, and fifty cents he borrowed off
-me the day he came here. He was always promisin’
-to pay it, but he never done it, and him bein’
-out of work I didn’t press him at first and then
-afterwards he kept sayin’ he’d pay me every day.
-I’m a poor, hard-workin’ woman, and I need the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
-money. Maybe you’re after owin’ him wages,
-now?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not. I wish I were, Mrs. Bennett. I’m
-sorry he left without settling with you, ma’am.
-Could you tell me where he’s gone?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can not. If I knew I’d be settin’ the police
-on him, never fear! From the first I suspicioned
-him, the dirty rascal, but he had a smooth tongue
-on him and was always promisin’ he’d pay tomorrow.
-If I knew where he’d gone to I’d not
-be gabbin’ here in the doorway! ’Twas while I
-was out to the store after dinner he sneaked in
-and packed his bag and took it away with him,
-knowin’ I’d not stand for it if I was by. Two
-weeks’ money and the half-dollar——”</p>
-
-<p>“And you can’t tell me whether he’s left town
-or just changed his lodgings, Mrs. Bennett?”</p>
-
-<p>“All I know is he’s gone, bad luck to him! Is
-he maybe owin’ you money, too, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“A little, yes. I’m much obliged, ma’am.
-Good-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you find him now, let me know, sir. That’s
-all I’m askin’ you. Just you let me know, sir!
-The dirty scallawag! Cheatin’ a poor, hard-workin’
-woman out of her money!”</p>
-
-<p>The door slammed and Joe stumbled back to
-the uncertain sidewalk and retraced his steps<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span>
-along the ill-lighted street. When he reached
-Indiana Street he unhesitatingly turned southward
-and five minutes later saw the lights of the
-railroad ahead. His course had already been determined
-and the visit to Mr. Chester Young’s
-lodgings had been made with little hope of either
-finding the defaulting clerk or gaining useful information.
-Chester had given Joe the impression
-that he lived with his mother, which accounted
-for the latter mistaking the identity of the woman
-at the door. Chester, it seemed, was a very tricky
-young man.</p>
-
-<p>At the station Joe examined the time-table in
-the waiting-room. Chester had left the building
-somewhere about a quarter to five. At five-two
-a train had left for Fostoria, Fremont and Sandusky,
-connecting at Fremont for Toledo. There
-was no train between that and a quarter to five
-and none afterwards until twenty minutes to six,
-when the south-bound express had left for Columbus.
-Everything indicated the five-two as
-the train Chester had taken if, as Joe suspected,
-he had really left Amesville. The ticket window
-was closed, but a rap on the door gained him admittance
-to the little room wherein the agent was
-seated at the telegraph instrument. He looked
-up inquiringly, nodded, worked the key a moment,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
-listened to the reply, and then swung around in
-his swivel chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir, what’s troubling you?” he asked
-gaily.</p>
-
-<p>“I wanted to ask if you remembered selling a
-ticket to a fellow for the five-two train,” stated
-Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe. What sort of a fellow? There were
-only nine passengers from here on Number 14,
-so far as I know. What did he look like?”</p>
-
-<p>Joe’s description was clear and concise and the
-agent nodded again. “I remember the chap,”
-he said. “He bought to—Hold on, now. What
-business is it of yours, my boy? Is he a friend
-of yours, or what’s the game?”</p>
-
-<p>“He worked for me at the news-stand in the
-Adams Building and left suddenly about a quarter
-to five. I went to his house and the landlady
-said he’d taken his baggage and gone. I—I want
-to see him and ask him something.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do, eh?” The agent grinned. “How much
-did he touch you for?”</p>
-
-<p>Joe smiled non-committingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s not my business, eh?” laughed
-the agent. “All right, son, I’ll tell you what I
-know about the lad. He bought a ticket to Upper
-Newton. I remember it distinctly because he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span>
-called for a Fostoria ticket first and changed his
-mind just as I stamped it. I asked him if he was
-quite sure this time and he said he guessed he
-was. Yep, Upper Newton, that was it. He carried
-a yellow suit-case. I noticed that as he went
-out to the platform just before I closed the
-window.”</p>
-
-<p>“And where’s Upper Newton?” asked Joe.
-“Is it very far?”</p>
-
-<p>“About twenty-four or -five miles.”</p>
-
-<p>“When does the next train go there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Seven-thirty-six. But, say, if you’re thinking
-of going after him I wouldn’t count a whole
-lot on finding him at Upper Newton. That’s not
-much more than a flag station. I wouldn’t wonder
-if he bought for there just to throw folks
-off the track. Dare say he’ll pay his way on to
-Fostoria or, maybe, Fremont. At Fremont he
-could get east or west as he liked. There’s a
-through train connects there for Toledo and beyond
-and one going east about eleven tonight.
-Take my advice and stay where you are, son.
-You’ll never catch him unless you want to put
-the police after him. If you care for that I’d
-advise you to go back up-town and tell your
-story to the chief. How much did he pinch from
-you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t say he’d stolen anything,” said Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“I know you didn’t. But, if he had, how much
-would it have been?”</p>
-
-<p>Joe hesitated. Then, smiling: “About seventy-five
-dollars,” he said. “But I’d rather you
-didn’t say anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m dumb. Say, where does he live when he’s
-at home?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. He worked in Columbus before
-he came here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he’s headed straight away from Columbus,
-hasn’t he? I guess he’s maybe going to
-Sandusky and take a boat. Still, seventy dollars
-won’t take him far.” The agent was silent a moment,
-rapping a pencil thoughtfully on the desk
-in front of him. Then: “Tell you what I’ll do,”
-he exclaimed, sitting up with a thump of his
-chair. “I’ll wire Harris on Fourteen and ask
-him if the fellow got off at Upper Newton or
-paid his fare on the train to Fostoria or beyond!
-How’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you would! It’s very kind of you. I
-suppose I couldn’t catch him if he’s gone on,
-though.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we’ll find out, anyhow.” The agent
-flicked a time-table to him, ran a finger down a
-column, glanced at the clock and then began jabbing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span>
-the telegraph key. “I’ll get Tiverton to give
-him the message,” he explained as he waited a
-reply. “Fourteen gets there in seven minutes
-if she’s on time. Here we are!” The sounder in
-its little box ticked rapidly and stopped and the
-agent busied himself again with the key. Joe,
-who had seated himself in a chair, watched and
-waited. Presently the agent’s hand left the key
-and he faced around again.</p>
-
-<p>“Twelve minutes late, he says. I’ve asked
-Harris to answer from Mittenton. We ought to
-get a reply in about twenty-five minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is Tiverton beyond Upper Newton?” inquired
-Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, about six miles. Harris will know if
-your man got off there, because there wouldn’t
-be more than two or three for a small station like
-that. If he didn’t he’d have to buy to some place
-further along and Harris would remember making
-out his check.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see. What did you say to that agent?”</p>
-
-<p>“I said, ‘Harris, Conductor Number 14. Did
-slick guy about twenty-two old leave train at
-Upper Newton? If not, what’s his destination?
-Important. Reply from Mittenton. <span class="smcap">Chase</span>,
-Agent, Amesville.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks,” said Joe. “Then we’d ought to get<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span>
-an answer about twenty minutes past seven.
-What time does that train go? Seven-thirty?”</p>
-
-<p>“Thirty-six. Mittenton will shoot that right
-back. So you’ll have plenty of time to get Number
-49 if you want it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fostoria is the first big town, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep. He might be stopping off there. Anyway,
-he asked for Fostoria first. That might be
-his home. I guess, though, he wouldn’t be fool
-enough to go home. He’d know folks would look
-for him there right away.”</p>
-
-<p>“How much is the fare to Fostoria, please?”</p>
-
-<p>“One-twenty-four.”</p>
-
-<p>“And how much is it to that other place where
-you said he might change?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fremont? Fremont’s a dollar and forty-five.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe looked thoughtful. He had, as he knew,
-only something like a dollar and eighty cents in
-his pocket, which would come very far from being
-sufficient. If he went back to the house he
-might borrow enough from Aunt Sarah and he
-might not. Aunt Sarah seldom kept more than
-a dollar or two on hand, and it would be folly to
-start out for Fremont or Sandusky with less than
-six or seven dollars in his pocket. He tried to
-think of some other place to get the money.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span>
-There was Mr. Strobe, but Joe had a dim idea
-that Jack had said something about his father
-going to Chicago the day before. Perhaps the
-agent would know whether Mr. Strobe was out
-of town. He looked across to find that person
-viewing him smilingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Not enough, eh?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>Joe grinned and shook his head. “Not nearly
-enough. I guess I ought to have six or seven
-dollars. Do you know whether Mr. Strobe’s in
-town?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know he left for the West yesterday morning.
-Whether he’s back or not I can’t say. He
-carries mileage, so I don’t know where he started
-for. Is he a friend of yours?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. His son, Jack, and I run that news-stand
-together. I thought if he was at home I’d
-run up there while we’re waiting and ask him to
-lend me about five dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess you wouldn’t find him. Where’s the
-son?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s at home, but he’s ill with quinsy. I
-wouldn’t want to trouble Jack with the business
-right now.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Joseph Faulkner.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, son, I’ll be your banker.” The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span>
-agent thrust a hand in his pocket and brought
-out some crumpled bills and a lot of silver.
-“Five enough? You’d better have more, hadn’t
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, thanks; five is quite enough. It’s
-mighty good of you, Mister—Mister——”</p>
-
-<p>“Chase. Don’t mention it. Pay it back some
-time in a week and I shan’t miss it. Here you
-are.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe accepted the crumpled bills and repeated
-his thanks. At that moment the assistant came
-in and the agent, greeting him, introduced Joe.
-“Faulkner,” he explained, “is waiting for a message
-from Harris on Fourteen. It’ll probably
-come in from Mittenton before I get back, Jim.
-Get it straight, will you, and give to him?” He
-turned to Joe as he reached for his coat and hat
-behind the door. “Had your supper yet?” he
-asked. “No? Well, you don’t want to start off
-without something inside you. Come on over to
-the Palace and coal-up.”</p>
-
-<p>The Palace proved to be the identical small
-restaurant which had exhaled that enticing fragrance
-of coffee the morning of Joe’s arrival in
-Amesville. The repast, though simple, was well
-cooked, and Joe, who had forgotten all about
-supper, now discovered himself to be extremely<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span>
-hungry. Under the benign influence of a cup of
-steaming-hot coffee he confided the whole story
-to Mr. Chase and the latter gave flattering attention.</p>
-
-<p>“I remember reading in the paper about that
-cigar-stand of yours,” he said. “You had a box
-and let folks put their money in it, didn’t you?
-Did it work?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but sometimes folks didn’t have the right
-change and then we lost a sale. So Jack and I
-decided we’d better hire someone to be there
-when we couldn’t. We neither of us liked the
-looks of Young very much, but we put in a cash
-register and thought it would be all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“What you needed, I guess, was a safe,” replied
-the agent drily. “Well, I hope you catch
-him, but, to be honest about it, Faulkner, I don’t
-believe you will. If he gets off at Upper Newton
-you’ll be able to trace him, I dare say, and you
-may if he goes on to Fostoria or Fremont; they’re
-smallish towns; but if he reaches Sandusky or
-Toledo it’ll be like looking for a needle in a haystack!
-What I’d do if I were you is go right to
-the police and put it up to them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe that would be the best way,” agreed
-Joe doubtfully. “But, somehow, I don’t like to.
-Everyone would know about it, you see, and if—if<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span>
-Young didn’t exactly mean to pinch the
-money——”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t mean to! You don’t suppose, do you,
-that it got stuck to his fingers and he couldn’t
-get it off?” asked the agent ironically.</p>
-
-<p>“No.” Joe flushed faintly. “What I mean
-is that it would be too bad to have him arrested,
-because he might never do a thing like that
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, please yourself. I don’t think he deserves
-much consideration, though.” He
-chuckled. “It would be a good plan to get him
-back here and let that landlady you told about
-get at him! I’ll bet that would be worse than a
-year in jail! If you’re through we’ll hike across
-and see if that answer has come.”</p>
-
-<p>There was some discussion as to who was to
-pay for Joe’s repast, but the agent finally silenced
-protest by agreeing to accept a handful of cigars
-if Joe’s mission succeeded. It was twenty minutes
-past seven by the waiting-room clock when
-they got back to the station and the message was
-awaiting them.</p>
-
-<p>“Passenger held ticket to Upper Newton, but
-stayed on and bought to Fremont. Made inquiry
-about east-bound trains tonight. If you want
-him pinched say the word. <span class="smcap">Harris.</span>”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Fremont, eh?” Mr. Chase seized the time-table
-and studied it a moment. “He can’t get
-an east-bound until ten-fifty-five. There’s a
-local to Norwalk, though, at nine-forty-seven.
-He might take that. Or he may have asked about
-the east-bound trains just to throw us off the
-track!” He looked thoughtfully at Joe a moment.
-Then, decisively: “That’s his game all
-right! He means to take the eight o’clock express
-to Toledo! If he does—Hold on, though!
-Jim, ask how late Fourteen was at Fostoria.
-That express doesn’t wait but five minutes for
-connections and Fourteen was twelve minutes
-late at Mittenton. She might make that up, but
-she makes all stops and I don’t believe she will.
-If he misses the eight o’clock he can’t get west
-until ten-four.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fourteen was nineteen minutes late at Fostoria,”
-announced the assistant. “Left there at
-twenty-two.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good!” exclaimed Mr. Chase. “That’ll bring
-her to Fremont about eight-seventeen if she
-doesn’t lose any more time, and she’s likely to
-keep on losing now. If you take the thirty-six”—he
-glanced swiftly at the clock—“you’re due in
-Fremont at nine-forty-eight. That’ll give you
-sixteen minutes there before the west-bound pulls<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span>
-out. If he means to take that he will be waiting
-around the station and you’ll catch him.” He
-swung around toward the assistant. “Jim, send
-this to Harris at Fremont: ‘Did passenger get off
-at Fremont? If so, do you know his destination?
-<span class="smcap">Chase.</span>’ If Harris wires back that he got off this
-side or has gone on to Sandusky I’ll telegraph
-you at Fostoria. If you don’t get any message
-it’ll mean that your party got off at Fremont
-and Harris doesn’t know where he’s headed for.
-You’d better loosen up now and get your ticket.
-Your train will be here in four minutes. Forty-nine’s
-on time, isn’t she, Jim?”</p>
-
-<p>“O. T. at Fountain,” was the reply. “There
-she whistles now.”</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes later, having set Aunt Sarah’s
-mind at rest by telephone, Joe was seated in a
-day-coach and Number 49 was leaving the
-Amesville lights behind her on her northward
-journey.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX<br />
-<small>PURSUIT</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Forty-nine was a faster train than the one on
-which Mr. Chester Young had embarked and
-made but five stops between Amesville and Fremont,
-but to Joe it seemed that she took things
-in an irritatingly leisurely manner. With but
-sixteen minutes’ leeway at the end of his journey,
-he was momentarily in fear that something would
-happen to detain them, and he viewed his watch
-anxiously as, having made a perfectly ridiculous
-stop of four minutes at Folkstone, Forty-nine
-rolled off again into the night. However, a comparison
-of his time and that indicated on the
-time-table with which he had armed himself
-showed no discrepancy, and he settled back in
-his seat with a sigh of relief. Fostoria was the
-next stop and he anxiously awaited it, wondering
-whether he would find a message from the agent.</p>
-
-<p>Now that he was absolutely embarked on his
-mission he began to wonder if he was not undertaking
-a foolish and hopeless quest. It had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span>
-looked quite simple and easy back there at Amesville,
-but doubts assailed him now. There were
-so many chances against success. Young might
-go on to Sandusky or he might lose himself in
-Fremont, deciding to remain the night there, or
-he might take that local to Norwalk. Even if Joe
-found him he might be no better off! How was
-he to persuade Young to give up the money? If
-he called on the police for help there might be
-all sorts of complications. Joe wasn’t certain
-that it would not be necessary for him to swear
-out a warrant first, by which time Young would
-be on his way to Toledo or elsewhere. He took
-out his money and counted it over. He had exactly
-five dollars and thirty-seven cents left after
-purchasing his ticket to Fremont. Of that
-amount a dollar and forty-five cents would be
-needed for his journey back to Amesville. A
-dollar-forty-five from five-thirty-seven left three
-dollars and ninety-two cents. On that he could
-travel something like a hundred and thirty miles,
-he reflected. Very well, then. He would go along
-with Young until that youth made restitution or
-until he had exhausted what money he had.
-After that he would telegraph to Aunt Sarah for
-money to get home with. In any case, the police
-were to have no part in the affair!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span></p>
-
-<p>The train slowed down while he was reaching
-this decision and the trainman, opening the door
-ahead, let in a gust of cold air and announced
-Fostoria. Another seemingly interminable wait,
-and then the train went on again, and just as Joe
-had given up hope of that message it came.</p>
-
-<p>“Telegram for Joseph Faulkner,” said the
-conductor questioningly as he came through the
-car.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s me, please,” said Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“Here you are, then, my boy.” Joe took the
-sheet of buff paper and read: “Amesville. Jos.
-Faulkner, on No. 49, Fostoria. Harris wires
-party got off Fremont and said he was going to
-Cleveland. Think that’s a stall. Toledo the best
-guess. Good luck. <span class="smcap">Chase.</span>”</p>
-
-<p>Joe folded the message and put it in his pocket.
-Undoubtedly Mr. Chase was right about it.
-Young would not announce his real destination
-and if he had said Cleveland it was safe to say
-that he meant to journey in another direction.
-Joe settled back again, tipped his cap over his
-eyes to keep the light out and tried to plan what
-he should do and say if he was lucky enough to
-discover Young at Fremont. In the end, though,
-he reached no very clear conclusion, and while he
-was still trying to formulate a speech with which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span>
-to greet the absconding clerk the train rattled
-over the switches, green and purple and red and
-white lights flashed past the window and the
-trainman was bawling:</p>
-
-<p>“Fremont! Fremont! Change for Norwalk,
-Elyria, Cleveland, Toledo, and points east and
-west! This train for Sandusky and Port Clinton!”</p>
-
-<p>Joe followed a dozen other passengers through
-the car door and down to the platform. A glance
-at his watch had shown him that Forty-nine, in
-spite of her unhurried progress, had arrived exactly
-on time. Consequently he had sixteen minutes
-in which to search the station and platform
-before the west-bound express drew out. He still
-kept his cap pulled down in front, trusting that
-if Mr. Chester Young saw him he would not recognise
-him. The platform was fairly crowded and
-Joe made his way along to the door of the waiting-room,
-keeping as much as possible out of
-sight. It took but a moment to satisfy himself
-that his quarry was not inside. Then he went
-on to the end of the platform without result, retraced
-his steps, reached the other end and paused
-there in the shadow of a piled-up truck. Mr.
-Chester Young was not to be seen. Five minutes
-had already gone by. Joe’s hope began to dwindle.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span>
-After all, he reflected, it had been too much
-to expect; given a start of two hours and a half,
-Young would have been an idiot if he had not
-eluded pursuit. And yet, on the other hand, what
-reason had Young to suppose that either of the
-boys whose money he had taken would go to the
-length of chasing him down? Joe didn’t believe
-that Young would give either him or Jack credit
-for having enough enterprise to do that. And if
-he didn’t really expect pursuit he wouldn’t try
-very hard to elude it.</p>
-
-<p>Joe gathered courage again and sought the
-ticket-window in the waiting-room. By this time
-the platform had almost emptied, but at the
-ticket-window several persons were in line and
-now and then the door opened to admit other
-passengers for the west-bound train. Joe gave
-up the idea of inquiring of the ticket-seller and
-inspected a time-table instead. The west-bound
-arrived in Fremont at nine-fifty-nine and remained
-there five minutes. It would come in,
-then, in just five minutes if it was on time. That
-put another idea in his head and he went back to
-the platform, keeping his eyes peeled, and sought
-the bulletin board there. “No. 16,” he read, “due
-9:59, 15 mins. late.”</p>
-
-<p>That, he told himself, would give him more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
-time. He remained where he was and kept his
-gaze on the door of the waiting-room. The platform
-began to fill up again. A four-car local
-pulled in, emptied its contents and puffed out.
-The clock pointed to one minute of ten now. It
-was chilly out there on the platform, for a north
-wind was blowing down from Lake Erie, and
-Joe’s thoughts travelled toward the gleaming
-coffee-urn he had glimpsed a few minutes back.
-For a moment he debated whether he should seek
-it and spend a nickel of his small fund, but he
-decided not to. If Young did put in an appearance
-he wanted to know it as soon as possible.
-And at that moment his gaze, travelling over the
-platform, alighted on the form of a man carrying
-a suit-case and making his way along toward
-where Joe was standing with his back to the
-building. For an instant Joe thought that the
-other had seen him and was going to speak. But
-it was the bulletin board that was the attraction,
-and Joe, turning aside to escape detection in a
-sudden spasm of nervousness, smelt the odour of
-a cigarette that was very familiar, heard the
-other’s grunt of impatience as he read the inscription
-on the board, and the tread of his feet
-as he strode away again.</p>
-
-<p>Then a mild panic seized Joe and he darted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span>
-forward. Someone got in front of him. He
-dodged around and his heart sank, for his first
-anxious look failed to discover the form it sought.
-He was already regretting his timorousness
-when he spied his quarry entering the waiting-room.
-Joe sped after him. Mr. Chester Young
-was making his way to the ticket window. Joe
-made a detour and closed in behind him. At the
-window he stood at his elbow while he purchased
-a ticket for Toledo. Young had, it appeared,
-plenty of money, for he gave a twenty-dollar bill
-to the ticket-seller and caused that busy gentleman
-to scowl as he made change. Then Young
-turned away, walked to the end of a bench, set
-his bag down, and proceeded to place the bills and
-silver in his purse.</p>
-
-<p>Joe, his heart thumping hard, walked across
-to him, a slight smile around his mouth. When
-he was a yard away Young glanced up and a look
-of surprise and consternation came into his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Young,” said Joe pleasantly. “I was
-afraid I’d missed you.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI<br />
-<small>ON THE WEST-BOUND</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Young’s first act was to slip the purse into a
-pocket of his overcoat, even as his gaze darted
-stealthily around the waiting-room, and he summoned
-a smile, not a particularly gladsome smile,
-to his face. Joe noticed the eternal cigarette
-tremble between his lips. Then:</p>
-
-<p>“Why, hello, Faulkner,” said Mr. Chester
-Young. “How are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, thanks,” replied Joe, his eyes unconsciously
-dropping for an instant to that pocket
-into which the fat purse had disappeared. “Sit
-down a minute, will you; I want to talk to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t do it,” answered the other briskly, buttoning
-his coat with none too steady fingers.
-“Fact is, I’m running up to Detroit and my train
-is leaving in about half a minute. I suppose you
-were surprised to find me gone, eh? Well, you
-see, I got a telegram this afternoon telling me
-that my father was very ill and I had to beat it
-off on the five-two. I was going to write and explain<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span>
-to you. I’ll do that, anyway. Glad to have
-seen you again. You keep that job open for me
-until Saturday and I’ll be back for it. Good-night.”
-He held out his hand and Joe took it.</p>
-
-<p>“Your train’s fifteen minutes late,” said Joe
-calmly. “So there’s no hurry. Sit down.” He
-still held Young’s hand and now pulled him gently
-toward the seat. Young resisted, but Joe’s clasp
-was a strong one, and unless he wanted to indulge
-in a scuffle there was nothing to do but give in.
-But it was a different Mr. Chester Young who
-faced Joe now. He tossed aside his cigarette and
-observed his captor defiantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what you got to say, Faulkner?” he
-demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you know why I’m here?” asked
-Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind what I know. Get down to business.
-What’s your game?”</p>
-
-<p>“My game’s to collect seventy-five dollars from
-you, Young. I ought to charge the costs of collection,
-too, I guess, but we’ll let that go. If you
-want to send nine dollars back by me to Mrs.
-Bennett, though, I’ll be glad to take it.”</p>
-
-<p>Young laughed softly. “And why should I
-hand seventy-five dollars over to you, Faulkner?
-What do you think I am, a national bank?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span></p>
-
-<p>“If you want an itemized account,” responded
-Joe patiently, “I can oblige you. But your train
-will be leaving in about twelve minutes, you
-know. Roughly, the cigars and things you turned
-back to the dealers amounted to forty-seven
-dollars——”</p>
-
-<p>Young’s expression changed enough to show
-that he had not expected Joe to have knowledge
-of that transaction.</p>
-
-<p>“And you got about thirty out of the cash
-register yesterday and today. That foots up to
-seventy-seven, and——”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” interrupted
-Young angrily, but without raising his
-voice. “Someone’s been stalling you. You’d
-better go back to Amesville and soak your head,
-sport. You’re too innocent to be so far from
-home.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ten minutes to train time now,” said Joe.
-“Come across, Young. You’re beaten, and you
-know it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you silly chump, you can’t hold me up
-for money like this! I haven’t got that much,
-anyway, and if I had I wouldn’t be likely to pass
-it over to you. You must be crazy! You ought
-to get a job in a squirrel cage!”</p>
-
-<p>“If you haven’t seventy-five it’s going to be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span>
-awkward,” said Joe reflectively. “I thought that
-probably you’d hand it over and there wouldn’t
-have to be any trouble about it. I hate to get
-my name in the papers, but if I have to all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quit your joking,” growled Young. “For
-two cents I’d knock your head off. There’s my
-train and I can’t stop here chewing the rag any
-longer.” He got up, bag in hand and grinned
-mockingly down at the other. “Give my love to
-Strobe when you get back, sport. So long.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe sighed regretfully and stood up. “All
-right,” he murmured. “There’s no hurry. I
-don’t mind seeing a little of the world while I’m
-at it. I dare say Toledo or Detroit is quite worth
-visiting.”</p>
-
-<p>Young, who had started toward the door,
-turned. “If you try to follow me,” he said menacingly,
-“I’ll do for you, kid!”</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t get a chance,” replied Joe simply.
-“I’d rather go home from here, of course, but if
-you want to be silly I’ll give you as far as Toledo
-to think it over.”</p>
-
-<p>“What would you do in Toledo?” sneered the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you arrested, of course. That’s the
-only thing I can do if you don’t make good before.
-I might have done it here, but I thought<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span>
-you’d prefer to keep out of trouble, and now”—he
-looked around the waiting-room—“there isn’t
-a policeman in sight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have me arrested!” jeered Young. “Try it,
-kid! Go ahead and try it! Why, I never saw
-you before in my life! Tell that yarn to a cop
-and see what will happen.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, let’s go out on the platform.
-There’s one there, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>Young’s eyes dropped, but after an instant’s
-hesitation he turned toward the door again.
-“Sure! Come on and find him!”</p>
-
-<p>Joe kept close at his elbow and they passed
-through the door and into the throng on the long
-platform. The west-bound train had pulled into
-the station a few minutes before and outside all
-was bustle and confusion. Young paused and
-looked up and down the platform.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a cop down there,” he exclaimed.
-“Come on and we’ll finish this up right
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>He pushed past Joe and made his way with
-difficulty in and out of the crowd. Joe followed
-close on his heels. Above the sound of escaping
-steam and the noise of the crowd he heard the
-cry of “All abo-o-oard!” He was quite certain
-that Young had not seen a policeman in the direction<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span>
-he was taking and was wondering whether
-the former meant to make a sudden dash for liberty
-when he was once free of the throng or, at
-the last instant, leap aboard the train. There was
-a sound of releasing brakes, at the other end of
-the long train a bell clanged warningly, and, an
-instant later, the cars began to move slowly past.
-They were out of the crowd now and near the
-end of the train. Joe saw Young turn his head
-a little in the direction of the moving train and
-something warned him to be on his guard. Young
-swung around and faced him.</p>
-
-<p>“I was sure I saw a cop down here,” he said
-puzzledly. “Where do you suppose he got to?
-See him anywhere?”</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps Young expected Joe to look away for
-a moment, for he suddenly shot out his right fist
-straight at the younger boy’s face. But Joe had
-not moved his gaze a fraction from Young’s countenance
-and he read what was coming before the
-arm was drawn back for the blow. Instinctively
-he dodged to the right and Young’s fist went
-harmlessly past his head. Then something took
-him in the knees—he surmised afterwards that
-it was Young’s suit-case—and he went staggering
-back against the station wall.</p>
-
-<p>When he recovered himself Young was darting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span>
-across the platform, bag swinging wildly, and
-even as he started in pursuit his quarry tossed
-the suit-case onto the forward platform of the
-last car, trotted alongside and, aided by the porter,
-who had been in the act of closing the vestibule
-door, sprang aboard!</p>
-
-<p>A dozen strides told Joe that he could never
-reach that platform. The train, gaining speed
-every instant, was now moving rapidly out of the
-station and beside him the lighted windows of the
-last car slipped past. There was but one thing
-to do and he determined to do it, or, at least,
-make a try. Slackening his pace a little, he let
-the length of the car go past him and then, spurting
-desperately, heedless of the warning shouts
-of lookers-on, he managed to grasp the forward
-rail of the last steps!</p>
-
-<p>The speed of the train lifted him from his feet
-and hurled him against the rear railing. He made
-a clutch for this, but failed, and swung outward
-again, dangling, his feet trailing along the planks
-of the station platform. Cries of alarm arose
-from the watchers behind. But Joe held on,
-searched with his left hand for a hold, knocked
-his knees bruisingly against the car steps, got
-one on the lower ledge, and, somehow, dragged
-himself to his feet, clinging at last to the brass<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span>
-gate that closed the platform off and fighting for
-breath!</p>
-
-<p>For a full minute he clung there, dizzy, conscious
-of smarting contusions about his knees
-and of a dull ache in one hip where he had collided
-with the railing. Finally he climbed over the
-gate, tried the door and found it unlocked and
-stepped inside a handsome library-compartment
-in which a half-dozen men were seated about in
-the cane easy-chairs reading. His appearance
-elicited no surprise. Perhaps they thought he had
-been on the platform while the train was in the
-station. At all events, although the occupants
-of the compartment raised their eyes as the door
-opened, only one of the number displayed any
-interest in the boy’s advent.</p>
-
-<p>The single exception was a tall, loose-jointed
-man, who, with his chair turned toward the windows,
-sat with long legs doubled up almost to his
-chin and a book face-down in his lap. As the door
-opened he turned his head and looked attentively
-at the breathless and still somewhat white-faced
-youth who entered. Joe paused to take another
-full breath before undertaking the passage of the
-swaying car and in that moment his eyes encountered
-those of the man. The man raised a long,
-lean hand and beckoned with a finger. Joe made<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
-his way to him and the passenger, undoubling
-himself, stretched a foot out, hooked it about the
-leg of the next chair and pulled it beside his own.</p>
-
-<p>“Sit down,” he said. He had a remarkable
-voice, Joe thought, and equally remarkable eyes,
-very light blue-gray in colour, that somehow compelled
-obedience. Joe embarrassedly seated
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a good way to get killed,” said the
-man calmly. “Don’t you know that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose it is, sir. I didn’t stop to think
-much about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t make a practice of it. I take it
-that the other fellow got aboard all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“The other fellow?” faltered Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, the—ah—the gentleman who tried to
-put his fist in your face.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! You saw——”</p>
-
-<p>“I happened to be looking out the window.
-You side-stepped very neatly. Fellow a friend of
-yours?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not exactly.” Joe smiled faintly. There
-was an answering twinkle in the light blue eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“No? But you evidently couldn’t bear to part
-with him. It’s not my business, but I’m curious
-to know the story. Fact is, I make my living
-from stories. I get chaps like you to tell them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span>
-to me and then I write them down and sell them.
-It’s a very simple way to make a fortune.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe smiled uncertainly. It sounded as if the
-other was joking, but his expression was quite
-serious. He had a lean, clean-shaven face, with
-many deep wrinkles. His nose was long and
-straight and his mouth rather large. Somehow,
-though, it was a nice face and inspired confidence.
-“There isn’t much story,” said Joe hesitantly.
-“The—the other fellow has something
-that belongs to me and I want to get it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Situation Number Three,” murmured the
-man. “Hackneyed, but capable of interesting and
-even novel variations.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir?” asked Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“May I ask what is the value of the something
-the other chap has of yours? It’s interesting sometimes
-to know for what amount a person will risk
-his life. Personally I wouldn’t do it for less than
-two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Not
-now, that is. There was a time, when I was considerably
-younger, when I dare say I’d have done
-it for considerably less; say for five thousand—or
-nothing at all. In your case now——”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s only about seventy-five dollars,” replied
-Joe. “He—he stole it.”</p>
-
-<p>The man nodded. “Naturally. Seventy-five<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span>
-dollars, though, seems an inadequate reward for
-a broken neck. Any kind of a respectable funeral
-would cost all of that. I don’t see that you stood
-to win much.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid I didn’t stop to think of all that,
-sir. He jumped on the train and so I—I jumped
-on, too!”</p>
-
-<p>“I see. And now?”</p>
-
-<p>Joe hesitated. “I suppose I’ll have to get him
-arrested in Toledo if he won’t give it up without.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you call a policeman at that last
-place?”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t see one. Besides, I thought he’d
-give the money back without any fuss when he
-saw that I had caught him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he wouldn’t?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps he hasn’t got it with him. Perhaps
-he’s spent it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think so. You see——”</p>
-
-<p>“But I don’t see,” said the man, with a smile.
-“I want to, though. Starting at the beginning,
-now——” He doubled his long legs up again,
-clasped his hands around them and observed Joe
-expectantly and encouragingly. Joe hesitated,
-smiled, and told his story. During the recital the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span>
-gray-blue eyes watched him intently and their
-owner maintained absolute silence. There was
-but one interruption, and that was when the conductor
-came in. Joe reached for his money, but
-the man gently pushed his hand away from his
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me,” he said gently, “but it’s my
-party.” He took out a very stunning gold-trimmed
-pocket-book, pulled a five-dollar note
-from it and handed it to the conductor.</p>
-
-<p>“Where to?” asked the latter. Joe’s new acquaintance
-questioned silently.</p>
-
-<p>“Toledo, I guess,” said Joe. “Do we stop before
-we get there?”</p>
-
-<p>The conductor shook his head, made out the
-check, returned the change and took his departure.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m much obliged,” said Joe, “but I didn’t
-mean for you to pay my fare, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know you didn’t. But as you’re my guest
-it was only right that I should. So you guessed
-that that punch was coming, did you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, sort of. And then, when he swung
-around his bag struck me on the knees and I went
-back against the wall.”</p>
-
-<p>“To be continued in our next,” murmured the
-other. He examined his watch. “We’ll be in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span>
-Toledo in about ten minutes, I think. So perhaps
-you’d better go and see your friend. Afterwards
-come back here and tell me what the result is.
-It would be too commonplace to bring the police
-into this. So we’ll just put our heads together
-and find an artistic dénoûement.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe hurried through the three Pullman cars
-and through an equal number of day-coaches
-without finding Mr. Chester Young. But in the
-next, the smoking car, the sight of that gentleman
-rewarded him as he closed the door. Young
-was seated half-way along the car, smoking a
-cigarette and figuring on the back of an envelope.
-Beside him, on the other half of the seat, rested
-the suit-case.</p>
-
-<p>Joe walked quietly down the aisle. Young
-didn’t see him until he had laid hand on the bag.
-Then, with an alarmed grasp at the suit-case,
-Young raised his eyes. His jaw dropped ludicrously
-and the cigarette in his mouth rolled to
-the floor, and while Joe set the suit-case aside
-and seated himself Young continued to regard
-him in stupefied amazement.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII<br />
-<small>THE AMATEUR DETECTIVE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Well,” said Joe finally, “thought better of
-it, Young?”</p>
-
-<p>Young found his voice then and for at least
-two minutes gave vent to his feelings, which,
-judging from the expressions he made use of,
-were far from pleasant. When, at last, breath
-or fresh invectives failed him, Joe said: “Young,
-you might as well be sensible about this. We’ll
-be in Toledo in a few minutes and there’ll be an
-officer waiting for us. What’s the good of going
-to jail for seventy-five dollars? Why don’t you
-give me back what you stole and have an end
-of it?”</p>
-
-<p>Young, having regained his breath, indulged in
-a few more well-chosen remarks derogatory to
-Joe’s character. After which he declared that
-he knew nothing about the money, never saw it,
-didn’t have it, and wouldn’t give it up if he had!</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Joe impatiently, “you’ve had
-plenty of chances to give it back without fuss,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span>
-Young. So don’t blame me for anything that
-happens after this.” He got up and went off
-down the aisle, leaving Mr. Chester Young scowling
-somewhat anxiously after him. In the library
-compartment Joe reported the result of his mission.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess,” he said regretfully, “there’s nothing
-to do now but try to get him arrested.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you certain he means to get off at
-Toledo?” asked the man.</p>
-
-<p>“N-no, I’m not. He bought a ticket for Toledo,
-though.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hm. Well, we’d better be ready in case he
-does. I’ll go and get my things ready.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you getting off there?” asked Joe as the
-other pulled his six feet and four or five inches
-from the chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know,” replied the man, “I’m never
-certain when I start out where I’ll fetch up? It’s
-queer that way.” He stretched his long arms
-and smiled whimsically down at the boy. “Once
-I started off for Chicago and brought up in
-Buenos Aires. After all, it’s the uncertainty
-that makes life interesting, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>The stranger proceeded to the second car
-ahead, changed the cap he was wearing for a
-derby, strapped up a battered kit-bag, took his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span>
-overcoat from the hook, and went forward again.
-Near the rear door of the smoking car was an
-unoccupied seat, and in this the two seated themselves.
-Joe pointed out the refractory Mr. Young
-to his companion, who examined what was to be
-seen of his back with a disappointed expression.</p>
-
-<p>“Very weak,” he muttered. “Hardly worthy
-of our talents, my friend. Observe the narrowness
-of the head between the ears. A sure sign
-of weakness of character. I have it myself. I
-think we can safely assume that he is not going
-to leave us here. If he were he’d be stirring
-around.”</p>
-
-<p>The train was running into the yard at Toledo
-now and many of the occupants of the car were
-donning coats and rounding up their luggage.
-The prediction proved correct. The train rolled
-into the station, but Mr. Chester Young kept his
-place. That he was nervous was evident from
-the manner in which he peered through the window
-and more than once looked anxiously back
-along the car. He did not, however, see Joe,
-since the latter was hidden by his companion.
-The train remained in the station for some five
-minutes before it started off again towards
-Detroit, and during that time, it is natural to
-suppose, Mr. Chester Young was by no means enjoying<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
-himself. It seemed to Joe that he could
-almost hear Young’s sigh of relief when the station
-lights slipped away from them again!</p>
-
-<p>Presently Joe’s companion, who had been silent
-most of the time during the stop, arose and signalled
-the former to follow him. Down the aisle
-they went. The seat directly in front of Young
-had just been vacated, and the tall man turned
-the back over, set his bag down, and seated himself
-facing Young, draping his overcoat across
-his knees and patting the seat beside him invitingly
-as Joe hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>“Sit down,” he said pleasantly. “That’s it.
-Now, then, here we are all together.” He turned
-to the astonished Mr. Chester Young and regarded
-him smilingly. “I guess,” he went on,
-“we can settle this all up nicely before we reach
-Detroit, eh? We’ve got a lot of time ahead of
-us and needn’t hurry.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know what you’re talking about,”
-sputtered Young, darting a venomous look at
-Joe. “You haven’t anything on me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, now!” The intruder lifted a lean hand
-deprecatingly. “Don’t let us start off that way,
-my friend. Let’s be good-natured and just talk
-things over a bit. Why, bless you, I’m not complaining
-a mite, am I? When the chief called me<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span>
-up and said, ‘Beat it to the station and find a fellow
-named Young,’ I was just getting ready for a
-nice, long snooze. I was up most of last night
-and was counting a lot on my sleep. Well, it’s
-all in the day’s work with us Central Office tecs,
-and I’m a natural-born philosopher. So here I
-am, and no hard feelings.”</p>
-
-<p>The expression on Young’s face changed from
-angry defiance to alarm. He swallowed once with
-difficulty, almost losing his cigarette in the operation,
-and then his gaze darted quickly about as
-though seeking an avenue of escape. The man
-opposite leaned over and patted his knee.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t think of that,” he said soothingly.
-“You couldn’t get away if you tried. Besides,
-you’d break your neck if you slipped off with the
-train going forty miles. Don’t try any foolish
-business, my friend. Just keep calm and good-tempered
-and let’s talk it all over nicely.”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t got anything to talk over,” muttered
-Young.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure you have!” The man chuckled.
-“You’ve got seventy-five dollars! We can do a
-lot of talking about seventy-five dollars, eh?
-Come on now, cards on the table, Young. What’s
-your idea of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Idea of what?” Young was rather pale, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span>
-he managed to put some assurance into his question.
-The man lighted a cigar with much deliberation.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I mean what are you thinking of doing?
-Now, here’s my advice to you. You don’t need
-to take it, you know. I shan’t mind if you don’t.
-If I were you I’d get together what you’ve got
-left of that seventy-five and hand it over. See?
-Then we’d just wish each other luck and I’d drop
-off at the first stop and report ‘nothing doing’ at
-the office. That would be the simplest thing. But
-you can come on back to Toledo if you want to
-and face the music. Only that makes a lot of
-trouble for you and me and this fellow here. You
-spend the night in a cell, I don’t get to sleep before
-one o’clock, and this fellow has to lie around
-until your case comes up in the morning. Still,
-I don’t want to persuade you against your own
-judgment. It’s all in the day’s work for me.”
-He leaned back and smiled pleasantly at
-Young.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve only got his say-so for it,” exclaimed
-Young desperately. “Why, I never saw him until
-he came up to me in the station at Fremont! I
-don’t know anything about him. It—it’s a
-frame-up, that’s what it is! If you arrest me
-you’ll get into trouble. I—I’ve got friends in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span>
-Toledo, and they’ll make it hot for you, all
-right!”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, I know. We get that line of talk all the
-time,” was the untroubled response. “You know
-your own business better than I do. If you didn’t
-take this fellow’s money, why, all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I didn’t! Why, look here, I’ll show
-you!” Young pulled a purse from his pocket
-and eagerly spread its contents out. “That’s
-every cent I’ve got to my name! Seventy-five
-dollars! Gee, if I had seventy-five dollars I’d be
-back there in a Pullman, believe me!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so. Still, you might have spent the
-difference. How much you got there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nineteen, about! I had twenty-five when I—when
-I was in Fremont, and this fellow”—he
-darted a triumphant look at Joe—“braced me
-for a dollar to get something to eat. Then, when
-he saw I had more, he began some wild yarn
-about my stealing money from him. Why, I guess
-he’s crazy!”</p>
-
-<p>The tall man turned and looked attentively at
-Joe. “Is that right?” he asked. “Did you get
-a dollar from him at Fremont?”</p>
-
-<p>Joe shook his head, not trusting himself to
-speak for fear he would laugh. The supposed
-detective sighed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t know! Of course, if they find
-only nineteen dollars on you when they frisk you
-at the station——”</p>
-
-<p>“Frisk me?” faltered Young.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure; search you; go through your clothes.
-And your bag.”</p>
-
-<p>Young shot a troubled look at the suit-case
-beside him. “No one’s got any right to search
-me,” he muttered. “And—and you can’t arrest
-me, either, without a warrant!”</p>
-
-<p>“Bless your heart, friend, if we waited for
-warrants we’d miss half the fun! Here comes
-the conductor. Better not buy beyond Monroe.
-We’ll get off there and beat it back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you believe what I’m telling you?”
-demanded Young anxiously. “I never saw this
-fellow or his money. Say, you aren’t really going
-to take me just on what he says, are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Orders are orders, friend, and I got mine,”
-was the reply. “But don’t you bother. If you
-didn’t get his money you’ll get off all right tomorrow
-morning. And we’ve got a good, comfortable
-jail in Toledo, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right,” faltered Young, his gaze
-on the approaching conductor, “but—but if he
-tells them a pack of lies, how do I know they won’t
-believe him instead of me? You do yourself!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Me? Pshaw, now, I don’t believe anyone.
-This fellow says you did and you say you didn’t.
-It doesn’t make a scrap of difference to me,
-anyway. It’s up to the judge in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but—say——” Young leaned across
-confidentially, lowering his voice. “Now, look
-here, sir. I don’t want to have to go back to
-Toledo. I’m in a hurry. I’ve got a sick father
-in Detroit, I have. Now, say I give this fellow
-what I’ve got with me? Eh? I’d pay that not
-to have to go back. What do you say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s up to him,” was the reply,
-“What do you say?” The man turned inquiringly
-to Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“If he will give me all the money he has with
-him, all right,” Joe answered. “I’ll be satisfied.
-I dare say he’s spent a good bit of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I’ve got to keep enough to pay my fare
-to Detroit,” said Young eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>Joe nodded. “All right. Pay your fare to
-Detroit and give me the rest.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s what I call sensible,” said the
-impromptu detective. “What’s the use of going
-to a heap of trouble when you can avoid it, eh?
-Hello, Conductor. One to Detroit and”—he
-looked a question at Joe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I guess I’ll go to Detroit, too,” was the response.</p>
-
-<p>“Two Detroits, eh? All right, gentlemen.
-Thank you. Let me see, you’re——” He observed
-the tall man doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you know me,” was the response, accompanied
-by a nod toward the rear of the
-train.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought so.” The conductor returned the
-change to Young and to Joe and passed on.
-Young, his purse still in his hand, counted out
-the remaining contents of it.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nearly eighteen dollars,” he said
-easily. “You might leave me enough for car-fare
-to get to my house with, but I won’t ask it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Keep out the silver,” said Joe, “and give me
-the bills.”</p>
-
-<p>Young obeyed and passed over a ten, a five,
-and two ones. “You’re witness that I paid this
-to him,” he challenged the third member of the
-group. The tall man nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m witness you’ve paid him seventeen dollars,”
-he agreed. “Go ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go ahead? What do you mean, go ahead?”
-asked Young with a scowl.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I mean go ahead and pay him the rest
-of it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The rest of it! He agreed to take what I had
-here——”</p>
-
-<p>“What you had with you, my friend,” interrupted
-the other. “Be good now and don’t let’s
-have any more trouble.” He reached across and
-pushed Young’s suit-case toward him. “Open
-her up, friend, and dig down!”</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you I ain’t got——”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard you, too,” was the wearied response.
-“But we’ll take the money that’s in the suit-case,
-I think. Come across with it, Young!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a couple of thieves! There ain’t any
-money in there! I——”</p>
-
-<p>“Seeing’s believing, my friend. Just open
-that up and show us.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t! You’ve got all you’re going to
-get!” He took the suit-case on his knees and
-hugged his arms over it. “What’s in here is
-mine!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, so there is some in there, eh?” The tall
-man chuckled. “Well, pass it over. Stand by
-your bargain and don’t play baby. And get a
-move on, too. We’ll be in Monroe in about ten
-minutes and then it’ll be too late.”</p>
-
-<p>Young glared at the other in impotent rage,
-but the make-believe Central Office man returned
-his gaze calmly, untroubledly, compellingly. For<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span>
-a long moment Young hesitated. Then, with a
-shrug of his shoulders, he tugged at the straps,
-opened the suit-case and drew a cigarette box
-from under the layers of clothing.</p>
-
-<p>“There,” he growled, and tossed the box into
-the man’s lap. Inside it were five folded ten-dollar
-bills. The man smoothed them out, counted
-them and passed them silently to Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“Fifty and seventeen is sixty-seven,” he said.
-“That good enough?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>Joe nodded as he stowed the money safely in
-a pocket. “That’s near enough,” he said. “I
-ought to make him pay back what it’s cost me to
-get it, but I won’t.” He turned to Young. “I’m
-going to hand nine and a half of this to Mrs. Bennett,”
-he said. “She needs it more than I do, I
-guess.”</p>
-
-<p>Young sneered. “What do I care what you do
-with it? You’re easy, anyway. If I hadn’t been
-a fool I’d have got clean away.” Then, fearing
-perhaps that he had admitted too much, he
-glanced furtively at the man. “We’re quits now,
-ain’t we?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, we’re quits. Or, rather, we’re more
-than quits, Young. I’m really in your debt for
-an interesting experience. It’s the first time I
-ever impersonated a detective and, although I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span>
-may be taking too much credit, I think I did it
-rather well, eh?”</p>
-
-<p><a href="#i_p290">“<em>What!</em>” squealed Young. “You ain’t a—a——”</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_p290">
- <img src="images/i_p290.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_290">“<em>What!</em>” squealed Young. “You ain’t a—a——”</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“My friend,” was the smiling reply, “I’m only
-a poor writer of tales who has been doing his best
-to relieve the tedium of a dull journey. The next
-time you have dealings with a detective, and
-something tells me there’s going to be a next time,
-you ask to be shown his badge. Never take anything
-for granted, my friend. It’s a wicked world
-and there are, unfortunately, folks in it ever ready
-to impose on the credulity of the young and—ah—innocent.
-Good-night, Mr. Young. And
-thanks for the amusement you’ve so kindly afforded.”</p>
-
-<p>They left him crumpled up in the corner, still
-holding his open suit-case, an expression of
-mingled wrath and incredulity on his face.</p>
-
-<p>Joe’s new friend led the way back to his chair
-in the Pullman, where he deposited bag and coat
-and again changed from derby to cap. Then they
-returned to the library car and viewed each other
-smilingly from opposite chairs.</p>
-
-<p>“I was right about the narrowness of the skull
-between the ears,” observed the man reflectively.
-“Mr. Young is weak, lamentably weak, and will<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span>
-not, I feel sure, ever make a success in his chosen
-profession.”</p>
-
-<p>“His chosen profession?” repeated Joe questioningly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, thieving. Perhaps it’s all for the best,
-however. Finding himself unable to prosper in
-that line, he may turn honest. Let us hope so.
-And now there’s one small formality we’ve
-neglected. Suppose we learn each other’s
-names?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mine is Joseph Faulkner, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“And mine is Graham—J. W. Graham. The
-J stands for John and the W for Westley.”</p>
-
-<p>“Westley Graham!” exclaimed Joe. “Why, I
-know who you are! I mean I’ve read stories——”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I don’t doubt it. You could scarcely fail
-to, my boy, for I write a horrible lot of them. I
-try not to, but they will out, like murder—or
-measles! Ever read any you liked?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I like them all!” cried Joe. “They’re
-dandy! There was one last month about a man
-who discovered an island that nobody knew
-about, and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I recall that. Well, I’m glad you like
-them, my boy. I do myself, when I’m writing
-them, but afterwards I try hard to forget
-them.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But why, sir?” Joe’s eyes opened very wide.
-“I wish I could write stories like those!”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you? I try to forget them because I come
-of Puritan ancestry. Know anything about the
-Puritans, Faulkner?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I know what it tells in the history,
-sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps history doesn’t particularly emphasise
-the quality I have in mind, however. The
-Puritans were endowed with the ineradicable belief
-that whatever gave one pleasure in the doing
-was wrong. All my life I have been at odds with
-my inherited Puritan principles. Every time I
-write one of those stories Conscience sits at my
-elbow and weeps. I try to console myself with
-the promise that some day before I pass on I shall
-write something very dull and very learned and
-very, very difficult, something that I shall utterly
-detest doing. But never mind my soul worries
-now. Tell me something about you, Faulkner.
-What do you do when you don’t chase over
-the country apprehending defaulting clerks?
-You told me you were going to school, I
-think?”</p>
-
-<p>So Joe talked then and, prompted by questions,
-told more about himself than he ever remembered
-confessing to anyone. But Mr. Graham had a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span>
-way of making one talk that Joe couldn’t resist.
-In the midst of his narrative the conductor bore
-down on them again and Mr. Graham, despite
-Joe’s protest, paid for the latter’s seat in the
-Pullman to Detroit. And, later, although it
-scarcely seemed a half-hour since they had parted
-from the overwhelmed Mr. Chester Young in the
-smoking car, they rolled into Detroit and it was
-after midnight!</p>
-
-<p>“When I come to this town,” said Mr. Graham
-as they waited in the vestibule for the train to
-stop, “I always put up at a small hotel on Grand
-River Avenue. It isn’t sumptuous, but it’s neat
-and quiet and they allow me to sleep late. Now,
-I propose that we walk leisurely up there, in order
-to stretch our legs, and that you become my guest
-for the night. In the morning we’ll have some
-breakfast together and then I’ll see you on your
-way back.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I don’t think,” stammered Joe. “I
-mean I oughtn’t to let you do so much for me,
-Mr. Graham! I’ve got enough money to
-pay——”</p>
-
-<p>“The money you have, Faulkner, belongs, as
-I understand it, to the firm of Faulkner and—well,
-whatever the other chap’s name is. And if
-you dissipate it in riotous living you’ll be a defaulter<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span>
-yourself. No, I think—Look, isn’t that
-our friend Mr. Young there? It is. I wonder,
-now, what he’s going to do in this town without
-money. Excuse me a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Graham left Joe at the car steps and dived
-hurriedly through the crowd about the train.
-Joe followed his course easily enough, since he
-was a head taller than most persons there, and
-so was witness to the little scene enacted on the
-platform beyond the crowd. Mr. Graham overtook
-Young there and for a moment they talked.
-Then the former put his hand in his pocket, drew
-forth his purse and passed some money to the
-other. After that, a hand on Young’s shoulder,
-Mr. Graham talked a moment longer. When he
-returned to Joe he picked up his bag and led the
-way out to Fort Street.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m wondering,” he said as they stepped out
-briskly in search of the hotel where one could
-sleep late in the morning, “how much a promise
-is worth, Faulkner.”</p>
-
-<p>“How much did you pay for it, sir?” asked
-Joe.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Graham laughed softly. “So you spied on
-me, eh? Well, it didn’t cost me much, Faulkner,
-but at that I’m afraid I overpaid. Here we are.
-Four blocks up Second Street and we’re almost<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span>
-there. I’m beginning to be a little bit sleepy.
-How about you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m dead tired, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you? Well, you can sleep as late as you
-like in the morning!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII<br />
-<small>“BATTER UP!”</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Joe returned to Amesville at a little before three
-on Sunday afternoon. He had meant to
-get back much earlier, but several things had prevented.
-In the first place, he had unintentionally
-taken advantage of the privilege of late slumber
-afforded by the quiet hotel and had not awakened
-until after eight o’clock, a most unusual proceeding
-for Joe! But, late as he had been, he had
-dressed and was reading a morning newspaper
-before Mr. Graham appeared. Breakfast was a
-leisurely ceremony and a surprisingly pleasant
-one. Joe had never seen anyone pay so much
-attention to the ordering of a meal as the writer
-did, and when it came it was quite unlike any
-breakfast Joe had ever partaken of. Strawberries
-were served with the stems on, a half-dozen
-big, luscious ones arranged in a circle about
-a pyramid of powdered sugar. Joe waited, at
-a loss as to how to proceed, until Mr. Graham
-had shown the way by lifting a berry by its stem,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
-dipping it in the sugar and transferring it to his
-mouth. His host, without appearing to observe
-Joe’s hesitation, explained that strawberries
-eaten in that way were far easier to digest than
-when accompanied by cream. Then had arrived,
-after finger-bowls, two half chickens, broiled and
-laid on toast, Julienne potatoes—only Joe called
-them “shoestring”—tiny crisp, crescent-shaped
-rolls, orange marmalade, coffee—this, too, without
-cream, fashioned on the table in some bewildering
-way with boiled milk and a tiny pat of
-sweet butter!—and, last but by no means least,
-golden-brown griddle-cakes served with honey.</p>
-
-<p>That had been a wonderful breakfast, indeed,
-and Joe had eaten until he felt ashamed of himself,
-but without, since they spent all of an hour
-at the table with the June sunshine lying across
-the white napery and glistening on the silver, any
-after discomfort. Later, when Joe had spoken
-of a ten o’clock train, Mr. Graham vetoed the
-plan at once, lightly but firmly, and they had
-taken a long walk, during which the writer, who
-seemed to know everything in the city worth seeing
-and the shortest way to reach it, had made
-Joe work his shorter legs to the utmost to keep
-up with his companion’s giant strides!</p>
-
-<p>At the station Mr. Graham had gone to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span>
-news-stand and doubtless vastly surprised the
-attendant by selecting four books from the pen
-of Westley Graham. From there they went to
-the ledge outside the ticket office and Mr. Graham
-wrote Joe’s name and his own on the fly-leaf of
-each and then piled them into the boy’s arms.
-After that, in spite of Joe’s earnest protests, he
-had bought the latter’s ticket and parlour car
-seat.</p>
-
-<p>“You can get some lunch at Toledo,” said Mr.
-Graham. “You’ll have twenty minutes there.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shan’t ever want to eat again,” replied Joe
-with a wistful recollection of that breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>The other laughed. “Oh, yes, you will.
-You’ll be hungry by the time you reach Toledo.
-If you’re not, you’re no real boy.” At the parlour
-car steps Mr. Graham shook hands warmly.
-“Good-bye, Faulkner,” he said. “We’ve had
-rather a jolly little party, haven’t we? I’ve enjoyed
-it, anyhow. Good luck to you, my boy.
-You’ll find an address in one of those books that
-usually gets me. Drop me a line some day and
-tell me how you’re getting on. Let me know who
-wins that game on Wednesday. I’d like to see
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t suppose you ever get to Amesville?”
-asked Joe anxiously.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Amesville?” Mr. Graham smiled. “I get
-everywhere sooner or later, Faulkner. Whether
-I do or don’t, we’ll run across each other again
-some day. That’s my experience. It’s a wee bit
-of a world, after all, and a mighty nice thing
-about it is that friends are always meeting.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe had opened one of the books as soon as he
-had had his last glimpse of Mr. Graham on the
-station platform, and, in spite of the latter’s prediction,
-had not lunched at Toledo. Instead, he
-sat on a baggage truck and pursued the adventures
-of the hero of the tale with a breathless interest
-that almost lost him his train to Amesville!</p>
-
-<p>His first act when he got home was to seek Mr.
-Chase, the station agent. But that gentleman
-was not on duty and so Joe enclosed the borrowed
-money in an envelope, scribbled a note that recounted
-the success of his expedition and thanked
-Mr. Chase for his assistance, and left it at the
-office.</p>
-
-<p>It was a worried and anxious Aunt Sarah who
-met him at the door, and Joe’s first half-hour at
-home was devoted to a full and complete history
-of the past twenty-four hours, during which he
-was made to drink two cups of tea and eat three
-slices of currant cake. Then he called up the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>
-Strobes’ house, found that Jack had been asking
-for him and was at last able to see him, and forthwith
-hurried to the meeting. Jack was swathed
-in a dressing-robe and flanked by medicines and
-an atomiser when Joe found him, but he looked
-pretty healthy and declared that he felt fine today
-and was to go out tomorrow unless the pesky
-doctor changed his mind in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>“I was frightened to death I wouldn’t be able
-to play Wednesday,” he said; “but I can. Say,
-did Frank play Saturday?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, he did, Jack, for a couple of innings; no,
-three.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack groaned. “It’s all up, then! Bat will
-put him in Wednesday just out of kindness. Isn’t
-that rotten luck? Who invented quinsy, anyway?”</p>
-
-<p>“Edison, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s all well enough for you to grin, but I
-lose that wager and Handsome Frank will be
-more conceited than ever! And I won’t get that
-bat-case——”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll buy that for you if you’ll shut up about
-it,” declared Joe desperately.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want you to. I can buy it myself, for
-that matter. It—it’s beating Frank that matters.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span></p>
-
-<p>“And only the other day you were saying that
-you were sorry for him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m not today,” said Jack grimly.
-“Say, where were you all the morning? I thought
-surely you’d come around or call up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Most of the morning I was in Detroit,”
-answered Joe soberly.</p>
-
-<p>“In Detroit! What do you mean, Detroit?”</p>
-
-<p>“Detroit, Michigan. There isn’t any other, is
-there?”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean you’ve been to Detroit today?”
-asked Jack incredulously. Joe shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“I came from there today. I went last night.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack stared unbelievingly. “What for?
-What’s the joke?”</p>
-
-<p>“For seventy-five dollars,” replied Joe, smilingly.
-“And I got it, or most of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, are you batty?” demanded Jack impatiently.
-“What seventy-five dollars? What’s
-the big idea?”</p>
-
-<p>So Joe told his story once more, while Jack’s
-eyes got bigger and rounder and he hurled questions
-at the narrator breathlessly. And when he
-had heard all about it and had had every last
-detail explained to his satisfaction he deliberately
-kicked over a chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t that make you sick?” he exclaimed.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span>
-“I have to go and get quinsy and lose all that
-fun! Of course Young couldn’t have sneaked off
-when I was well! Oh, dear, no! It had to be
-when I was laid up! Hang the luck, anyway!
-Say, if I’d been along, Joey, I’d have punched his
-head!”</p>
-
-<p>“Just as well you weren’t, then,” laughed Joe.
-“As it was, everything went off quietly and
-strictly according to the rules-book.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what do you know about it!” marvelled
-Jack. “Joey, when they named you ‘Lucky’
-Faulkner they hit it just about right! Why, you
-didn’t have one chance in ten thousand to get that
-money back!”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess that’s so. Come to think of it, Jack,
-I didn’t get it back. It was Mr. Graham did it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind who did it, you brought it home.
-Now what are we going to do for someone to look
-after the stand?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been thinking that the best thing would
-be to put the tin box back for a few days. School
-closes Thursday, and after that we can look after
-it ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. I dare say four days won’t lose us
-much. I wonder, though, how we’re going to like
-sticking around that lobby when the hot weather
-comes. That won’t be so pleasant, eh?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303"></a>[303]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe the Adams Building will be
-hotter than any other place,” replied Joe. “Anyway,
-if we’re going to earn money we’ve got to
-work for it and put up with some things. I’ve
-got to be going now, Jack.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your hurry? I haven’t seen you for
-an age!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll drop around after supper if you can see
-folks then. But I want to go and give this nine-fifty
-to Mrs. Bennett. I guess she needs it worse
-than we do.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack was back in school Monday morning, a bit
-weak in the legs, but otherwise as good as ever,
-or so he declared. He had two days of examinations
-to make up and, since he would not have
-been of much use to the team anyway, he stayed
-away from practice that afternoon and toiled over
-his papers in a deserted class-room under the
-eagle eye of one of the teachers.</p>
-
-<p>On Tuesday there was only an hour of light
-work for the players. The Second Team ended
-its season with a game with the grammar school,
-which it won in a breath-taking tenth inning rally,
-and the diamond was given over to the workmen
-who were to put it in shape for the morrow’s
-battle.</p>
-
-<p>Petersburg descended on Amesville the next<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[304]</span>
-day at noon and went to lunch at the principal
-hotel. She arrived nearly a hundred strong and
-armed with a multitude of gay banners, which
-she waved jubilantly as, luncheon over, the team
-and its followers took trolley cars to the field.</p>
-
-<p>Petersburg had gone through a more than
-usually successful season, playing nineteen games,
-of which she had won twelve and tied one. In
-Calvert she had a pitcher of known ability who
-had last year proved a good deal of a riddle to
-Amesville’s batters, and her second-choice twirler,
-Gorman, had been coming fast during the last
-month and had only a week ago held Minton
-School to one hit. For the rest, Petersburg had
-an average team, with a fast, snappy infield and
-an outfield composed of two veterans and one
-newcomer. Petersburg had not gained the reputation
-of a hard-hitting outfit this year, but an
-analysis of the scores of past conflicts would have
-shown that she had usually secured hits when
-they were most needed.</p>
-
-<p>Amesville, however, went into the game that
-afternoon with more confidence than usual.
-There had been seasons when she had had a
-strong pitching staff and a poor fielding team,
-seasons when she had been brilliant at fielding
-and weak at batting, and seasons when she could<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305"></a>[305]</span>
-bat anything and had no talent in the box. But
-this year it was felt that the Brown-and-Blue was
-an evenly rounded nine with good pitchers, clever
-fielders, and the ability to bat, and most of the
-local rooters who filled the two stands behind first
-base and flowed over on to the field held that it
-was less a question of which team would win
-than what the score would be!</p>
-
-<p>Petersburg had nearly an hour of practice before
-Amesville trotted out to claim the diamond,
-and by that time the audience had assembled and
-the stage was set. The umpire had been imported
-from Lima, and, since he had presumably never
-heard of either Amesville or Petersburg High
-School in his life, was credited with being about
-as impartial as an umpire could be. He was a
-small, rotund, business-like-looking chap who
-wore the regulation blue flannels and had a voice
-like a mild-mannered bull.</p>
-
-<p>Amesville’s batting order was as follows:
-Smith, s.; Morris, cf.; Strobe, lf.; Hale, 3b.;
-Peddie, 2b.; Faulkner, 1b.; Cummings, rf.; Craig,
-c.; Pollock, p. Toby Williams hoped to get into
-the game before the curtain fell on the afternoon’s
-performance, and probably Carl Moran
-entertained a similar hope, but it was pretty certain
-that Tom would remain on the mound as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306"></a>[306]</span>
-long as the opponent showed its teeth. On the
-bench, when the Amesville players trotted out for
-the opening inning, remained Williams, Moran,
-Foley, Loomis, Speyer, Johnson, a capable hitter
-from the disbanded Scrubs, and Buster Healey.
-Buster was not in playing togs, however, and he
-viewed the world from behind a pair of horn
-spectacles with thick lenses that gave him the appearance
-of a wise owl. Manager Mifflin was
-there, too, with his battered score-book spread
-open on his knees, and so was Coach Talbot, in
-low-voiced conversation with Mr. John Hall, a
-privileged well-wisher of the team.</p>
-
-<p>At half-past two to the second Mr. Reardon,
-the imported umpire, faced the stands in “big-league”
-fashion and announced the batteries in
-a voice that carried easily to the outfield fence:
-“Batthery for Amesville, Pollock and Craig!
-For Petthersburg, Calvert and Beale. <em>Batther
-up!</em>”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307"></a>[307]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV<br />
-<small>BUNCHED HITS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“First man, Tom!”</p>
-
-<p>Sam Craig pulled his mask down, looked over
-the field and then knelt behind the plate. Tom,
-his arms at his sides, watched, nodded, himself
-turned and viewed the fielders, and pulled his cap
-down a bit further over his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on, Tom! Let’s have him!” called
-Gordon Smith.</p>
-
-<p>“Here we go!” cried Hale.</p>
-
-<p>Tom’s hands came up to his chest, his foot went
-forward, cunning fingers wrapped themselves
-around the clean, new ball. At the plate Wiley,
-third baseman, squared himself and tentatively
-swung his bat. Behind him Captain Craig placed
-his feet apart and with slightly bent knees and
-out-thrust hands waited. Behind the third base
-line the visitors were still cheering and two noisy
-youths were encouraging the batsman from the
-coachers’ boxes. Tom’s arms went back above
-his head, his body lurched forward, his right hand
-shot out and a white streak sped away for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308"></a>[308]</span>
-plate. A yellowish flash as the bat swept the
-air, the thud of ball against leather mitt, and the
-stentorian voice of the umpire:</p>
-
-<p>“Shtrike!”</p>
-
-<p>Amesville cheered, while a chorus of approval
-arose from the fielders, and Sam, thumping the
-ball into the deep hollow of his big mitten, cried
-to Tom: “That’s the stuff, Tom! Keep after
-him!”</p>
-
-<p>On first, or, to be exact, well off of first and
-behind the base-path, Joe added his encouragement
-to the rest and, a bit nervously, perhaps,
-hitched at his trousers, which didn’t need a particle
-of attention. Again the wind-up, leisurely
-and carefully made, and again the sphere flew
-toward the plate. It was a ball this time, and
-the batsman judged it correctly and let it severely
-alone. The cheers from the stands had died away
-now. A few latecomers were searching for points
-of vantage well back of the foul lines. The hot
-June sunlight fell radiantly on the backs of spectators
-and straw hats had already begun to wave
-in front of flushed faces. A second ball followed
-and then a drop that fooled the Petersburg third
-baseman brought the second strike.</p>
-
-<p>“Two and two!” called Sam cheerfully. “Let’s
-have him, Tom!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309"></a>[309]</span></p>
-
-<p>Joe, on his toes, waited. The ball shot forward
-again, the bat met it, Joe leaped to the base as
-Hale, coming in on the run, scooped up the trickling
-sphere and jerked it across the diamond.
-Squarely into Joe’s glove it thumped, his left foot
-touched the bag, and the runner, puffing hard,
-swerved aside.</p>
-
-<p>“One gone!” called Joe. “Let’s have the next
-one, Tom!”</p>
-
-<p>“One!” echoed Sam, pointing a dramatic
-fore-finger aloft.</p>
-
-<p>The next batsman, however, was not to be disposed
-of in any such manner. He picked out Tom’s
-second offering and sent it speeding between
-Smith and Peddie and raced across the first bag
-without challenge. The coachers redoubled their
-vocal energy. Twice Tom threw to Joe and twice
-the runner threw himself back to safety. Then
-Tom gave his attention to the Petersburg shortstop.
-With a strike and two balls on that youth,
-Tom tried to sneak one across in the groove.
-The shortstop was ready for it and the ball went
-screeching into right field. Cummings came in
-hard and got it on the bound, throwing to second.
-The first runner was on third by that time and
-Petersburg was yelling madly on stands and
-bench and coaching lines.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310"></a>[310]</span></p>
-
-<p>The runner on first stole on the first ball, and
-Sam, faking a throw to second, slammed the ball
-to Tom. But the man on third held his place.
-With only one gone there was no use taking any
-chances. The Petersburg left fielder got himself
-into a hole at once, swinging twice at deceptive
-offerings. Then Tom wasted a couple and,
-finally, cut the outer corner of the plate and the
-batsman withdrew with trailing bat. But the
-trouble was not over yet, for the next man, the
-Petersburg left fielder, was more canny. He disdained
-the first two deliveries and the umpire
-called them both balls. Tom tried to fool him
-on an inshoot and again missed it. With three
-balls against him, Tom decided to pass the batsman
-and so threw wide and the bases were filled.
-A hit meant two runs, and the hit was forthcoming
-a moment later when the Petersburg captain,
-Lyman, picked out something to his liking and
-raised it far and high into centre field. Morris
-and Cummings both went after it, but it was
-Sid’s ball and Sid should have had it. But when
-it dropped it failed to find its way into his hands,
-and amidst consternation and gloom in the Amesville
-ranks, two tallies crossed the platter!</p>
-
-<p>There was a pathetic hunch to Sid’s shoulders
-as he turned and went back to his position. Then<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311"></a>[311]</span>
-Smith’s cheerful “Never mind that, Sid! Here’s
-another!” went back to him and he waved a hand
-answeringly. They were certainly finding Tom
-Pollock, Joe reflected ruefully, and glanced
-toward the bench to see if Toby was pulling off
-his coat. But there was no sign of anxiety there.
-After all, Joe added consolingly, it was only the
-first inning. Then he stopped thinking about it
-and sprinted across the line to pull down a high
-foul and make the second out. Then came the
-Petersburg catcher, a sturdy chap with a knowing
-manner. But Tom was taking no chances
-and presently Beale walked to first, filling the
-bases for the second time, while Petersburg
-hissed.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s wrong with Pollock?” asked Beale
-as he put a foot beside Joe’s on the bag.</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll settle down in a minute,” answered Joe.
-“You chaps want to make the most of this inning.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what we’re doing,” replied Beale with
-a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>The Petersburg pitcher started toward the
-plate, but was called back, and a tall youth took
-his place. He was Middleton, a substitute fielder,
-Beale explained as he danced away to a lead.
-But for once a pinch-hitter remained true to precedent.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312"></a>[312]</span>
-Tom tried him on a low ball, put a wide
-one across and then offered one of his famous
-“knuckle balls.” That did the business effectively,
-for Middleton struck at it and Sam pulled
-it down three feet behind the plate. Amesville
-cheered encouragingly as their team flocked to
-the bench, and cheered again when Gordon Smith
-stepped to the plate. Gordon studied two deliveries
-from Calvert and heard one called a ball
-and the other a strike. Then he fouled off two,
-and, with the score two and one, landed against
-the next offering. But it went straight to shortstop
-and Gordon was an easy out. Sid Morris
-had no better luck, for his attempt at a hit was
-pulled down by centre fielder. Jack hit safely to
-left. Hale tried hard to get one out of the diamond,
-but failed, and Jack made the third out,
-short to second baseman.</p>
-
-<p>Tom found himself in the second inning and only
-four batsmen faced him, the third man up getting
-to first on a weak hit to Hale that jumped so
-erratically that it couldn’t be handled in time.
-Returning the compliment, Calvert also disposed
-of the enemy in three chapters, George Peddie
-striking out, Joe getting his base on balls, and
-Cummings and Craig fanning.</p>
-
-<p>In the next inning Petersburg got a runner to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313"></a>[313]</span>
-third, but had to leave him there when, with two
-down, Cummings gathered in an easy fly that just
-escaped going foul. Tom Pollock opened things
-up in Amesville’s half with a smashing drive into
-deep right that proved good for two bases and
-Amesville waved her banners and shouted wildly
-in acclaim. For awhile, however, it seemed that
-Tom would get no further, for Smith’s best was
-a fly to second baseman and Sidney Morris, after
-fouling off a half-dozen, struck out. It was Jack
-who was destined to bring in the first tally.
-With two strikes against him he slammed a
-sizzling hit down the first base line, scoring Tom
-and taking second himself. That unsettled Calvert
-for the moment and Hale bunted toward
-third and barely beat out the throw. By this
-time Amesville clamoured triumphantly and Sam,
-at first, and Smith, behind third, added strident
-voices to the bedlam. With Jack on third, Hale’s
-steal of second went unchallenged, Peddie swinging
-harmlessly. Calvert followed that strike with
-two bad ones, one of which nearly got past the
-catcher, and then made the mistake of offering a
-fast out-shoot. Peddie was fond of those and he
-liked the present one especially and sent it arching
-into short right field. The fielder scuttled in
-for it and Captain Lyman, at first base, ran back.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314"></a>[314]</span>
-But the ball fell harmlessly to earth between
-them, by which time Jack had scored, Peddie was
-on first, and Hale was sprinting for the plate.
-Unfortunately, Hale had pulled up momentarily
-at third, in spite of Gordon Smith’s urging, and
-Captain Lyman’s quick, straight throw to the
-catcher killed him off at the rubber.</p>
-
-<p>But the score was 2 to 2, and Amesville settled
-back with sighs of satisfaction. Five hits for a
-total of seven bases was not bad in three innings,
-they argued, and a continuation of such work
-should win without trouble. But a continuation
-proved more than the Brown-and-Blue was capable
-of. Petersburg went down one, two, three in
-the fourth inning, but so did Amesville, and in the
-fifth and sixth she did little better so far as
-results were concerned. Calvert, after that first
-wobble, settled down to a fine, steady pace. In
-the fifth Sid Morris got to first on a pass and in
-the next inning Joe made his first hit of the game
-when two were down. But, although Cummings
-was passed, Sam Craig struck out.</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile Petersburg made the most in
-the fifth inning of a pass, a hit, and an error. Tom
-presented the first batsman with his base, thereby
-paving the way for trouble. The left fielder, who
-had already tasted blood in the third, got a safe<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315"></a>[315]</span>
-hit past Smith and first and second bases were
-occupied with no one out. Captain Lyman’s drive
-got away from Tom Pollock’s glove and when he
-had recovered it the bags were all filled. The
-next man proved an easy out, retiring after four
-pitched balls, but Catcher Beale came through
-with a two-bagger to right that brought two more
-tallies across. Tom struck out the next pair.</p>
-
-<p>With the score 4 to 2, Amesville, as has been
-said, failed to help herself to anything in that
-inning or the sixth. Calvert was pitching his
-best, and Calvert at his best was a hard nut to
-crack. Petersburg retired in order in the sixth
-and seventh, Tom adding two more strike-outs
-to his growing list.</p>
-
-<p>When Tom Pollock went to the bat in the last
-of the seventh Amesville arose and demanded
-runs. “Here we go! It’s the lucky seventh!
-All up, High School! Here’s where we tie them!”</p>
-
-<p>The cheer leaders waved their megaphones and
-brought forth lusty encouragement, while Petersburg,
-fewer in numbers, but possessed of willing
-lungs, hurled back defiance from across the sunlit
-field. Joe, squeezed in between Jack and Steve
-Hale on the home bench, listened silently to the
-discussion. Coach Talbot was talking to Gordon
-Smith, next up, but the others were having it back<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_316"></a>[316]</span>
-and forth. Manager Mifflin, his black-covered
-score-book across his knees, was biting the end
-of his pencil nervously.</p>
-
-<p>“Someone’s got to start something this inning,”
-Sid Morris was saying. “He’s going to
-crack again before this game’s over, you mark
-my words. And when he does we want to be right
-there, fellows.”</p>
-
-<p>“Calvert’s gone twelve innings,” said Speyer,
-“without shedding a feather, and it looks to me
-as if he could do it today.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s shed a few feathers already,” replied
-Jack. “We had him going nicely in the third,
-and if things had worked right we might have
-been running yet. What happened at third,
-Walt?”</p>
-
-<p>“My fault, I guess,” answered Hale. “I
-thought that hit was shorter. Still, I ought to
-have kept on when Gordon was telling me to. I
-suppose I got rattled.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll take it on first,” said Captain Craig.
-“Toby, take third, will you? Play this safe till
-they’re two out and then pull ’em along any old
-way!” He walked apart with Gordon Smith and
-then hurried down to the coacher’s place at first,
-shouting encouragement to Tom as he went.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_317"></a>[317]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV<br />
-<small>A DOUBLE UNASSISTED</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>At the end of the bench sat Frank Foley, sombre
-gaze fixed on the batsman. Joe, seeing him, felt
-sorry for his defeated rival and wondered whether
-Mr. Talbot would put him in for an inning or two.
-He surely deserved it, thought Joe. It was hard
-lines having to sit there all through the big game
-without even a chance to warm his hands! Only,
-he reflected, if Bat did put Foley in Jack would
-simply throw a fit! At that instant Foley happened
-to turn his head and their looks met. If
-Joe, averting his own glance quickly, had expected
-to find anger or antagonism in the other’s eyes
-he was wrong. Foley met his gaze impersonally,
-unsmilingly. They were still cheering lustily on
-the stands when Calvert shot the first ball in.
-Then the noise died away, to start again as the
-umpire called:</p>
-
-<p>“Ball!”</p>
-
-<p>Another ball followed. Then a low one that
-looked good from the bench and, it seemed, looked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_318"></a>[318]</span>
-good to the umpire. Tom Pollock gravely studied
-the plate, took a new grip of his bat, and waited
-once more. The next effort was wild and the
-ball almost got past the catcher. Amesville
-shouted and jeered and the two coachers danced
-and waved and made noise any way they could.
-Again Calvert pitched, and once more the ball
-went wide.</p>
-
-<p>“Four balls!” announced Mr. Reardon. “Take
-your base!”</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s where we start!” cried Jack, excitedly
-thumping Joe’s knee. “Go to it, Gordon, old
-scout! You know what to do!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the lucky seventh!” shouted the Amesville
-rooters ecstatically. “Smash it, Smith!
-Bring him in! Here we go, fellows!”</p>
-
-<p>After that for many minutes Joe was too excited
-and anxious to know what was going on
-around him, although once during the subsequent
-proceedings he had a dim notion that Mr. John
-Hall and Coach Talbot were shaking hands and
-that Walter Cummings had fallen backwards over
-the water carboy! They were cheering Smith
-now as he faced the pitcher with “sacrifice bunt”
-written large all over him. But Smith wasn’t
-destined to sacrifice. Calvert simply wouldn’t
-allow him to. He, too, ambled to first on a free<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_319"></a>[319]</span>
-ticket and bedlam broke loose in the Amesville
-stand. Men on first and second with none out
-and only two runs needed to tie! This was indeed
-the lucky seventh! Then came Sid Morris, after
-listening to Coach Talbot’s instructions, and Sid
-was there to hit, as he soon proved by swinging
-at and missing two pretty poor balls. With the
-score two and two Fortune took a hand in the
-game. Calvert was noticeably nervous now and
-when the fifth delivery shot away from his hand—Sid
-had fouled off one—it twisted straight for the
-batsman. Sid stepped back, but not far enough,
-and the ball struck against his shoulder. He
-staggered away, dropping his bat and doubling
-over. But by the time two or three of his team-mates
-had leaped to his assistance he was smiling
-and shaking himself.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” he said over his shoulder as he
-trotted down the line.</p>
-
-<p>That was the final undoing of Pitcher Calvert.
-Already the Petersburg second-choice twirler was
-warming up behind the first base stand. Calvert
-gazed anxiously around the filled bases, heard the
-frenzied shrieks of the coachers and the wild,
-disconcerting babel from the audience and faced
-the situation a bit wiltedly. The catcher soothed
-and reassured him from in front of the plate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_320"></a>[320]</span>
-and Calvert tried his best to come back. But
-Jack laid his bat against the very first ball that
-came his way and off screeched a line drive into
-left field, scoring Tom and Gordon Smith and
-placing Sid on third. Jack took second on the
-throw-in.</p>
-
-<p>Petersburg seemed inclined to stop the game
-then and there and have a consultation about it,
-but Umpire Reardon would allow no post-mortems.
-Calvert, the center of a group of dismayed
-players, yielded the ball and took that
-long walk from the box to the bench, cheered
-perfunctorily by friend and foe, and Gorman
-took up his task. Gorman was younger, smaller,
-and slighter, and that he didn’t at once stop the
-havoc being worked against Petersburg’s defences
-was not to be wondered at. Hale was now
-at bat and the hoarse cries of the Amesville fellows,
-mingled with the shrill shrieks of the coachers,
-whirled and eddied about his head, imploring
-him to clear the bases. In the meanwhile Petersburg’s
-coaches were rushing about, giving instructions
-to the fielders. Gorman had speed and
-lots of it, and Petersburg cheered loudly when
-his first offering cut the middle of the plate and
-went for a strike. But Hale was not to be denied
-and a moment later he connected with one of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_321"></a>[321]</span>
-Gorman’s benders and lifted a high fly to deep
-left. The fielder made a nice running catch of it,
-but could not prevent Morris from scoring and
-putting the game at 5 to 4!</p>
-
-<p>Amesville was now wild with excitement and
-hats and pennants were waving madly. With but
-one out and a run to the good the game seemed
-won, for Jack Strobe was dancing around at third
-ready to come across on any excuse. It was Peddie’s
-turn at bat, and Peddie, with one hit already
-to his credit, would surely be good for another.
-He was. The youngster let two wide ones go by
-him and then swung. <em>Crack</em> went bat and ball
-and the latter sped out into left field, free of the
-outstretched hands of the fielders, and Jack
-romped home!</p>
-
-<p>Six to four now, and still there was only one
-down! Amesville sang and shouted and tramped
-and waved flags and acted like so many happy
-lunatics. Down at second Peddie sat on the bag
-and recovered his breath while Gorman and Beale
-met for a conclave between plate and mound and
-Joe, gripping his bat, strode resolutely to the
-plate. One hit had been the portion of “Lucky”
-Faulkner that day, and one hit seemed very little
-to him. And so, when the game went on, he
-watched and waited craftily until Gorman had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_322"></a>[322]</span>
-tried him on two wide ones and scored a strike.
-Then Joe found what he wanted and smashed a
-drive toward third baseman and streaked to first.
-In the ordinary course of events that should have
-been the safest sort of a hit and should have put
-Peddie across the rubber and left Joe on first.
-But, as it happened, the Petersburg shortstop,
-who had all the afternoon performed remarkably,
-sprinted across at full speed and when the ball
-eluded the frantic glove of the third baseman, got
-it on the run and, without pausing, slammed it to
-the plate! It was a close decision, but the umpire
-waved Peddie out. That virtually ended the lucky
-seventh, for, although Joe went down to second
-and slid into the bag an instant ahead of the ball,
-Arthur Cummings proved an easy victim to Gorman’s
-skill.</p>
-
-<p>So, with the score 6 to 4, Petersburg went desperately
-to bat in the eighth while the shadows
-lengthened across the diamond and the crowd on
-the stand began to dribble down to the field. Joe
-made the first out in that inning, taking a sizzling
-drive from Catcher Beale’s bat. After that Smith
-threw out the centre fielder and Pitcher Gorman
-got a life on Smith’s fumble of his grounder and
-took second when Tom walked the head of the
-list. But it was all over a minute later when a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_323"></a>[323]</span>
-fine throw from Sam Craig caught the pitcher
-flat-footed off second.</p>
-
-<p>Sam led off for Amesville in the last of the
-eighth with a scratch hit that proved too slow for
-second baseman to field in time. Tom Pollock
-tried hard to get a hit, but finally fanned, and
-Smith was instructed to lay down a bunt and advance
-Sam Craig. It was at this moment that
-Joe saw Jack leave his place on the bench and
-speak to Coach Talbot. What was said between
-them Joe couldn’t hear, nor did he try to, but
-after a minute of indecision Mr. Talbot nodded
-his head and Jack returned, looking, as Joe put
-it afterwards, like the cat who ate the canary.</p>
-
-<p>“You and Bat got it all settled?” asked Joe
-laughingly as his friend seated himself again.</p>
-
-<p>Jack rewarded Joe with a somewhat sheepish
-glance as he nodded. After a moment he said in
-a low voice: “It was about Frank.”</p>
-
-<p>“What about him?” asked Joe, his gaze travelling
-to the end of the bench.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll see,” replied Jack evasively, and that
-was all that he would say.</p>
-
-<p>Smith’s attempt to bunt resulted disastrously,
-for Gorman would have none of it and the first
-thing Smith knew he was in the hole. When, with
-two strikes and two balls against him, he tried to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_324"></a>[324]</span>
-hit it out, the ball slammed itself into Gorman’s
-glove and Smith was gone. Sid Morris had better
-success, for he got a hit down the alley between
-second and shortstop and Sam Craig advanced a
-base. Then Joe learned the meaning of Jack’s
-converse with the coach. Mr. Talbot recalled
-Jack, who had been half-heartedly awaiting his
-turn, and summoned Frank Foley.</p>
-
-<p>“Foley! Take a whack at it. Don’t try to
-bend your bat. Just put one through.”</p>
-
-<p>Foley, surprised, leaped from the bench. “Me,
-sir?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, hurry up!”</p>
-
-<p>Foley hurried. Half a dozen eager hands
-stretched out as many bats toward him and, seizing
-a couple, he hurried to the plate, swinging
-them eagerly. Foley’s friends in the stand applauded
-warmly and Joe viewed Jack quizzically
-as the latter sank back into his place on the bench.</p>
-
-<p>“Jack,” began Joe in a whisper.</p>
-
-<p>Jack turned on him rudely. “Oh, dry up!” he
-muttered.</p>
-
-<p>Joe chuckled. “You’re a fine hater, aren’t
-you?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s got nothing to do with it,” declared
-Jack, reddening. “Frank’s worked hard all
-spring and—and he deserved to get in.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_325"></a>[325]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Of course, he did, and I’m glad, Jack, mighty
-glad. And it was decent of you, you old poser, to
-let him——”</p>
-
-<p>“Dry up and watch the game,” begged Jack.
-“I hope he does something!”</p>
-
-<p>And Frank, who seldom came through with a
-hit, today did the unexpected. There was a strike
-and two balls against him when he took his swing,
-a very healthy swing, too, and off went the ball
-straight down the first base line, and in raced
-Sam, while Amesville cheered another tally. But
-that was all, for Hale flied out to shortstop the
-next minute and the inning ended.</p>
-
-<p>“All over but the cheering!” cried Jack as the
-bench emptied. “Hold them safe, fellows! Don’t
-let anything slip, Joey! I’ll be watching you!”</p>
-
-<p>Frank Foley trotted into left field and Loomis
-to right. But those were the only substitutions
-made. Williams and Moran started to warm up
-by Coach Talbot’s orders, but no one looked to
-see either of them get in. The audience was
-already starting hesitantly toward the gates
-when Petersburg’s right fielder went to bat. Five
-minutes later many of them were scurrying back
-again, for, after fouling himself into the hole, the
-batsman waited and walked! Petersburg cheered
-hopefully then and when the next man up, who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_326"></a>[326]</span>
-happened to be that redoubtable shortstop,
-smashed a two-bagger over Peddie’s head, advancing
-the first runner to third, she cheered
-quite madly!</p>
-
-<p>It was Amesville’s turn to show concern and
-Toby Williams began to put on speed where he
-was pitching to Jack Speyer. But Coach Talbot,
-contenting himself with low-toned instructions,
-never so much as looked at Toby. The opponent’s
-left fielder was replaced by a pinch-hitter and
-the pinch-hitter won fame and glory. He picked
-off Tom’s second offering and sent it well into
-short centre, scoring the men from third and
-second, putting himself on first and then going
-on to the next bag when the throw was made to
-the plate in the attempt to head off the shortstop!</p>
-
-<p>Seven to six! And only one out! No wonder
-Captain Craig walked down to the box, amidst
-the joyful hoots of the visitors, and held a consultation
-there with Tom. No wonder that at last
-Mr. Talbot’s glance wandered along to where
-Williams and Moran were pitching. Scattered
-cries of “Take him out!” arose from the uneasy
-throng back of the first base line. But the demand
-was not general and, in any case, Coach
-Talbot had other intentions.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Lyman came to bat, a little pale, very<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_327"></a>[327]</span>
-determined, and—struck out! It was Amesville’s
-turn to jeer and rejoice and she did so, relieving
-over-strained nerves. Tom faced the Petersburg
-second baseman calmly and smilingly, got his signals
-from Sam, wound up and pitched.</p>
-
-<p>“Shtrike!” called the umpire, and the Brown-and-Blue
-partisans shouted stridently. Then
-came a ball, a low one and wide, followed by a
-second strike across the centre of the plate and
-shoulder high. Another ball then, for Tom could
-afford to waste one, and then——</p>
-
-<p>Well, then there was a <em>crack</em> of wood against
-leather and the batsman was speeding to base!
-The ball went to Tom, but it was bounding crazily
-and he could only knock it down in his first stab
-for it. When he had it in hand he turned toward
-third to head off the runner from second and saw
-that that youth had changed his mind and was on
-his way back to the middle sack. Wheeling
-quickly, Tom pegged to Joe at first. But by that
-time the Petersburg runner had rounded first
-and was dashing to second. Joe caught and
-turned to throw to Smith when he caught sight
-of the further runner doubling back. <a href="#i_frontis">Sensing a
-mix-up, Joe held the ball and raced for second
-base.</a> The two runners reached that bag simultaneously.
-The expected happened. Plump into<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_328"></a>[328]</span>
-each other they went with a bang that doubtless
-made them see stars as they each rolled apart,
-clear of the base! Joe threw himself between
-them, his hand with the ball shot to the left and
-then to the right, and the game was over!</p>
-
-<p>Two minutes later, when Joe, with most of the
-others who had been caught on the field, was being
-borne crazily about through the laughing, jubilant
-throng, swaying and pitching above a sea of faces,
-his bearers brought him for a moment abreast of
-Frank Foley and their glances met.</p>
-
-<p>“That was great, Faulkner!” called Frank
-warmly.</p>
-
-<p>But Joe, smiling happily, shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Only luck,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p class="p4 noic">THE END</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chapv" />
-<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">Printer’s, 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>
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