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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69206 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69206)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Winning his game, by Ralph Henry
-Barbour
-
-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: Winning his game
-
-Author: Ralph Henry Barbour
-
-Illustrator: Walt Louderback
-
-Release Date: October 22, 2022 [eBook #69206]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WINNING HIS GAME ***
-
-
-
-
-
- WINNING HIS GAME
-
-
-
-
-By Ralph Henry Barbour
-
-
-PURPLE PENNANT SERIES
-
- The Lucky Seventh
- The Secret Play
- The Purple Pennant
-
-
-YARDLEY HALL SERIES
-
- Forward Pass
- Double Play
- Winning His Y
- For Yardley
- Around the End
- Change Signals
-
-
-HILTON SERIES
-
- The Half-back
- For the Honor of the School
- Captain of the Crew
-
-
-ERSKINE SERIES
-
- Behind the Line
- Weatherby’s Inning
- On Your Mark
-
-
-THE “BIG FOUR” SERIES
-
- Four in Camp
- Four Afoot
- Four Afloat
-
-
-THE GRAFTON SERIES
-
- Rivals for the Team
- Winning His Game
-
-
-BOOKS NOT IN SERIES
-
- The Brother of a Hero
- Finkler’s Field
- Danforth Plays the Game
- Benton’s Venture
- The Junior Trophy
- The New Boy at Hilltop
- The Spirit of the School
- The Arrival of Jimpson
-
-
-D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, Publishers, New York
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “The ball, curving inward, met his bat fairly and
-screeched off into short center”]
-
-
-
-
- WINNING
- HIS GAME
-
- BY
- RALPH HENRY BARBOUR
- AUTHOR OF “RIVALS FOR THE TEAM,” “THE PURPLE PENNANT,” ETC.
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- ILLUSTRATED BY
- WALT LOUDERBACK
-
-
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
- NEW YORK LONDON
- 1917
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1917, by
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
-
-
- Printed in the United States of America
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. DUD WONDERS 1
- II. THE ENTERING WEDGE 13
- III. 29 LOTHROP 25
- IV. A CHANCE MEETING 36
- V. DUD LOSES HIS TEMPER 49
- VI. FIRST PRACTICE 59
- VII. BEN MYATT ADVISES 69
- VIII. A WILD PITCH 81
- IX. JIMMY TAKES CHARGE 93
- X. THE CHALLENGE 104
- XI. WITH THE SCRUBS 118
- XII. ON THE RIVER 130
- XIII. CONFESSION 138
- XIV. MAROONED! 148
- XV. DUD SERVES THEM UP 160
- XVI. THE TRACK MEET 172
- XVII. BASEBALL, TENNIS AND OYSTERS 184
- XVIII. DUD GOES TO THE RESCUE 192
- XIX. BACK TO THE BENCH 207
- XX. JIMMY ENCOURAGES 219
- XXI. ON THE MOUND 230
- XXII. DUD COMES BACK 240
- XXIII. BEN TELLS A SECRET 253
- XXIV. THE FIRST GAME 264
- XXV. LEFT BEHIND 274
- XXVI. THE BORROWED HAND-CAR 286
- XXVII. WINNING HIS GAME 301
-
-
-
-
-THE ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- “The ball, curving inward, met his bat fairly and screeched
- off into short center” _Frontispiece_
-
- FACING
- PAGE
-
- “‘You’re a sneaky little bounder, that’s what you are!’” 38
-
- “‘The canoes have gone!’” 144
-
- “Jimmy ... was rolling over on the platform and Dud ...
- with him” 282
-
-
-
-
-WINNING HIS GAME
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-DUD WONDERS
-
-
-Jimmy Logan stood his skis in the corner behind the door and, tramping
-heavily to get the clinging snow from his shoes, climbed the first
-flight in Trow Hall slowly and then dragged wearied feet down the
-corridor to Number 19. Once inside the room, he said, “Hello,” shied
-his cap onto his bed and sank exhaustedly in the nearest chair,
-stretching his legs across the rug and slumping down until the wet
-collar of his mackinaw came in contact with his ears. Whereupon he
-muttered, “Ugh!” and sat up another inch or two.
-
-Across the room, one foot on the floor and the other doubled up
-beneath him on the windowseat, was Jimmy’s roommate. His response to
-the greeting had been brief and delivered in a preoccupied voice, for
-Dudley Baker had a book open before him on the cushion and held a
-stained and battered baseball in his right hand. His attention was
-divided between book and ball and had no room for Jimmy. The latter’s
-gaze presently came away from his shoes, which were trickling water to
-the rug, and fixed itself on Dudley. He had to sit up still higher in
-the chair to get an uninterrupted view of his chum, which proceeding
-elicited a protesting groan from him, and after he had attained it he
-instantly decided that it was not worth while and deeply regretted the
-exertion it had caused him. He promptly descended again on his spine,
-crossed his feet and sighed luxuriously.
-
-The dollar clock on Dudley’s chiffonier ticked briskly and loudly in
-the ensuing silence. Outside the windows tiny flakes of snow were
-falling. The shadows deepened in the room. In the corridor deliberate
-footsteps sounded and suddenly the transom over the door showed yellow
-and an oblong of light appeared on the ceiling. Mr. Crump, the school
-janitor, was lighting the dormitories. Jimmy wished that his shoes were
-off, and his mackinaw, and the woolen socks, but as yet he wasn’t equal
-to the task. When Mr. Crump’s footsteps had died away on the stairs
-Jimmy broke the silence.
-
-“What’re you doing?” he asked uninterestedly. There was, however, no
-reply from the window-seat, possibly because Jimmy’s tones had been too
-faint to reach there. After a moment Jimmy turned his head and stared
-across a pile of books on the study table at the three or four inches
-of Dudley’s head that were visible. Then:
-
-“_Dud!_” he bawled resentfully.
-
-“Huh?”
-
-“What are you doing, I asked you.”
-
-“Oh, me? Oh, just trying to dope out some of this stuff.”
-
-“What stuff?”
-
-“Stuff about pitching. How to hold the ball, you know.”
-
-“Oh!” Jimmy subsided again and another period of silence followed. Then:
-
-“You don’t expect to play baseball for a while, do you?” he asked
-lazily. “You’d better study how to throw a snowball!” He chuckled
-faintly at his joke.
-
-“It isn’t so long now,” responded Dud soberly. “They’re going to call
-candidates the twenty-first.”
-
-“Gym work,” grunted the other. “Take my advice and keep away from it.
-Don’t go out for the team until it gets out of doors. Are you still
-thinking of trying for the school?”
-
-“Of course.”
-
-Jimmy grunted. “You’ll have a fine show, I don’t think! Better try for
-the second, Dud.”
-
-“I don’t expect to make it, but it’s good practice, and maybe next
-year――――”
-
-“You’ll stand more chance with the second, and have a lot more fun.
-The second’s going to have a regular schedule this year; five or six
-games, maybe; going away for some of them, too.”
-
-“If I don’t make the first, and I suppose I won’t, of course, I’ll try
-for the second,” said Dud. “I asked Murtha this morning if he thought
-it would be all right to try for the first, and he said――――”
-
-“Guy Murtha said, ‘Yes, indeed, Baker, we want all the candidates we
-can get!’ That’s what they always tell you, and then, when you get
-out there, they inform you gently but firmly that you won’t do, and
-hadn’t you better stay with your class team this year and try again
-next? What’s the use? I like to play ball, Dud, but you don’t catch me
-putting in a month’s grind in the cage and then getting the G. B. as
-soon as we get outdoors. Me for the second――and safety.”
-
-“You’re lazy,” replied Dud, shutting his book and stowing the ball back
-of the pillows. “You could make the first this spring if you’d try for
-it. You ought to, too.”
-
-Jimmy shrugged. “Maybe so. But I’d rather have a sure place on the
-second, thanks. Gee, but I’m tired!”
-
-“Skiing?”
-
-“Yes; Pete Gordon and Kelly and Gus and I. We climbed up to the
-Observatory and then hiked half-way over to the Falls. It was piles of
-fun going down the mountain. Gus Weston took a header and turned over
-about forty-eleven times and then went into a snow bank head-first up
-to his waist. But we tried to do too much. My legs feel as if they’d
-never stop aching! What have you been doing? Been in here all the
-afternoon? But, of course, you have. I forgot about your tooth. How is
-it? Any better?”
-
-“Yes. I guess I caught a little cold in it. I wish that dentist
-chap would yank it out instead of practicing on it!” Dud turned the
-lights on and perched himself across a chair at the opposite side of
-the table, his arms on the back, and observed Jimmy in a thoughtful
-fashion. Jimmy grunted.
-
-“Shoot,” he said. “What’s on your mind?”
-
-“I――I’ve been wondering, Jimmy.”
-
-“Oh, gee!” Jimmy groaned deeply. “At it again, eh? Well, what is
-it this time, Dud? The other day you were worrying yourself thin
-because you were afraid you were costing your folks too much money, or
-something.”
-
-Dud smiled. “Not exactly worrying,” he replied. “Just――just wondering.”
-
-“There isn’t much difference, the way you do it. If I――――”
-
-“Not so much about how much I was costing them as whether they’re going
-to get their money’s worth, Jimmy. Sometimes I wonder whether I’m
-really doing any good here. Now you look at it this way――――”
-
-“I won’t! I refuse! Besides, that’s an old one. What’s your latest
-worry?”
-
-“It isn’t a worry――exactly. I was only thinking that――――” He paused.
-Then: “Oh, I guess it isn’t anything, after all. Say, you’d better get
-out of those wet things, Jimmy.”
-
-“I’m going to just as soon as I have strength to move. But I want to
-hear your new――er――problem, Dud. Come across. ’Fess up to your Uncle
-Jimmy.”
-
-Dud hesitated, smiling a bit embarrassedly. He was a good-looking
-chap of fifteen, with clean-cut features, a rather fair complexion
-and very bright blue eyes. He was small-boned and slim, and, since
-he had been doing a lot of growing the past twelve months, he looked
-a trifle “weedy.” In that respect he was a distinct contrast to his
-roommate, for James Townsend Logan was a stocky lad, wide of shoulder
-and broad of chest. Jimmy was sixteen, although only four months
-divided the two boys in age. Jimmy’s features were nondescript, but
-the result was pleasing. He wore his red-brown hair rather long――Dud
-said it was because he was too lazy to have it cut oftener than once
-every term――and had a short nose and a wide, humorous mouth and a very
-square chin. He was a member of the upper middle class, while Dud was a
-lower middler.
-
-“I guess it’s sort of silly,” said Dud after a moment. “But I’ve been
-wondering”――Jimmy groaned again――“why I don’t know more fellows, Jimmy,
-why I don’t――don’t ‘mix’ better. I don’t believe I really care a whole
-lot――――” He paused again. “Yes I do, too, though. I’d like to have
-fellows like me, Jimmy, as they do you, and ask me to do things and go
-places and――and all that. Of course, I know the trouble’s with me, all
-right, but――but what is it?”
-
-“Oh, piffle, Dud! Fellows _do_ like you.”
-
-“Yes, about the way they like the steps in front of School Hall. That
-is, they don’t exactly _like_ me; they just――just don’t _dislike_ me.
-I guess I’d rather have them do that than not care a fig whether I’m
-alive or dead. I suppose this sounds silly, but――――”
-
-“Honest confession is good for the soul,” responded Jimmy lightly. “But
-I think you’re wrong about it, Dud. Or, anyway――now look here――――”
-
-“I suppose I’m just not cut out to be what you might call popular,”
-interrupted Dud thoughtfully. “Well, but still――――”
-
-“Shut up and let me talk! The trouble with you is that you don’t let
-fellows find out whether they can like you or not. You don’t――don’t
-‘mix’――do you see? If you’d get into things more――――”
-
-“But that’s just it! How can I when I see that I’m not wanted?”
-
-“That’s just imagination, Dud. You can’t expect fellows to fall all
-over themselves and hug you! You’ve got to show ’em that you’re ready
-to be friends. You’ve got to make the start yourself. What do you do
-when someone says ‘Let’s do this or that’? You mutter something about
-having to dig Latin or math and sneak off. Fellows naturally think you
-don’t want to do the things they do. Now today, for instance――――”
-
-“I couldn’t have gone, Jimmy, with this plaguey toothache!”
-
-“Why, no, I guess you couldn’t. But, thunderation, Dud, if it isn’t
-a toothache it’s something else. You’ve always got some perfectly
-wonderful excuse for beating it about the time the fun begins. Not that
-you missed much this afternoon, for you didn’t, barring a lot of tired
-muscles, but you often do miss things. To be what you call a ‘mixer,’
-Dud, you’ve got to ‘mix,’ and you don’t know the first thing about it.
-Fellows like you, all right, what they see of you, but you don’t give
-them a chance.”
-
-Dud stared thoughtfully at the green shade before him. “Ye-yes, I
-suppose that’s true, Jimmy. But I don’t like to stick around when
-fellows are getting up things because I think that maybe they won’t
-want me in on it and that if I’m there they’ll think they have to ask
-me.”
-
-“Huh! What if they do have to ask you? Let ’em! Then when they see that
-you’re a regular feller they’ll ask you next time without having to.”
-
-“But I wonder if I am.”
-
-“Am what?” asked Jimmy ungrammatically.
-
-“A ‘regular feller.’ Maybe I’m not. I wonder――――”
-
-Jimmy threw up his hands in despair. “Oh, gee, he’s at it again!
-Dud, what you want to do is stop wondering. You’re the finest little
-wonderer that ever came down the pike, all right, but you spend so much
-time at it that you don’t get anywhere. Now, you take my advice, old
-chap, and stop wondering whether fellows like you or don’t like you.
-Just get out and butt in a little. When you see a crowd walk right into
-the middle of it and find out whether it’s a fight or a frolic. And,
-whatever it is, take a hand. Now there’s some mighty good advice, Dud,
-take it from me. I didn’t know I had it in me! And let me tell you
-another thing, kid. If you expect to have a show for the first team you
-want to crawl out of your shell and rub shoulders with fellows. Get
-hunky with the first team crowd, do you see? Be――be more of a――well,
-more of a regular feller, like I said before. Don’t try too hard to
-be popular, though. Fellows get onto that and won’t stand for it.
-Just――just be natural!”
-
-“I guess I’m being natural,” answered Dud, with a smile, “and that
-is where the trouble is. I guess I’ll have to wait until next year.
-A lower middle fellow feels sort of fresh if he tries to mix in with
-upper middlers.”
-
-“Piffle! Lots of your class are thick as thieves with upper middle
-chaps. Look at young Whatshisname――Stiles. He’s always traveling with
-upper middlers――Ordway and Blake and that bunch.”
-
-“Ned Stiles has more cheek than I have. Besides, I don’t think fellows
-like him particularly, Jimmy. He sort of toadies, doesn’t he?”
-
-“He’s a perfect ass, if you ask me. But they seem to stand for him.”
-
-“Well, but I don’t want to be ‘stood for’; I want fellows to――to want
-me.”
-
-“All right. Give ’em a chance then. You’re all right, Dud, only
-you’re shy. That’s what’s the matter with you, old chap, you’re just
-plain shy! Never thought of it before. Look here, now, I’ll tell you
-what you do. You forget all about your dear little self and get over
-being――being――gee, what’s the word I want? Being self-conscious! That’s
-it! That’s your trouble, self-consciousness.” Jimmy beamed approval at
-himself. “Best way to do it is to――to do it! Tell you what, we’ll make
-a start tonight, eh? Let’s go out and visit someone. Who do you know
-that you’d like to know better?”
-
-“I’d like to know Hugh Ordway, for one,” said Dud hesitatingly. “But I
-guess he wouldn’t care about knowing me, and so――――”
-
-“Stow it! That’s just what you mustn’t do, do you see? You mustn’t
-‘wonder’ whether a fellow wants to know you or not. You just take
-it for granted that he does. Say to yourself, ‘I’m a good feller, a
-regular feller. I’m as good as you are. Of course you want to know me.
-Why not?’ See the idea?”
-
-Dud nodded doubtfully. “Still, Hugh Ordway’s a bit――――”
-
-“A bit what?” demanded Jimmy impatiently.
-
-“I mean he’s awfully popular and has piles of friends and he wouldn’t
-be likely to――to want to know me.”
-
-“Oh, piffle! Ordway’s just like any of us――except that he happens to be
-English and have a Lord or a Duke or something for a father. I don’t
-know him very well myself, but that’s just because he trains with the
-football crowd――Blake and Winslow and that bunch. But I know him plenty
-well enough to visit, and that’s just what we’ll do this evening, Dud.”
-
-“Maybe we’d better leave it for some other night,” replied Dud
-uneasily. “I’ve got a lot of lessons tonight and――――”
-
-“Ha, ha!” laughed Jimmy mirthlessly. “Where have I heard that before?”
-He pulled himself from his chair with a groan and pointed a stern
-finger at his chum. “You’ll start right in with me this very evening,
-Dud, and be a regular feller! And no more punk excuses, either! I’m
-going to take you in hand, son, and when I get through with you you
-won’t know yourself. Here, _stop that_!”
-
-“What?” asked Dud startledly.
-
-“You know what! You were beginning to wonder! I saw you! No more of
-that, understand? The first time I catch you wondering I’ll――I’ll take
-my belt to you!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE ENTERING WEDGE
-
-
-If you have by any chance read a previous narrative of events at
-Grafton School entitled “Rivals for the Team” you are sufficiently
-acquainted with the scene of this story, and, also, with many of
-the characters. But since it is quite possible that you have never
-even heard of the former narrative, it devolves on the historian to
-introduce a certain amount of descriptive matter at about this stage,
-something he has as little taste for as have you. Descriptions are
-always tiresome, and so we’ll have this as short as possible.
-
-Grafton School, then, occupies a matter of ten acres a half-mile
-east of the town of that name and at the foot of the hill which is
-known as Mount Grafton. Like many another New England school, it is
-shaded by elms, boasts many fine expanses of velvety turf and, so to
-speak, laves its feet in a gently-flowing river. The buildings on the
-campus consist of three dormitories, the more venerable School Hall,
-the gymnasium and the Principal’s residence, and of these all save
-the two latter stretch in a straight line across the middle of the
-three-acre expanse. The gymnasium is slightly back from the line and
-the Principal’s cottage is a bit in advance, its vine-covered porch
-looking along the fronts of the other buildings and its rear windows
-peering down into Crumbie Street. School Hall is in the center. Trow
-comes next on the left, and then Lothrop. On the right of the older
-building stands Manning, which shelters the younger boys, and somewhat
-“around the corner” is the gymnasium.
-
-Graveled walks lead across the campus, under spreading elm trees,
-to Crumbie Street on one side, to River Street on the other, to
-School Street straight in front. Beyond School Street is the Green, a
-block-wide parallelogram on which, at the corner of School and River
-Streets, two smaller dormitories stand. These, Morris and Fuller, are
-converted dwellings of limited accommodations. The main walk from
-the steps of School Hall continues across the Green to Front Street,
-beyond which, descending gently to the Needham River, is Lothrop Field.
-An ornamental wall and gate commemorate the name of the giver. The
-Field House flanks the steps on the left and beyond lie the football
-gridirons, the baseball diamonds, the tennis courts and the blue-gray
-cinder track. The distant weather-stained building on the river bank is
-the boathouse.
-
-Grafton School looks after slightly over two hundred boys between the
-ages of twelve and twenty. At the time of which I am writing, February
-of last year, the number was, I believe, exactly two hundred and ten,
-of which some thirty-five had attained to the senior class and about
-eighty were juniors, leaving the upper middle and lower middle classes
-to share the residue fairly equally. The faculty numbered twelve,
-beginning with Doctor Duncan, the Principal, and ending with Mrs. Fair,
-the matron. Doctor Duncan’s full title is Charles William Duncan, A.M.,
-Ph.D., but he is better known as “Charley”! There was――and doubtless
-are――also a Mrs. Duncan and a Miss Duncan, but they are not likely to
-enter into this narrative. So much then for our stage setting. I might
-keep on, but I fear you are weary, and I know I am!
-
-Hugh Ordway roomed on the top floor of Lothrop, the newest and most
-luxurious of the dormitories, sharing the suite of study and two
-bedrooms with Bert Winslow. Hugh’s father was English and his mother
-American, and, although Hugh had been born on the other side and had
-spent most of his sixteen years there, he declared himself to be half
-American. His full name was Hugh Oswald Brodwick Ordway, and in spite
-of the fact that by reason of his father being the Marquis of Lockely,
-Hugh had every right to the title of Earl of Ordway, he was generally
-known at Grafton as “Hobo,” a nickname evolved from his initials. As he
-was a straight, well-built, clear-skinned, young chap with quiet brown
-eyes and an undeniable air of breeding, the nickname was amusingly
-incongruous if one stopped to consider it. But Hugh had been known as
-Hobo Ordway ever since fall, when his cleverness as a running halfback
-on the first football team had surprised and delighted the school,
-and nowadays the name was too familiar to excite any comment. Hugh’s
-particular friends were more likely to call him “’Ighness,” however.
-
-It was Hugh, alone in the study, who responded to the knock at the
-door shortly after supper that evening and who successfully disguised
-the surprise he felt when he recognized his visitors as Jimmy Logan
-and Dudley Baker. He made them welcome quite as heartily as though he
-had been expecting them all day, and Dud, who had hung back all the
-way up the three flights of slate stairs, was vastly relieved. The
-conversation skipped from one subject to another for the first few
-minutes, during which time Hugh, perched on the window-seat, leaving
-the easy-chairs to his guests, hugged his knees to his chin, piloted
-the conversation and secretly wondered at the visit.
-
-You are not to suppose, however, that Hugh was the only one of the
-three at his ease. Such a supposition shows on your part a vast
-ignorance of Jimmy Logan. Jimmy was a stranger to embarrassment. Had
-Hugh been the President of the United States or the King of England
-or――well, “Home Run” Baker, Jimmy would have been just as splendidly
-at ease as he was this moment. He might have assumed a more dignified
-attitude in the Morris chair and his voice might have held a more
-respectful tone, but beyond that――no, not Jimmy! Just now Jimmy was
-humorously recounting his skiing adventures that afternoon and Hugh
-was chuckling over them. Dud smiled when Hugh laughed, sitting rather
-stiffly in his chair, and tried his best to look animated and pleasant
-and only succeeded in looking anxious and uncomfortable. Jimmy did his
-best to get Dud to talk, but Dud’s conversation consisted largely of
-“Yes” and “No” and Hugh secretly thought him a bit of a stick. Jimmy
-was wondering whether to withdraw as gracefully as possible before
-Dud created any worse impression when the door opened to admit a
-black-haired, dark-eyed fellow of seventeen who, with less command over
-his features than Hugh, looked frankly surprised when he saw who the
-visitors were. The surprise even extended to his voice as he greeted
-them.
-
-“Hello, Jimmy,” said Bert Winslow. “What are you doing up here? Haven’t
-seen you around here for ages.” He spoke to Dud then, hesitating a
-moment as though not certain of the latter’s name. Dud, noting the
-fact, felt his embarrassment increase and wished that Jimmy would
-give the word to leave. But Jimmy had already abandoned thoughts of
-withdrawing. He liked Bert Winslow, just as most fellows did, and
-welcomed the chance to talk to him. Bert and Jimmy were both members of
-“Lit”――short for Literary Society――and only two evenings ago had been
-pitted against each other in one of the impromptu weekly debates and
-had struggled along nip and tuck until Jimmy, abandoning facts, had in
-a wild flow of rhetoric won the meeting. Bert alluded to it now as he
-tossed his cap through the open door of his bedroom.
-
-“Jimmy, that was a fine lot of hot air you got off the other night,” he
-said with a grin. “Didn’t your folks ever teach you anything about the
-beauties of truthfulness?”
-
-Jimmy laughed. “Sure, but I had to beat you somehow, Bert. Besides,
-what I said may be so for all I know!”
-
-“Huh! You just said the first thing that came into that silly head of
-yours! Did you ever hear such a mess of rot as he sprang, Hugh?”
-
-Hugh smiled. “It sounded all right! Some of the figures were corking.
-You must have a wonderful memory, Logan!”
-
-“Memory!” snorted Bert, seating himself beside Hugh on the window-seat.
-“There wasn’t a figure that was right! I looked it up afterwards. Did
-you hear him, Baker? Oh, no, you’re Forum, aren’t you?”
-
-“Yes,” replied Dud. He tried very hard to follow that up with something
-brilliant or amusing in regard to Jimmy’s debating, but couldn’t think
-of anything, possibly because Bert’s tone had held some of the careless
-contempt with which members of a society spoke of its rival, and Dud
-wished just for the moment that he, too, was “Lit.”
-
-Perhaps Hugh thought that his chum had verged on discourtesy, for
-he observed quickly: “They tell me you chaps have some awfully good
-talkers in Forum, Baker.”
-
-Dud agreed. “I guess Joe Leslie is our best; he and Guy Murtha.”
-
-“Murtha’s better than Joe, I think,” said Jimmy. “Anyway, he did a lot
-better last year in the debate with Mount Morris.”
-
-“Joe’s a wonder at hammering home facts,” said Bert. “Guy’s better at
-the eloquence stuff, though. Speaking of Guy, Hugh, reminds me that I
-told him you were going to try for the outfield this spring and he said
-he was mighty glad because if you could get on the base he was certain
-you could get around.”
-
-“Oh, but I say, Bert, I don’t know that I shall! Try for baseball, I
-mean.”
-
-“Of course you will!”
-
-“But I don’t know much about it. You say it’s quite different from
-cricket, eh?”
-
-“Quite, ’Ighness! You’ve seen baseball played, haven’t you?”
-
-“Oh, yes, once or twice, but――――”
-
-“I should think a fair cricket player would easily get the hang of
-baseball,” said Jimmy. “I guess it’s as hard to catch a cricket ball as
-a baseball, isn’t it? I suppose you’re a rattling good cricket player,
-Ordway.”
-
-“Oh, no, really I’m not,” exclaimed Hugh. “I’ve played a bit at it, of
-course. You chaps bowl――I mean pitch to the batters so like thunder,
-don’t you? I fancy I’ll be scared to stand up there, eh?”
-
-“You might if Gus Weston was pitching,” laughed Bert. “You going to
-play this year, Jimmy?”
-
-“Oh, I guess so. What would the dear old second do without me?”
-
-“Aren’t you trying for the first, though? You’re as good a fielder as
-Parker, I guess.”
-
-“I may. The fact is, Bert, I’m sort of used to the dear old second. It
-would be like leaving home to go to the first. Still, I may decide to
-break home ties and meet you fellows there.”
-
-“I fancy you’re not likely to meet me there,” said Hugh. “I’ll be an
-awful dub if I try it, I know. Do you play, Baker?”
-
-“A little,” answered Dud.
-
-“Dud’s the coming Mathewson,” said Jimmy. “Got to watch him, we have.
-Some twirler!”
-
-“Really?” asked Bert, evidently not much impressed. “That’s fine,
-Baker. The second rather needed pitchers last spring.”
-
-“He’s going out for the first,” said Jimmy. “Dud’s like me, you know.
-When Duty calls――――” Jimmy smiled eloquently.
-
-“I say, though, Logan, who is this Johnnie you spoke of? Mathews,
-wasn’t it?”
-
-“Not Johnnie; Christopher,” replied Jimmy gravely. “I referred to Mr.
-Christopher Mathewson, better known as ‘Matty,’ the Dean of American
-Pitchers. Dud and ‘Matty’ are as thick as thieves; that is, Dud is!
-Dud reads everything ‘Matty’ writes and can tell you off-hand how
-many games ‘Matty’ pitched last year and all the other years, and how
-many he won, and what his averages are and all the rest of it. He has
-a gallery of Mathewson pictures and he’s the proud possessor of a
-ball that Mathewson used in a game with Philadelphia back in 1760 or
-thereabouts. I don’t know how he got that ball, but I suspect that he
-swiped it.”
-
-“It was given to me,” said Dud defensively. Then he added, embarrassed:
-“You mustn’t mind what Jimmy says. He talks a lot of nonsense.”
-
-“I say, though,” exclaimed Hugh, “I do hope you get on the first,
-Baker. It must be a lot of fun to do the pitching, eh? More fun than
-fielding, I fancy.”
-
-“Have you pitched much?” inquired Bert politely.
-
-“I’ve been trying to for a couple of years,” answered Dud. “I don’t
-suppose I’ll make the first this year, of course, but Murtha said he’d
-be glad to have me try, and so――――”
-
-“You must make allowances for his modesty,” said Jimmy. “He’s really
-rather a shark at it. He can tell you just how to pitch any ball ever
-discovered, from a straight one to a ‘floater.’”
-
-“Question is, I guess,” Bert laughed, “whether he can _pitch_ ’em. I
-know _how_ to pitch a ‘knuckle ball,’ but I can’t do it. I remember
-now, Baker, you pitched some on the second last year, didn’t you?”
-
-“Only three games, or parts of them, Winslow. I dare say I won’t be
-good enough this year, but――I thought I’d try.”
-
-“Of course,” said Bert heartily. “Nothing like trying. The trouble is,
-though, you’ve got some good ones to stack up against, eh? There’s Nate
-Leddy and Ben Myatt――――”
-
-“And Gus Weston,” observed Jimmy gravely.
-
-Bert smiled. “Just the same, Gus has pitched some good games for us.
-But isn’t he a wonder when he goes up?”
-
-Jimmy chuckled. “Gus Weston can go up quicker and higher than any
-fellow I ever saw,” he said. “And when he _is_ wild――――” He ended with
-an impressive whistle.
-
-“He looked pretty promising last spring,” continued Bert. “Remember the
-game he pitched against Middleboro? They only got six hits off him, I
-think.”
-
-“Yes, and Kelly is another chap that is likely to make good this year,”
-said Jimmy. “Oh, we’re pretty well off for twirlers, but you wait until
-Dud gets going. And speaking of going, Dud, what do you say if we do a
-little of it?”
-
-“Don’t rush off,” said Bert. “Well, come around again, Jimmy.”
-
-Probably the invitation was meant to include Dud, but Hugh thought that
-Dud might not interpret it so and added cordially, “Yes, do, fellows!”
-
-On the way downstairs Jimmy said: “Well, we got out of that pretty
-well, Dud. I thought for a while you were going to spoil everything by
-monopolizing the conversation the way you did, but――――”
-
-“I don’t seem to know what to talk about,” said Dud ruefully. “I guess
-Ordway thought me an awful ass.”
-
-“Well, he rather pointedly invited you to come back, so I don’t think
-you need to worry about that. The next time――――”
-
-“There won’t be any next time,” interrupted the other. “It’s just like
-you said, Jimmy. I can’t mix and there’s no use trying.”
-
-“Oh, yes, there is! We’ve just started. That was the――the entering
-wedge, so to say. We’ll drop around again next week. And between now
-and then I’ll put you through a course of sprouts, old chap. We’ll mix
-in society. Just as soon as you can learn to forget your plaguey self,
-Dud, you’ll get on finely. The trouble is with you that you just sit
-and worry about what fellows are thinking of you. But I’ll break you of
-that quick enough.”
-
-“I guess we’ll call it off,” muttered Dud.
-
-“And I guess we won’t,” was the firm response. “Having set my hand
-to the plow, Dudley, I never look back. That’s me. My full name is
-Grim Determination. All others are impostors. Accept no substitutes.
-Guaranteed to comply with the Pure Food Law. After you, Dud. One flight
-and turn to the right, please.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-29 LOTHROP
-
-
-True to his promise――or threat, if you think with Dud――Jimmy haled his
-protesting friend from room to room in the evenings, made him join
-the throngs on the ice or the toboggan slide in the afternoons and on
-all occasions dragged him into the conversations and, to use his own
-expression, “got him in the spot-light.” It can’t be truthfully said
-that his efforts met with overwhelming success, however. Dud didn’t
-shine as a conversationalist or display any traits calculated to win
-popularity. No one disliked him in the least. Most of the time few were
-really conscious of his presence, in spite of Jimmy’s untiring efforts.
-Personally, as has been suggested, Dud didn’t take kindly to being
-exhibited and exploited, and when a fortnight or so after the inception
-of the undertaking Jimmy actually got to telling jokes and crediting
-them to Dud, the latter was supremely uncomfortable. Jimmy would
-chuckle and say: “Dud got off a good one the other day, fellows.” And
-then he would follow with some more or less brilliant remark or joke
-that sounded to Dud horribly flat. Generally the hearers laughed and
-shot surprised glances at the silent and embarrassed Dud, but he didn’t
-win recognition as a wit or a sage for all of that. Had they heard the
-things from Dud first-hand they might have been more impressed. As it
-was the credit went rather to Jimmy than Dud.
-
-Jimmy played Boswell to Dud’s Doctor Johnson with remarkable enthusiasm
-and patience. He evolved all sorts of schemes, most of which his chum
-promptly refused to consider, designed to waft Dud into the white light
-of publicity. For instance, he conceived the brilliant idea of having
-Dud write a notable article for _The Campus_, the school monthly. Dud
-had no serious objection to that project, but it fell through because
-neither of them could think of a subject to write on. Then Jimmy
-suggested that Dud get someone to break through the ice on the river
-so Dud could rescue him. Jimmy said he would be glad to impersonate
-the drowning character if he wasn’t afraid of catching cold and having
-rheumatism in his throwing arm. It was all highly entertaining for
-Jimmy and he thoroughly enjoyed it, but Dud was getting very tired
-of it. Every now and then Jimmy had what he called a “show down.” At
-such times he would take a list from his drawer in the study table and
-check off the names of fellows whose acquaintance Dud had succeeded in
-making since the last time.
-
-“Churchill, we got him. Check for Churchill. He was a brand new one,
-wasn’t he? Roy Dresser, check. Dresser was rather a success, Dud. I
-think he rather took to you. We must call there again. I’ll make a note
-of that. Dresser’s room is a good place to meet fellows. Parker, check.
-Parker’s an ass, anyway. Ayer――I say, Dud, we haven’t met Neil Ayer
-yet. Do you know him at all?”
-
-“Only to speak to.”
-
-“We’ll go after Ayer this evening, then. I know where to find him. He
-will be in Joe Leslie’s room, I guess. Foster Tray, check. Tray’s a
-good sort. Zanetti――that’s another chap we’ve missed. We’ll have to
-find him with Nate Leddy some time. I don’t know him at all. He’s a
-good fellow to know, though. Stands in with the football and the track
-crowds. I tell you what, Dud! Why not go out for the Track Team?”
-
-“Because I can’t do anything,” laughed Dud.
-
-“How do you know you can’t?” asked Jimmy, untroubled. “Besides,
-you wouldn’t have to really _do_ anything. You could have a try at
-something and you’d meet a lot of fellows. Jumping isn’t awfully hard.
-Why not try the broad jump?”
-
-“I couldn’t do that and pitch too, you idiot.”
-
-“That’s so. I forgot. Still, some fellows do go in for baseball and
-track. There’s Cherry, for instance. Well, never mind. Maybe we’d
-better――er――concentrate.” Jimmy sat back and studied Dud speculatively,
-tapping his pen against his teeth the while. “What we’ve got to do,
-Dud,” he continued presently, in the tones of one who has reached a
-weighty conclusion after much thought, “is to put it all over those
-other box artists. That’s our line, Dud. We’ve got to spring you as a
-startling phenom! Yes, sir, that’s the game!”
-
-“That’s all well enough, Jimmy, but suppose I can’t pitch a little bit
-when the time comes?”
-
-“By Ginger, you’ve got to! Look here, you’re wasting time. You ought
-to be at it every day. You ought to get down in the cage in the gym
-and practice. What time is it now? Nearly six, eh? Too late today,
-then. But tomorrow we’ll put in a half-hour, and the next day, too, and
-right along until they call candidates. I’ll catch you. I’ll borrow a
-mitt somewhere. It’ll be good fun, too. Practice for both of us. Great
-scheme, eh?”
-
-“Do you mind?” asked Dud eagerly.
-
-“Love to! We’ve got a week yet and you ought to be able to get a lot
-of practice in a week. That’s settled, then. But we mustn’t forget
-the――er――the social side of the campaign. So let’s see.” Jimmy
-bent over his list again. “Quinn, check. Milford――had him before.
-Forbes――――”
-
-The second visit to Hugh Ordway’s study came off right on schedule,
-nine days after the first call, but on this occasion Dud and Jimmy
-found the room jammed from door to windows with fellows and a loud
-and even violent argument going on. Their appearance went practically
-unnoticed and they found seats with some difficulty and became for a
-while silent listeners. The argument proved to be concerned with the
-election the evening before of one Starling Meyer as captain of the
-Hockey Team. The hockey team had just finished a disastrous season,
-ending with a second defeat by Grafton’s ancient rival, Mount Morris.
-Lack of hard ice had aided in the team’s demoralization, but besides
-that things had gone badly from start to finish, and there were many
-who credited the afore-mentioned Meyer with having been largely to
-blame. “Pop” Driver, who played right guard on the eleven and was
-normally good-natured to a fault, expressed the views of the anti-Meyer
-faction.
-
-“Meyer,” Pop was saying, “has caused more trouble all the winter than
-he’s worth. Everything that Yetter’s wanted to do one way, Star’s
-insisted on doing another. You fellows know that, all of you. Look at
-the way they changed the style of play in the middle of the season.
-Yetter started out playing four men on defense and it worked all right.
-Then Star got to saying that we weren’t scoring enough points and
-that the four-men-back business was all wrong. He grouched and sulked
-about it until Yetter gave in to him. After that we got licked right
-along, with one or two exceptions, and finally Yetter went back to the
-old style again, and Star threatened to quit and there was the dickens
-to pay for awhile. Star’s simply no use unless he can be the whole
-shooting-match.”
-
-“Well, they’ve made him captain,” said Jim Quinn, football manager, “so
-now he can show what he knows.”
-
-“There’s no sense in blaming everything on Star Meyer,” declared Ned
-Musgrave. “Yetter’s a good chap, but he hadn’t any business being
-captain. There’s where the whole trouble began. If Yetter――――”
-
-“Warren would have been all right,” said Bert Winslow, “if Star had
-let him alone. But Star hates to see anyone else have any say about
-anything. He’s a peach of a hockey player, I’ll grant you that, but
-he’s a peach of a trouble-maker, too. And I’ll bet you anything things
-will be in a worse mess next year than they were this.”
-
-“Why didn’t they elect Gus Weston?” asked Roy Dresser. “Gus would have
-made a dandy leader.”
-
-“Because Star pulled all the strings he could,” answered Pop, “and
-scared the fellows into voting for him.”
-
-“I happen to know, Pop,” interposed Musgrave warmly, “that more than
-three-fourths of the team wanted Star for captain long before election.
-You might as well be fair to him, Pop. Give him a show. Don’t convict a
-fellow before he’s tried, I say!”
-
-“All right, Ned,” answered Pop good-naturedly. “We’ll let him have his
-trial. Maybe you’re right, too. Star may make a better captain than he
-did a first lieutenant. Let’s hope so. I won’t be here to see, though.”
-
-“What makes you think so?” inquired Nick Blake maliciously, raising a
-laugh at Driver’s expense. Pop, as he himself put it, was doing the
-four-year course in five, and there was always some doubt as to his
-getting through in five. Pop grinned now and shook his head.
-
-“They’ll give me my diploma to get rid of me, Nick,” he said.
-
-Jimmy, who had remained quiescent until now, took advantage of a
-momentary lull in the discussion and chuckled. Pop, beside him, turned
-inquiringly. “What’s on your mind, Jimmy?” he inquired.
-
-“I was just thinking of something Dud got off awhile ago,” replied
-Jimmy, still visibly amused. Dud threw an entreating look at him, but
-Jimmy pretended not to see it.
-
-“Dud who?” asked Pop.
-
-“Dud Baker, over here.” Jimmy’s glance indicated his friend. “We
-were talking about the hockey team losing so many games one day and
-Dud said he guessed the trouble with them”――Jimmy had managed to
-gain the attention of the room by now――“was that they were weak from
-Star-vation!”
-
-Dud looked anything but like the author of the bonmot at that moment,
-but the audience laughed, even Ned Musgrave, and Jimmy credited himself
-with a bull’s-eye.
-
-“The pun,” observed Nick Blake gravely, “is considered the lowest form
-of humor.”
-
-“I think that’s mighty clever,” exclaimed Hugh. “You’re hipped because
-you didn’t think of it yourself, Nick.”
-
-“Dry up, ’Ighness! I was about to say when you so rudely interrupted
-that it is, of course, necessary to consider one’s audience, and that,
-having the mentality of the audience in mind, Baker’s joke may be
-considered clever, even brilliant. For my part――――”
-
-“Choke him, somebody,” said Bert. “After all, say what you like about
-Star, you’ve got to acknowledge that there’s much to ad-Meyer about――――”
-
-But Nick’s groan of anguish drowned the rest, and Dresser, pretending
-disgust, arose to depart, setting the example for several others.
-Jimmy, fearing that Dud’s gloomy silence might undo the effect created
-by the joke, thought the moment a good one for retiring and led his
-chum away. Outside, Dud remonstrated again.
-
-“I wish you wouldn’t, Jimmy,” he said. “I feel such an awful fool when
-you spring those jokes and tell fellows I made ’em. They must know I
-didn’t!”
-
-“Why? You do say things as good as that, don’t you? When there’s no one
-but me around, I mean.”
-
-“I don’t know. Maybe. I didn’t think that was awfully funny, anyway,
-Jimmy.”
-
-Jimmy chuckled. “I do. And the others did. Cheer up, Dud. I’ll make a
-celebrity of you in spite of yourself!”
-
-Later, back in Number 29 Lothrop, Bert Winslow laughed suddenly while
-he was getting ready for bed and Hugh, hearing, called across from his
-own bedroom.
-
-“What’s the joke, Bert?”
-
-“I was thinking of the one Jimmy Logan sprung; about the hockey team
-being weak from Star-vation. It isn’t so bad, eh?”
-
-“Rather clever, but it was that chap Baker who said it, wasn’t it?”
-
-“I guess so. But look here,” continued Bert, appearing in his doorway
-in the course of a struggle with his collar, “why is it Baker never
-gets off any of those things himself? It’s always Jimmy Logan who
-springs ’em. All Baker does is to sit and look glum. If he’s so
-all-fired clever why doesn’t he say something once in a while? I think
-he’s a bit of a pill.”
-
-“He’s not so bad, I fancy,” replied Hugh. “Maybe you have to know him.
-Some chaps are like that, if you know what I mean.”
-
-“Yes, but――――” Bert’s voice died out until he had at last wrenched the
-refractory collar from his neck. Then: “Here’s another funny thing,
-Hugh,” he said. “Jimmy lugs that fellow around every place with him;
-sort of butts in with him everywhere. You’d think Jimmy was a――a
-nurse-maid or something. Looks to me as if he was trying to introduce
-his young friend into Society. I wouldn’t care a bit if he forgot to
-bring him up here the next time.”
-
-“What have you got against him?” inquired Hugh.
-
-“Nothing much. He’s only a lower middler, though, and lower middlers
-ought to keep to their own set. Besides, look at the cheek of the kid!
-Going to try for pitcher on the first! What do you know about that?”
-
-“But if he’s really any good at it,” began the other.
-
-“How could he be? He can’t be more than fifteen, I guess.”
-
-“You were young once yourself, old chap.”
-
-“Yes, but I didn’t try to pitch on the first team,” grumbled Bert.
-“He’s too fresh.”
-
-“I’ll tell you just what’s the matter with him,” said Hugh, appearing
-in the study in a suit of pink-striped pajamas. “He’s shy, Bert.”
-
-“Shy! And going out for the first nine!”
-
-“I know it doesn’t look so,” laughed Hugh, “but that’s just what his
-trouble is, and I rather fancy that Logan, out of pure kindness, is
-trying to bring him out, if you know what――――”
-
-“Pure kindness!” scoffed Bert. “Jimmy’s kind enough, I guess, but if
-that’s his game you can bet all you’ve got that he’s doing it for a
-lark. I know Jimmy!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-A CHANCE MEETING
-
-
-Two days after the visit to Hugh Ordway’s room Jimmy Logan’s joke
-which he had attributed to Dud bore unexpected fruit. The remark
-had tickled the fellows who had heard it and consequently they very
-promptly repeated it, with the natural result that within twenty-four
-hours it got around to Starling Meyer himself. Star, as he was
-generally called, was a large, good-looking boy of seventeen, well
-supplied with self-conceit. He was a rattling good hockey player,
-undoubtedly the best in school, and a fair performer with the second
-nine in the outfield. There his athletic prowess ended, for he
-considered――or pretended to consider――track sports unimportant and
-football unscientific. He was a clever student and stood high in
-class, and was, in consequence, rather a favorite with the faculty.
-As a member of the Forum Society his activities were critical rather
-than constructive, for he took no part in the debates beyond attending
-them and pointing out the deficiencies of the debaters in a superior
-manner. Most fellows liked him, especially those who were not clever
-in the lines he affected, and even those who saw through his poses and
-couldn’t stand his conceit accorded him honor for his brilliancy in
-class-room and on the ice. Although Star roomed next door to Dud, the
-latter knew him only as he knew three-fourths of the students, that is,
-to nod to on passing. Once or twice, since they had both been rather
-unimportant members of the second baseball team last year, they had
-spoken. But beyond that they were strangers, and so when, two days
-after that visit to 29 Lothrop, Star Meyer stopped Dud in front of Trow
-by the simple but effective method of seizing him by the arm, Dud was
-somewhat surprised. Star was scowling and Dud didn’t need more than
-one glance at his face to realize that he was angry. Even when angry,
-however, Star didn’t allow himself to forget his pose of contemptuous
-superiority, and now when he spoke he managed a one-sided smile
-designed to remind Dud of the honor being done him.
-
-“Baker, you’re a remarkably fresh young kid,” began Star, “and some day
-that mouth of yours is going to get you into a heap of trouble. Ever
-think of that?”
-
-Dud, puzzled, moved restively in the bigger boy’s grasp but failed to
-get free. “I don’t know what you mean, Meyer,” he protested.
-
-“Yes, you do. What’s the good of lying? After this you leave my name
-out of your funny jokes; hear?”
-
-“I don’t know what――――” began Dud again. Then recollection of Jimmy’s
-bon-mot came to him and he flushed.
-
-“The next time I’ll kick you from here to the river,” said Star in a
-quietly venomous tone. “I’d do it now for a couple of buttons, too. You
-leave my name strictly alone, Baker, after this. Understand me?”
-
-“Yes, but honest, Meyer, I didn’t say――――” Then, however, Dud had to
-stop, for, although innocent, to insist on the fact would put the blame
-on Jimmy. He dropped his eyes. “All right,” he muttered.
-
-Somehow that phrase seemed to add fresh fuel to Star’s smoldering
-anger, for he took a fresh and very painful grip on Dud’s arm and said:
-“All right, is it? Well, it isn’t all right, kid! You’re a sneaky
-little bounder, that’s what you are! Saying smart-aleck things and then
-trying to lie out of it! Don’t you ever mention my name again. If you
-do I’ll get you and you won’t forget it in a hurry. Now you beat it!”
-
-[Illustration: “‘You’re a sneaky little bounder, that’s what you are!’”]
-
-With a sudden wrench at the captive arm, Star spun Dud around and aimed
-a kick at him. Fortunately, a premonition of what was happening
-caused Dud to jump aside and Star’s foot missed its goal. Dud, angry
-himself now, turned with clenched fists and flashing eyes. But the
-situation was distinctly hopeless. Star topped him by a head and Dud
-was suddenly conscious of his own physical inferiority. Still he
-might have tried conclusions had it not been for the smile of haughty
-contempt on the other’s countenance. Somehow that smile was too much.
-It seemed to say: “What, you dare to show disrespect to _me_? Begone,
-impious mortal!” Dud’s fingers straightened again, he gulped down his
-resentment, stole a doubtful glance at a group of fellows who were
-looking on curiously from the dormitory steps and walked away, trying
-his best to appear dignified and unconcerned but secretly feeling like
-a whipped cur. Later, when he recounted the episode to Jimmy the latter
-took him to task vigorously.
-
-“Why didn’t you tell him you didn’t say it? I’m not afraid of the big
-fraud!”
-
-“Considering you’d told everyone that I had said it――――”
-
-“Yes, that’s so.” Jimmy frowned mightily. “Well, then, why didn’t you
-light into him? Don’t you see that the fellows who were watching you
-will think you were afraid of him?”
-
-“I wanted to, but――but somehow he looked so――so sort of _superior_――――”
-
-“Yah! That’s Star’s best bluff! Bet you anything if you’d hit him just
-one little tap on the nose he’d have run! Hang it, Dud, you’ve got to
-play up, boy! Here I am making you out a regular feller, and the first
-chance you get to――to put yourself in the lime-light you fall down!
-Why, you had the finest sort of an opportunity to distinguish yourself!
-Think what it would have meant to you, Dud! Fellows would have said:
-‘What do you know about young Baker licking Star Meyer right in front
-of Trow this morning? Had it all over him, they say! Beat him something
-brutal! Some class to that kid, eh?’ That’s the way they’d have talked
-you up. Now you’ve gone and――――”
-
-“Don’t be an ass,” begged Dud with spirit. “You know plaguey well I
-couldn’t lick Star. He’s six inches taller than I am, and he’s at least
-seventeen years old, and he’s――he’s stronger――――”
-
-“Son, when you get in a row with another chap,” replied Jimmy
-emphatically, “don’t you stop to figure out how much bigger or stronger
-he is. You jump in and get the first lick at him. You’ll be surprised
-to find what a lot of inches that first whack takes off the other chap!
-What you should have done――――”
-
-“Well, I didn’t,” said Dud shortly. “You wouldn’t have, either, I
-guess.”
-
-Jimmy grinned. “Never mind what I’d have done, Dud. I’m not making a
-name for myself. I’m not――――”
-
-“Neither am I. You are. And I’m getting sick of it. It’s no use,
-anyway. Let’s drop it.”
-
-“Drop nothing,” replied Jimmy vigorously. “We’re getting on famously.
-Why――――”
-
-“You’ve just said I’ve queered myself!”
-
-“I said you’d missed a chance to make a hit. So you have. But we can
-fix that all right. Those fellows who saw it will talk, I guess, but we
-can talk too. Who were they?”
-
-“I don’t know. Stiles was one, though.”
-
-“The sweetest little gossip in school,” commented Jimmy. “All right,
-Dud, you leave it to me. Your Uncle James will fix it all hunky for
-you. You sit tight and――yes, that’s the game! Dud, you must go around
-looking very dignified for a couple of days.”
-
-“Rot!”
-
-“I mean it. You must make fellows think that you resisted a great
-temptation and that it has――er――has sobered you. Get me?”
-
-“What temptation?” asked Dud, puzzled.
-
-“Why, the temptation to lose your temper and beat Star up, of course,”
-explained Jimmy patiently. “That’s our line, don’t you see? It was only
-by――by superhuman control that you manfully resisted the impulse to
-fell him to the ground! Great stuff, what? You just wait till I tell
-it!”
-
-“Jimmy, for the love of lemons don’t start anything else! Every time
-you get to talking you put me in a hole. You’ve got fellows thinking
-I’m a wit, and they all look at me in a funny sort of a way as if they
-were waiting for me to spring something bright, and I get tongue-tied
-and can’t think of a thing to say. And you’re telling it around that
-I’m going to be a wonderful pitcher, too. They don’t believe that, of
-course, but it makes me look silly. And now you want to make me out
-a――a scrapper――――”
-
-“Not at all, not at all! Star resented your remark about him and spoke
-insultingly to you. You gave him a beautiful calling down and he didn’t
-dare talk back. Then, when your back was turned, he tried to kick you,
-and you, stifling your――er――your natural and excusable indignation,
-kept your temper wonderfully and walked superbly away. All through the
-encounter your dignity was sublime!”
-
-Dud groaned. “You’ll simply make me out an awful ass and fellows will
-laugh at you――and me. I wish you wouldn’t, Jimmy!”
-
-“That remark merely shows how little you appreciate my powers of
-diplomacy,” replied the other in tones of sorrowful resignation. “But
-never mind. I shall continue to do my best for you, Dud, even though
-my efforts are unappreciated, misunderstood. Leave it all to me, my
-young friend. Appear very dignified and――and aloof. Let’s see you look
-aloof, Dud.”
-
-Dud only looked disgusted.
-
-“Not a bit like it,” resumed the other cheerfully. “More like this. Get
-it? Sort of hinting at a secret sorrow or――no, that’s not exactly the
-idea, either. You want to look like the hero in the second act of the
-play, when everyone thinks he stole the jewels and the heroine spurns
-him. He knows that he’s innocent, you see, and knows that the audience
-will know it in the last act. So he just looks disdainful and a bit sad
-and sort of moons around by himself and smokes a good deal to salve his
-sorrow――――”
-
-“I can’t smoke,” interrupted Dud practically. “They won’t let me, and I
-don’t like it anyway.”
-
-Jimmy waved his hand airily. “You get the idea, though, Dud. ‘Too proud
-to fight’ is your line, old chap. Now shut up and let me think.”
-
-Jimmy’s thinking resulted in action. That afternoon about four he might
-have been observed lingering idly in front of School Hall, hands in
-pockets, whistling tunelessly, evidently quite at a loose end. Nick
-Blake tried to entice him up to Lit to play pool, Gus Weston suggested
-the joys of a trip to the village for hot soda and Pete Gordon strove
-to lure him to his room. Jimmy resisted heroically and was left to his
-devices. It was a particularly disagreeable afternoon, with a hard
-wind freezing the pools along the walk, and Jimmy from time to time
-glanced impatiently at the big doors behind him. But it was nearly the
-half-hour before they finally opened again to emit Ned Stiles. Warned
-by the creaking of the portal, Jimmy instantly assumed the appearance
-of one who, passing, has his attention attracted by the sound of an
-opening door. This in the face of the fact that he had been all along
-aware that Stiles, in trouble with Mr. Gibbs, the history instructor,
-had been having an after-school séance with “Gusty” in a classroom.
-Stiles was an upper middler, seventeen years old, an uninteresting and
-rather sycophantic youth whom Jimmy secretly disliked very much. Stiles
-suspected the fact and was consequently somewhat surprised when Jimmy,
-after nodding briefly, halted and awaited him at the foot of the steps.
-
-“Hello, Stiles. Rotten day, isn’t it? Seen Guy Murtha lately?”
-
-Stiles shook his head, changing his books from one elbow to the other
-in order to reach his handkerchief and blow a very red nose. Stiles
-always had a cold in winter and snuffled from October to April.
-
-“Can’t find him anywhere,” continued Jimmy in preoccupied tones,
-accommodating his steps to those of the other boy and continuing on
-toward Trow. “Star Meyer said he thought he’d gone to the village. I
-want to see him awfully.”
-
-“I haven’t seen him all day, I guess,” said Stiles. He was hoping
-that some of the fellows would look from their windows and see him
-hob-nobbing with Jimmy.
-
-“Well, I guess I can get him at supper,” said the latter. Then he
-chuckled, and, in response to Stiles’ unspoken question, explained, “I
-was thinking of Star. He hasn’t got over it yet, I guess. Grumpy as
-anything he was.”
-
-“Got over what?” asked Stiles eagerly.
-
-“Didn’t you hear about it?” Jimmy looked at him incredulously. “Why,
-Dud Baker gave him an awful calling down this morning and Star took it
-like a lamb. Say, that kid certainly has got spunk!”
-
-Stiles viewed the other suspiciously, but Jimmy’s countenance expressed
-truth and quiet amusement. Stiles grunted. Then he said “Huh!”
-doubtfully.
-
-“Star was mad as a hornet about something Dud said; some joke or other,
-you know.”
-
-Stiles nodded. “Yes, about the hockey team dying of Star-vation.”
-
-“Was that it? Well, anyway, he got after Dud and wanted Dud to
-apologize and Dud told him to chase himself, that it was all true and
-that every fellow in school knew it, and a lot more. And Star was mad
-enough to bite! Think of Dud getting away with it!”
-
-“I saw it,” said Stiles, “but it didn’t look――just like that to me.
-Star had Baker by the arm and it looked like he was reading the riot
-act to him. And then he tried to kick him and Baker beat it.”
-
-“Good thing for Star he did, then,” said Jimmy knowingly. “I’d hate to
-stand up to Dud Baker when he was riled!”
-
-“I didn’t know he was――that sort,” said Stiles interestedly. They had
-reached the entrance to Trow and paused at the door.
-
-“Dud Baker? Didn’t you ever hear why he left the school he was at
-before he came here?”
-
-Stiles shook his head.
-
-“Well, it isn’t a nice story to tell, although it wasn’t all Dud’s
-fault. I heard it from a fellow who was there and saw it. In fact, he
-helped to carry the other fellow to his room. He was three years older
-than Dud and a whole head taller, too, they say. But Dud isn’t the sort
-of fellow you can bully. Or he wasn’t. Nowadays Dud will stand a lot.
-I guess after that fracas he learned to keep his temper. The other
-fellow was in bed a month. It was such a close shave for him that it
-sort of sobered Dud up and he will go most any length now to keep from
-scrapping. He’s got an awful punch, they say.”
-
-Stiles looked vastly amazed, but Jimmy, glancing from the corners of
-his eyes, saw to his satisfaction that there was no incredulity in the
-amazement. Stiles had swallowed the yarn whole and was gasping for
-more. But Jimmy knew the value of silence.
-
-“Well, I guess I’ll run over to Lothrop. If you should see Guy you
-might tell him I’m looking for him. So long.”
-
-“But, look here, Logan,” called Stiles eagerly; “what was it Baker said
-to Star, eh?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know just what he told him, but it was aplenty. And Star
-took it, too!”
-
-“But he――he kicked Baker! We saw him!”
-
-“Never!” replied Jimmy vehemently. “He may have kicked _at_ him. In
-fact, some fellow told me he did aim a kick at Dud when Dud’s back was
-turned. Said Dud turned like a tiger on him then and he thought sure
-it was all up with Star. But Dud controlled himself and walked quietly
-away. Gee, I couldn’t have done that, Stiles! It must have been great
-to see, wasn’t it?”
-
-“Why――er――yes, only――――” Stiles paused. “It looked to us as if Baker
-was scared, Logan. Of course he wasn’t, but that’s what it looked like.
-I didn’t know he was such a scrapper.”
-
-“Who, Dud?” Jimmy spread his hands expressively. “Take my advice, old
-man, and don’t let him hear you say he looked scared, though maybe he
-wouldn’t touch you. And then again he might lose control of that temper
-of his and―――― Better not risk it, I guess.”
-
-“I wouldn’t think of it,” said Stiles earnestly. “I didn’t really think
-he was scared, you know; only some of the other fellows who saw it said
-it _looked_ that way. Don’t tell Dud Baker I said that, will you?”
-
-“Me? No indeed. In fact, I wouldn’t mention the thing to him at any
-price. He’s awfully touchy, you see, and ever since this morning he’s
-been sort of like a bear with a sore head. I guess there’s times when
-he wishes he’d forgotten himself and let fly! Well, so long!”
-
-Jimmy walked on toward Lothrop and Ned Stiles plunged through the
-door and hurried down the corridor to leave his books and then spread
-his news to all who would hearken to it. And Jimmy, approaching the
-first entrance to Lothrop Hall, winked gravely at the ornamental brass
-knocker.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-DUD LOSES HIS TEMPER
-
-
-“Winter,” observed Jimmy very disgustedly one morning toward the last
-of February, “is sure ‘lingering in the lap of spring,’ as the poet
-hath it. Between you and me, Dud, I guess winter’s fallen asleep there!
-Here it is almost March and everything’s still covered up with snow or
-ice. Or water,” he added a second later, his gaze falling to the pools
-of melting snow that lay in the hollows of the campus.
-
-The windows were wide open and the air that came in, while chill and
-damp, still, somehow, held a suggestion――or perhaps a faint promise――of
-spring. But the sky was leaden, between the walks the sod was hidden
-under patches of dirty snow or ice that had begun to melt a little and
-the whole morning world had a tired and bedraggled look. Jimmy, still
-attired in pajamas, shivered and turned disapprovingly away. Then his
-gaze fell on Dud and the disapproval increased, for Dud, half awake a
-moment before, had nestled down on the rumpled pillow again and was
-sleeping peacefully. Jimmy was righteously indignant.
-
-“Wake up, you sluggard!” he bawled, pulling the clothes from the other.
-“Here I’ve been talking to you for five minutes, saying perfectly
-gorgeous things, and you haven’t heard a word! Get up, you lazy loafer,
-and hear the birdies sing――or sneeze! Come out of there!”
-
-Dud came out, rather in a heap, blinking confusedly, and strove to pull
-the clothes from the bed to his shrinking form on the floor. But Jimmy
-was merciless, and Dud was forced to arise grumblingly and rub his
-sleepy eyes.
-
-“Wh――what time is it?” he yawned.
-
-“Never mind what time it is,” replied Jimmy severely. “It’s time you
-were up and doing――――”
-
-“‘With a heart for any fate,’” murmured Dud poetically if sleepily.
-“What day is it?”
-
-“Great Jumpin’ Jehosophat!” exclaimed Jimmy. “He doesn’t even know
-the date! It’s a Tuesday, darling, and the month’s February, and the
-year――――”
-
-“Then it’s today practice begins,” said Dud. “I knew there was
-something.” He arose and sought his bath robe. “I’ll bet it’s awfully
-early. I don’t hear anyone up.”
-
-“You hear me up,” responded his roommate. “As a matter of fact, I don’t
-know just what time it is, because you forgot to wind the clock and my
-watch has stopped and I couldn’t find yours. But it must be long after
-six――――”
-
-“Six!” grunted Dud in deep disgust. “What do you go pulling me out of
-bed at six for? I’m going back again!”
-
-“I said it was long after six. Where’s your watch? Have a look at it.”
-
-Dud discovered that article at last dangling over the back of a chair,
-it having escaped from a pocket, and in more mollified tones informed
-Jimmy that it was twenty to seven. In the corridor a door opened and
-slippered feet pattered toward the bathroom. Jimmy set his watch and
-the clock, found his own robe and then, pausing at the door, asked
-solicitously:
-
-“How’s the old arm, Dud?”
-
-“Sore,” was the answer. Dud bent it and flexed it――it was his right
-one――and observed it scowlingly. “It’s lame all the way to the
-shoulder. _Ouch!_ And the shoulder’s lame, too!”
-
-“Too bad,” said Jimmy. “I was afraid you might overdo it, Dud.”
-
-“Well, whose silly idea was it, anyway?” demanded Dud indignantly. “Who
-suggested practicing every day, I’d just like to know?”
-
-“I did, of course, but I didn’t tell you to do too much of it and lame
-yourself, did I? What you’ve gone and done, Dud, is catch cold in it.
-You ought to be mighty careful that way. You ought――――”
-
-“Oh, dry up,” grumbled Dud. “You make me tired. If you know so pesky
-much about it, why didn’t you say something before? I wouldn’t have
-caught cold in it if you hadn’t insisted on slopping around in that
-rink yesterday with the water up to your ankles! No wonder I caught
-cold!”
-
-“Well, you’ll have to lay off a few days, old chap. It’ll be all right
-again, I guess.”
-
-“That’s fine, isn’t it, when I’ve got to report for practice this
-afternoon?”
-
-“You won’t have to pitch, though,” responded Jimmy consolingly. “Just
-do the setting-up stuff. Come on and get your bath.”
-
-“I don’t want any bath,” muttered Dud, still feeling of his pitching
-arm with cautious fingers. “You go ahead.”
-
-“Dud,” said the other severely, “you’ve got a grouch. You must have got
-out of bed the wrong way.”
-
-“I did, when you pulled me out,” was the pointed reply. “And who
-wouldn’t have a grouch, I’d like to know? I’ll have a fat chance to do
-any pitching, won’t I?”
-
-“You can tell ’em you lamed yourself, can’t you? Cheer up, Dud, and
-come ahead before the crowd gathers. I’ll rub it for you when we get
-back.”
-
-“Huh! I guess that’s what’s the matter with it now. You nearly killed
-me last night with your old massaging, as you called it.”
-
-“It may hurt a little,” said Jimmy earnestly, “but it’s awfully good
-for you. It’s regular Swedish stuff, Dud. I learned it from a chap at
-home who works in the gym. We ought to have some liniment, though. I
-wonder if that liquid dentifrice stuff of yours would do.”
-
-“I’ll do my own rubbing, thanks,” replied the other ungraciously. “If
-it hadn’t been for you――――”
-
-“Help!” wailed Jimmy, hurrying through the door. Then came the sound
-of quick scurrying in the corridor, and Dud, still mooning on the
-side of the bed, guessed that Jimmy and some other chap were racing
-for a bathtub. Dud hoped the other fellow would win. He continued to
-explore the lamed muscles of his arm for several minutes, finding a
-grim satisfaction in the twinges of pain he evoked. Finally, however,
-he slung the cords of his bath-robe together and dejectedly followed
-the others down the corridor. As luck would have it, three other youths
-were awaiting their turns at the tubs, while Starling Meyer reached the
-washroom at the same moment Dud did. Star fixed a haughty and scornful
-glare on the younger boy.
-
-“I’m ahead of you,” he announced briefly.
-
-Most any other time Dud would have acquiesced without a murmur, but
-this morning his peevishness made him combative and courageous. “Like
-fun you are,” he replied scowlingly.
-
-A perceptible thrill went through the other members of the waiting
-group. Dud Baker and Star Meyer were going to have a scrap! They had
-heard of Dud’s fighting reputation, and now they were to witness an
-example of that youth’s quality! They almost held their breaths in the
-excitement, their round eyes traveling from Star to Dud and back again
-expectantly. Star frowned portentously.
-
-“We’ll see,” he remarked coldly.
-
-“You bet we’ll see,” agreed Dud, a strange recklessness taking
-possession of him. Somehow this morning Star didn’t look nearly so
-formidable, perhaps because his eyes were still heavy with sleep or
-because the flaming red bath-robe in which he was enveloped was so
-palpable an affront to good taste. Star stared an instant in perplexed
-surprise and then deliberately turned his gaze away from Dud’s
-pugnacious countenance, indicating contempt and scorn and several
-other things that riled Dud still further. From the cubicles holding
-the tubs came the rush and splash of water and the voices of the
-bathers. No healthy boy ever bathed silently, and the four in the tubs
-were, judging from the sounds, remarkably robust! Jimmy was chanting
-a football pæan at the top of his lungs, another boy was singing
-something remarkably tuneless and repetitional and the other two were
-exchanging badinage across the partition at the tops of their voices.
-
-After a moment one of the doors opened, a very pink-hued youth emerged
-and it was the turn of one of the interested trio. Oddly enough
-the latter showed a strange disinclination to avail himself of his
-prerogative. Instead he offered in a whisper to let one of the others
-precede him. But the reply was a shake of the head, the boy not even
-removing his fascinated gaze from Dud.
-
-There was nothing for it but to go then, and the youth went,
-disappearing behind the door most reluctantly. Star moved impatiently
-from one foot to the other. “You fellows in there, get a move on,” he
-advised loudly. “We’ve been waiting here ten minutes.”
-
-“Keep on waiting, old chap,” replied Jimmy, interrupting his song.
-“Don’t know who you are, but you’re an awful fibber. I say, Dud, are
-you there?”
-
-“Yes,” growled Dud.
-
-“Hand me a piece of soap from the stand, will you?”
-
-Dud wanted to say no, but thought better of it and ungraciously crossed
-the washroom and secured a cake of soap. “Catch,” he called.
-
-“Stop it!” squealed Jimmy. “Don’t chuck! Here, pass it in.” The door
-opened a bit and Jimmy’s face appeared in the slit. “Squeeze in,” he
-whispered. “I’m through.”
-
-Dud thrust the door open and entered, and Jimmy quickly bolted it
-again. “Who’s out there?” he whispered. But before Dud could inform him
-Star Meyer’s voice was raised in indignant protest.
-
-“You can’t do that, Logan! It isn’t Baker’s turn. There are three of us
-ahead of him. You come out of there, Baker!”
-
-“I only took half a bath, Star,” replied Jimmy amiably. “I’m letting
-Dud have the other half.”
-
-“Yes, you are! No funny business now! Here, Benson, it’s your turn. Go
-ahead in. They can’t do that.”
-
-Benson, a slim, unaggressive youth, stared at Star in alarm. “I――I’m in
-no hurry, thanks, Meyer. I――I’d just as lief wait, thanks.”
-
-“Then you, whatever your name is, it’s your tub!”
-
-The second boy shook his head and grinned. “I don’t like that one,” he
-replied diplomatically. “The plug leaks. I’ll wait.”
-
-Star scowled and looked doubtfully at the closed door. For some reason
-intense quiet prevailed. Not a splash was heard. “Then if you fellows
-won’t take it,” he said resolutely, “it’s my turn. That’s my tub,
-Baker. You’d better come out of there.”
-
-“I’ll be out when I’ve had my bath,” was the truculent reply, followed
-by a sound very much like that caused by a hand descending approvingly
-on a bare shoulder. Star strode across and rattled the door, but the
-only response was the gurgling of water as the plug was withdrawn.
-
-“I’ll report you to Mr. Gibbs,” announced Star loftily. “You’re
-supposed to take your turn. You’d better let me in there.”
-
-Just then the door opened and Jimmy came out. Star drew back a step and
-Dud quickly shot the bolt again. Jimmy smiled sweetly and carelessly
-at Star. “Don’t be a grouch, old man,” he said. “There’s lots of water
-yet.”
-
-Star fell back on his haughty attitude and observed Jimmy as from
-Olympian heights. Jimmy chuckled. “Great stuff, Star,” he approved.
-Then he nodded affably to the round-eyed Benson and took himself
-gracefully from sight. At that moment another cubicle emptied itself of
-its occupant and Star, swallowing his wrath, absent-mindedly entered
-it, leaving the two waiting youths to scowl blankly at the closed
-door. After a moment Benson ejaculated in a careful whisper: “_Hog!_”
-The other boy nodded agreement. “I thought he and Baker were going to
-scrap,” he confided sotto voce. “Gee, I wish they had. And I wish
-Baker had done him up! He’s just a big bluff, that’s what he is!” From
-the further cubicle came the sound of song. Dud was regaining his
-temper.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-FIRST PRACTICE
-
-
-There was a large attendance at half-past three that afternoon in the
-baseball cage. Some forty-odd candidates, most of them last year’s
-first and second team members, had assembled for work, while fully as
-many others were on hand to watch proceedings. Not that anything very
-exciting promised, but it was a raw, uncomfortable sort of day outside
-and fellows were glad of any event that offered a half hour’s mild
-amusement. The cage was not a very ambitious affair, for it had been
-an after-thought and had been built after the building was erected and
-at a sacrifice of one of the two bowling alleys, which, thrown into
-the space formerly occupied by a storeroom, supplied area for a modest
-cage. It was large enough to throw at base distance in and to hold
-batting practice in if the batter didn’t attempt anything more than a
-tap. Also, of course, it made an excellent place for the pitchers to
-limber up.
-
-Dud and Jimmy went over to the gymnasium together, for the latter had
-finally decided to try his luck with the first nine. When, having got
-into his gymnasium suit, Dud looked around for Jimmy, he was rather
-disconcerted to find himself confronting Starling Meyer across the
-bench. Dud didn’t feel so brave today, and would have been just as
-satisfied if he hadn’t run across the hockey star. But the latter
-only glared in a haughtily disgusted manner and turned his back, and
-Dud heaved a sigh of relief, not loud but fervent, and made his way
-unobtrusively out of the locker-room. He was careful to nod or speak to
-such fellows as he knew, although lots of times it took a good deal of
-courage. He was obeying Jimmy’s directions, however.
-
-“Don’t wait for fellows to speak to you,” Jimmy had ordered. “Speak
-first. Don’t act as if you were afraid they wouldn’t know you, either.
-Just say, ‘Hello, Smith,’ sort of careless-like, or, if you don’t know
-them fairly well, just nod and smile. Don’t grin, smile. Like this.”
-And Jimmy turned the corners of his mouth up slightly and nodded his
-head very briefly. “Get the idea! ‘I know who you are, but I don’t
-recall the name.’ But don’t try that on the big fellows like――well,
-like Murtha and Trafford and those chaps. You want to be polite to
-them, sort of cordial, too. Only don’t let them think you’re trying to
-swipe.”
-
-“Which I am,” Dud had interpolated a trifle bitterly.
-
-“Not at all! You’re merely being――er――tactful. There’s a difference.
-Tact and diplomacy are great things, Dud. You want to practice ’em.”
-
-“Toadying, I call it!”
-
-“Tut, tut! Nothing like it. Call it――call it a studied effort to
-please!”
-
-“Call it what you like,” Dud had replied somberly. “It’s poor business.”
-
-“Some of our greatest citizens have been diplomats, Dud. Look at me!”
-
-Dud’s gaze picked out a number of baseball celebrities whom, under
-Jimmy’s tutelage, he had come to know well enough to speak to. In every
-case, if he found himself near enough to speak he spoke, or, failing
-that, he nodded, trying to look quite at his ease and not succeeding
-very well. Guy Murtha was there, of course, for Guy was this year’s
-captain. He was eighteen, a tall, decidedly plain youth with so many
-likable qualities that one soon forgot about his features. And Bert
-Winslow and Nick Blake were talking together further on, and near by
-were Ben Myatt and Pete Gordon and Nate Leddy. And Hugh Ordway was one
-of a group the rest of whom Dud knew only by sight. Jimmy appeared from
-somewhere and about that moment Mr. Sargent, the physical director and
-baseball coach, came in with Tris Barnes, the manager. Mr. Sargent,
-or “Pete,” as he was called, was short and square, with a beard and
-mustache and a pair of restless brown eyes behind the big round lenses
-of his spectacles. He had a nervous, impatient manner of speaking and
-was quite likely, to the secret amusement and delight of the fellows,
-to get his words twisted when the least bit excited.
-
-“All out of the cage, please, but team candidates,” was his order.
-“Close that door, somebody. Better bolt it, Churchill. Now, fellows,
-if you’ll kindly top stalking――ah――stop talking, we’ll get started.
-Captain Murtha, want to say anything?”
-
-“I guess not, sir. There’ll be plenty of time to talk later on,
-won’t there? I’d like to say, though, that we’re going to need more
-candidates than are here today and I wish you fellows would try and
-get others to come out. There’s no use waiting until we get outdoors,
-for this work in the cage is very important and fellows who miss it
-won’t stand much show. Our season begins pretty early this spring, a
-week earlier than last year, and we haven’t any too much time to get
-in shape. I’d like mighty well to see fully twenty more fellows here
-tomorrow.”
-
-“Yes, yes; this is a very poor showing,” agreed Mr. Sargent. “Well,
-we’ll make a start, fellows. We’re going to have setting-up work this
-afternoon and for a few days. How’s that, Barnes? No, no dumb-bells
-today, thanks. Just get in line, fellows, will you? About four rows
-will do. That’s it. Now then, follow me, please. And keep your mind on
-what you’re doing. One, two, three, four! Stretch the arms out as far
-as they’ll go. All right. Now the wrists; twist! One, two, three, four,
-five, six, seven, eight――keep it up! All right!”
-
-It soon became tiresome to Dud, for he hadn’t been in training and
-the gymnasium work twice weekly had not been strenuous. It was, he
-reflected, rather remarkable to find so many muscles that creaked
-in unsuspected places! Almost in front of him, in the second row,
-Star Meyer was going through the evolutions easily and gracefully
-and untiringly, and with something of his usual haughty disdain for
-anything not of his own devising. In gymnasium shirt and trunks Star
-showed strong and muscular, and Dud felt a warm satisfaction over
-the fact that he and Star had not come to blows that morning in the
-bathroom! Star’s legs were things to admire as the muscles played over
-them like whip-cords and Dud wished that he had paid a little more
-attention to his physical condition during the past year or two. He
-imagined that his own thin, elongated body must look strangely out of
-place there with all those other well-conditioned ones. Further along,
-where he could just be seen out of the corners of Dud’s eyes, stood
-Jimmy, sturdy and stocky, loafing a bit when Mr. Sargent’s gaze was
-not on him. Dud wanted to loaf, too, but didn’t dare.
-
-The calisthenics lasted less than a half-hour, by which time Dud was
-not the only one breathing hard and perspiring freely, and then Barnes
-set the candidates’ names down. When it was Dud’s turn to register
-Star Meyer was nearly at his elbow, a fact which added to Dud’s
-embarrassment.
-
-“Name?” asked the manager.
-
-“Dudley Baker, Upper Middle.”
-
-“Age, Baker?”
-
-“Fifteen.”
-
-“Experience?”
-
-“I was on the second nine last year.”
-
-“Position?”
-
-“P-pitcher, please.”
-
-Someone sniggered. It wasn’t Star, for Star never sniggered. It was too
-low and common. Star only looked insultingly amused. Barnes looked a
-little amused, too, although he tried not to.
-
-“All right, Baker. Get on the scales and let me know your weight
-tomorrow. Don’t forget, please.”
-
-Dud, aware of more than one amused countenance, moved away and sought
-the locker-room, conscious that his cheeks were very red. Jimmy,
-already out of his gymnasium togs, noticed and frowned disapprovingly.
-
-“Why the blushes, Dud?” he asked severely.
-
-Dud muttered something evasive and passed on to his locker. But later
-Jimmy wormed it out of him. Jimmy always could. And Jimmy frowned once
-more. “We’ll have to do something with Star,” he said thoughtfully,
-“something to make him have a little more respect for his betters. I
-wonder――――”
-
-Dud laughed. “I thought wondering was my stunt, Jimmy.”
-
-“So it is. I don’t wonder, then. I――I merely speculate. Look here, Dud,
-know what I think?” Dud shook his head hopelessly. “Well, then,” Jimmy
-went on, “I think you’d better have a show-down with Star.”
-
-“What sort of a――a show-down?” faltered Dud.
-
-“I mean pick a quarrel with him and fight him. You see, Star has a good
-deal of influence, and I’m afraid he’s been talking. One or two things
-have reached me, you know. What we’d better do is make an impression on
-him.”
-
-“Thanks!”
-
-“You’re not much of a slugger, are you?” Dud shook his head. “No, I
-suppose not,” continued Jimmy thoughtfully. “Well, neither am I, but I
-guess there are a few tricks I could teach you. Besides, I have a hunch
-that Star isn’t any fonder of scrapping than you are. I wouldn’t be a
-bit surprised if you could bluff him, Dud. Of course, I may be wrong,
-but that’s my idea of him.”
-
-“It’s a fine idea,” said Dud sarcastically, “but suppose you’re wrong?
-Then what?”
-
-“Why, then you’ll have to mix it up a bit,” replied the other quite
-cheerfully. “But we won’t try it until we’ve got in shape some. We’d
-ought to have a couple of pairs of light gloves. Know any fellow who
-has any, Dud?”
-
-“No, I don’t,” answered the other emphatically. “And if you think I’m
-going to stand up to Star Meyer and have him knock me around just
-to――just to please you, you’re horribly mistaken. Nothing doing!”
-
-“To please me! I like that! It isn’t to please me, you silly chump;
-it’s for your own good. Star is distinctly――distinctly inimical to your
-interests, and――――”
-
-“Yes, and he’d be distinctly inimical to my nose,” interrupted Dud
-warmly. “And I like my nose the way it is. You may not, but I do. I’m
-not going to fight him, and that’s all there is to it!”
-
-Jimmy was plainly disappointed. “It seems the only way, though, Dud,”
-he said pleadingly. “If you know any better way―――― And besides you’ve
-got a reputation for slugging to keep up. What will fellows think if
-you let Star sneer at you and don’t call him down?”
-
-“You had no business telling fellows I was a fighter,” said Dud. “You
-didn’t consult me about that and I’m not responsible now for what they
-think. I’m not a fighter and never was and never could be. I don’t know
-anything about it. And――and I don’t want to.”
-
-Jimmy sighed and shrugged. “You’re extremely _difficile_, Dud,” he said
-in a discouraged tone. “I plan things for you――――”
-
-“Plan things! I should say you did! You’re a bully little planner,
-Jimmy, but I don’t like your plans. Think up something that won’t get
-me killed, please!”
-
-“Piffle! What if Star did give you a black eye? You’d have the credit
-of putting up a game fight and fellows would like you better. I tell
-you, Dud, a fellow’s got to risk something now and then!”
-
-“You do the risking then,” replied the other a trifle sullenly. “I
-don’t want any black eyes, thanks.”
-
-“Oh, all right then. Still, we’ve got to take Star down a peg or two,
-Dud. But don’t you worry. I’ll fix my giant intellect on the problem.
-Leave it all to me, old chap.”
-
-“Yes,” answered Dud bitterly, “and find myself all beaten up some fine
-day! Look here, Jimmy, I guess this thing’s gone about far enough.
-Let’s drop it now. I――I guess I don’t care so much about being a
-‘regular feller’ as I did. It――it’s too plaguey strenuous!”
-
-“Give it up just when we’re beginning to show results?” cried Jimmy in
-amazement. “Never! When I start a thing, Dud, I see it through. That’s
-me, old chap. Having once set my hand to the plow――――”
-
-Dud groaned in despair. “Well, then,” he muttered, “I wish you’d go off
-and plow somewhere else!”
-
-“Cheer up, Dud, the dawn is breaking!” Jimmy slapped him encouragingly
-on the back. “We’ll make a regular feller of you yet!”
-
-“That’s all well enough, Jimmy, but what I want to know is this. What’s
-Star Meyer going to do when he hears that I’m telling it around school
-that he’s afraid of me? It’s a wonder to me that he hasn’t heard it
-already!”
-
-Jimmy winked. “I sort of think he has, Dud,” he said softly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-BEN MYATT ADVISES
-
-
-If, however, Starling Meyer had heard Jimmy’s version of that encounter
-with Dud, he certainly gave no sign. When he and Dud met, which was
-frequently now that daily baseball practice was going on in the
-cage, he either looked over Dud’s head or deigned him a fleeting and
-disdainful glance. But Dud didn’t feel at all badly because he received
-no more attention. In fact, he was extremely glad every time he looked
-at Star and pondered on that youth’s wealth of muscle and length of
-arm, and he hoped from the bottom of his heart that Star would keep
-right on treating him with distant disdain――the more distant the better!
-
-Meanwhile Jimmy, being a firm believer in preparedness, had procured
-two pairs of light-weight boxing gloves from different sources and Dud,
-much against his inclination, was made to don a pair every day before
-supper and do his best to master the rudiments of self-defense. I don’t
-believe, just between you and me, that Jimmy knew a whole lot about
-boxing, but at least he knew more than his friend did. Dud was the
-veriest tyro and those first lessons, undertaken by Dud with no relish
-and one might well say under compulsion, were strange affairs. With
-the study table drawn back to the length of the green cord connecting
-droplight and ceiling plug――the droplight met a natural fate during the
-third lesson――an eight-foot “ring” was secured, and in this, with much
-thudding of shoes and thumping of gloves, the two feinted and parried
-and struck. The striking, though, was somewhat one-sided at first,
-Jimmy being the striker and Dud the strikee, to coin a convenient word.
-Anyone pausing outside the door of Number 19 might have heard, in spite
-of the closed transom, a conversation calculated to arouse curiosity.
-
-“Watch your head now!... Well, I warned you, didn’t I?... Keep your
-right in front of you! Don’t drop your arm like that or.... Now
-lead! Quick! Oh, put some pep in it, Dud!... More like this; see?...
-Feint with your right and come up quick with your left straight for
-my chin!... Get it? Try it again.... That’s better, only you’re too
-slow. You give it away beforehand. Keep your eyes on mine and don’t
-look where you’re going to hit.... Sorry, Dud! Was it too hard?... You
-had your guard down, you see.... Quicker on your feet, old chap! Keep
-moving! Don’t get set or I’ll.... I just wanted to show you what would
-happen, Dud. Don’t get mad about it. The only way to learn.... Good
-one! You got me that time! Right on the nose! Bully work!...”
-
-After some half-dozen lessons Dud began to learn. And Jimmy, having
-procured a paper-covered book in the village which was entitled “Boxing
-Self-Taught,” studied it diligently and became more proficient. I
-doubt that Jimmy, even when at his best, was what might be termed a
-scientific boxer, and Dud never developed beyond the hammer-and-tongs
-stage, but they got to fancying themselves quite a bit after a
-fortnight or so and talked learnedly of “hooks” and “upper-cuts” and
-“side-stepping” and other mysterious things. And by that time Dud
-had become really interested and viewed Star Meyer with far less
-awe. In fact, though I grieve to relate it, he even got to the point
-where he speculated on what it would feel like to place his fist in
-violent contact with Star’s supercilious nose! The conclusion that
-he invariably arrived at was that the sensation would be distinctly
-pleasurable! But much to Jimmy’s disappointment――and a little to Dud’s,
-too, I fancy――Star offered the latter no possible excuse for doing such
-a thing.
-
-“He’s afraid of you,” grieved Jimmy. “Isn’t that the limit? A big,
-husky chap like him――――”
-
-“He,” corrected Dud.
-
-“――――Being afraid of a fellow six inches smaller,” continued the other,
-superbly disregarding the interruption. “Wouldn’t it make you weary?
-What we’ve got to do, Dud, is force a quarrel on him. There’s no use
-waiting for him to start anything!”
-
-“Well, but why?” asked Dud doubtfully. “As long as he isn’t bothering
-me――――”
-
-“He _is_ bothering you! He――he’s a thorn in your flesh!”
-
-“Oh!” said the other vaguely. “Is he?”
-
-“Of course he is! He’s talking, too. Some of the things he’s said have
-got back to me.”
-
-“What?” asked Dud.
-
-“Never mind what. You wouldn’t want to hear ’em, I guess.”
-
-Dud laughed. “You’re making that up, Jimmy,” he charged. “You’re just
-dying to get me into a scrap with him. I wouldn’t mind――much, although
-I guess he’d lick me, but I don’t see any use in fighting him about
-nothing. Of course, if he _did_ anything, or _said_ anything――――”
-
-“Haven’t I been telling you――――”
-
-“And I heard him say it,” added Dud hastily, “why, that would be
-different.”
-
-“Oh, if you’re going to wait for him to knock you down!”
-
-“I’m not,” replied Dud indignantly, “but I can’t fight him for nothing
-at all!”
-
-“Huh!” Jimmy viewed his chum gloomily. “I don’t see what use it is then
-to go to all that trouble to learn to fight if――if you aren’t going to
-make use of――of your knowledge. That’s an economical waste, Dud. And
-waste is sinful.”
-
-“It isn’t a waste,” said Dud. “It’s a good thing to know how to defend
-yourself. Besides, that boxing business has put my arm back in shape
-for pitching. It feels great nowadays. Just feel of that muscle, Jimmy.”
-
-“Not bad,” decided the other, grudgingly. Then, more brightly: “Say,
-you ought to be able to hand Star a peach of a wallop with that, Dud!
-Well, all we can do is hope for the best. We don’t want to fight, but
-if we have to――――”
-
-“We?” queried Dud. “I don’t see where you come into it! You’re always
-talking about ‘we’ fighting Star Meyer, but it’s me――――”
-
-“I,” said Jimmy sweetly.
-
-“It’s I, then, who would have to do it. If you want Star licked so
-plaguey much why don’t you do it yourself?”
-
-Jimmy considered a moment. “Well, say, that isn’t a bad idea,” he
-replied at last. “Someone ought to do it, that’s sure! If you’re quite
-certain you don’t mind――――”
-
-“I’m dead sure,” said Dud emphatically.
-
-“Then maybe――――” Jimmy felt of his arm muscles. “I’ll think it over,”
-he concluded thoughtfully.
-
-Baseball practice had by this time really become baseball practice.
-I mean by that that the period of dumb-bell exercises and setting-up
-drills had passed and the candidates, reënforced by some dozen or so
-late-comers, were passing and batting and learning the tricks of the
-game. The battery candidates comprised Nate Leddy, Ben Myatt, Gus
-Weston, Will Brunswick, Joe Kelly and Dud Baker, pitchers, and Pete
-Gordon, Hal Cherry and Ed Brooks, catchers. Of the pitchers, Myatt was
-last year’s star and a clever twirler, Leddy was a good man but not
-so dependable. Weston had speed but little control, and the others
-were still unknown quantities, except that both Kelly and Dud had
-twirled a few times for the second nine the spring before. Pete Gordon
-was the regular catcher and Brooks the second-choice man. Cherry was
-a beginner who showed promise. At the end of the first two weeks of
-indoor work, the battery candidates were given their first try-out one
-afternoon at the conclusion of the regular practice, and Dud, somewhat
-to his surprise, survived. Still, as Jimmy kindly pointed out to him
-later, that didn’t mean much since it was the custom to keep all the
-would-be pitchers until the team got out of doors. Nevertheless, Dud
-was encouraged and did his level best to make good. Myatt, a big,
-likable chap of eighteen or over, took a real interest in the efforts
-of the younger members of the staff and was generous with advice and
-instruction. One afternoon, shortly before the candidates got out-doors
-for the first time, he took Dud in hand after practice.
-
-“Say, Baker,” Ben called as Dud was leaving the cage, “got time to
-pitch me a few?”
-
-Dud, pulling his glove off, turned back. “Why, yes,” he answered. “Want
-me to?”
-
-“Yes. Yell to Ed Brooks to lend me his mitt, will you?” A minute later
-Ben took his place in front of the net and thumped the big mitten
-encouragingly. “All right now, boy! Try a few easy ones. That’s nice. I
-say, Baker, mind if I give you a hint or two?”
-
-“I’d be awfully glad if you would,” replied Dud eagerly. “I know I’m
-not much good.”
-
-“Who says so?”
-
-“I do.” Dud smiled.
-
-But Ben shook his head reprovingly. “You ought to be the last one to
-say it,” he announced gravely. “First thing you want to do, boy, is
-stop tying yourself in a knot on your wind-up. You’ll never last nine
-innings if you go through all that gymnastic stuff. What’s the big
-idea?”
-
-“I don’t know,” faltered Dud. “That’s the way I’ve always done it, I
-suppose.”
-
-“Well, I wouldn’t do it any more. You see if you can’t reach the
-toe-plate without going through so many motions. Cut out that second
-swing of yours, why don’t you? Here’s you.” Ben went through an
-exaggerated imitation of Dud’s wind-up. “Too much work, see? If you had
-a man on second, now, you couldn’t do half that, boy; he’d be sliding
-into the plate before you were through. Get your body into it and stop
-throwing your arm around. It’s the body that puts the speed into the
-ball. You want to start easy and work up gradually until, when the ball
-leaves your hand, you’re at the top of the pitch. The way you do it,
-Baker, you get a lot of motion up and then lose it before you pitch.
-And you tire yourself a lot. I couldn’t last five innings if I threw my
-arms around like that. I hope you don’t mind my criticizing you, Baker.”
-
-Dud didn’t, and tried to say so, but his response was not much more
-than a murmur. However, Ben went on cheerfully.
-
-“Just at first you won’t have the control you have now, I guess, but
-after you’ve got on to the hang of it you’ll find you can pitch a lot
-easier. Just try it, will you?”
-
-Dud’s first attempt was a complete failure, for he started unthinkingly
-on that second swing, tried to stop it and got so confused that he
-didn’t even let the ball out of his hand. Ben suggested getting used
-to the wind-up before trying to pitch, and so Dud twirled and twisted a
-number of times, uncomfortably conscious of the few loiterers watching
-through the netting, and finally got so that he was able to reach the
-moment of delivery without falling over his feet. But when he tried to
-pitch a few straight balls into Ben Myatt’s mitten he discovered that
-the change in his method had seemingly spoiled his direction, for more
-than once Ben had to reach for a wide one or else scoop one off the
-floor.
-
-“Don’t worry about that,” said Ben. “You’ll get your eye back again.
-That’s enough for now, I guess. There’s one more thing I’d suggest,
-though, Baker. You’re trying to pitch too many different things. You
-were hooking them in and out and dropping them and trying to float
-’em, too. You don’t need all that, boy. Not yet, anyhow. You take my
-advice and learn to pitch a good straight ball. Get so you can send it
-high, low, in or out or right in the groove. Then learn to change your
-pace without giving it away to the batsman. After that there’s plenty
-of time for drops and hooks. I tell you, Baker, the fellow that has
-control is the fellow the batters hate to stand up to. This thing of
-having fifty-seven varieties of balls doesn’t cut much ice, old man.”
-Ben opened the door and gently pushed Dud out ahead of him and they
-went across to the locker-room. “A chap who can tease the batter with
-the straight ones, slip one across for a strike now and then, follow
-a fast one with a slow one and do it all without changing his style
-is the fellow who wins his games. I’m not saying hooks and floaters
-and all those aren’t useful, for they are, but I do say that when a
-fellow’s beginning he ought to pin his faith to just one thing, and
-that’s control. Don’t be worried if they hit you hard at first; they’re
-bound to; but just keep on learning to put ’em where you want to, and
-the first thing you know you’ll be fooling them worse than the curve
-artist. Practice that new wind-up, boy, and cut out all the unnecessary
-gee-gaws that just use up your strength. Nine innings is a whole month
-sometimes and it’s the very dickens to feel your muscles getting sore
-along about the sixth. So long, Baker. Good luck.”
-
-Dud thought it over while he stood under the shower and while he pulled
-on his clothes. Maybe Ben Myatt was right, he reflected, but he was a
-bit proud of his ability to “put something on the ball” and confining
-himself to straight ones didn’t sound interesting. For a moment he
-wondered if Ben was trying to steer him away from his hooks and drops
-so that he wouldn’t prove a rival. Then the absurdity of that suspicion
-dawned and he smiled at it. In the first place, Ben wouldn’t be in
-school another year, and in the second place Dud was certain that he
-would never be able to pitch as Ben could if he kept at it all his
-life! In the end, by which time he was tying his scarf in front of one
-of the little mirrors, he decided that Ben’s advice was excellent and
-that he would follow it, for a while at least.
-
-The next afternoon, Hal Cherry, catching Dud and Kelly, looked a trifle
-surprised and a bit disgusted, too, when Dud’s delivery suddenly
-exhibited a strange eccentricity. Cherry had to spear the air in
-all directions that day, and Mr. Sargent, watching and counseling
-the fellows, followed Dud’s doings with dubious eyes. Nor was Dud
-perceptibly more steady the day following, and Brooks, who caught him,
-protested more than once. By that time Dud was getting discouraged and
-was strongly tempted to go back to his former more elaborate and far
-more labored wind-up, and would have done so probably had it not been
-for Ben Myatt’s brief encouragement after practice.
-
-“Haven’t got the hang of it yet, I see, Baker,” remarked the veteran.
-“Keep on, though. It’ll come to you in another day or two, I guess. Try
-not to slow up just before your pitch, boy. That’s your trouble now.”
-
-Pondering that hint, Dud hauled Jimmy out of bed early the next morning
-and conducted him out back of the dormitory, where, stationed midway
-between two windows, he made cheerful efforts to get his hands on the
-balls that Dud pitched him. Many of them, however, bounded unchallenged
-from the bricks and trickled back to Dud. One particularly wild heave
-came so near a window that Dud shivered, pocketed the ball and led the
-way back to the room.
-
-“If,” said Jimmy disgustedly, on the way, “that’s a sample of what you
-can do with this simplified wind-up you’re telling about you’d better
-go back to the old stuff. There’s nothing in it, Dud!”
-
-“I’m going to stick it out a bit longer, though,” was the answer. “Ben
-says it will take time, Jimmy.”
-
-“Yes, and patience,” said Jimmy sarcastically, “the catcher supplying
-the patience. After you’ve ‘beaned’ a few batters, Dud, they’ll put you
-in jail as a danger to the community. I’m glad I don’t have to stand up
-to you!”
-
-Two days after that, March having departed very lamb-like, the cage was
-abandoned and outdoor practice began.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-A WILD PITCH
-
-
-April at its best is an uncertain month, and April this spring lived
-up to its reputation. No sooner had the baseball candidates grown
-accustomed to the feel of soft and springy turf under their feet than a
-three-days’ rain began and they were forced to retire again to the dim
-and unsympathetic cage. The track and field candidates defied weather
-conditions until the cinders held pools of water and the pits became
-of the consistency of oatmeal porridge. Then the sun shone forth again
-and, after another day of indoor confinement, the players once more
-trailed down to Lothrop Field. The diamond was far from dry, but the
-sun was warm and a little south-east breeze promised its best efforts.
-Candidates for the second team were called out that afternoon, and
-Jimmy, whose status with the first was still a matter for conjecture,
-thought seriously of returning to the fold. Dud, however, refused to
-sanction the step and so Jimmy grumblingly stayed where he was.
-
-“I know just how it’ll be, though,” he said pessimistically. “They’ll
-keep me here until Crowley’s got his second team all made up and then
-they’ll drop me. Oh, all right!” He stretched his legs and leaned more
-comfortably back against the railing of the stand. “After all, it’s too
-nice a day to do anything. I pity those poor dubs out there catching
-flies and wrenching their arms throwing the ball in. Me for the quiet,
-untroubled life of a substitute outfielder. You’ll have to go in and
-pitch pretty quick, Dud; Pete’s got his eye on you now; but I’ll just
-sit here and keep this bench warm and――――”
-
-Jimmy’s remarks were rudely interrupted.
-
-“Hi, Logan!” called Mr. Sargent. “Go on out there to left and get your
-hands on some of those flies. Lively, now! Send Boynton in.”
-
-Jimmy arose with alacrity, casting a despairing glance at Dud, and
-ambled off. Hugh Ordway, seated further along the bench, got up and
-joined Dud.
-
-“Awfully pretty, isn’t it?” observed Hugh, nodding toward the wide
-expanse of new green that led away to the ribbon of river beyond.
-“Reminds me a lot of home――I mean England.” It sounded as if he was
-correcting himself, and Dud asked:
-
-“But England is your home, isn’t it?”
-
-Hugh nodded. “I suppose it is, only when I’m here I like to remember
-that I’m part American, if you know what I mean.”
-
-“Your mother is American, isn’t she?” asked Dud.
-
-“Yes, she was born in Maryland. Her folks have lived there for a long
-time. It’s a bit odd, Baker, but sometimes I feel as if I were more
-U. S. A. than British. Being sort of half-and-half like that, a fellow
-doesn’t quite know where he is, if you know what I mean!”
-
-“I dare say,” murmured Dud. It was the first time that Hugh Ordway had
-ever approached him, and he felt rather embarrassed. The desire to make
-a good impression on the other only resulted in tying his tongue up.
-But Hugh appeared not to notice the fact.
-
-“How are you getting on,” he asked, “with your bowl――your pitching?”
-
-“Just fair, I guess. How do you like it? Baseball, I mean.”
-
-“Crazy about it! I’ll never learn to play decently, I fancy, but it’s
-a jolly game, isn’t it? What I like best is batting, only I can’t seem
-to hit the ball very well yet. Myatt fools me every time, you know. I
-got a couple of good ones off Nate Leddy the other day, though. Are you
-pitching today?”
-
-“I guess Pete will put me in for an inning or two later. He’s giving us
-all a chance now. I――I’m pretty rotten so far.”
-
-“Haven’t found yourself yet, I fancy. It takes a bit of time, eh? Bert
-says a lot of us will be dropped to the second pretty soon. I say,
-Baker, I wasn’t thinking of you, you know!”
-
-“Oh, I’ll get dropped, all right, I guess.”
-
-“Hope not, I’m sure. In my own case I wouldn’t mind a bit. Maybe I
-could play well enough to make the second. Or a class team perhaps.”
-
-“I thought you――you fielded very well the other day,” said Dud politely.
-
-Hugh laughed. “You’re spoofing, I fancy. I did catch a few, but I was
-beastly scared of them. Bert says I looked as if I were going to catch
-them in my mouth! Odd feeling you have when those balls begin to come
-down, getting bigger and bigger every second, and you’re wondering
-whether you’ll catch them or if they’ll hit you on the nose! Jolly good
-fun, though! Corking! Lots more exciting than cricket.”
-
-“Is it? I never played cricket.”
-
-“Oh, no end! Cricket’s a bully good game, too, but it’s a lot more
-quiet and――er――sedate, if you know what I mean. Well, I’ll toddle. Hope
-you get on finely, Baker. And drop in some time, eh?”
-
-“Thanks,” answered Dud. Then, as Hugh moved away, he blurted: “Did you
-really mean that, Ordway?”
-
-“What? Why, of course!”
-
-“Then――then I will. I didn’t know――――” Dud’s voice trailed off into
-silence as he dropped an embarrassed gaze. Hugh smiled and nodded.
-
-“Right-o, Baker! Glad to have you.”
-
-Dud, wishing he hadn’t made such a fool of himself, bent stern
-attention on his glove until the red had subsided from his cheeks. “He
-will think me an awful kid,” he reflected. “Asking things like that
-and――and blushing like a silly girl! And of course he couldn’t say
-anything else. You won’t catch me going!”
-
-Further self-communing was cut short by Mr. Sargent. “All right,
-Baker,” called the coach. “Warm up, will you? Brooks will catch you.
-See if you can’t steady down today.”
-
-Dud squirmed out of his sweater, pulled his glove on and joined Ed
-Brooks in front of the first-base stand. Brunswick had taken Kelly’s
-place in the box and it would be Dud’s turn next. As Brooks tossed
-the ball to him and spread his hands invitingly wide apart Dud hoped
-hard that he would be able to steady down, but doubted it. As yet
-the recollection of that impulsive question to Ordway still made his
-face burn. Consequently when, after pitching a half-dozen easy ones
-to warm his arm, he began to put on a little speed, he was pleased as
-well as surprised to find that some of his old control had come back.
-Encouraged, he made greater efforts to put the ball where he wanted to
-and, unconsciously, began to “steam up.” But Brooks cautioned him and
-Dud slowed down.
-
-“That’s pitching ’em,” called Brooks. “They’re all straight, though,
-Dud, or pretty near it. Try a slant.”
-
-But Dud resisted the temptation to “hook” one and shook his head.
-Instead, he sent over a slow one that fooled Brooks completely and
-brought from the latter a laugh at his own expense. “Do it again,” he
-urged, as he threw the ball back. “I want to get used to those.”
-
-“I’ll wait until you’re not expecting it,” laughed Dud.
-
-There was no line-up today, but first and second-string players were
-batting and running the bases, taking their places in the field
-ultimately to let others come in. Weston, Kelly and Brunswick had
-held the mound for an inning or two apiece, while Ben Myatt and Nate
-Leddy were trying to improve their hitting, a thing that the latter
-was rather weak at. Presently the outfielders were called in in a body
-and others took their places, and changes were made in the infield.
-Brunswick went to the shower and Dud to the pitcher’s box. Pete Gordon
-was still catching.
-
-“All right, Baker!” called Pete. “Strike ’em out, boy. Put her over
-now.”
-
-Neil Ayer fouled one and then landed on the next and went to first,
-and Bert Winslow took his place. The pitchers were not expected to
-work hard, for a batsman stayed in until he hit or was caught out.
-Bert was difficult to dispose of, since he cannily refused everything
-that wasn’t distinctly a strike, and Dud pitched a dozen deliveries
-before Bert found one he liked and rapped it to deep center. Meanwhile
-Mr. Sargent was coaching Ayer from first to second and on to third,
-making him slide to every base even though he was not threatened. When,
-however, he tried to steal home on Dud’s wind-up, Dud managed to keep
-his head, send in a fast one and saw Ayer nailed a yard from the rubber.
-
-It wasn’t especially interesting work and some of the hits were
-screechers into deep right, left or center that the outfielders
-couldn’t begin to get their hands onto. Dud had not had much experience
-in fielding his position and was momentarily in fear that a hot liner
-would come at his head. If one did, he was quite certain he would duck
-and quite disgrace himself. But when, after some nine or ten batters
-had faced him, Captain Murtha hit one squarely on the nose and it came
-straight at Dud, the latter involuntarily put up his hands and, while
-he didn’t make the catch, knocked it down, recovered it and tossed out
-Murtha at first. He got a round of applause from the stand for that,
-which so rattled him that his next delivery shot past Gordon a good
-four feet to his right and let in a runner from third. The batter sent
-the next one off on a voyage to deep center and took two bases. The
-base-runners were taking such extraordinary chances and Mr. Sargent
-was making such a hullabaloo back of first that Dud began to lose his
-control badly, and he was forced to put exactly eleven balls across
-before Weston, tired of waiting for a good one, reached for a wide ball
-and fouled out to first-baseman.
-
-Then Star Meyer faced him and Dud made up his mind to make Star work
-for his hit. Star viewed the pitcher with amused contempt and Dud felt
-his cheeks tingle. But he set his teeth and sent a high one across
-that the batter disdained and followed it with one that barely cut the
-inner corner of the plate and was just knee-high. Star looked doubtful
-about it, but Gordon proclaimed it “a daisy, Star! They don’t come
-any better.” That apparently impressed Star, for he swung hard at the
-succeeding delivery, which, happening to be one of Dud’s slow ones,
-crossed the plate almost a second after the swing! Someone laughed and
-Star frowned haughtily. Dud tempted him with another wide one and then
-sneaked one across right in the groove and caught the batter napping.
-Gordon thumped the ball into his glove before he threw it back, a
-signal of commendation with the big catcher.
-
-“That’s the stuff, Baker!” he called. “That’s pitching ’em, boy!”
-
-Dud tried another slow one and again Star swung too soon and again a
-laugh greeted the performance. This time, with the ripple of laughter,
-came a smatter of applause from the handful of spectators on the stand.
-Star’s countenance lost its haughtiness and his mouth set grimly. Dud
-decided that he might as well let Star hit and get rid of him, and so
-he tried to put one over shoulder-high and across the middle of the
-plate. But something went wrong. Dud was convinced afterwards that
-his foot had turned on a pebble. At all events, instead of traveling
-straight and true into Gordon’s waiting mitt, the ball took an erratic
-slant and brought up against Star’s shoulder. There was speed on the
-ball and the batter had scarcely tried to dodge it, and now he dropped
-his bat, clapped a hand to his shoulder and performed a series of most
-unconventional steps about the plate. Dud started toward him, but
-Gordon was already at his side and so Dud contented himself with a
-sincere “Awfully sorry, Meyer!”
-
-But Star, impatiently throwing off the catcher’s hand, turned an
-angry countenance to Dud. “You meant to do that, Baker! You did it on
-purpose. I’ll get you for it, too! You can’t――――”
-
-But Mr. Sargent interposed then. “Tut, tut, Meyer! It was purely an
-accident. You must learn to get out of the way of them. Sorry if it
-hurt you, though. Get Davy to rub it for you. That’ll do for today.”
-
-Star, pausing to cast a final ominous look at Dud, recovered his
-poise and, rubbing his injury, retired haughtily. Many amused glances
-followed him, for no one there doubted that it had been purely
-accidental and Star’s loss of temper had struck them as unnecessary.
-The incident ended Dud’s usefulness for that day, for his delivery
-became so wild that Mr. Sargent quickly took him out, putting in Weston
-to finish the practice.
-
-Dud, yielding the ball shamefacedly, retired to the bench and donned
-his sweater. He was quite aware of the fact that Mr. Sargent meant
-him to return to the Field House, but the thought of the irate Star
-Meyer, who, by the time Dud got there, would doubtless be just getting
-into his clothes, deterred him. Instead, then, of leaving the field,
-Dud found a place on the bench and pretended deep absorption in the
-practice. Presently, though, a better idea presented itself. Across
-on the other diamond the second was putting in its first day of work
-under the tuition of “Dinny,” as Mr. Crowley, the assistant physical
-director, was called. He would, he decided, wander over there as
-unostentatiously as possible, and so escape Mr. Sargent’s eagle eye.
-But it proved a mistaken move, for just at the moment that Dud
-detached himself from the few idlers on the bench, Mr. Sargent happened
-to look across the diamond, and his impatient voice quickly followed
-his glance.
-
-“Baker! Go ahead in! I told you once!”
-
-The fellows on the bench grinned and Dud tried his best to make it
-appear that he wanted nothing better in life than to do that very
-thing! But, just the same, once behind the stand and out of view of
-those on the diamond, his feet moved very slowly along the path. I
-don’t believe that Dud was a coward, for one may have no stomach for
-physical combat and yet be brave enough in other ways, but I am quite
-certain that he wished heartily all the way across to the Field House
-that the tall and dignified form of Star Meyer would appear at the
-doorway and proceed homeward before he reached there! But nothing of
-the sort happened, and when Dud entered the locker-room he was just
-in time to hear Star finish an account of the recent episode for the
-benefit of three boys who lolled on the benches in various stages of
-undress.
-
-“He was afraid to give me one I could hit and so he whanged one
-straight at me. I wasn’t looking for it and couldn’t get out of the
-way, and it got me right on the shoulder. He threw it as hard as he
-could, too, and that arm will be out of commission for days. Pete
-had the cheek to tell me that it was an accident! Accident! Yes, it
-was――not! You wait till I get a chance at that fresh kid!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-JIMMY TAKES CHARGE
-
-
-Dud’s first impulse was to turn back, but one of Star’s audience had
-seen him already, and so, after a moment of hesitation, he went on and,
-since Star had his back toward the door, reached his locker before the
-speaker saw him. Then there was an instant’s silence. Dud pulled open
-the locker door, took his towel out and dropped it on the bench. Then:
-
-“Got canned, did you?” asked Star. “Maybe you’ll learn after a while
-that you can’t do that sort of thing and get away with it.”
-
-“I didn’t mean to hit you, Meyer, honestly,” returned Dud. “I――I’m
-awfully sorry. There was a pebble or something――――”
-
-“Oh, forget your pebbles! You know very well you meant to hit me.
-You’ve been doing a lot of talking around school lately. I’ve heard it.
-And I’d have given you a mighty good spanking if you’d been big enough
-to notice.” Star had walked around the end of the bench and now faced
-Dud like an outraged Jove from a yard away. Dud tried hard to appear
-undisturbed, but the mere publicity was enough to send the blood into
-his cheeks and put a tremor in his voice as he answered.
-
-“I haven’t been talking about you, Meyer,” he said as stoutly as he
-could. “And, anyhow, you needn’t try to bully me. I’ve apologized for
-that――that accident, and that’s all I can do.”
-
-“Oh, you apologize, do you?” Star laughed amusedly. “Well, apologies
-don’t answer, kid. If you weren’t so small I’d kick you around the
-room, you――you ugly-faced little insect!”
-
-“Never mind my size!” cried Dud, throwing discretion to the winds in
-the sudden flare of anger. “And never mind about my looks, either! Any
-time you want to start kicking you go ahead, Meyer! I’m not afraid of
-you! You’re a bluff, a big bluff, that’s all you――――”
-
-Star’s right hand shot out suddenly and the open palm landed hard on
-Dud’s cheek. The blow sent him sprawling across the bench, but he was
-on his feet again in an instant, his face white save where the impact
-of Star’s hand had left a tingling red stain. Star, smiling crookedly,
-had stepped back, ready for Dud’s rush. But the rush wasn’t made, for
-at that instant “Davy” Richards’ voice came sternly from the doorway.
-
-“Here, boys! Stop that! Look you, Meyer, leave him alone! What mean you
-hitting a boy beneath your size, eh?” Davy was Welsh and when excited
-relapsed into a brogue as broad as it was difficult of reproduction in
-type. Star looked around, shrugged his shoulders and laughed lightly.
-
-“I wasn’t hitting him, Davy. I merely slapped his face for him. If I
-ever really hit him he’d know it!”
-
-“Well, no more of it in this house! ’Tis no place for fighting. And you
-there, you, Baker, behave yourself, do you hear me? No more now or I’ll
-take a hand myself!” Davy retired grumbling, and one of the audience
-of three chuckled as he got up and sauntered out. The others exchanged
-glances of amusement and went on with their dressing. Star nonchalantly
-retired to his own bench, leaving Dud standing with clenched fists and
-angry face in the middle of the floor, for once unconscious of the
-curious gazes of others.
-
-“It isn’t finished yet, Meyer,” he said at last in a low voice.
-
-Star glanced up contemptuously. “You’ll be finished if you try any more
-funny stunts with me, Baker,” he said threateningly. “And I want you to
-stop talking about me, too. Hear that? The next time I’ll do a lot more
-than slap your ugly face for you!”
-
-“You’ll fight me!”
-
-“I wouldn’t bother to!” Star laughed. “I might break you in two if I
-hit you!”
-
-“You’ll fight me,” reiterated Dud doggedly. “If you won’t――――”
-
-He stopped, for Davy was glowering at him from the doorway.
-
-“Look you, Baker, what I say I mean! One more word about fighting while
-you’re in this place and out you go!”
-
-Dud subsided and silence reigned until the door opened to admit a
-number of released second team candidates, by which time Dud was ready
-for his shower. When he returned to the lockers Star had gone. By that
-time the room was crowded from end to end, for practice was over and
-some forty-odd boys were struggling for space. Jimmy spied his chum and
-pushed his way to him.
-
-“Oh, Dud, it was fine!” he whispered delightedly. “Only why didn’t you
-put it a foot or so higher and ‘bean’ him? Did you see him again?”
-
-Dud nodded.
-
-“Was he mad?” demanded Jimmy eagerly. “Hello, what are you looking so
-funny about? You didn’t――I say, Dud, you two didn’t――――” He paused
-expressively.
-
-“We had words,” replied Dud in low tones, “and he――slapped my face.”
-
-“Slapped――――” Jimmy whistled. Then: “Great stuff, Dud! What did you
-do? Where were you? I wish I’d seen it!”
-
-“I didn’t do anything. Davy butted in. I’m going to fight him, though.”
-
-“Of course! Slapped your face, eh, the big bully? That――that’s a
-fighting matter, Dud. When are you going to do it?”
-
-“He refused; said he wouldn’t bother with me; said he might break me in
-two! But he’s got to fight, Jimmy!”
-
-“You bet he has!” agreed Jimmy enthusiastically. “But listen: let me
-get my shower. You wait for me, will you? We’ve got to talk this over,
-you know.”
-
-“There isn’t anything to talk over,” said Dud flatly. “He’s got to
-fight me.”
-
-“Yes, but if he says he won’t―――― You wait for me, see? I won’t be a
-minute.” And Jimmy, beaming broadly, dashed off.
-
-Dud found a corner by the door and waited, listening idly to the
-chatter of the fellows. Nearby Foster Tray, struggling with a stubborn
-shirt, remarked in smothered tones:
-
-“Did you see Baker peg Star in the arm, Mil? It was a fierce old biff!”
-
-“Yes,” replied Oscar Milford, “and Star was hopping mad.” He chuckled.
-“Said Baker did it on purpose. Well, maybe he did. I don’t know. But
-they say Baker’s got Star scared of him, for some reason.”
-
-“Oh, piffle! A kid like that? Not likely! But it isn’t sense getting
-mad about being hit with a ball. Gee, if I got peeved every time I got
-whacked last year――――”
-
-A good-natured altercation over the possession of a bath towel that
-both Leddy and Parker laid claim to drowned the rest of Tray’s remark
-and Dud slipped further along. Captain Murtha ran across him a moment
-later and stopped an instant.
-
-“Say, Baker, you did mighty well there for a while today. Keep it up,
-old man. But don’t lay out any more of the team, eh? You might leave us
-short-handed!” Guy laughed, nodded and went on, and presently, showing
-numerous evidences of having dressed hurriedly, Jimmy arrived a bit
-breathless and dragged Dud outside. There, one arm through Dud’s, he
-led the way back to the dormitory.
-
-“Now,” he demanded eagerly, “let’s have the whole story.”
-
-“Well, I stepped on a pebble or something and the ball got away and hit
-Star on the shoulder.”
-
-“Yes,” chuckled Jimmy, “I saw that. Something ought to be done about
-those pebbles!” And he winked meaningly.
-
-“But it was a pebble!” declared Dud. “I didn’t mean to hit him!”
-
-“You didn’t!” Jimmy was incredulous, incredulous and disappointed.
-“Gee, I thought of course you did it so he’d get mad and fight! Are you
-sure?”
-
-“Yes, I am,” answered Dud shortly. “Don’t be a fool, Jimmy.”
-
-“Oh, all right, then. It was an accident.” Jimmy sighed. “Then what?”
-
-Dud brought the narrative to its conclusion by the time they were
-crossing the campus, and Jimmy disengaged his arm in order to slap Dud
-approvingly on the back. “Fine!” he declared. “Just what we wanted! By
-the time we put this thing through, Dud, you’ll be the most talked-of
-fellow in school!”
-
-“I don’t want to be talked of. I’m sick of all that rot. All I want is
-to show Star Meyer that he can’t slap me and――and get away with it!”
-
-“Sure! But it’ll do you a lot of good if you lick him, don’t you see?
-Fellows will call you a plucky kid and all that. Oh, there’s nothing to
-it, Dud! Here’s where we make good, old son!”
-
-“I’m not likely to lick him,” replied the other quietly. “I dare say he
-will beat me to a pulp, but he won’t do it before I’ve got in a few,”
-he added grimly.
-
-“That’s all right, too, but it’s going to make a lot bigger hit if you
-get the decision,” responded Jimmy. “No, you’d better make up your mind
-to lick him, Dud.”
-
-“Make up my mind!” replied the other impatiently as they traveled
-together down the corridor. “How’s making up my mind going to help? He
-can lick me, and you know it. And I know it. What’s the good of talking
-rot like that?”
-
-“How do you know he can?” asked Jimmy eagerly. “I’ll bet you anything
-Star’s got a yellow streak in him somewhere. And you’ve been learning
-right along, haven’t you? Why, say, I call you a mighty clever boxer
-right this minute, Dud! Yes, I do, honest! And――I say, what time is it?
-Fine! We’ve just got time to put on the gloves for a few minutes. I was
-reading in that book――――”
-
-“I’m not going to put on the gloves,” answered Dud decidedly. “I’ll
-fight him just as I am. All that scientific stuff isn’t much good,
-anyway. It didn’t keep him from almost knocking me flat on the floor
-this afternoon, did it?”
-
-“But you weren’t looking for it! If you’d known――――”
-
-“Besides, the thing is to get him to fight. He says he won’t. How can I
-make him, Jimmy?”
-
-“We-ell――――” Jimmy studied the question with his head on one side and
-his mouth pursed. At last: “There are two or three ways, I guess. You
-might challenge him publicly or you might just walk up and slap his
-face the way he slapped yours or you might――――”
-
-“That’s good enough,” interrupted Dud. “Come on!”
-
-“Hold on! Where are you going?”
-
-“To find him!”
-
-“Well, but――but wait! Hold on! See here, Dud, you can’t walk into a
-fellow’s room and biff him, you know!”
-
-“Why can’t I?”
-
-“Because it isn’t done, old chap. Violation of――er――hospitality and all
-that, you know. What you want to do is to find him some time when other
-fellows are around, see? Then he can’t possibly refuse. But you want to
-make sure that a faculty isn’t looking! Better wait now until morning
-and get him in School Hall; in the corridor, say. Yes, that’s the idea.
-There’ll be a crowd around, and――――”
-
-“I’d rather do it now,” said Dud. “Maybe――by tomorrow――I might
-not――might not want to so much!”
-
-“Oh, that’s all right. I’ll keep you up to it, son. Trust me. You
-see, Dud, this is a wonderful opportunity and we want to make the
-most of it. You wait until the morning and then find Star in the
-corridor between recitations. There’s bound to be a crowd there.
-Imagine the sensation when you step up to him and let him have
-it right on the cheek! Maybe you’d ought to say something, too,
-something――er――effective. Let’s see now. Suppose――――”
-
-“Look here, Jimmy, this isn’t any silly pageant! I don’t care whether
-anyone’s around or not. All you think about is making a public show of
-it! You make me tired!”
-
-“Nothing of the sort,” returned Jimmy indignantly. “All I say is that
-if you’re going to do it you ought to do it right! What’s the good of
-balling it all up when, by using a little――er――a little headwork, you
-can make a great big hit? No, sir, you listen to me. I’m managing you
-in this affair, Dud. Just you sit still and leave the whole business to
-me.”
-
-“Leave it to you――――” began Dud bitterly.
-
-“Besides, I’ve got a better scheme, old chap! Let’s do it shipshape,
-eh? After supper I’ll call on Star and take your challenge to him.
-Then, if he says he won’t fight, we’ll go ahead with the public
-insult scheme. But that will be giving him a chance to accept like a
-gentleman. And, of course, whether he accepts or doesn’t, the thing is
-just bound to leak out.” Jimmy grinned. “Those things always do.”
-
-“I wish,” said Dud moodily, “I’d kept my mouth shut and not told you
-anything about it. You’re bound to go and hire a brass band and make a
-hullabaloo! I dare say”――sarcastically――“you’ll be selling tickets for
-the fight!”
-
-“By Jove, that isn’t a bad idea! I don’t mean to sell tickets, but we
-might issue invitations or――or something. ‘You are cordially invited to
-be present at an informal scrap between Dudley Baker and Starling Meyer
-at five-thirty on Friday. R. S. V. P.’”
-
-“I wish you’d quit making a silly joke of it,” complained Dud. “If you
-think it’s so terribly funny, why don’t you fight him yourself?”
-
-“I would in a minute if he slapped my face,” replied Jimmy promptly.
-“Maybe he will when I take the challenge to him. Gee, I wish he’d try
-it! Still, I suppose you’d claim the right to the first scrap. Well,
-that’s settled, then. Come on to supper now. Better be sort of careful
-what you eat, you know. You want to keep in condition. What do you say
-to tomorrow afternoon before supper down at the Beach? We’d be out of
-sight there and it would be handy for fellows to get to after practice.
-No use staging the affair too far away if we want a good attendance,
-eh? Got to consider folks’ comfort some, you know. All ready?”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE CHALLENGE
-
-
-“Come in!”
-
-Starling Meyer turned from the window in Number 17 and faced the door.
-Ernest Barnes, Star’s roommate, looked up from his book and glanced
-curiously in the same direction as the portal opened briskly to admit
-Jimmy Logan. It lacked but a few minutes of study hour and Jimmy, with
-the door of the next room slightly ajar, had made certain of Star’s
-return before starting on his errand. Beyond the partition――there was a
-connecting door between the rooms, but that was never opened――Dud was
-dubiously awaiting Jimmy’s report.
-
-“Oh,” said Star eloquently as Jimmy advanced jauntily enough but with a
-most sober countenance into the radius of light from the study table.
-“Hello, Logan, what do you want?”
-
-Barnes’ greeting was just a nod, civil but not enthusiastic, and having
-made it he went back to his book.
-
-“Hello, fellows,” said Jimmy. “Mind if I sit down, Meyer?”
-
-“Help yourself.” Star eyed the caller suspiciously. “This is an
-unexpected honor,” he added sarcastically.
-
-Jimmy nodded. “Yes, isn’t it? Fact is, I’m on a painful errand, Meyer.
-Mind if I speak before Barnes?”
-
-“Oh, cut the comedy, Logan,” replied Star impatiently. “What nonsense
-are you up to, anyway?”
-
-“No nonsense at all, really,” Jimmy assured him earnestly. “It’s like
-this, Meyer. I’m here on behalf of my friend, Baker. You see, he isn’t
-just satisfied with the way things were left this afternoon. He feels
-that――er――the matter ought to be settled more――er――more definitely. See
-what I mean?”
-
-“Oh, rot! I’m not going to fight that kid, Logan. He’s too small. Tell
-him to forget it. And look here, you!” Star’s voice took on an edge. “I
-want you to quit meddling in my affairs, too, Logan. I know what you’ve
-been up to. You and that roommate of yours are altogether too fresh.”
-
-“Me?” asked Jimmy innocently. “What have I done, Meyer?”
-
-“You’ve talked a whole lot too much, that’s what you’ve done. And
-you’ve egged Baker on to――to make trouble. I want you to stop it, both
-of you.”
-
-“Well, I may have talked some,” Jimmy allowed calmly. “Everyone has a
-right to talk――――”
-
-“If they’re careful what they say, yes! But――――”
-
-“Anyway, that isn’t what I came to see you about. I’ve talked it over
-with Dud and we’ve concluded that you ought to give him satisfaction.
-You see, Meyer, slapping a fellow’s face and then refusing to go on
-with it looks――well, a bit funny, eh? Now what we propose is that you
-and Dud meet, say tomorrow afternoon at half-past five, down at the
-Beach, and settle the matter in a quiet, gentlemanly way. What do you
-say to that?”
-
-“I say no,” replied Star shortly. “I haven’t any intention of fighting
-him. All I will do is slap his face again if he doesn’t let me alone.
-He’s been telling it around――or you have――that I’m afraid of him!”
-
-“Um,” said Jimmy thoughtfully. “Well――er――if you don’t fight him won’t
-it look as if he was right?”
-
-Star flushed angrily. “Don’t be a fool, Logan! I’d take the two of you
-on and lick the tar out of you if it wasn’t beneath me!”
-
-“Oh, I see! Then I’m to tell Dud that you refuse?”
-
-“Tell him anything you like! And now you get out of here or I’ll throw
-you out!”
-
-Barnes had displayed a remarkable aloofness up to the present moment,
-but now he raised his eyes at last from his book and judicially, even
-hopefully, compared the two before him. The result of the comparison,
-however, seemed to disappoint him, for he sighed and went back to his
-occupation again, apparently dismissing the matter from his mind.
-
-“And what would I be doing?” asked Jimmy brightly. “I’ll tell you
-frankly, Meyer, that your attitude is a great surprise to me. It’s a
-great disappointment, too. I’d hoped for better things, Meyer. The
-fellows are going to be mightily disappointed when they hear about it.”
-
-“So you intend to talk some more, do you?” demanded the other
-exasperatedly.
-
-“Me? Oh, my, no! But these things have a way of getting out, you know,
-Meyer.” Jimmy shook his head sadly. “This school is a frightfully
-gossipy little community.” He got up and turned toward the door. “If
-you think better of it, all you’ve got to do is just let me know. I
-wish you’d think it over, Meyer.”
-
-“You get out of here!” retorted Star threateningly.
-
-“I’m going. I don’t know what Dud will say, though, when I tell him!”
-
-“I fancy,” sneered Star, “that he will be a good bit relieved!”
-
-“Dud? Oh, dear, no!” responded Jimmy gently. “He’s awfully keen about
-it, Dud is. It’ll be a horrible disappointment to him, Meyer. Well, so
-long.”
-
-Jimmy passed out with melancholy mien, closing the door softly behind
-him and then pausing an instant to chuckle before he opened the next
-portal. A moment later his expression of wicked glee changed to one of
-utmost decorum, for to his surprise he found that Dud had a visitor and
-that the visitor was none other than Mr. Russell. Mr. Russell, better
-known as “J. P.,” was the Greek instructor and one of the house masters
-in Trow. Jimmy said “Good evening, sir,” in the most deferential tones,
-shot a quick, inquiring glance at Dud and then paused uncertainly.
-
-“Am I in the way, Mr. Russell?” he asked.
-
-“Not at all, Logan. I’ve finished my business with Baker. Possibly I’d
-better acquaint you with it and enlist your assistance.” Mr. Russell
-smiled gently. “We’ve heard that Baker had a quarrel this afternoon
-with another boy and was heard to threaten him. As you know, both of
-you, fighting is not tolerated here, and I felt it my duty to drop
-in and warn Baker against――ah――any infringement of the rules. He has
-explained the circumstances and I must acknowledge that he has grounds
-for――ah――complaint. But the matter must be settled amicably, boys, and
-I shall depend on you, Logan, as an older boy, to see that your friend
-here does nothing he will be sorry for. Personally, I believe that
-there is something to be said for――ah――a physical encounter under such
-circumstances, but rules are rules and we are here to obey them. You
-agree with me, Logan?”
-
-“Absolutely, sir,” replied Jimmy emphatically.
-
-“Then I may depend on you to see that nothing occurs which――ah――――”
-
-“You may, sir,” said Jimmy resolutely. “In fact, I’ve already been
-talking it over with Dud, Mr. Russell, and I’m certain he doesn’t
-intend to make any trouble. You see, just at first he was a bit peeved.
-Any fellow would have been if another fellow had slapped his face like
-that. But after I’d talked to him a while――――”
-
-Jimmy paused because Dud was grinning and Mr. Russell had emitted what
-was an unmistakable chuckle.
-
-“I’m afraid, Logan, your counsel didn’t prevail, after all,” said the
-instructor, “for I found Baker in a decidedly uncompromising state of
-mind. I think you’d better have another talk with him.” Mr. Russell
-arose, still smiling, and moved to the door. “My advice to both you
-boys is to be sensible. Good evening.”
-
-“Now what the dickens did he mean by that?” asked Jimmy, frowning
-perplexedly after the instructor. Dud laughed.
-
-“He meant that your bluff didn’t fool him a bit, you silly ass, if you
-want to know. I told him I meant to fight Meyer the first chance I got.
-Then you came in and began talking too much, as usual.”
-
-“Oh!” said Jimmy, grinning. “So that’s it? Well, now what’s to be done?
-I put it up to Star and he ab-so-lutely refused the invitation.”
-
-“I guess that ends it,” said Dud. “I certainly don’t intend to have any
-scrap with him now when faculty’s on the watch. J. P. says they’d chuck
-me if I got caught at it. He’s not a bad sort, J. P.”
-
-“Isn’t it the very dickens!” muttered Jimmy, plunging his hands in
-his pockets and viewing his chum forlornly. “Just when everything was
-coming around our way, too!”
-
-Dud shrugged philosophically. “I’ll get even with him some time, even
-if I can’t fight him now,” he declared grimly. “Don’t you worry.”
-
-“Yes, but that isn’t going to help us much now,” replied Jimmy
-perplexedly. “You see, I insisted that you were crazy for a scrap and
-Star will think――――”
-
-“Oh, who cares what Star thinks? Who cares what anybody thinks?” asked
-Dud impatiently. “I’m sick of the whole business.”
-
-“We’ve got to save our faces, though,” said the other, shaking his
-head. “And so I guess――――” His face lighted suddenly. “That’s the
-ticket! By Jove, Dud, we’ll get credit out of this yet!”
-
-“What silly scheme are you thinking about now?” asked his chum
-dubiously.
-
-“Why, all we’ve got to do is to tell the truth!”
-
-“_All?_” asked Dud sarcastically. “I’d say that was a whole lot for you
-to try, Jimmy.”
-
-“Yes, sir, just let it get around that faculty got wind of the thing
-and, knowing your reputation as a scrapper, sent J. P. to forbid you to
-fight! Great stuff, that!” Jimmy laughed delightedly. “Why, it’s almost
-as good as the scrap!”
-
-“Look here, Jimmy, I’m tired of the whole thing, I tell you. Let it
-drop, won’t you?”
-
-“Sure! Only we’ve got to have the last word, Dud! Now don’t pester me
-any more. I’ve got to dig a bit.”
-
-But if Jimmy really studied, appearances were deceptive, for when,
-during the next hour, Dud occasionally glanced across the table, it was
-always to behold Jimmy with his hands locked behind his head, his gaze
-on the ceiling and a thoughtfully rapturous smile on his face. After
-study hour was over he disappeared.
-
-Dud asked no questions the next day. As he had truthfully told Jimmy,
-he was tired of the whole affair. He was still deeply resentful toward
-Star Meyer, but his anger had cooled and he had no intention of
-getting into trouble with the faculty for the scant satisfaction of
-being bruised up further by that youth. He was tired, too, of trying
-to become “a regular feller,” to use Jimmy’s descriptive phrase. What
-the latter liked to call “the campaign” had been, so far as beneficial
-results were concerned, a total failure. To be sure, Dud had enlarged
-his circle of acquaintances vastly; he was now on nodding or speaking
-acquaintance with fully three-fourths of the fellows; but what, as he
-asked himself disconsolately, was the good of knowing chaps if they
-didn’t like you afterwards? He could still count on the fingers of one
-hand the fellows who really showed any disposition to be friendly:
-Hugh Ordway, Ben Myatt, Guy Murtha, Roy Dresser and Ed Brooks. He
-tried in vain to find a sixth. There was Jimmy, of course, but Jimmy
-was understood. Of the friendly ones only Ordway and Dresser could
-be called disinterested, he decided. Murtha was friendly because he
-wanted Dud to make good as a pitcher, Myatt because he took a sort of
-proprietary interest in the younger twirler, and Brooks because it
-had fallen to his lot to catch Dud frequently, and there had sprung
-up between them a sort of comradeship that, so far, ended with each
-day’s work-out. As to Hugh Ordway, Dud suspected that that youth showed
-friendliness because he was naturally kind-hearted and had taken pity
-on him. So that left only Roy Dresser, and Dresser was much older
-than Dud and went with the football crowd and, in the natural course
-of events, their paths seldom crossed. It would have been perfectly
-feasible for Dud to call on Dresser, but that would have required an
-amount of assurance that the younger boy didn’t possess. No, judging by
-results, that “campaign” had not been a colossal success!
-
-Just now, however, Dud didn’t care so much whether he was popular or
-not. He was very full of baseball and secretly consumed by the ambition
-to make good as a pitcher and win a place on the first team. For the
-present that provided sufficient interest. He didn’t really believe
-that he would succeed in his ambition; at least, not this year; but
-one may lack belief and still hope, and Dud was doing a whole lot of
-hoping. So far he had done as well as any of the “rookies” without,
-however, having distinguished himself in the least. He could flatter
-himself that neither Brunswick nor Kelly had been used more often than
-he, and he took encouragement from the fact. Sometimes he regretted
-that he had taken Ben Myatt’s advice and changed his style. If he
-hadn’t, he told himself, he might have showed a lot more by this
-time. Generally, though, he recognized the fact that Ben’s advice had
-really been very sensible and that eventually, if not this season,
-then next, he would find himself better off for having followed it. So
-far, though, the improvement that Ben had promised had developed very
-slowly, and he had days of discouragement. It seemed that what accuracy
-he had possessed before had quite left him. He could show speed and
-he could fool four batsmen out of five with his change of pace, but
-when the score got to be two-and-two and it was necessary to put them
-over he was as likely as not to be as wild as a hawk. Obeying Ben, he
-still avoided “hooks,” making up his mind to leave such things quite
-alone until he was able to put the straight ones where he wanted them.
-Plenty of pitchers will tell you that it is harder to pitch a straight
-ball than a curve, and it’s very nearly true. It is, in fact, entirely
-true in the case of a young pitcher who has started out pitching curves
-to the practical exclusion of straight balls. And Dud, having taught
-himself very largely, had begun his pitching career on the erroneous
-assumption that a wide knowledge of “hooks” and “curves” and “jumps”
-and other freakish things is a pitcher’s best asset. It is not, though,
-for the simple reason that no pitcher ever combined a large variety of
-deliveries with that most valuable of all assets, control. “Putting
-it where you want it” is what counts, and the pitcher who can put a
-straight ball just where it will do the most good can dispose of the
-batsman in far better style than one whose wide curves and drops and
-jumps refuse to break over the plate. All this Dud learned for himself
-eventually, but just now he was accepting it on faith, and his faith
-often failed him.
-
-The day after Mr. Russell’s visit to Number 19 Dud very carefully
-avoided a meeting with Star Meyer. When he left his room he listened to
-make sure that his neighbor was not also about to emerge, and in School
-Hall he searched the corridors between recitations in order that he
-would not find himself embarrassingly confronted by Star. When you have
-earnestly vowed to make another fellow fight it is a bit disconcerting
-to have to pass him by meekly! Dud’s endeavors met with complete
-success until he entered the Field House in the afternoon to get into
-his playing togs. Then, as he feared, fortune deserted him. The first
-occupant of the room his eyes lighted on was Star, while, oddly enough,
-Star glanced across at the doorway at that instant and saw Dud. But
-that was all there was to it, for Star removed his gaze without a
-flicker of recognition, and Dud went to his own locker, fortunately
-the width of the room away from Star’s, and attended strictly to the
-matter of making a hurried change of attire. Some of the fellows who
-had learned of the encounter between the two the afternoon before
-watched them expectantly until Star, ready for work, left the building
-with Weston and Milford. Dud avoided the glances of the others as
-he pulled his togs on. They knew, he was certain, that he had sworn
-revenge against Star and were naturally viewing him disparagingly as a
-“quitter.” Had he overheard a whispered conversation in one corner of
-the locker-room, however, he wouldn’t have been troubled so much.
-
-“Did you see Star sneak out?” chuckled Jones, a rather stout youth with
-ambitions looking toward a position in the first team outfield. “I’ll
-bet he’s mighty glad faculty read the riot act to Baker!”
-
-“What was that?” asked Churchill, a third-choice shortstop.
-
-“Didn’t you hear? Why, Star and Baker had a row in here yesterday
-and went for each other, and Davy had to separate them. Star was mad
-because Baker hit him with the ball when he was at bat. Baker was wild,
-they say, and swore he’d get Star the first chance. So Davy pipes off
-the faculty and J. P. beats it to Baker’s room and tells him that if he
-doesn’t leave Star alone faculty’ll jump him hard. So, of course, Baker
-has to promise to behave, but they say he’s hopping mad and will get
-Star yet. I thought maybe he’d forget and light into him just now.”
-
-“Oh, peanuts! I guess Star isn’t afraid of that kid. Why, look at him!
-Star’s six inches bigger every way!”
-
-“That’s all right,” responded Jones, “but they say Baker’s a regular
-terror when he gets started. Got thrown out of one school because he
-nearly killed a fellow there.”
-
-“That right?” asked the other incredulously.
-
-“Surest thing you know, old scout! Ned Stiles was telling me. He knows
-the fellow Baker beat up.” Jones gazed speculatively and admiringly
-at the unconscious Dud and shook his head. “He doesn’t _look_ awfully
-scrappy, does he? But, say, I’ll bet he could hand you an awful wallop
-with that right of his! They say he’s as clever as anything on his
-feet; just dances all around the other fellow and does about as he
-likes. You all ready?”
-
-On the way out Churchill, regarding Dud in surreptitious awe,
-encountered that youth’s gaze, and, as Dud at the instant happened to
-be frowning darkly at his thoughts, Churchill was ever after convinced
-that Dud was a fellow to be treated with the utmost respect!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-WITH THE SCRUBS
-
-
-Dud speedily forgot all about Star Meyer, social aspirations and
-everything else except baseball, for they had their first practice game
-that afternoon and, although Dud wasn’t called on to work during the
-first three innings, he became vastly absorbed in the proceedings. Mr.
-Sargent made up one team of seasoned veterans of previous campaigns,
-with Gus Weston pitching and Gordon catching, and formed the opposing
-team of the newer candidates, giving the twirling job to Nate Leddy
-and letting Ed Brooks catch him. Since it was the first contest of the
-year both teams were on their toes and went into it hard. From the
-practice diamond Mr. Crowley’s second nine looked on enviously when the
-opportunity allowed.
-
-Weston pitched nice ball for the regulars for two innings, mowing down
-the opposing batsmen impartially and even monotonously. But in the
-third, Ben Myatt, playing left field for the scrubs, landed on one of
-Gus’s offerings and drove it far into right center, where neither Star
-Meyer nor Gordon Parker could reach it in time to prevent him from
-reaching third. That put the following batsmen on their mettle, and
-before the inning was over Gus Weston had yielded four hits for a total
-of seven bases and three runs had crossed the plate. As, however, the
-regulars had by that time scored thrice owing to two singles and as
-many errors of the scrub’s infield, the contest was far from decided.
-Weston managed to survive the fourth inning, although decidedly wobbly.
-He allowed two hits and passed Barnes, and the scrubs were yelling for
-a tally when Hugh Ordway fanned and made the last out, leaving an irate
-runner on third.
-
-Brunswick went on the mound for the regulars in the fifth and Dud took
-Leddy’s place for the scrub. After that, as might have been expected,
-the fielders were much busier and runs began to trickle across quite
-frequently. Dud pitched three innings that afternoon and performed
-fairly creditably. Ed Brooks, fast rounding into form as a catcher,
-knew Dud’s failings and jockeyed him along with a lot of skill and
-wisdom. More than once Dud found himself in a hole, and if he escaped,
-as he generally did that day, it was more due to Brooks than to him.
-The catcher never hesitated to demand the third strike when it was due,
-leaving it to Dud to put on enough steam or to fool the batter with
-an unexpected slow ball, and it must be said to Dud’s credit that he
-frequently delivered the goods. But at that he was hammered hard by
-the head of the opposing batting list, and could only find consolation
-in the fact that Brunswick fared but little better at the hands of the
-scrubs.
-
-Brunswick gave way to Joe Kelly in the eighth, and in that half-inning
-the scrubs almost snatched the game away from their haughty opponents.
-Kelly was wild and ineffective and filled the bases with the first
-three men up. Jimmy Logan, who had never set the world on fire with
-his batting, bunted cannily down the first-base line, managed to get
-in the way of Kelly’s throw to the plate and not only saw two runners
-score but reached first in safety himself. Prentiss fouled out on the
-second delivery and Jimmy was caught going down to second. Dud, whose
-turn it was at bat, had but slight hope of turning in a hit. But Kelly
-had another ascension――or perhaps merely continued his first!――and
-got himself in the hole to the tune of one strike and three balls.
-Dud let another strike go by and then hit at the next delivery. Luck
-favored him, for Nick Blake, at short, made a miserable stop of a weak
-grounder and threw to first the fraction of a second too late, and
-the runner from third was safe. That run brought the scrubs’ score to
-11 to the regulars’ 13 and, even with two down, the scrubs dreamed of
-tying it up. But Boynton dispelled the illusion by popping a weak fly
-to Neil Ayer at first, and, since the practice period was up, Mr.
-Sargent called the game. For the succeeding half-hour the scrubs busied
-themselves to a man telling just how they would have won the game had
-it gone nine innings!
-
-Doubtless pitching four innings to the tune of nine hits and two passes
-isn’t anything remarkable, but Dud left the field that afternoon
-treading on air. If, he confided to himself, he had mixed a few
-hooks in with those straight ones and, perhaps, succeeded in getting
-a “floater” over nicely a few times, he would have cut those nine
-bingles down to three or four! And, anyway, Pete hadn’t taken him out,
-as he had Brunswick, which showed that at least the coach was fairly
-satisfied with him. And when, while he was pulling off his togs, Guy
-Murtha stopped an instant to say “Good work, Baker: I like your style,”
-the air under Dud’s feet became roseate clouds! He didn’t even recall
-Star Meyer’s existence until, on the way to the showers, he literally
-ran into that youth. And then, instead of falling back, abashed, he
-pushed past the other with a fine indifference and rattled the curtain
-along the rod in Star’s face!
-
-Afterwards, going across the Green in the early twilight, he overtook
-a group of fellows and, contrary to his usual custom of passing them
-with a muttered and doubtful greeting, he fell into step with Bert
-Winslow, much to that youth’s surprise, and carelessly offered an
-observation to the effect that it had been a dandy game. Bert agreed
-unenthusiastically, shot a curious side-glance at the other, felt
-some of his antipathy toward him vanish and remarked quite cordially:
-“You’re more of a pitcher than I thought, Baker. Where’d you learn it?”
-
-“I haven’t learned it yet,” answered Dud, conquering his shyness with
-an effort that left him almost breathless. “Anyway, _you_ didn’t have
-much trouble hitting me, Winslow.”
-
-Bert accepted the compliment as merited, which it was, and thought
-better of the other’s discernment and modesty, and while he was
-beginning a reply Nick Blake, walking a few steps ahead, turned and
-regarded Dud gravely and remarked sadly: “I’ll give you a quarter next
-time, Baker, if you’ll tip me off when you’re going to pitch one of
-those slow ones. I don’t mind hitting the air, but I hate to break my
-back. Besides, I’m extremely sensitive to ridicule, Baker.”
-
-The others laughed and Dud was spared the necessity of a reply by Bert
-Winslow. “If you were really sensitive to ridicule, Nick, you wouldn’t
-try to play,” he observed crushingly. Nick resented the insult promptly
-and battle ensued. Dud left the adversaries rolling on the turf,
-applauded by several spectators, and made his way on to Trow, feeling
-much embarrassed and extremely happy.
-
-The happiness was reflected in the letter which he wrote home the next
-afternoon, for that was Sunday, and Dud, while he sometimes dashed
-off a hurried note on a weekday, made it a practice to always fill
-four pages with his somewhat scrawly writing on Sundays. His epistles
-invariably commenced the same way:
-
- DEAR MOTHER, FATHER AND SISTERS [there were two of the latter]:
-
- I am well and getting on nicely. I hope you are all well when
- this reaches you.
-
-After that he might change the rest of the contents from week to week,
-but Mrs. Baker, who read the letters aloud to a more or less attentive
-audience, could get through the first two sentences while she was still
-fixing her reading glasses on her nose. Today Dud’s letter was far more
-cheerful than usual. In fact, it started right out being cheerful, and
-the weather, generally dwelt on at length, was utterly neglected.
-
- A good deal has happened since I wrote last and things are
- getting pretty busy here. Something doing every minute in the
- big tent, like Jimmy says. Yesterday I pitched four whole
- innings in the first practice game we have had and did pretty
- well take everything in consideration. Dad will say I’m
- boasting but I’m not because if I hadn’t done pretty well Mr.
- Sargent would have canned me quick, I guess. They only got
- nine hits off me and Guy Murtha who is captain and a peach
- of a whanger only got one real hit off me and one that was
- mighty scratchy. I guess I did as well as Brunswick and I know
- I did better than Joe Kelly because Joe had an ascension and
- handed out passes to beat the band. Well, we’re getting down
- to business here now all right, everybody’s doing something,
- the Track Team has been out about a fortnight and so have we,
- nearly, and the tennis cracks are out on the courts and some
- of the fellows who play golf go over to the Mt. Grafton links.
- They let the school fellows play there for nothing, but I guess
- Charley pays them something for the privilege by the year. I’d
- like to try my hand at golf, but I guess it wouldn’t be good
- for my pitching. I’m still sticking to straight balls, like I
- told you last week, but if I can get my control back pretty
- soon I’m going to try hooking them again. I guess you’ll begin
- to think I don’t do anything here at School but play baseball,
- but that isn’t so because ever since mid-year exams most of us
- have been digging like anything. I’m all square again with Mr.
- Gring, but I told you that last week. He says if I could write
- English as well as I talk it I’d be all right but just the same
- I got Good on my last comp and would have got Excellent only
- for punctuation. Jimmy says I’m a punk punctuater. I guess I
- am, all right, too.
-
- We play our first game the 25th with the second team and then
- we play Portsmouth Grammar the 28th. I’ll send a card with the
- schedule on it so you will know when we play and whom. We have
- sixteen dates this spring but some of them aren’t filled yet.
- It’s very hard to get teams around here to play us because we
- usually beat them badly and they don’t like it. I had a row
- with Starling Meyer in the Field House the other day and he
- slapped me and Davy, he’s the trainer, butted in. I was going
- to make Star fight but faculty got wise and J. P. came up and
- said if I did I’d get in trouble, so I didn’t. But I’ll fix
- him some other way. Jimmy is well and as crazy as ever. He
- is out for the first too and I guess he will make it, anyway
- he has more chance than I have, but I feel very much more
- encouraged since Pete let me pitch all through the last of
- the game yesterday like I told you. I didn’t get your letter
- until Friday last week so I guess dad forgot to post it again.
- You ask him if he didn’t. He will say Pooh, Pooh, but I’ll
- bet anything he did. I’m getting on fine. I’ve met some more
- fellows who are on the nine and everything’s fine and dandy.
- Please tell dad that I’d like it if I could have my allowance
- a little before the first this month because I have to dig
- down for the track team assessment. They voted to tax all of
- us fifty cents apiece, which is O.K. only I haven’t got it to
- spare. Love to you all,
-
- Your aff. Son,
-
- DUDLEY.
-
-Dud was highly pleased with that letter, for he discovered that he
-had bettered his usual four pages by two more. There was besides, he
-decided, a literary flavor to it that most of his epistles lacked; and
-he was certain that his father would chuckle about forgetting to post
-that letter; and maybe he would send the allowance right away!
-
-After it was finished he and Jimmy went down to the Beach and, since
-they had no canoe of their own and the punts belonging to the school
-were hard to row and likely to prove leaky, borrowed one of the many
-that reposed under the trees along the Cove. They were in doubt for
-a while as to which particular craft to requisition, since it was
-distinctly advisable to select one whose owner was not likely to want
-it that day. The difficulty was finally solved by Dud, who recalled
-the fact that young Twining was in the infirmary with German measles.
-Twining was only a junior, anyway, and juniors had few rights even when
-perfectly well, and still fewer when they weren’t! So Dud blithely led
-the way to a gorgeous light blue Old Town, and together they bore it to
-the muddy water of the Cove and clambered in.
-
-“It’s the best canoe here, too,” observed Jimmy contentedly, as he
-dipped his paddle at the bow. (Jimmy took the bow paddle because, or
-so he declared, there was more responsibility connected with that
-position. Dud, while not deceived in the least, never objected, for he
-had a notion that stern paddling would develop his arm muscles.) “They
-say that little bounder has heaps of money, millions and millions;
-that is, his dad has. Did I ever tell you about the old darkey woman
-who used to work for us? She was telling mother about some man who
-was terribly rich, you know, and mother said, ‘I suspect he’s a
-millionaire, Dorah.’ ‘A millionaire, Mis’ Logan!’ says she. ‘Bless yo’
-heart, honey, that man’s got sev’ral millions of airs!’ Guess that’s
-the way with Twining’s dad, eh?”
-
-“That’s a peach of a canoe that Ordway’s got,” said Dud, after he had
-laughed at Jimmy’s story.
-
-“Too fancy,” replied the other as they left the Cove and headed down
-the river. “He has about everything in it except a grand piano!”
-
-“I suppose it cost a lot,” said Dud.
-
-“I’ll bet it did. I told him the other day that it was too pretty to
-use, and he said he thought it was, too. Seems he didn’t know much
-about canoes and let Bert Winslow order it, and Bert got all the
-trimmings the law allows. That’s like Bert. I guess it’s too heavy to
-handle well. Here comes Brew Longley and Foster Tray. Don’t forget to
-speak now!”
-
-A battered green canoe occupied by two youths passed and salutations
-were exchanged. For once Dud managed to get just the proper amount
-of mixed hauteur and friendliness in his greeting. Somehow, since
-yesterday, it wasn’t so hard to do things like that. Tray, a football
-player and track team member, laughed as the canoes passed. “See you
-got a canoe now, Jimmy,” he called.
-
-Jimmy waved his paddle nonchalantly. “Yes, it’s a poor thing but mine
-own. I’ll let you use it, Tray, any time you like. I believe in lending
-to them as hasn’t.”
-
-“You believe in borrowing, too, don’t you?” laughed Longley.
-
-“Anything but trouble,” responded Jimmy, over his shoulder.
-
-They paused near the old wooden bridge beyond the boathouse to watch
-an automobile dash by at some forty miles an hour, and Jimmy sighed
-as he began to paddle again. “I always think every time that the old
-affair will fall into the river, but it never does. I never do have any
-luck!” Beyond the bridge, where the river widened as it wound through
-the marshes, they met a canoe at about every turn. Many were drawn to
-the bank, and their crews were usually lying at ease above. About two
-miles beyond the bridge and within view of Needham Falls they overtook
-a white canoe, or a canoe that had been white at one time, apparently
-empty, since at a little distance nothing showed but an idle paddle and
-the backs of the seats.
-
-“That,” mused Dud, “looks like Ordway’s. It must have got away from him
-somewhere further back. We’d better tow it home, hadn’t we?”
-
-“I guess so. Got anything we can tie it up with?” Jimmy altered the
-direction of his craft to run alongside the derelict.
-
-“Maybe we can use my belt,” Dud suggested. But at that moment they came
-near enough to see into the white canoe and discovered that it was far
-from empty, since two forms were stretched out flat on the bottom.
-One had the colored pages of a Sunday paper over his face and was
-consequently unrecognizable, but the other was unmistakably Nick Blake
-himself. Jimmy signaled to stop paddling and the canoe floated silently
-alongside.
-
-“Asleep!” whispered Jimmy. Dud nodded. Their eyes questioned. Here,
-plainly, was a Heaven-sent opportunity to perpetrate a joke, but what
-form the joke was to take was not easily decided. Dud watched Jimmy
-expectantly, and Jimmy frowned thoughtfully, benignantly down on the
-recumbent forms. If, he pondered, there was some way of fixing a line
-to the white canoe without waking the occupants it would be a lark to
-tow it down to the Falls and tie it up there in plain sight of the
-trolley bridge. But Nick or his companion would probably wake before
-they had accomplished that deed. And, besides, there was no rope handy.
-Jimmy was for once at a loss. So, evidently, was Dud, for the latter
-returned Jimmy’s inquiring look blankly. The precious moments passed.
-And then, while Jimmy still racked his usually prolific brain, Nick’s
-lips opened, although not his eyes, and Nick’s voice murmured: “Hello,
-Jimmy! How well you’re looking. Isn’t he, ’Ighness?”
-
-And from under the newspaper came the reply in dreamy accents: “Oh,
-rather! Perfectly ripping!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-ON THE RIVER
-
-
-“You chumps!” growled Jimmy in deep disgust. “What do you think you’re
-doing, anyway?”
-
-“It’s a sad story,” murmured Nick. “We were shipwrecked six――seven――how
-many days ago was it, Mr. Ordway?”
-
-“Seven, Mr. Blake.”
-
-“Ay, seven days ago, sir, and ever since we have been tossed about in
-this tiny boat at the mercy of the sea and tempest and――――”
-
-“Elements,” suggested the voice from under the comic supplement.
-
-“Ay, elephants! At last――at last――――”
-
-“Get that in about no food nor water,” prompted the other in a hoarse
-whisper.
-
-“I forgot to say that there was no time to provision the boat. For six
-days――――”
-
-“Seven!”
-
-“For seven days we were without food or drink, and at last, weak and
-exhausted, we lay down in the bottom of the boat and died.”
-
-“Oh, so you’re dead?” asked Jimmy interestedly.
-
-“Dead as anything,” replied Nick cheerfully. “You dead, Mr. Ordway?”
-
-“Fearfully, thanks.”
-
-“I thought so. When one is dead one’s memory is apt to be a bit
-uncertain, though. That’s why I asked. Gentleman here inquired. Very
-kind of him, I’m sure. Wasn’t it kind of him, ’Ighness?”
-
-“Extraordinarily kind! Most polite, I’m quite sure!”
-
-“The trouble with you fellows,” said Jimmy solicitously, “is that
-you’ve been lying around here in the sun. What you need is a local
-application of cold water to the cranium――――”
-
-“Doesn’t he talk beautifully, ’Ighness?”
-
-“It’s wonderful,” sighed the other.
-
-“And it’s my duty to attend to the matter,” concluded Jimmy. Nick
-opened his eyes then and the colored supplement quivered emotionally.
-
-“Respect the dead, Jimmy,” warned Nick, “or I’ll forget that I’m a
-lifeless corpse and lay you out with a paddle. Who’s there with you?”
-
-“Dud Baker.”
-
-“Ah, the sprightly Baker,” murmured Nick. “Salutations, Baker.”
-
-“Hello,” replied Dud from the further end of the canoe. “Hello, Ordway.”
-
-Hugh cast aside the paper and carefully assumed a sitting position.
-“Hello, Baker,” he said. “Nick, I fancy we’re rescued.”
-
-“Too late,” answered his companion in disaster gloomily. “We’re dead.
-It’s perfectly silly to come along at this late day and rescue us,
-Jimmy.”
-
-“Well, if you’re dead it’s up to us to bury you. Mind if we don’t sew
-you up in sacks, Nick? We’re awfully shy of sacks.”
-
-“I mind terribly. I couldn’t think of being buried at sea without a
-sack. I suppose you’ll tell me next that you haven’t even a cannon ball
-to sink me with!”
-
-“He might use a couple of those doughnuts,” suggested Hugh, poking with
-one foot at a bundle in the middle of the canoe.
-
-“Doughnuts?” asked Jimmy eagerly. “Got eats in there, fellows?”
-
-“Yes, sir.” Nick pulled himself up with a groan. “We’re off on a
-picnic, Jimmy. And that reminds me, Hugh, that it’s about time we
-looked for a picturesque sylvan glade somewhere. Seen any of those
-things, Jimmy?”
-
-Jimmy, who had been working the light blue canoe along until it now
-rocked companionably beside the white one, shook his head. “No,” he
-answered. “Let’s――er――let’s look at one of those doughnuts, Nick.”
-
-Nick viewed him speculatively and then dropped his gaze to the bundle.
-“I wouldn’t want to expose them to the air, Jimmy. They get stale so
-soon, you see. But I’ll describe them to you. They’re big and fat and
-sort of a lovely golden-brown color, and they’ve got sugar sprinkled
-on their circumferences, so to speak. Honest, Jimmy, they’re awfully
-_tasty_ doughnuts. You’d like ’em, I feel sure.”
-
-“Stingy brute! Come across, Nick. I’m as hungry as a bear. You’ve got
-plenty, I’ll bet.”
-
-“Depends,” replied Nick, clasping his hands about his knees, “what you
-call plenty. We’ve got only a dozen.”
-
-“You can have a couple of my six,” laughed Hugh, reaching for the
-luncheon.
-
-“One moment,” interposed Nick. “Tell you what, ’Ighness. Here we are
-with more food than we can eat, and here are two famished mariners
-miles from port. What’s the answer?”
-
-“Why, we invite them to dinner, of course.”
-
-“Correct! Turn your old tub around, Jimmy, and paddle back to the
-willows and we’ll go ashore and have a banquet. We’ve only got three
-chops, but there’s lots of bread and butter and some cheese and a can
-of peaches. Only we forgot to bring an opener, and so I don’t just
-see―――― You don’t happen to carry a can-opener with you, do you Baker?”
-
-“No, but I think I can-opener without one,” replied Dud.
-
-“Wow!” said Jimmy.
-
-Nick turned with great difficulty and viewed Dud reproachfully. “You
-shouldn’t do that,” he said. “I don’t mind for myself. I’m strong. But
-Hugh here won’t get that before tomorrow morning at eleven-thirty-nine,
-and meanwhile he will puzzle that poor English bean of his and get
-faint and dizzy. You shouldn’t, Baker, you shouldn’t!”
-
-“Get what?” asked Hugh innocently.
-
-Jimmy laughed and Nick nodded sorrowfully at him. “Listen, ’Ighness,”
-he explained patiently. “It was like this. I asked Baker if he carried
-a can-opener with him. Get that?”
-
-“Perfectly. And he said he could open it without one. What’s the joke?”
-
-Nick cast his hands aside hopelessly. “What’s the use? What’s the use?”
-he demanded. “Come on and let’s paddle. I’m sta-a-arved!”
-
-“How about getting back for supper?” inquired Jimmy. “It’s ’way after
-five now.”
-
-“We get lost or we have an upset or something,” rejoined Nick
-carelessly. “We discussed that, but I forget now just what we decided.”
-
-“That’s all right for you,” objected Jimmy as he and Dud swung their
-craft around, “but what about us? We can’t all get upset?”
-
-“Why not?” asked Nick, reaching for his paddle. “There’s plenty of
-water, isn’t there?”
-
-“But, I say, Nick,” remonstrated Hugh, “if we tell them we were upset
-we’ll have to get our clothes wet, eh?”
-
-“Um, that’s so. I hadn’t thought of that. Oh, well, never mind now.
-We’ll think up something going back.”
-
-“We might let the canoes get away from us and have to chase them,”
-suggested Dud.
-
-“Perfect!” applauded Nick. “Baker, you have a great mind. Tell you
-what, my hearties. After we get to the willows we’ll carelessly let the
-canoes get away, see? Then we’ll catch ’em further downstream. They
-won’t ask us how _far_ we had to chase ’em. Even if they do we can be
-vague.”
-
-“Maybe we’d better try to get back on time,” said Hugh.
-
-“Squealer!” Nick, in the stern, reproachfully splashed Hugh’s back.
-“There’s no fun picnicking if you have to go home right away and eat
-another meal.”
-
-“Oh, all right, old chap,” agreed Hugh. “Only don’t throw any more
-water down my neck. It’s beastly cold.”
-
-There was silence then for a few minutes while the two canoes passed
-leisurely down the winding stream, side by side. Westward, the sun
-was dropping close to the greening summit of the low hills and the
-April day was almost at its end. There was a perceptible chill in the
-little breeze that crept across the meadows and made catspaws on the
-quiet surface of the water. Early blackbirds were fluttering along the
-banks ahead of the canoes, uttering their creaky notes and simulating
-wild alarm. A fish leaped after a reckless insect and fell back with a
-startling splash, sending widening circles away in the amber glow. They
-didn’t paddle much, for there was enough current to bear them along.
-Jimmy frankly shipped his blade and watched the drops trickle. Nick’s
-voice came across the few yards of water.
-
-“Somebody will please say some poetry,” he requested.
-
- “‘Now fades the glimmering landscape on the sight,
- And all the air a solemn stillness holds,
- Save where the beetle wheels his droning flight,
- And drowsy tinklings lull the distant folds.
-
- “‘Save that from yonder ivy-mantled tower
- The moping owl――――’”
-
-“That’ll be about all of that,” interrupted Nick. “If you don’t know
-anything cheerful, ’Ighness, dry up. ‘The moping owl’! Where do you get
-that stuff, anyway?”
-
-“Chap name of Gray wrote it,” replied Hugh meekly.
-
-“Thought so! Same fellow who did that ‘Elegy on a Country Cemetery,’ or
-whatever it is. He was a jovial old Johnnie, wasn’t he? Bet you he’d
-have been swell company at a funeral!”
-
-“If you want something bright and sparkling,” offered Jimmy, “I know a
-nice little poem about a hanging! It begins――――”
-
-“Never mind how it begins! Want to spoil a perfectly good appetite? I
-say, you fellows, we’ll race you to the willows. Dig, ’Ighness!”
-
-Followed a spirited race around the last bend to where a group of
-willows leaned out over the shadowed water. Victory was claimed by both
-crews, and the matter was never finally settled, for Nick tactfully
-introduced the subject of supper in the middle of the argument and
-leaped ashore with the brown-paper package that contained the precious
-viands. Dried marsh grass and the paper from the bundle started a fire
-at the foot of one gnarled willow, and small pieces of driftwood,
-deposited by some winter flood, were piled on. Meanwhile Hugh made the
-discovery that they had failed to provide salt for the chops and that
-Nick had neglected to bring his folding cup. Jimmy helpfully reminded
-them that it was an ancient custom, or so he had read, to substitute
-gunpowder for salt when the latter was not to be had, and so _that_ was
-all right! Nick called him an idiot and borrowed his knife to sharpen a
-stick on which to broil the chops. In payment Jimmy helped himself to a
-doughnut.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-CONFESSION
-
-
-A quarter of an hour later they were sitting around the bed of glowing
-coals busily concerned with the chops and bread and butter. The chops
-were decidedly underdone in the middle although beautifully crisp
-outside, and Nick came in for some criticism as a cook. But each of
-the four ate his share――it had proved rather a problem to divide three
-chops into four equal portions!――and so, if the proof of “the pudding
-is in the eating,” Nick was vindicated. They had also brought four
-potatoes to roast, but it was decided that life was too short and
-appetites too impatient to wait for them, and so Jimmy buried them in
-the ground, after carefully cutting them into quarters, and agreed to
-share the proceeds of the crop in September with the others, estimating
-the yield at two pecks. When they were thirsty they went down the bank,
-climbed into a canoe and leaned their heads into the river, thus, as
-Nick pointed out, getting not only a drink but a bath.
-
-The doughnuts, now diminished to eleven, were served out as dessert,
-Jimmy, of course, receiving only two as his share, and were consumed
-with the peaches and cheese. Jimmy’s knife was rather the worse for
-its encounter with the can, but Dud kept his promise of opening the
-latter. They speared the peaches out with slivers, passing the can
-around the circle until nothing was left but the juice. Then they drank
-that. Afterwards they tossed the can into the river and threw pebbles
-at it until it floated slowly out of range. By that time it was fully
-twilight and the April evening was growing chill. So they built up the
-fire again and sat closer, huddling together for better protection from
-the little breeze that whispered through the dead grass and leafless
-boughs. For a while no one showed much inclination for conversation,
-but after a while Hugh let fall a murmured remark and presently they
-were talking desultorily of this and that, or, at least, Jimmy and
-Hugh and Nick were. Dud, as usual, had little to say, and finally Nick
-remarked:
-
-“Shut up, Baker, and let someone else get a word in. I never heard such
-a chatterbox.”
-
-Jimmy chuckled. “Isn’t he gabby?” he asked.
-
-“Is he like this in the room, Jimmy?” Nick inquired.
-
-“N-no, and that’s the funny part of it. When he and I are alone
-together he’s just full of words; can’t get them out fast enough. In
-company, though, he’s horribly otherwise. I’ve been trying to break
-him of it, but”――Jimmy sighed lugubriously――“nothing doing.”
-
-“I dare say he believes in waiting until he has something to say,”
-offered Hugh. “Is that the idea, Baker?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know.” Dud laughed uncertainly. “I never seem to think of
-things when――when I’m around with a crowd.”
-
-“Well, you don’t call us a crowd, do you?” demanded Nick. “Come on
-now; loosen up; spring some of those scintillant remarks that Jimmy is
-always repeating. Know what he does, Baker? Well, he tells ’em around
-and sort of gets the credit for ’em himself. Of course, he says you
-said them, but there’s a sort of――of inflection in his voice that gives
-you the idea that he put you up to it or――or something; if you know
-what I mean, as Hugh would say.”
-
-“Oh, Dud’s full of bright things,” said Jimmy carelessly. “Only the
-trouble is he doesn’t talk for publication.”
-
-“And you’re his press agent, eh?” laughed Nick. “I’ve often wondered――――”
-He stopped. Then he laughed softly and Jimmy was aware that he was
-regarding him mirthfully in the half darkness.
-
-“What’s the bally joke?” murmured Hugh.
-
-“Oh, nothing. That is――――” Nick fell into silence again. Then: “Most
-of the things Jimmy tells sound a whole lot like Jimmy,” he stated
-suggestively. There was a moment’s silence, broken at last by Dud.
-
-“They are Jimmy’s,” he said quietly.
-
-“Here, don’t try to put the blame on me!” Jimmy laughed loudly. “That’s
-a punk trick, Dud!”
-
-“Honest confession is good for the soul,” said Nick lightly. “Come
-across, Jimmy. What’s the idea? Everyone knows you’ve been touting
-Baker like anything ever since Christmas recess. What is it, a
-conspiracy?”
-
-Jimmy laid a twig carefully on the fire. “I don’t know what you’re
-talking about,” he grumbled.
-
-“Oh, yes, you do, old man! We’re all friends together, you know, and
-nothing you say will be used against you. That all right, Baker?”
-
-“Don’t ask him,” replied Jimmy. “He’d tell you anything. He’s incapable
-of the truth. Say, what’s the matter with getting back, fellows?”
-
-“Oh, there’s plenty of time,” said Nick. “Joking aside, Jimmy, just
-what is the big idea?”
-
-“Go ahead and tell,” urged Dud. “I don’t mind. Besides, they won’t
-talk.”
-
-“Oh, you!” said Jimmy in disgust. “What is there to tell? Well, all
-right, fellows. Only this is just between us, understand? It’s a little
-scheme of my own. You see, Dud here is――well, he’s just as you see
-him now. He thinks big thoughts and he’s a nice boy, but he’s a graven
-image when he gets outside his room. Well, he likes fun as much as the
-rest of us but he doesn’t get it because he always thinks he isn’t
-wanted around. He――he’s shy, you know. At least, I suppose that’s it. I
-never was that way and don’t know much about it.”
-
-Nick and Hugh laughed.
-
-“So I said one day: ‘Dud,’ I said, ‘you do like I tell you and I’ll
-have you mixing in no time at all. I’ll make a regular feller of you,
-and it won’t cost you a cent. All you’ve got to do is what I tell you.’
-So Dud said: ‘Oh, pshaw!’ or words to that effect, but agreed to try
-the scheme. First thing I did was to make a list of fellows he ought
-to know. Then we started in and got acquainted. It was hard sledding
-because just as soon as I got him into a bunch of fellows he’d get
-tongue-tied. Well, I saw that that wouldn’t do and so I began to get
-off the good things Dud said――――”
-
-“All of which you made up?” chuckled Nick.
-
-“No, not all, honest. Some I did, of course. Dud didn’t deliver the
-goods fast enough. And――well, that’s all there is to it. Perfectly
-legitimate, you see, although Dud has had his doubts now and then and
-threatened mutiny once or twice. We’ve got on fairly well. I haven’t
-exactly popularized him yet, but I haven’t done so badly either. Lately
-he’s been sort of kicking over the traces and refusing to pull, but
-we’re progressing slowly. Now you know all about it. If either of you
-chaps blab I’ll punch your head.”
-
-“So that’s it,” mused Nick. “Some scheme, eh, ’Ighness?”
-
-“Rather!”
-
-“I’m glad you know,” said Dud, embarrassed, “because it’s always seemed
-so silly for Jimmy to go around getting off a lot of funny jokes and
-crediting them to me, and then――then for me to just stand around
-and act like a dummy. I suppose we went into it as a sort of lark,
-or――well, I don’t know. I suppose it sounds funny to you chaps. But I
-wanted you to know.”
-
-“I knew already,” said Hugh. “That is, I guessed a long time ago.”
-
-“Honest?” exclaimed Jimmy. “Say, that’s queer, because when I asked Dud
-which of the fellows he’d like to――――”
-
-“Shut up, Jimmy!” implored Dud.
-
-“Why? There’s no harm in it, you chump. I asked Dud who he’d like to
-know most and he said――――”
-
-“_Please_ dry up, Jimmy!”
-
-“He said Hugh Ordway. That’s why we butted in on you one night a long
-while ago.”
-
-“Really? Well, you know, that’s quite a compliment, Baker. I’m afraid,
-though, you didn’t find me――what’s the word, Nick?”
-
-“Responsive?”
-
-“Well, yes. Or appreciative, I guess; that’s better. If I’d known――――”
-
-“You didn’t expect Baker to tell you, did you?” asked Nick. “If you
-really wanted to know a fine, respectable member of the community,
-though, Baker, why didn’t you select me? I can’t understand you wanting
-to know this cold-blooded Britisher.”
-
-“I think we called on you next,” answered Dud, laughing.
-
-“Did you? Well, thanks for small favors! But look here, Jimmy, it’s
-been fun for you, I guess, but you haven’t done Baker much good, you
-idiot! A fellow’s got to work out his own――his own salvation at school.
-No one else can do it for him. Now you let Baker hoe his own row,
-and――――”
-
-“That’s all you know about it,” replied Jimmy tranquilly. “Dud is on
-speaking terms with about every fellow worth knowing now and before I
-took him in hand――――”
-
-“That’s all right, but I’d rather have a half-dozen real friends than
-be able to say ‘Hello’ to everyone. All Baker needs is to put his chin
-up and――and get out and――and mix!”
-
-“Sure!” agreed Jimmy sarcastically. “That’s all! But suppose he
-can’t do it? Suppose he hasn’t got the――the assurance? Then what? Why,
-that’s where I come in, do you see?”
-
-“You’re an ass,” laughed Nick. “Baker, you take my advice and discharge
-your press agent. He’s no good. Anyway, you won’t need him any more.”
-
-“It’s funny about being popular, or whatever you like to call it,”
-mused Hugh. “Funny, I mean, how some fellows are and some aren’t; and
-lots of times the popular chaps aren’t the ones you like best, if you
-know what I mean.”
-
-“Very clear, ’Ighness; almost pellucid,” said Nick. “Just the same――――”
-
-“I don’t think I ever wanted to be what you’d call popular,” interrupted
-Dud. “I never could be, I’m sure. All I did want was to know more
-fellows and not feel quite so much out of everything. Of course, being a
-lower middler I dare say it’s cheeky to want to mix with fellows in the
-upper classes――――”
-
-“Don’t see it that way,” said Nick. “Very commendable ambition, I’d
-call it. Shows a desire to seek――er――refinement and wisdom, and――――”
-
-“Oh, let’s get back,” said Jimmy. “I’m freezing to death. Besides,
-you chaps may say what you like, but I know that without my skillful
-handling of the case Dud wouldn’t be sitting here tonight listening to
-you talk a lot of poppycock, Nick. Results are what count, and as a――a
-press agent, if you like, I’ve produced results. Now someone tell me I
-haven’t!”
-
-“If you call this a result,” began Nick doubtfully.
-
-“Of course I do! Dud has shown you two chaps that, whether he’s a
-brilliant conversationalist or isn’t, he’s a perfectly human sort of a
-chump, and you both like him a little better than you did yesterday,
-and tomorrow Dud can go around and mention to a few fellows that last
-evening he picnicked with Ordway and Blake on the river, and the
-fellows will think, ‘Now if Baker is in with Ordway and Nick Blake he
-must be all right,’ and――――”
-
-“Don’t be a rotter, Jimmy!” begged Dud.
-
-“Rotter nothing! It’s so, isn’t it? Mind, I don’t say you will tell
-about it, but you could. You won’t, as a matter of fact, because you
-don’t play the game for all it’s worth.”
-
-“Honest, Jimmy, you’re enough to sicken a fellow,” said Nick. “If I
-thought you believed what you preached, or practiced it――――”
-
-“I do,” insisted Jimmy stoutly.
-
-“You don’t,” contradicted Dud. “Come on home before you talk any more
-nonsense.”
-
-“I deny the nonsense,” replied Jimmy good-naturedly, “but I’m perfectly
-willing to go home. I’ve been trying to for half an hour. Help me up,
-someone. My legs are stiff with the cold. I say, we mustn’t forget to
-let the canoes get adrift, fellows.”
-
-“Oh, rot,” said Hugh. “If we’ve got to lie, let’s lie decently.”
-
-“Why lie at all, then?” asked Dud. “Let’s just say that we wanted to
-have supper on the river, and――and had it!”
-
-“Not a bad idea,” applauded Nick. “Who knows but that we’ll get off
-easy that way? Faculty will be so surprised when we don’t offer any
-of the usual excuses that they’ll probably forget to put us on pro.
-Anyway, let’s try it.”
-
-“I’ll try anything once,” murmured Jimmy, as he stretched his numbed
-legs. “I wonder, though, if we can see our way back? Bet you we’ll
-run into the bank every two minutes! Where the dickens is that canoe?
-I thought we left it right here. And where’s――――” Jimmy stopped and
-turned toward the others approaching. “Say, fellows, I know an awfully
-good joke,” he drawled.
-
-“What is it?” demanded Nick suspiciously.
-
-“Get ready to laugh. All set? Well, the canoes have gone!”
-
-[Illustration: “‘The canoes have gone!’”]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-MAROONED!
-
-
-“Gone!” exclaimed Hugh. “My word! But how――――”
-
-“Cut out the comedy, Jimmy,” said Nick. “Aren’t they there, really?”
-
-“Well, you come and have a look. Maybe your sight is better than mine.
-I haven’t my glasses with me and so, of course, I may be mistaken, but
-nevertheless and notwithstanding――――”
-
-“Well, I’ll be switched!” muttered Nick, holding a flaring match aloft
-in the darkness. “Now how the dickens――――”
-
-“I guess,” offered Dud, “that getting in and out of them to drink
-pushed them off.”
-
-“That’s the jolly story,” agreed Hugh. “But they were there the last
-time I went down.”
-
-“Who took the last drink?” asked Jimmy.
-
-“You did, didn’t you? Did you see both canoes then?”
-
-Jimmy turned to Nick in the gloom and considered. At last: “I didn’t
-notice,” he confessed. “It was pretty dark then――――”
-
-“But I say,” interrupted Hugh, “what are we going to do, eh?”
-
-“Beat it home, ’Ighness,” responded Nick, “if you know what I mean.
-There’s no use looking for the pesky things tonight. I dare say,
-anyway, they’ll run aground somewhere before they get very far. What
-we’ve got to do is foot it back. How far is it, Jimmy?”
-
-“About a mile and a half,” answered Jimmy gloomily, “and most of the
-way across this plaguey marsh. Unless we strike across that direction
-and find the Yarrow road.”
-
-“That would be worse than looking for the canoes,” said Nick. “Best
-thing to do is follow the river as well as we can. Come on!”
-
-“I say, if I fall in you might sing out so I’ll know which way to
-swim,” suggested Hugh. “Tomorrow I’m going to buy an anchor for that
-canoe, Nick; that is, if I ever find it.”
-
-“Gee!” muttered Jimmy.
-
-“What’s the matter?” asked Nick.
-
-“I was just recalling the interesting fact that the canoe we were in
-belongs to young Twining, the little beast, and he will be likely to be
-quite peevish if it’s lost.”
-
-“How inconsiderate!” laughed Nick. “He’s a junior, isn’t he?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“That’s all right then. You can point out to him that it’s a great
-honor for him to have his canoe lost by an upper middler. Besides,
-it’ll turn up in the morning. Oh, thunder!”
-
-“I should say so!” agreed Hugh, scrambling out of the ditch he had
-followed Nick into. “’Ware water, fellows!”
-
-Dud and Jimmy escaped that time, but during the next half-hour or so
-they had their share of misfortunes. There was no moon and the stars
-were partly hidden by light clouds and it was impossible to see more
-than a pace ahead at any time. They never actually tumbled into the
-river, but they frequently stumbled down the bank and only saved
-themselves by prompt laying hold of whatever they could reach, as when
-Nick, walking too close to the edge and finding himself slipping,
-promptly clutched Hugh’s leg and nearly doubled the catastrophe! It
-seemed more like an hour than a half-hour since they had left the
-willows before they caught sight of the old bridge looming indistinctly
-above them. After that the rest was easy, for they had only to break
-their way through the bushes that clad the embankment and foot it along
-Crumbie Street to the corner of the campus, their path now illumined
-by the infrequent street lights. Under the first of them they stopped
-to take stock. Every one of them was wet to the knees or above and
-plastered here and there with the nice, dark, rich mud of the marshes.
-It was almost eight o’clock and any hope they may have entertained of
-reaching their various rooms undetected had long since vanished. Nick
-sighed philosophically as he turned to continue his journey, his shoes
-_squish-squashing_ at every step.
-
-“Anyway,” he said, “when we tell them we lost the canoes and had to
-walk home they’ll just have to believe us! That is the one bright spot
-in the surrounding gloom.”
-
-“I’ve always wondered,” mused Jimmy, “how it would feel to be on
-probation.”
-
-“You ought to know by this time,” chuckled Dud. “You’ve been there
-twice already.” For some reason, Dud seemed less troubled by the
-impending disaster than the others.
-
-Jimmy sniffed. “I don’t know, Mr. Baker, where you get your information,
-but you have been sadly misled. The other occasions to which you
-doubtless allude――――”
-
-“Shut up, Jimmy,” warned Nick. “And, say, we’d better part company
-about now. You and Baker beat it up here and Hugh and I’ll amble
-careless-like over to River Street. I hate to attract attention, I’m
-that modest. Nighty-night!”
-
-“Same to you,” replied Jimmy. “And thanks for a pleasant party.
-Although I must say that your arrangements for getting us home were a
-bit――ah――primitive!”
-
-“Don’t mention it! Farewell, brothers. We meet in prison!”
-
-Whether by design or accident, Mr. Russell’s study door was wide
-open as Dud and Jimmy quietly slipped from the stairway well into
-the first-floor corridor of Trow, and, although they didn’t think it
-advisable to stop to pass the time of day with the instructor, they
-stopped just the same.
-
-“Ah, Logan, is that you?” It was “J. P.’s” voice. The two boys retraced
-their steps and halted at the doorway.
-
-“Yes, sir,” replied Jimmy brightly.
-
-“And Baker, too, I see. Well, young gentlemen, where have you been? We
-missed your bright and smiling faces at supper tonight.”
-
-Mr. Russell seemed to be in a pleasant mood, though one couldn’t always
-be certain from appearances, and so Jimmy, as spokesman, smiled his
-most winning smile and answered truthfully: “In the mud, sir.”
-
-“Indeed? Yes, I see. All the evidence tends to corroborate your quaint
-statement. But why in the mud, Logan?”
-
-Jimmy hesitated an instant and then decided to make a clean breast of
-the matter. Mr. Russell heard him through, smiling pleasantly. And
-when the tale was told he said: “A most interesting narrative, Logan,
-on my word. You show a nice sense of dramatic construction. But really,
-boys, I’m rather afraid trouble will come of this. You know there’s a
-rule about being in bounds by six o’clock on Sundays, eh? By the way,
-you brought your fellow miscreants back with you, I trust? I refer to
-Ordway and Blake.”
-
-“Yes, sir; they’re back,” replied Jimmy dispiritedly. Mr. Russell’s
-tone now wasn’t so reassuring.
-
-“And they, too, were――ah――in the mud?”
-
-Jimmy grinned. “You’d think so if you saw them! They fell right in a
-ditch once!”
-
-“Really?” Mr. Russell smiled quite broadly. “Well, I suppose it’s all a
-grand lark with you youngsters, eh? Dear, dear, what a thing it is to
-be young! Get those wet things off, boys, and stay in your room for the
-rest of the evening. Possibly――――” He caught himself up. Then: “We’ll
-hope for the best. Hm! Better look to your ways for awhile, though,
-both of you. How about that little matter we spoke of recently, Baker?
-Any――ah――any developments?”
-
-“No, sir. I――I quit.”
-
-“Wise youth! Go your ways, young gentlemen. Ponder on your sins
-and”――Mr. Russell took up his book again――“refresh your souls with the
-sweet communion――――”
-
-The rest was only a mumble. Dud and Jimmy stole noiselessly away.
-
-Fortune was good to them on the morrow. They were assembled, a
-sober quartette, in Dr. Duncan’s office after breakfast and gravely
-reprimanded and told that only a diligent application to studies could
-wipe out the stain of their guilt. Promises of unfaltering labor
-being at once forthcoming from each, they were dismissed with a final
-admonition to mend their ways and, they thought, a sigh of relief from
-the principal, never at his best in the rôle of Stern Authority.
-
-After a ten o’clock recitation, Nick and Jimmy hurried up the river
-in Nick’s canoe and recovered the lost craft, Twining’s being found
-lodged against the bridge timbers and Hugh’s a half-mile up the stream,
-entangled in a sunken branch. That, to all appearances, ended the
-affair, but in reality there was one important consequence that was
-lost sight of, which was the acceptance of Dud into the circle in which
-Nick Blake and Hugh Ordway revolved. It didn’t happen all at once, and
-for a week or two Dud himself didn’t realize it, but at the end of that
-period he suddenly discovered himself sitting with Hugh and Nick and
-Bert Winslow and Ted Trafford in Nick’s room very gravely discussing
-such important subjects as The Value of the Sacrifice Hit, Overhand
-versus Underhand Pitching, When to Use the Pinch-Play and The Duties
-of a Third-Baseman on a Bunt to His Territory with a Man on Second.
-Perhaps Dud didn’t take a very large part in the discussion, but when
-he had anything to say he found voice to say it, and a few remarks from
-him on the subject of underhand pitching were well received. But the
-main thing was that he was there, not on sufferance but, as it seemed,
-quite naturally and as a matter of course. He surreptitiously pinched
-himself, found he was actually awake and then, for a moment, was
-visibly embarrassed.
-
-I don’t pretend that either Hugh or Nick would have been broken-hearted
-if Dud hadn’t been present that evening, nor shall I attempt to guess
-just how much of the friendliness they displayed was due to sympathy.
-On the other hand, they were more than willing to have him there, and,
-when they thought of it, were at some pains to make him feel welcome.
-Ted Trafford took his cue from his host, and Bert Winslow’s attitude
-was one of careless toleration. He still looked on Dud with suspicion.
-Jimmy Logan couldn’t foist any lemon on him, as he once eloquently put
-it to Hugh! Still, he didn’t actually dislike the younger boy, and,
-save for an occasional mildly sarcastic comment occasioned by what he
-called Dud’s cheek in trying to squirm his way into upper class company
-and the first team, he treated the latter decently enough. The evening
-ended with ginger-ale and grape-juice, mixed in equal proportions in
-a pitcher, the scant remains of a pineapple cheese and some crackers.
-Ted Trafford and Dud went back to Trow together, rather silently since
-Ted was sleepy and Dud had nothing important to say, and parted in
-the corridor. Dud reflected afterwards that Trafford might have said,
-“Come and see me some time, Baker,” or something to like effect. But he
-didn’t. He merely nodded sleepily, yawned and murmured: “Night!” Dud
-was a bit disappointed, and without cause. Ted Trafford, who was a big,
-good-hearted senior, would have issued that invitation had it occurred
-to him that the younger boy would have set any store by it. As it was,
-the thought didn’t enter his mind. If Baker was a friend of Nick and
-Hugh, why, that was all there was to it. “Any friend of my friend,” is
-the way Ted would have put it.
-
-Followed a week bare of real incident. Dud, like the other members
-of that picnic party, applied himself doggedly to his lessons in an
-effort to get square with the Office again and turned out each week-day
-afternoon for baseball practice. Sometimes he pitched for the scrubs
-and more often his work consisted of serving them up to the batters
-at the net and, afterwards, being relieved by Kelly or Brunswick,
-practicing batting himself. The first game of the season came off that
-Wednesday afternoon, with the second team as the opponent. It wasn’t
-much of a contest. Errors swelled the score of each team and all sorts
-of delays slowed the game up so that there was time for only seven
-innings. Dud took no part, the twirling being performed by Ben Myatt
-for three innings and by Nate Leddy for the rest of the game. The
-second team pitchers were severely handled and the first won by the
-decisive score of 17 to 7.
-
-If there was any special sensation in that contest it was in the sudden
-eminence of “Hobo” Ordway as a batter. Hugh, going into the line-up in
-the fourth inning, came twice to bat and on each occasion smashed a
-long, clean two-bagger into left-center. In the field he had only three
-chances, but he took them all. It was only in throwing in that Hugh
-was weak. Jimmy went to right field for three innings, made one rather
-brilliant running catch of a long fly, failed to get a hit and retired
-in favor of a pinch hitter in the sixth. After that Wednesday game life
-settled down again rather monotonously, but not uninterestingly, for
-Dud. On Saturday the team journeyed away and played Portsmouth Grammar
-School and won handily against a weak adversary. Dud didn’t accompany
-the team as a member nor did he go along with the half-hundred ardent
-rooters. Neither did Jimmy. Mr. Russell in refusing their request for
-leave, intimated that the afternoon might be spent far more profitably
-in study. “J. P.” was kindly but firm. Doubtless his advice was
-well-meant and worthy of consideration, but I regret to say it was not
-followed. Instead, the two boys went trout fishing in Three Gallon
-Brook, a mile back of school. Dud used flies and got not even a nibble.
-Jimmy, with a plentiful supply of angle-worms, landed a four-inch
-sunfish. As no one, so far as they were aware, had ever caught, seen
-or suspected the presence of a trout in Three Gallon Brook, they were
-not disappointed. The only feature of the excursion not counted on
-occurred when Dud slipped from a rock during the effort to free his
-line from a snag and landed in three feet of extremely cold water.
-Fortunately that happened after Jimmy had landed his catch and so they
-were about ready to go home, anyway. Jimmy carried the sunfish back to
-school dangling from an alder branch. That is, it dangled until they
-reached the school grounds. Then it was placed tenderly in Jimmy’s
-coat pocket and smuggled to Number 19. When he returned from supper he
-brought salt, and the fish was fried over the gas――with the door and
-transom carefully closed and both windows wide open――and consumed in
-a peculiarly flabby and underdone condition. Jimmy partook with gusto,
-or pretended to, but Dud did scant justice to the repast. Jimmy said
-he was jealous. Gus Weston happened in before the penetrating aroma of
-the sunfish had been entirely dissipated and asked anxiously what the
-trouble was. Whereupon Jimmy stopped trying to dislodge a bone that had
-worked its way in back of his tongue and described movingly the size,
-ferocious aspect and fighting qualities of that fish, recounting with
-much detail the long, exhausting struggle incident to its capture. And
-Weston diplomatically vowed that he believed every word of it; and had
-either of them a rattling good detective story to lend him?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-DUD SERVES THEM UP
-
-
-Between Dud and Starling Meyer existed an armed neutrality. They passed
-with covert glances, avoided each other when possible and doubtless
-caused some disappointment to a certain element in the school who had
-been for several weeks eagerly expecting a fracas between the two. The
-boxing lessons had been abandoned, since, as Jimmy pathetically pointed
-out, there was no use getting ready for something that couldn’t happen.
-The gloves were returned to their owners, and, robbed of self-defense
-as a principal interest in life, Jimmy gave his attention to playing
-baseball. It occurred to him at about this time that it wouldn’t look
-well for Dud to make the first team, even as a substitute, and for
-him to get chucked back to the second nine. So the Monday after the
-Portsmouth Grammar School game Jimmy buckled down to make good. Right
-field seemed the only position open to him, and even to earn that
-he would have to beat out Harold Boynton, and Boynton, while not an
-exceptional fielder, was a pretty fair hitter. Therefore it behooved
-Jimmy to get busy and learn to “lam ’em out” a bit better. His first
-step was to attempt to bribe Brunswick and Dud to pitch easy ones when
-he was at the net. Failing at that, he sighed and set out to conquer
-by labor. Jimmy always preferred to take short cuts. The longest way
-around might suit some fellows, but he took it only as a last resort.
-Having, however, made up his mind to the circuitous journey, Jimmy was
-capable of settling down to the task and seeing it through.
-
-On Wednesday the second team was again defeated, and on the following
-Saturday Grafton High School, supported by a large and noisy mob of
-pennant-flaunting boys and girls, engaged the attention of the first
-team. The batting order that afternoon gave a line on what was likely
-to be the final selections: Blake, ss; Murtha, 2b; Parker, cf; Winslow,
-3b; Ayer, 1b; Ordway, lf; Boynton, rf; Gordon, c; Myatt or Leddy, p.
-There might be, probably would be, changes later on in the arrangement
-of the players for batting purposes, but it was generally conceded
-that the team as made up that day was practically as it would be six
-weeks later. It was likely that Ben Myatt would occasionally be played
-in center field, for Ben, aside from being a remarkable pitcher, was
-a steady outfielder and a good hitter. There were some critics who
-sneered at Hugh Ordway’s presence on the nine, hinting at favoritism,
-and it must be acknowledged that Hugh accomplished little that
-afternoon to vindicate his selection for the middle-garden position.
-Hugh had a bad day, missing one easy fly and failing to reach first
-base once. His muff in the third inning let in two runs and made the
-outcome doubtful until the sixth, when a single by Guy Murtha with one
-down, a sacrifice by Parker, a screeching two-base hit by Bert Winslow
-and an error by third-baseman landed two tallies for the home team.
-
-The score stayed at five to five until the ninth, when the home team
-started a rally. Bert Winslow, first man up, was passed. Neil Ayer
-laid a bunt in front of the plate, sending Bert to second and going
-out himself at first. Mr. Sargent sent Milford to bat in place of Hugh
-and Milford came through with a clean single that landed him on first.
-Bert, however, was out at the plate by inches only. With two gone, a
-second pinch-hitter was sent to the rescue in the person of Gus Weston.
-As a pinch-hitter Gus was ordinarily something of a joke, but on this
-occasion he turned the laugh on High School’s pitcher, landing on the
-first offering and sending it down the third-base line for a hit that
-advanced Milford to second. Gordon followed with a pop-fly that should
-have been an easy out, but which second baseman and shortstop managed
-between them to let fall safe.
-
-With bases full and Nate Leddy up――Myatt had gone through five innings
-and been sent to the showers――Mr. Sargent took a chance and let Nate go
-to bat. Evidently the latter was instructed to wait out the pitcher,
-for he stood idly by while two strikes and two balls went across. Then
-the coach called him back and Jimmy Logan was sent in to distinguish
-himself. Anyone but Jimmy would have suffered from nerves, I fancy,
-for it is something of an ordeal to step up to the plate with two out,
-bases filled and the pitcher’s score two-and-two. But Jimmy approached
-the task with beautiful assurance. Some said he even swaggered a
-little. Perhaps he did, and perhaps that swagger was the undoing of the
-opposing pitcher. At any rate, all Jimmy had to do was dodge two wild
-deliveries and trot, smilingly, to first, while Milford ambled over the
-plate with what proved eventually to be the winning run. Nick Blake
-brought the inning to an end a moment later when he sent a long fly to
-the outfield.
-
-Grafton High School begrudged that victory and showed it, at the time
-by the half-hearted way in which they cheered their successful rival,
-and later by sending a challenge for another contest on High School
-grounds. The challenge was accepted and a vacant date a week and a
-half later was awarded her. Since faculty rules prohibited the team
-from playing away from the school on Wednesdays during April and May, a
-special dispensation was asked for and obtained, and the game came off
-in due time and High School went down in decisive defeat, the score at
-the end of the seven innings played being 9 to 2 in favor of Grafton.
-
-Before that, however, Leeds High School had administered the first
-beating to the Scarlet-and-Gray to the tune of 3 to 0. It was a good
-game and Grafton showed up well in all departments except that of
-hitting. Leeds’ pitcher was a hard proposition and only four scattered
-hits were registered by Grafton. On the other hand, Leddy, who started
-in the box for his team, was found for six hits in four innings, one
-of them a three-bagger, and although Ben Myatt, who relieved him, held
-the enemy well in hand, the mischief was already done. In the eighth
-and ninth innings that day Mr. Sargent used every available player in
-his determined effort to stem the tide of disaster, even Dud getting a
-chance to show his batting prowess and rapping a liner straight into
-the hands of shortstop as his contribution to the cause. Jimmy, called
-into the fray in the eighth, managed to get hit with an in-shoot and
-so, luckily, earned his base. It was Starling Meyer who came nearest to
-accomplishing anything in the batting line, for Star, after watching
-two good ones pass him, landed on what was palpably intended for a wide
-one and managed to drop it behind first base some three inches inside
-the foul line. Unfortunately there was no one on the bases to take
-advantage of the miracle.
-
-As a result of the Leeds game there followed, beginning on the next
-Monday afternoon, a series of batting practices that for the rest of
-the week, barring Wednesday and Saturday, left no time for line-ups.
-There also followed a change in the batting order and a slight shakeup
-of the team. Bert Winslow took Guy Murtha’s place as second batter,
-Guy following him and Parker slipping into fourth position. Gordon and
-Boynton also changed locations. Milford was tried out at first and for
-the next three weeks he and Neil Ayer had a very lively struggle for
-the first sack. Eventually Ayer came into his own again, although had
-batting ability alone entered into it Milford would undoubtedly have
-won the place. Jimmy got several opportunities to show what he could do
-in right field and Starling Meyer received some recognition in center.
-Southlake Academy was defeated on the nineteenth at Southlake, Gus
-Weston pitching for once a remarkably steady game until he was taken
-out in the seventh. By that time the contest was on ice and Coach
-Sargent sent Brunswick in for a couple of innings of experience.
-Experience came his way, too, to the tune of four hits for a total of
-six bases, but luckily only one run resulted.
-
-Track and field sports were by now engaging much of the school’s
-interest. The team had held its handicap games the last of April, had
-defeated St. James Academy the week before and was at present very
-busily at work getting into condition to meet Mount Morris, Grafton’s
-principal rival, on the twenty-sixth. Over on the big oval ribbon of
-gray-blue cinders the twenty-odd youths who wore the scarlet-and-gray
-stripe across their chests or who hoped to wear it after next Saturday,
-sprinted and ran and hurdled, while about the jumping pits a dozen or
-fifteen others strove mightily with shot and hammer and vaulting-pole
-or worked zealously at the jumps. Nowadays the audience at the first
-team diamond was smaller each afternoon, and one heard much learned
-talk of dual records, and the names of Zanetti and Tray and Keyes and
-Yetter and Musgrave and many others pursued one from breakfast to
-bedtime. “Dinny” Crowley divided his time as best he could between
-Track Team and second nine, while Davy Richards, at last really in his
-element, loomed large in importance. Davy had a reputation as a trainer
-of track and field talent to vindicate and Davy in the process of
-vindicating was a fine imitation of a tyrant. Even Mr. Sargent forsook
-baseball for a space each day and gave his attention to the weight men
-and jumpers, for “Pete” in his day had held a college record for two
-years with the hammer and had, as a side issue, leaped his twenty-two
-feet-odd for the honor of the Blue. So for one week at least baseball
-took a back seat at Grafton and the real heroes were the slim-waisted,
-bare-legged chaps in fluttering white trunks.
-
-The ball team met Middleboro High School on Wednesday afternoon and
-had no trouble in winning a 14 to 3 contest that offered little in the
-way of excitement or suspense to the listless spectators. It was an
-intolerably hot day for May and audience and players alike drooped. For
-Grafton, Nate Leddy started the twirling, but after his teammates had
-scored eight runs on the opponents in five innings Nate ambled off and
-Joe Kelly tried his hand. Joe was not a success, for the enemy took
-most kindly to his slants, and after facing two innings of trouble Joe
-likewise retired and Dud was given his first taste of hostile batsmen.
-
-With the score 12 to 3, Dud was not expected to kill himself, and
-Ed Brooks, who had taken Gordon’s place behind the plate with the
-advent of Kelly on the mound, was all for an easy life. But Brooks was
-reckoning without Dud’s ambition to win a place on the list of battery
-candidates. Dud had warmed the bench and twirled his glove during so
-many games that this opportunity presented itself to him as Heaven-sent
-and he resolved to use all the skill he knew and all the control he
-possessed. For a fortnight he had been experimenting with his curves
-again and, at Ben Myatt’s suggestion, had even attempted a side-arm
-delivery that looked promising. He had little fear of being punished
-much, but he went to the mound and picked up the ball determined to
-deny any sort of a hit to the opponents. That is why he shook his head
-so frequently at his catcher, much to that gentleman’s surprise, and
-why when Middleboro’s tail-enders faced him in that first of the eighth
-he worked so carefully and cunningly that one after another the three
-last batters on the list retired without even fouling-off a ball! The
-Middleboro pitcher stood like a graven image while Dud shot two fast
-ones over the outer corner of the rubber, wasted one for luck and then
-ended the inning with a slow ball that floated as perfectly over the
-center as though it had been rolled on wires! For the first time during
-the game the somnolent spectators showed enthusiasm as Dud dropped the
-ball and made for the bench. Brooks squeezed in beside him and thumped
-him on the knee.
-
-“Great work, Dud!” he said. “We made ’em look like pikers, didn’t we?”
-
-“You!” laughed Parker, sitting next him. “What did you do, Eddie?
-Baker scratched every signal you gave him!”
-
-“Me?” asked Brooks sarcastically. “Oh, nothing! I just held him, that’s
-all! You get up there and put your mitt against some of Dud’s fast ones
-and see how simple it is! Say, Dud, it would be fine if we could send
-them down in the next inning the same way, eh? Only thing is, that
-fellow Dollard, who bats second, is a pretty good hitter. He’s made two
-already out of three times up.”
-
-“What’s the first fellow like?” asked Dud.
-
-“Chapman? I guess that’s his name. Plays third. Oh, he’s not dangerous.
-He wants his base. Sneak over the first one for a strike and then tease
-him a couple of times with high ones. He’ll go after them every time.
-But Dollard’s not so easy. He waits for the good ones.”
-
-“Then we’ll have to see that he doesn’t get them,” replied Dud simply.
-
-“Well, if you can keep on working the corners the way you did last
-inning you’re all right. That ump has his eyesight with him. If he
-didn’t you’d get the worst of it lots of times.”
-
-Grafton tallied twice more in her half of the eighth and then Dud went
-back to the mound and faced the small and stocky third-baseman. But he
-wasn’t hard. Once Dud thought he had lost his wish, but the ball rolled
-foul before it reached the third sack. After that there was no more
-trouble. Chapman, if that was his name, bit at a high one and missed
-it badly, let a ball go by and then again swung too late at a fast one
-that crossed the plate and retired disgruntled to the bench.
-
-But Dollard was more canny. Dollard had to have good ones. Dud tried
-him on two that looked fair until they broke, but the batter treated
-them with contempt. Then Dud tried him out with a slow one and caught
-him napping. Dollard fouled the next one into the stand and the score
-was two-and-two. Brooks signaled for a straight one, hoping to finish
-him off, but Dud shook his head. Instead, he changed his position in
-the box a mite, wrapped his fingers about the ball, wound up, stepped
-forward and swung his arm wide at the height of his elbow. Brooks had
-to jump for that ball, for it proved a cross-fire indeed, and there
-was a perceptible moment of hesitation before the umpire reached his
-verdict. But when he did he said “_You’re out!_” so decisively as to
-make up for the hesitation. Dollard voiced objections all the way to
-the bench and let it be known by the manner in which he slammed his bat
-to earth that he was totally out of sympathy with that umpire! But the
-crowd cheered the strike-out and jeered the victim and the next batsman
-stepped to his place.
-
-Then, for once, and for the first time since he had profited by Ben
-Myatt’s advice, Dud went back to his hooks and that third batter swung
-and dodged and swung again while Dud brought the game to an end with
-exactly four deliveries!
-
-Two days later there came the final cut in the first squad and six
-disappointed candidates were turned over to the second team. One of the
-six was a pitcher, but his name was not Baker. It was Kelly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-THE TRACK MEET
-
-
-It was Saturday afternoon and Dud, squeezed into a seat on the little
-grandstand between Roy Dresser and Ernest Barnes, was watching the
-Track and Field Meeting of Grafton and Mount Morris. The baseball crowd
-had gone off to play the Rotan College Freshman Team and by what Dud
-considered a horrible error of judgment on the part of the coach he
-had not been taken along. Of course, he hadn’t expected to pitch even
-one inning against the college nine, but he did think that Mr. Sargent
-might have included him among the substitutes. How was a fellow to
-learn if he didn’t watch the team play? And to add to his sense of
-injury, Jimmy had actually accompanied the nine to play right field!
-Of course that was only because Boynton was entered in the athletic
-meet and someone had to take his place, but it didn’t make Dud any more
-reconciled. There were moments when he almost wished that the team
-would run up against the defeat that was predicted for it!
-
-Still, those moments were of the past, for during the last half-hour
-Dud had been far too excited over the events taking place before his
-eyes to recall the injustice done him. The sprints, the half-mile, the
-high hurdles, the shot-put and the high jump had been decided and the
-rivals were within two points of each other, Mount Morris leading with
-28. Just now nine eager youths, four wearing the green-and-white of
-Mount Morris and five the scarlet-and-gray of Grafton, were awaiting
-the pistol at the start of the quarter-mile and Dud’s eyes were
-riveted on them. Warren Yetter, on whom Grafton’s hopes rested, was
-the second man from the pole and, oddly enough, Kirkwell, the Mount
-Morris crack, was at his right elbow. Dud could see them talking to
-each other smilingly, but for all of that a bit constrainedly. Then
-the nine bodies poised, there was an instant’s silence and the sharp
-report of the starting pistol sounded on the still air. The runners
-leaped away, jockeyed for positions in the first dozen strides and
-swept past the stand like frightened deer. Dud was on his feet, and so
-too were all those around him. Inarticulate sounds made a background
-for the strident shouts and yells of encouragement. Along the grass a
-Mount Morris youth, an official of some sort, raced beside the runners,
-dangling a white sweater with a broad green band on it, yelping and
-urging. Now they were at the first corner, Kirkwell leading and Yetter
-a yard behind him. Tenney, of Grafton, strove to pass Yetter on the
-outside and was followed closely by a Mount Morris runner. At the next
-corner the first four were strung out and hugging the rim: Kirkwell,
-Yetter, Tenney and Number 54. Dud sought hurriedly for his program to
-discover the identity of Number 54, realized the next moment that he
-didn’t care, swept his gaze back across the field quickly and joined
-his voice in the roar that swept from the stand. Yetter was sprinting
-gamely now. Only a yard separated him from Kirkwell. Tenney was certain
-of third place. The finish was only a few yards away. Yetter crept
-up and up! The shouts increased. The stand was a pandemonium. The
-officials, packed about the finish line, were waving and shouting, too,
-all but the judges and timers. Yetter and Kirkwell swept to the line
-side by side! Or did they? Wasn’t the Mount Morris man a little ahead
-as they disappeared behind the group there? The tumult had quieted, but
-now it broke forth again and the shouting came from the other end of
-the stand. Across the field a half-dozen jubilant Mount Morris fellows
-were tossing their hats in air and signaling victory!
-
-“That was a peach of a finish,” said Roy Dresser, with a sigh of
-relief. “Warren almost had him.”
-
-“That puts them another point ahead,” said Dud, grudgingly crediting
-Mount Morris with 5. “Gee, I thought Yetter was supposed to have the
-four-forty cinched!”
-
-“I guess he ran it inside his best time,” replied Roy. “Kirkwell was
-better, that’s all.”
-
-The announcer was bawling forth the result:
-“Four-Hundred-and-Forty-Yards-Run! Won by C. J. Kirkwell, Mount Morris!
-W. H. Yetter, Grafton, second; A. L. Tenney, Grafton, third. Time, 52⅗
-seconds!”
-
-“Wow!” exclaimed Roy. “That’s a fifth better than the dual record! I
-told you Warren was going some!”
-
-Dud tried to glean comfort from the fact, but those five points stared
-at him obstinately. They were putting the low hurdles across the cinder
-for the final heat, while at the end of the oval lithe forms sprang in
-air to waft themselves over the bar nearly ten feet above the ground or
-to go, doubled up like an animated jack-knife, flying into the brown
-loam of the jumping pit. Behind the stand the hammer-throwers were
-still busy. Dud watched Jim Quinn launch himself upward with his long
-pole, straighten a tense body and drop across the trembling bar and
-sighed with relief. The pole vault might decide the meeting and so far
-Quinn was more than holding his own.
-
-Musgrave and Keyes, of Grafton, and Torrey and Capper, of the rival
-school, crouched far up the track. At the finish a handkerchief waved.
-The four figures set, straightened and leaped away from their marks and
-the sound of the pistol followed them. Down they came, stride, stride,
-stride, leap; Torrey gaining between hurdles, Keyes pulling him back
-at the timbers; Musgrave and Capper falling behind but fighting gamely
-for third place. On and on to the growing roar of the excited watchers,
-hurdle after hurdle falling behind. Torrey well in advance now, but
-Keyes pushing him for every ounce of strength in his body. Two more
-hurdles left. Torrey is over! Keyes is over! A mad race for the final
-obstacle, Torrey again gaining on the flat, but Keyes, head back, feet
-twinkling, only a yard behind. Up again and over, almost side by side
-at the next stride. Then the dash to the string, Torrey, arms upthrown,
-breaking it a stride ahead of Keyes! Mount Morris shouts wildly and
-Grafton joins, for Ned Musgrave has beaten out his rival handily and
-again the points go five to Mount Morris and four to Grafton, and Mount
-Morris had been conceded first and third places!
-
-Dud is a trifle comforted as he sinks back to his seat and scratches
-agitatedly with his stubby pencil. Barnes, munching chocolate
-philosophically, asks the score.
-
-“Thirty-eight to thirty-four,” replies Dud.
-
-“We’re a goner then.”
-
-“We are not! Wait till the mile run comes off! Foster Tray will win
-that at a walk, and we may get second place too.”
-
-“Yes, and Mount Morris will win the broad jump and the hammer.” Barnes
-pushes the last of the chocolate between stained lips and wipes sticky
-fingers on a dingy handkerchief. “Say, I wonder how the baseball game
-is coming out.”
-
-“We’ll get licked. Here come the milers. Who’s the fellow in the blue
-and yellow bathrobe, Roy?”
-
-“Milton. He ought to do pretty well. He ran fifth last year and they
-say he’s a lot faster now. I don’t see――――”
-
-“The bar is now at nine feet, ten and one-half inches!” announces a
-voice, and they turn their gaze to see a Mount Morris youth rise in
-air, straighten and come hurtling to earth with the bar on top of him.
-
-“So sorry,” murmurs Roy Dresser. “Hope he does it again next time.”
-
-The megaphone artist trots into the middle of the arena and faces the
-stand, a slip of paper in his hand. The voices are stilled as he places
-the scarlet horn to his mouth. “At the end of the fifth inning――――”
-
-Deep silence now!
-
-“――At Rotan the score stands: Grafton 5――――”
-
-An outburst of cheers, quickly stilled.
-
-“――Rotan 11!”
-
-A moment of gloom, broken by ironical cheers from the Mount Morris end
-of the stand.
-
-“What do you know about that?” asks Dud wonderingly. “They must have
-hammered Myatt for fair! Eleven to five! Gee!”
-
-“What I want to know,” observes Barnes, “is how we got five!”
-
-Dud observes him in faint disgust. “Oh, I suppose they gave them to us!
-Don’t you think we can play ball at all?”
-
-“I didn’t think we could hit that fellow Gibbs,” Barnes answers
-carelessly. “He’s a wonder, you know.”
-
-“Well, even wonders have their off days. I guess Myatt had one today!
-Gee, eleven runs!”
-
-“I’m just as well pleased I didn’t go, Baker. The crowd will be dead
-sore when they get back. It costs nearly two dollars to make that trip.”
-
-“We’ve just simply got to get this meet,” mutters Dud. “We can’t get
-beaten all around today!”
-
-“I’ve known it to happen,” says Roy unfeelingly. “Here they go! Must be
-two dozen of ’em!”
-
-In truth there were exactly fourteen, about evenly divided between
-the two schools. They hustled away confusedly and went to the corner
-weaving in and out, slowing their strides. Four times around a
-quarter-mile track is no pleasure jaunt and they knew it. Foster Tray
-was well in the rear of the bunch and he stayed there as long as the
-pace suited him, but at the finish of the first lap he had crawled up
-to third place, with Towne, of Mount Morris, and Milton, of Grafton,
-leading in that order. The field was already strung out, for the pace
-had been fairly fast for the tyros. In the backstretch a Mount Morris
-youth sprinted from the center of the first bunch and swept into the
-lead, no one disputing him. But he lasted only to the beginning of
-the homestretch and when the leaders came past the stand again Towne
-was first and Tray second. Milton was back in fourth place, behind
-a teammate. Then came three Mount Morris fellows and, after them, a
-straggling line of pluggers.
-
-The time was shouted to them as they went by, but there was too much
-shouting from the stand for Dud to hear it. At the next corner Milton
-hustled past the third runner and fell in behind Tray, and Grafton
-cheered that indication of pluck. But by the time the backstretch
-was once more ahead Towne and Tray were yards to the good and both
-Milton and the man behind him were losing ground. There was no sign of
-weariness shown by either of the leaders. Towne was running a fine,
-steady race and seemed well within himself. Tray, not so pretty a
-runner, looked to be tiring, but he kept his position to the fraction
-of an inch, a single stride behind his rival, his spikes hugging the
-rim closely. Around the corners they came, into the stretch, to a
-chorus of cheers and shouts and shrill yells of advice, entreaty and
-encouragement. The gong clanged its announcement of the final lap.
-Fifteen yards or so behind the two leaders came Milton, fighting
-doggedly to keep ahead of a Mount Morris youth but losing gradually. By
-this time the track showed tired contestants everywhere. Towne and Tray
-were already lapping the rear-guard.
-
-Stride for stride, the green ribbon and the scarlet passed the turns
-and reached the backstretch. There was still no sign of a change of
-pace, no altering of the steady strides. Now they were half-way through
-the final circuit, moving together across the green turf like a single
-machine. But suddenly cries leapt from the watchers. Towne had started
-his sprint! Already a yard separated the two! And now it was a good
-two strides! They were rounding the third corner, heads back, digging
-for all they were worth! Tray was falling behind! The spectators in
-the stand were on their feet, hands outstretched and beckoning, lungs
-roaring forth shouts of triumph or of despair. Into the stretch the
-two white-clad figures swept. Surely Tray had pulled up again! He had!
-He was running stride for stride with the Mount Morris man! He was
-gaining! Why, there was nothing to it but Tray! What a sprint! Two
-yards between them now, three――four! And Tray still opening up daylight
-and the finish growing nearer and nearer! The stand was emptying, the
-audience piling down to crowd the track at the finish line. It was
-difficult to see now, but there was a head bobbing up and down a few
-yards away, and another――――
-
-“_Track! Track! Keep back there! Give them room, fellows!_”
-
-“_Grafton! Grafton! Grafton!_”
-
-“_Tray! Tray! Tray!_”
-
-“_Come on, Towne! Mount Morris! Mount Morris!_”
-
-“_You can do it! Come on! Come on!_”
-
-Then a veritable babel of sound as a white-clad runner stumbles into
-sight at the end of the throng, is caught by ready arms and borne
-staggering to the turf. Grafton cheers fill the air. Another runner
-subsides on the grass. Cries of “_Track! Track! Let them finish!
-Everyone off the track!_” And then Milton, white of face, dragging his
-unwilling feet beneath him, fighting for breath, crosses the line a
-scant two yards ahead of a Mount Morris youth and plunges forward on
-his face. After that they jog in one by one, but no one sees them, for
-the race is over and Grafton has won first place and third and added
-eight much-needed points to her score!
-
-Dud, separated in the confusion of that rush down from the stand from
-his companion, waited to hear the announcement of the time, hoping to
-learn that Foster Tray had made a new record for the mile. But four
-minutes and fifty-four seconds was not sensational, and so he followed
-the crowd to the pole-vault. The broad jumpers had just finished and
-Mount Morris had won first place, leaving four points for Grafton,
-and the figures stood 46 to 44, the Green-and-White still two points
-ahead. The hammer-throw had not yet been heard from, Dud learned, but
-Quinn was sure of first in the pole-vault. Dud joined the ranks of the
-anxious onlookers and watched while Mount Morris’s talent tried and
-failed to equal Jim Quinn’s ten feet and one inch, watched while Hanson
-of Grafton struggled for third place in the vault-off between him and
-Joy of Mount Morris and grieved when he lost out. And then, while Dud
-was figuring and calculating and staring at the unwelcome result which
-showed Mount Morris still a point ahead, a wildly leaping junior shot
-around the stand bringing an end to suspense.
-
-Grafton had won first and second place in the hammer-throw! Driver had
-thrown a hundred and thirty-nine feet and four inches! And Gowen had
-done almost as well! And Mount Morris’s best was only――――
-
-But Dud didn’t care what Mount Morris’s best had been! He was scrawling
-a big black 8 on his program and shouting to no one in particular:
-
-“What do you know about that? Grafton, 57; Mount Morris, 51! Well,
-I guess! Six points to the good! Oh, we’re not so bad, not so bad!
-Fifty-seven to fifty-one! What do you know about that?”
-
-No one heard him, I fancy, for there was a great deal of noise about
-that time.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-BASEBALL, TENNIS AND OYSTERS
-
-
-There was yet nearly three-quarters of an hour before supper time and
-Dud, still elated and excited over the track victory, turned his steps
-to River Street and, skirting the school grounds, swung west and made
-for the station. The ball team, unless it missed its connection at the
-Junction, would be in at a quarter to six. Dud was not alone in his
-journey to the station, for the carriages bearing the Mount Morris
-athletes passed him half-way along the shaded village road and several
-boys, fortunate youths living nearby who had procured leave of absence
-over Sunday, were trailing along, suit-cases in hand. Dud witnessed
-the departure of the Mount Morris track team and the fellows off for
-home and then, seated on a baggage-truck, watched the shadows creep
-down the hillside across the tracks and thought of a great many things.
-He speculated on what had happened at Rotan to result in Grafton’s
-defeat, wondered whether by any stroke of fortune the Scarlet-and-Gray
-had redeemed herself in the later innings and then tried to imagine
-himself in the box for Grafton, facing those doughty Rotan freshies
-and mowing them down one-two-three! He couldn’t quite visualize the
-scene, however, and gave up with a sigh. Then he wondered how long it
-would be before Mr. Sargent would let him start a game, and what would
-happen when he did! And at that instant there was a whistle far down
-the track, the few loiterers came to life along the platform and the
-baggage man requisitioned his truck.
-
-Jimmie was one of the first off the train and was all for returning
-to school in the barge until Dud reminded him that he had walked all
-the way over to meet him and didn’t propose to pay any fifteen cents
-to ride back. Whereupon Jimmie good-naturedly set out with his chum on
-foot.
-
-“Twelve to seven,” he answered in reply to Dud’s request for the final
-figures. “What was the matter? Why, nothing much, except that we
-couldn’t hit that pitcher of theirs and they slammed Myatt all over
-the lot in the third. Why the dickens Pete didn’t yank him out I don’t
-know. Maybe it’s just as well he didn’t, though. I guess they’d have
-battered Leddy something brutal. Those dubs sure can hit the pill, son!”
-
-“How did you get on?” asked Dud.
-
-“Rotten, thanks! I muffed a peach of a fly and let two runs cross,
-worse luck! It was in that awful third. The sun got square in my eyes
-just at the last moment. I had the old thing sighted nicely until I
-had to drop my hands to make the catch. Then it went plum through
-’em. There were three on bases and so two of them scored. The other
-one could have, too, if he’d had any sense, for it took me about ten
-seconds to find the ball after I muffed it. But the fellow slowed up at
-third and by that time it was too late.”
-
-“Did you hit any?”
-
-“I got one, and it was a corker. I’d have had two bases on it if Blake
-hadn’t held me up at first, the chump! I wasn’t awfully strong with the
-stick, Dud, but I got a base every time I went up!”
-
-“You did? How, for pity’s sake?”
-
-“Well, the first time I rolled one in front of base and the catcher
-threw to second to get Ordway. He didn’t, though, for Hobo’s a regular
-flash on the bases, and we were both safe. The next time I got pinked
-in the arm, the next time I hit between short and third――some little
-sizzler, that was, old scout!――and the last time I worked Mr. Pitcher
-for a pass.”
-
-“Gee, you’re a lucky chap,” said Dud enviously.
-
-“Lucky? Nothing of the sort. Brains, son, brains! Besides, do you call
-it lucky to have a long, easy fly go right through your fingers? Huh!
-Luck didn’t do anything for little Jimmy today! Say, how’d the meet
-come out? Heard we’d won it, but what was the score?”
-
-They talked track meeting until the campus was reached and then Dud
-returned to the subject of the ball game. “They tried Star Meyer in
-center for a couple of innings; Parker got his leg spiked and Star
-wasn’t so bad. Made a pretty catch of a long one that went nearly to
-the fence and managed to beat out a bunt in the ninth. I suppose the
-first thing I know I’ll have to down him as well as Boynton.”
-
-Dud looked surprised. “Do you think you’ve got a show, Jimmy?” he
-inquired.
-
-“Why not?” asked the other, bristling. “Boynton’s not much better than
-I am. He muffs ’em, too, now and then. Of course, he’s hitting better,
-but I’ll wager he doesn’t get to first any oftener. But if they go and
-lug Star into the business, why, that’s different. I can’t win out
-against the whole school!”
-
-“But you say they played Star in center. And you’re after right, aren’t
-you?”
-
-“I’m after anything I can get, son. A fellow who can play center can
-play right or left, can’t he? An outfielder’s just an outfielder, you
-see, and you can’t play more than three of ’em at a time――and get away
-with it. Just now there are about six of us, all trying for three jobs.
-I wish Star Meyer would go soak his head and not butt in on baseball!”
-
-Dud laughed. “You might suggest it to him, Jimmy. Who pitched besides
-Myatt? Did Brunswick get in?”
-
-“Nobody. Ben went the distance. They couldn’t touch him much after that
-rotten third. Got a couple of hits in the fifth and about one each
-inning after that. They made their last run in the eighth with two
-down. A fellow cracked a two-bagger down the left foul-line and tried
-to steal third, and did it because Winslow let the ball drop. Then the
-next fellow hit an easy one to Ayer and Myatt didn’t cover base in time
-and the chap on third scrambled in. I guess it was just as well Pete
-didn’t derrick Ben, after all, because he certainly pitched a corking
-game after that third inning. Gee, but I’m hungry! Wish I was at
-training table,” he added wistfully. “They get steaks there!”
-
-They went over to Nick Blake’s room after supper and found Hugh and
-Bert and Guy Murtha there, and there was much baseball talked and
-many “might-have-beens” discussed. Dud, as a non-participant, had
-little to say, and Hugh, who might have talked a good deal since he
-had rather distinguished himself by his work at the bat and on the
-bases, was almost as silent. After awhile, on the excuse of showing
-Dud a new book, Hugh led the other off upstairs and they settled down
-full-length on the window-seat, beside the open casements, and had a
-fine, chummy talk. Dud could talk well enough when there was but a
-single listener, and tonight Hugh found the younger boy far from dull.
-By the time Bert Winslow came in, yawning, they had discovered numerous
-bonds of sympathy such as mutual likes and dislikes and an intense
-desire to make good at baseball. Hugh, entering the game as the veriest
-tyro and with a deal of doubt and not much enthusiasm, was now a rabid
-“fan” and almost amusingly eager to make a name for himself.
-
-Bert, I think, wanted to go to bed, but was too polite to start while
-there was a visitor present, and so toppled into a chair and joined the
-conversation. Dud realized that Bert didn’t care very much for him and
-so tried to get away a few minutes after the other’s advent, but Hugh
-wouldn’t have it.
-
-“Oh, sit down and behave yourself, Baker! It isn’t late. I say, Bert,
-Baker and I have been discovering that we have lots of things in
-common, if you know what I mean.”
-
-“Really?” Bert stifled a yawn. “Such as what, ’Ighness?”
-
-“Oh, baseball, for one, you know. Tennis, too. And oysters――――”
-
-“Oysters!”
-
-“Yes. You see I happened to think that a dozen nice cold raw oysters
-would taste corking. They would, wouldn’t they?”
-
-“Out of season, you chump.”
-
-“Never! That’s only prejudice, old chap. Well, anyway, oysters was one
-thing――_were_ one thing, I should say. English is beastly confusing at
-times, eh? And then we found that Baker knew my part of the country,
-down Maryland way, you know. He comes from Delaware.”
-
-“So would I,” laughed Bert.
-
-“Delaware,” replied Dud, smiling, “is small but select. Where’s your
-home, Winslow?”
-
-“Pennsylvania; Shrevesport. Know it?”
-
-Dud shook his head. “Some of my folks lived in Pennsylvania once, a
-good many years ago.”
-
-“It’s a good state. They were foolish to leave it,” yawned Bert. “Hope
-they didn’t have to?”
-
-“Why, in a way I believe they did. You see one of them was an officer
-in the American Army, and when Howe occupied Philadelphia they thought
-it might not be healthy.”
-
-“Oh,” said Bert. Hugh smiled.
-
-“Still,” continued Bert, “they needn’t have gone to Delaware, eh?”
-
-“I don’t think they did just then. A couple of them were with
-Washington at Valley Forge. I think the women went to New Jersey until
-Philadelphia was evacuated again. I don’t know just what happened
-then. We’ve been living in Delaware only since my grandfather’s time.
-He moved there from Philadelphia to improve his state.”
-
-“Improve his state? You mean he was――was hard up?” asked Bert
-suspiciously.
-
-“I can’t say. I’ve been told it was to improve his state. That’s all I
-know.”
-
-Hugh laughed. “You began it, Bert! Honors are even. As judge of the
-debate, I declare it a draw.”
-
-Bert smiled slowly. Then: “All right, Baker,” he said amiably, “you
-win! Fact is, I don’t know anything about Delaware or a thing against
-it. Sorry if I trod on your toes.”
-
-“You didn’t, Winslow; I moved them out of the way,” laughed Dud.
-
-After the latter had taken his departure and the two roommates were
-preparing for bed, Hugh heard a grunt from the opposite chamber.
-“What’s troubling you?” he called.
-
-“Nothing,” was the answer. “I was just thinking that that kid isn’t
-such a fool, after all, eh?”
-
-“Well,” replied Hugh, winking at himself in the glass, “I rather fancy
-he had you, old top.”
-
-Bert’s only response was another grunt, but it sounded assenting.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-DUD GOES TO THE RESCUE
-
-
-Grafton had now played seven contests with outside teams and had
-won five and lost two. Six games remained; seven in case it became
-necessary to play a third game with Mount Morris. On the whole the
-nine had showed average strength. The pitching had been good and
-defensively the team had more than held its own against contenders.
-But both Coach Sargent and Captain Murtha would have been anything but
-displeased if the batting had been heavier or had even shown promise
-of improvement. The remaining games were all, with the exception of
-that with Yarrow High School, scheduled just before the second Mount
-Morris contest, hard ones. St. James Academy especially was looked
-on as a difficult opponent, and Lawrence Textile School as scarcely
-less dangerous. Both teams boasted pitchers of reputation, and unless
-Grafton’s stick work improved she was not likely to pile up much of
-a score against either visitor. Of course, it could be argued that a
-team with a perfect defense is in no danger of defeat, but on the
-other hand, a team with no power of attack can’t win games. And Guy
-Murtha, being captain and in his last year at school, naturally wanted
-very much to come off victor in those remaining contests. Fortunately,
-the St. James and Lawrence Textile games were to be played on Lothrop
-Field, a circumstance which would aid to some extent. The meeting
-with Corliss College was to be played away from home, but Corliss――or
-Careless, as the Graftonians liked to call it――while strong, was not
-the problem that either of the other two was. As for Yarrow High――well,
-that was only a practice game to fill in between the first Mount Morris
-engagement on the ninth of June, which was a Saturday, and the second
-one, which fell on the following Friday, the Mount Morris Class Day.
-In case each of the ancient rivals secured a game the play-off would
-be at Grafton the next day, the teams remaining after the close of the
-schools to settle the controversy.
-
-On the Monday succeeding their defeat at Rotan the players were given
-a particularly strenuous afternoon of it. With the exception of Gordon
-Parker, whose leg still protested at the injury done it by a Rotan
-baseman’s spikes, all the players were out and not one was spared,
-unless we exempt Ben Myatt. Dud put in a hard afternoon, for he pitched
-six innings for the scrubs and was fairly well hammered. Still, he
-managed to keep the hits of the regulars so well scattered that Mr.
-Sargent was satisfied to leave him on the mound until, in the seventh,
-it became advisable to let a pinch hitter take his place. After that
-Weston finished up for the scrubs and was so erratic that the one-run
-lead handed over to him by Dud soon vanished, the regulars winning out
-by the score of 9 to 6. When Dud heard the result in the Field House
-later he tried to be sorry for Weston, but the effort wasn’t very
-successful. Dud, you see, was already entertaining visions of pitching
-a half-game or so against Mount Morris and thus winning his letter.
-Not that the letter part of it interested him so much, however. Just
-the glory of being in a Mount Morris game would be enough for him. Of
-course, he couldn’t figure out as yet just how that desirable result
-was to come about. There was Ben Myatt for the first game and Nate
-Leddy for the second, or the other way around, with Weston to take
-a hand if needed. As for Brunswick, Dud wasn’t worrying about him.
-Brunswick was keeping along at about the same pace he had begun the
-season on, neither worse nor better, while Dud could honestly assure
-himself that he was improving from day to day, or, at least, from game
-to game. And he didn’t have to rely wholly on his own verdict, for
-others had seen the improvement and told him of it. Ben Myatt had
-praised him warmly, Captain Murtha had had a good word more than once
-and Mr. Sargent had let Dud see that he wasn’t blind to the latter’s
-growing ability.
-
-But Dud was forced to presuppose a third game in the big series before
-he could see himself turning back the Mount Morris hitters, and a third
-game might not materialize. Of course, if Gus Weston kept on blowing
-up every time he went into the points, why, that would improve Dud’s
-chances a whole lot, and it was this thought that made it difficult for
-Dud to grieve over the loss of that game to the scrubs! With Weston out
-of the way――――
-
-But Weston was an old hand, had been pitching for three years and was
-just as likely to steady down again the next time and send his stock
-soaring again. All that was to be done, reflected Dud, was to hope for
-the best――which, from Gus Weston’s point of view, was the worst!――and
-keep right on getting better and better every day. He didn’t wish
-anyone ill luck, but if only Leddy might have a slight attack of
-measles or something and Gus Weston develop a bum wing――well, Dud was
-forced to admit that it would be Providential!
-
-But the measles didn’t afflict Leddy nor did Weston complain of trouble
-in his arm, and practice went on each day and Dud pitched or didn’t
-pitch but always stood in front of the net and took his turn at
-“looking like a silly goat,” to use his own expression, while he tried
-to connect with the puzzling offerings of Leddy or Weston or Brunswick.
-
-St. James descended like a wolf on the fold on Wednesday and took
-Grafton’s measure without a great deal of trouble. To be sure, the game
-went to the fifth inning before St. James solved Leddy’s slants and by
-that time Grafton had herself assailed the opposing twirler for three
-hits and scored one run. But when the visitors did take to Leddy’s ways
-they took enthusiastically. Nate got through the fifth with difficulty,
-some brainless base-running on the part of the enemy aiding him out of
-a tight place, but in the sixth, after the bases were filled with only
-one out and two runs already across, he was retired from service and
-Myatt went in to save the day. And Myatt might have done it had he been
-backed by errorless fielding, but Nick Blake booted one in the seventh
-and Ayer fumbled a heave a minute later and two more runs came over.
-Grafton managed to add to her score in the eighth, increasing it to two
-when Winslow cracked out a two-bagger after Nick Blake had been passed
-to first and had stolen second. But that was the last of the home
-team’s scoring, while, just to clinch the game, St. James broke through
-with a couple of hits, one good for two bases, and added a fifth run in
-the ninth. Grafton tried everything she knew in the effort to start a
-rally in the last half of that inning, but the best she could do was to
-get Ayer as far as third base, at which station he remained while Hugh
-Ordway reached first on a weak infield hit that bounded erratically,
-and Jimmy, batting for Boynton, hit into a double, his luck for once
-deserting him. So 5 to 2 was the final score, and it pretty fairly
-represented the merits of the two teams. St. James had been there
-with the hits when hits meant runs and Grafton had failed to show any
-attack worthy the name. In view of results, it was cold comfort to know
-that, outside two errors and a wild pitch by Leddy, she had played an
-excellent defensive game. Results were what counted and another defeat
-had been scored up against Grafton.
-
-That game came off on the last day but one in May, and on Friday June
-came in with a spell of torrid weather. The heat combined with the
-knowledge of impending final examinations tended to rather take the
-starch out of fellows, and the ball players were no exception. Practice
-became half-hearted, in spite of Guy Murtha’s impassioned pleas and
-scoldings, and when Saturday dawned things looked bad for Grafton
-as regarded that Lawrence Textile contest. Most of the fellows were
-pulling their feet behind them and wearing worried frowns. The mercury
-climbed up to eighty-four at noon that day and what breeze had made
-life bearable in the forenoon died away entirely. Lawrence arrived
-shortly after one o’clock and, after getting a taste of conditions in
-the region of Grafton, willingly consented to a postponement of the
-start of the game from two-thirty to three o’clock. The delay, however,
-was of not much avail, for at the half-hour it was just as hot as it
-had been at two-thirty, and the spectators went to the field armed with
-newspapers and fans and all sorts of devices to shield their perspiring
-countenances.
-
-Coach Sargent again altered the batting order. Parker, while probably
-able to get in, was not used and Jimmy took his place in center field.
-Hugh Ordway went to third place on the list and Jimmy to seventh. Ben
-Myatt started the game, with Gordon behind the bat. Lawrence’s twirler
-was a tall, able-looking chap of about twenty years, unless appearances
-were deceptive, named Fairway. Nick Blake was responsible for an
-excruciating pun when, during Grafton’s third time at bat, he confided
-to Jimmy that it looked as if that pitcher was in a fair way to beat
-them. Jimmy charitably assumed that Nick was affected by the heat. Up
-to that time neither team had presented more than three men at the
-plate in an inning, the two pitchers going very smoothly and working
-the corners for all they were worth. But in that last of the third the
-luck broke for the home team.
-
-Jimmy, surviving Nick’s pun, chose a likely bat and took his stand.
-Being first man up, it was required of Jimmy that he secure his base
-by any method short of robbery. Fairway sneaked the first one over
-on him and teased him with a slow ball, which Jimmy wisely let pass.
-After that an attempt to bunt resulted in a foul down the third-base
-side. With two against him, Jimmy took a firmer grip of his bat and
-bent all his energies to the task. Naturally, Fairway could afford to
-waste a ball, and did so, and it was two-and-two. Jimmy took heart.
-The next one looked good and he swung briskly. Another foul resulted,
-the first-baseman almost making the catch. Another offering curved up
-to him and again he laid his bat against it and again it went foul.
-Fairway dragged his sleeve across his perspiring face, had a good look
-at the signals and unlimbered. The ball shot in, knee-high and looking
-good, and Jimmy started his swing. But something warned him in time and
-he recovered just as the ball took a most deceptive drop in front of
-the plate.
-
-“Ball――three!” called the umpire. Jimmy grinned and hitched his
-trousers. From the bench came encouraging and approving cries. Jimmy
-stepped out of the box and wiped his damp hands in the dust. Then he
-wiped them on his trousers. Then he stepped back with bat poised.
-
-“All right, Fairy!” called the catcher. “Right over now, old man!”
-
-Jimmy’s smile broadened. “Fairy” was such an amusing title for that
-tall, husky youth down there! Then the ball was singing up to him, his
-bat was swinging at it, there was a _slap_ and Jimmy was legging it to
-first. But again he had fouled, and again the Fates that rule over the
-lives of such as James Townsend Logan came to his rescue. The catcher,
-running back with gaze set skyward, hands poised for the descending
-ball, managed at the last instant to get the sun’s rays fairly in his
-eyes. The ball struck his mitten, bounded out, was juggled and dropped
-to the sod. A shrill shout of joy arose from the Grafton bench. The
-catcher angrily sped the ball to third and looked for his mask in a
-very disgruntled manner. Jimmy held it out to him.
-
-“Hard luck,” said Jimmy consolingly. “Next time I’ll put it where you
-can catch it.”
-
-The Lawrence backstop grunted.
-
-That trifling incident proved psychological, as many trifling incidents
-do in baseball, and Fairway’s next attempt at a strike passed a foot
-wide of the base, and Jimmy, dropping his bat, trotted to base amidst
-the plaudits and laughter of the spectators. The coachers got busy on
-the instant, Captain Murtha at first and Bert Winslow at third, and
-sent a veritable fusillade of interesting remarks across the diamond.
-
-“On your toes, Jimmy! Take a lead! Watch his arm! Look out! Up again!
-At a boy! Here we go! Go on! Go on! _Who-oa!_”
-
-Jimmy, hooking a leg back to the bag, grinned, climbed to his feet
-again, shook the dust from his togs and inched along the base line.
-Fairway gave him up after two attempts and turned his attention to Pete
-Gordon. Gordon was there to sacrifice, of course, and the safest way
-to do it was to bunt. But Pete was the slugging kind of a hitter, the
-sort who doesn’t very frequently connect, but slams out wicked liners
-or screeching flies when he does. Bunting, therefore, was not his
-strong suit, and his two attempts failed, the first one going foul and
-the second resulting in a harmless swing against the atmosphere. After
-that, with two strikes against him and only one ball to his credit,
-Pete was not dangerous, and when he finally hit one it arched amiably
-into center fielder’s hands and Jimmy retraced his steps to first.
-
-Myatt, however, did better, for Ben landed against the second delivery
-and whizzed it over the pitcher’s upraised glove and safely into the
-field, and Jimmy slid to second unhurriedly. Nick Blake went out on
-strikes, and it was Bert Winslow who came through with the longed-for
-safety, rapping the ball straight down first base line and a yard to
-the right of the baseman’s best reach. Jimmy scampered home, Myatt
-reached third, and Bert managed to get to second ahead of right
-fielder’s throw. But that ended Grafton’s chances for the time, for the
-best Hugh could do was to lift a fly to short left that shortstop got
-after a run.
-
-At one to nothing the game went to the fifth, Myatt holding the enemy
-harmless in the fourth and Grafton failing to reach first base in her
-half. But in the first of the fifth a fumble by Winslow put a runner on
-first. Myatt struck out the next two batsmen and Grafton’s adherents
-began to breathe easier. But Fairway, the Lawrence twirler, who had
-fanned ingloriously the time before, took a liking to Myatt’s first
-offering and poked it straight between Blake and Winslow. Result,
-an eager youth on third casting longing eyes at the plate! Also, an
-equally anxious runner on second, Fairway having gone on to that sack
-during the throw to the plate.
-
-Myatt started in with the head of the opposing batting list by putting
-himself promptly in the hole, pitching three remarkably poor balls
-one after another. Then he got two strikes across, neither of which
-was offered at, and tried to follow it with a third. But the heat was
-beginning to tell on Myatt, and the next attempt, while it looked
-pretty good from the bench, was adjudged a ball and the bases were
-full.
-
-“Weston,” called Mr. Sargent, “get a ball! You, too, Baker.”
-
-Possibly the sight of the two relief pitchers and Brooks trudging
-off to warm up put Myatt on his mettle, for he fairly stood the next
-batsman on his ear, fanning him with just four deliveries while the
-Grafton sympathizers cheered and yelped. Three disappointed runners
-left as many bases and turned sadly to their positions.
-
-Grafton tried hard to add to her score in her half of the fifth, but
-Fairway was quite master of the situation. The sixth passed without a
-thrill, even if Lawrence did manage to work a pass and get a scratch
-hit. Nothing came of it, for Blake, Murtha and Ayer pulled off a double
-and stopped the rampage. For Grafton, Winslow, Ordway and Murtha went
-out in order.
-
-The seventh witnessed Myatt’s Waterloo. For several innings he had been
-in bad shape owing to the heat, and when he faced the first batsman in
-the seventh it was not difficult to see that he was working on pure
-nerve. When the first man had found him for a single and he had pitched
-three balls to the second, Murtha stepped over and held a conference.
-Myatt shook his head and Bert Winslow joined them. Over behind third
-Gus Weston and Dud had taken up their work again, and Will Brunswick
-had been sent to join them.
-
-“There’s a job open for somebody,” remarked Brooks, throwing the ball
-to Gus. “Ben’s quitting.”
-
-The three pitchers, their backs to the bench, never turned, but three
-pairs of ears were, you may be certain, very alert. It was Weston
-who was summoned, and Gus, throwing aside his sweater, which he
-had worn tied across his chest, lolled onto the field. Dud watched
-him enviously, first because he had been chosen to relieve Myatt
-and secondly because he was able to approach the honor with such a
-wonderful assumption of indifference!
-
-Weston pitched his trial deliveries, rather wildly as a matter of
-fact, received the intelligence that the batter had three balls to
-his credit and no strikes, and instantly supplied him with a fourth!
-The Lawrence coaches and the Lawrence players on the bench hooted and
-jeered joyfully as the batsman walked to first, the runner on first
-jogged down to second. But that was what might have been expected, that
-pass to the batter, for it is no mean task to go to the mound with the
-score three against you and keep the batsman from walking. Dud had to
-acknowledge that as he and Brunswick and Brooks retired to the thin
-strip of shade afforded by the little house in which were stored the
-tennis nets.
-
-But this was not Weston’s day. To Grafton’s dismay, Gus very promptly
-passed the third man, working only one strike against him, and behold,
-the bases were filled and there were no outs! So suddenly can the
-fortunes of battle shift in the game of baseball! Brooks, his gaze on
-the bench, jumped to his feet.
-
-“Come on, fellows!” he said. “At it again! Peter signaled.”
-
-“Gee,” murmured Brunswick, “I don’t see much use warming up a day like
-this! I haven’t a square inch on me that’s dry!”
-
-“Never mind your troubles, Willie; shoot ’em!” responded Brooks,
-grinning as he drew his mitt on. “One of you guys will have to go in
-there in about two shakes. They’re holding the game now for you to
-limber up your old arms. Shoot ’em, Dud!”
-
-Over on the diamond Captain Murtha and Bert Winslow and Nick Blake had
-surrounded the unfortunate Weston, Pete Gordon, ball in hand, standing
-guard at the plate. A faint breeze came up from the river and awakened
-murmurs of relief from the sweltering spectators. Lawrence demanded
-that the game go on, half a dozen impetuous youths leaping from the
-bench to confront the umpire. The group in the center of the diamond
-melted and Weston held up his hand for the ball. Gordon tossed it back
-to him, knelt and signaled.
-
-“All right, Gus, now?” he encouraged. “Make ’em good, old man! Let’s
-get this one! Slide ’em over!”
-
-The infielders crept up to short-field, the runners capered and took
-daring leads and the coachers shouted themselves hoarse. Gus wound up
-and shot the ball away. It dropped prettily across the base, but the
-batter refused it and the umpire upheld him.
-
-“Ball!” announced the latter. Weston, hands on bent knees, stared as
-though dumfounded. Then he straightened, turned on his heel and cast
-his arms derisively apart. Lawrence jeered enjoyably.
-
-“Pretty good, Gus,” called Gordon. “Never mind, though. Let’s have it
-this time!”
-
-But Weston, though he took time and pains, shot one in that sent the
-batsman staggering out of his box and sent Guy Murtha to the mound.
-“That’ll do, Gus,” said Guy. “This isn’t your day, old man.”
-
-“It’s so beastly hot,” grumbled Weston.
-
-Murtha nodded non-committingly and raised a hand. At the bench Mr.
-Sargent turned to Nate Leddy. “Better warm up,” he said. “We may need
-you. Send Baker in.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-BACK TO THE BENCH
-
-
-The coach met Dud at third. He appeared smiling and unworried, but his
-characteristic trick of jumbling his words betrayed the fact that he
-was not as calm as he looked.
-
-“Think you can go in there and pull us out of this mess, Baker?” he
-asked. “Take all the time you want and set your gignals right――I mean
-get your rignals sight――er――well, go ahead, my boy, and show what you
-can do!”
-
-Dud made no answer, which was perhaps just as well since had he replied
-truthfully to the coach’s question he would have been forced to say
-that he was quite certain that he couldn’t do anything of the sort!
-Instead, he walked toward the mound with a fair appearance of ease and
-in a condition of blue funk. Murtha met him, and although the latter
-smiled cheerfully and tried his best to look as if he thought all his
-troubles were now past, it wasn’t difficult for Dud to perceive that
-the captain was a bit disappointed in Mr. Sargent’s selection. He would
-have much preferred Nate Leddy, but he had a good deal of confidence
-in the coach’s judgment and, after all, young Baker had shown real
-pitching more than once.
-
-“Good boy, Baker,” he said cheerfully. “Let’s see what you can do now.
-Listen, let Gordon do the head-work, see? Just try to give him what he
-wants. They’ve got three on and no one out, Baker, and the score’s two
-against you. Whatever you do, old man, don’t pass him. Let him hit if
-you have to and try to make him pop up. Do your best, Baker, for we
-want this game!”
-
-Guy handed him the ball and Dud, very trembly at the knees, conscious
-of the hot glare of sunlight that made heat waves dance along the
-paths, conscious of the encouraging voices of teammates and of hearty
-applause from the stand, wrapped his fingers about the leather and
-sent in his first “warming-up” ball. A whoop of joy and derision came
-from the visitors’ bench, for the ball had almost eluded the spry
-Gordon. Back it came and Dud, trying his best to calm his nerves, shot
-it in again. It was all right that time and the next. Then the ball
-struck the ground in front of the plate and Gordon had to drop and
-block it. One more, high and wide, ended the practice and the Lawrence
-third-baseman stepped up to the plate again as the umpire called
-“Play!” From the Lawrence bench and from the Lawrence coachers came a
-sudden hubbub of sound, but through it Dud heard Nick Blake’s cheerful
-voice.
-
-“We’re all with you, Dud! Go to it, son!”
-
-“Dud!” Nick had never called him that before, and somehow the thought
-steadied him remarkably. To be sure, his knees were still a trifle
-wobbly as he studied Gordon’s fingers laid against the back of his
-mitt, but the stage-fright was passing.
-
-“Let’s get him, Baker,” called Gordon as he arose from his crouch and
-held hands wide apart. “You’ve got the stuff, old man!”
-
-With a man on third watching for the least excuse to race home, a full
-wind-up was out of the question, and Dud realized that he must depend
-more on cunning than speed. Gordon had shown three fingers horizontal,
-and three fingers horizontal called for a low curve ball. Dud,
-emulating the example of Myatt, surveyed the bases slowly, pulled his
-cap down, tried to shut out the wild cries of the coachers, snuggled
-the ball in his fingers, threw his arm up, took his stride and pitched.
-
-At the plate the batter moved up on the ball, hesitated and let it pass.
-
-“Strike!” said the umpire.
-
-There was cheering from the stand, yells of triumph from the players
-in the field, but Dud scarcely heard them. Gordon, walking down the
-alley, thumped ball and mitt together. “That’s the stuff, Baker!” he
-cried. “One-and-two now! Let’s have him out!” He tossed the ball back,
-a watchful eye on third, went back to his place, crouched, signaled and
-again held hands wide apart. He wanted a drop and he got it, but it
-shaved too closely the outer corner and the umpire judged it a ball.
-Gordon turned indignantly.
-
-“_What!_”
-
-“You heard what I said,” returned the official crisply.
-
-Gordon grinned and returned the ball. “It looked good, Baker! Let’s
-have it again!”
-
-But it was “one finger” this time, and the fast one that sailed
-straight across the plate caught the batsman napping, and the umpire’s
-“_Strike――two!_” was drowned in a shout of joy from the Grafton
-sympathizers.
-
-“That’s the pitching, Dud!” called Nick, scooping a handful of dust
-from the base path and tossing it joyfully into the air. “Fine work,
-Baker!” “Keep after him!” “No one walks!” They were all calling
-encouragement to him now. He almost forgot the shouting, cavorting
-runners and the bawling coachers. Back came the ball once more, Gordon
-grinning widely. Then he dropped to one knee and laid four fingers
-across the big brown mitt.
-
-“Right in the slot, old man! He can’t see ’em! At a boy! Let her come!”
-
-And Dud let her! It was a slow one that did the trick, a ball that
-sped away from the mound with all the ear-marks of a moderately fast
-straight delivery but that never crossed the rubber until the batsman’s
-sharp swing had passed harmlessly. Then it descended into Gordon’s
-eager hands and the umpire waved an arm skyward.
-
-“_He’s out!_”
-
-How the stand shouted then and how silent the Lawrence bench suddenly
-became! The third-baseman, disgusted and puzzled, dragged his
-dishonored bat away with him and tossed it contemptuously into the
-pile. But that was only one down, and a big, capable-looking youth with
-a grim determination shown in his tight-set mouth was already waiting.
-A wide one that went as a ball, a drop that the batter tried for and
-missed, a second ball――Dud had attempted to cut the inner corner of
-the plate with a hook and had failed by an inch――and then, in response
-to Gordon’s signal of one finger, a fast one that reached the batsman
-waist-high and which he met with his bat.
-
-_Crack!_
-
-He was speeding to first, the bases were emptying. Dud, heart in mouth,
-turned in time to see Nick Blake spring two feet into the air and spear
-the ball, and then, without a wasted motion, dash across the second
-sack a scant instant before the runner from first slid, feet foremost,
-into it in a cloud of dust!
-
-Nick had played the double unassisted and the side was out! Grafton
-stood up in the stand and shouted herself hoarse. Dud, still a little
-dazed by the suddenness of the triumph, stood a moment beside the
-pitcher’s box ere he turned toward the bench. Then Guy Murtha was with
-him, had him by the arm and was laughing softly and saying extravagant
-things that he probably wouldn’t have said five minutes later. But Dud
-didn’t altogether sense them. He only knew during the ensuing minute
-that Nick had saved him――and the game! And if he could have done what
-he wanted to do he’d have embraced that youth on the spot. As it was,
-ignorant that some of the applause was really meant for him, he made
-his way to the bench and sat down a bit breathlessly, and someone was
-waving a dampened towel in front of him and there was much talk and
-laughter.
-
-And so Grafton started her half of the seventh with the score still 1
-to 0 and Ayer at bat. Ayer popped innumerable fouls into all sorts of
-out of the way places and then, with two strikes and one ball against
-him, stood inertly by and let a perfectly good straight one pass. He
-shook his head dejectedly as he turned away. Boynton reached first
-on second-baseman’s questionable error――the Lawrence scorer gave
-Boynton a hit――and went to second a moment later when Jimmy was thrown
-out at first. Gordon brought the inning to an end by fouling out to
-third-baseman.
-
-Then Dud was back in the box again and Gordon was shouting one thing
-and signaling another and again the Lawrence coachers were doing their
-level best to rattle him. But that first of the eighth was easy work
-for Dud. The luck was all Grafton’s. The first of the enemy beat out
-a bunt and then was caught by Gordon going to second. Dud scored his
-second strike-out on the next man, using just four deliveries. The
-succeeding batter proved more troublesome, for after Dud had worked two
-strikes across he began to lay against the others and foul them off
-with a fine impartiality. Everything, it seemed, was fish that went to
-his net, and Dud was beginning to despair of ever getting rid of him.
-He slipped up once and sailed one over the stubborn batsman’s head, and
-added a second ball to the score. Then, however, Gordon signaled a low
-curve and this time the ever-ready bat missed! So did Gordon, for that
-matter, but he found the rolling sphere and got it to Ayer well ahead
-of the runner. Dud got a round of applause all to himself this time,
-as he went back to the bench to pick out his bat, but he was so busy
-wondering just how much of a fool he would look when he stood up there
-and tried to hit the redoubtable Fairway that he didn’t even hear it.
-
-I’d like to tell you, in view of what occurred later, that Dud picked
-out one of Fairway’s slants and drove it across River Street for a
-home-run. But nothing of that sort happened, and if Dud didn’t look
-like a fool at the bat on that occasion it was only because pitchers
-aren’t supposed to be hitters. Dud was an easy proposition for the
-rival twirler. He promptly forgot everything he had ever learned about
-batting and swung wildly at the first two offers, held himself away
-from temptation at the third one and fanned the air an inch above the
-succeeding ball. He returned to the bench shame-facedly, but no one
-paid any attention to his fiasco and it dawned on him that he had done
-just what they had expected him to do and a great big determination
-arose in him to do better the next time, to learn how to judge a ball
-rightly and to eventually become that rara avis of baseballdom, a
-pitcher who can hit! But there was, it proved, no second chance for him
-today. Nick Blake fanned as effectively if not as promptly as Dud had
-and Bert Winslow was thrown out at first. And the ninth inning began.
-
-Once more Dud proved his mastery of the enemy, but there were no
-strike-outs for him this time. The first Lawrence batsman hit to
-Winslow and went out at first, the next man flied out to Ordway and
-the third, after Dud had put two strikes across, lighted on a low
-curve and popped it unexpectedly into short right for a base. Dud made
-three attempts to catch him napping and failed and the next minute
-the runner was sliding to second ahead of Gordon’s hurried throw. But
-Lawrence got no further, for the following batsman, trying hard to hit
-safely out of the infield, merely succeeded in smashing a liner into
-Ayer’s hands.
-
-Once more Grafton swung her bats and tried to break the deadlock. The
-heat was moderating now and long shadows were creeping across the
-diamond, but the players of both sides were fagged and wilted and
-prayed for the end of the contest. But it wasn’t to come yet, for
-Ordway fanned, Murtha flied out to left field――it would have been a
-wonderful hit if that fielder hadn’t raced back like a rabbit and
-made a one-hand catch that brought applause even from the Grafton
-adherents――Ayer beat out a bunt and Boynton hit a weak grounder to
-shortstop and the ninth had passed into history.
-
-Dud was back at his post again, a little tired, too, in spite of
-the fact that he had worked only two innings. He had the head of
-the list against him now and realized that this was no time for
-slip-ups. Lawrence began enthusiastically. The little, blond-headed
-second-baseman outwitted Gordon and Dud and walked to first. The next
-batsman fouled out to Ayer. Then came a sharp _rap_ and the ball
-sailed over second base and there were two on and only one out. But
-things looked better a few minutes later, for Dud scored his third
-strike-out, turning the left-fielder ignominiously back to the bench.
-That surely ought to have ended things for all practical purposes, but
-right there Luck took a hand in the game. The next batsman was anxious
-to hit, and Gordon knew it. In consequence the latter signaled high
-ones and Dud tried to serve them up. They caught him on the second
-for a strike, after the first had gone as a ball, and then Dud fooled
-him with a low one that barely crossed and the score was two-and-one.
-It seemed all over but the shouting and Gordon risked all on the
-next delivery. One finger was the signal and Dud sped the fast one
-in breast-high with not a thing on it but steam. The batsman leaned
-against that nice ball and drove it far and high into right field and
-although Boynton was under it he missed the catch. And although he
-recovered it quickly and sped it back to second, and Guy Murtha pegged
-it on to third, the runner there was safe and the chap who had hit took
-advantage of the play and slid to second unchallenged.
-
-Lawrence caught hopefully at the chance before her. A pinch hitter took
-the place of the center fielder. Gordon had no line on the new man
-and had to guess his tastes. A high one was refused and was judged a
-ball, a curve that just didn’t cut the outer corner went as another
-ball. Gordon signaled for a drop and the batter bit at it and had one
-strike against him. Then another drop failed to please the umpire and
-Dud was in the hole. Gordon called for a high one over the plate and
-Dud tried to put it there. But he didn’t. The ball went wide and Dud
-saw with dismay the batsman trotting to first and heard the triumphant
-yelps of the enemy. Another pinch hitter was up and Gordon, a little
-anxious of countenance now, was asking for a curve ball. Dud responded
-and scored a strike, the batter hitting hard but uselessly. Then came
-a ball, then a second. Gordon was calling all sorts of encouragement.
-Guy Murtha came over and told Dud to take his time. His teammates were
-assuring him that he could do it. The enemy’s coachers, back of first
-and third, were howling and dancing like Comanche Indians. The runners
-were running back and forth along the paths. Pandemonium was fairly
-loose and the din thumped against Dud’s ears excruciatingly. He felt
-his courage ebbing out of his finger-tips. He wanted to ask Murtha to
-let him quit, to put someone else in, but was more afraid to do that
-than he was to go on. Gordon was pleading for a straight one. Dud glued
-his eyes to the catcher’s chest, took his half wind-up and sped the
-ball. And even as he released it he knew that he had failed again!
-
-“_Ball――three!_” called the umpire through the din.
-
-Gordon was hurrying down the alley toward him, shaking the ball at him,
-his eyes blazing.
-
-“Settle down!” he growled. “Put ’em over! You can do it! Now get on to
-yourself!”
-
-Dud took the ball, nodded dazedly and turned back to the mound. Murtha
-was there, Murtha and Winslow, too, and the captain was looking over
-past third base and juggling a pebble in his dirt-grimed hands. When he
-turned his gaze sought Dud grimly.
-
-“Guess you’d better let someone else in, Baker,” he said. “Sorry, but
-we need this, old man.”
-
-Dud passed him the ball, tried to say something, he didn’t know what,
-and turned, white-faced and with hanging head, toward the bench.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-JIMMY ENCOURAGES
-
-
-That game with Lawrence Textile went to thirteen innings and ended,
-still a tie, 1 to 1, to allow the visitors to get their train. Nate
-Leddy, going to the rescue with three on, two out and the pitcher’s
-score one-and-three, pulled out of the hole very neatly. Instead of
-attempting the difficult feat of striking the batsman out, Nate dropped
-one over knee-high and the ball went straight up from the swinging bat
-and straight down again into Gordon’s mitten, and Lawrence saw her
-golden opportunity vanish. After that for three innings, although the
-suspense kept up every moment, neither side got anywhere near a score.
-Leddy and Fairway, the latter showing fatigue and substituting control
-for speed, were masters every minute. Fairway’s work to the very end
-was such that the spectators applauded him every time he left the mound
-or went to bat. After that hair-raising, nerve-racking tenth inning,
-Grafton could feel only satisfaction at the outcome. Even Captain
-Murtha had no regrets, and if Coach Sargent was disappointed he made
-no sign.
-
-Perhaps, aside from the Lawrence players, the only disconsolate one
-was Dud. He had hurried from his shower straight to his room, his
-main desire being to get out of the way before the game ended and the
-fellows came piling into the Field House, and so he didn’t learn the
-outcome of the contest until Jimmy arrived, half an hour later. By
-that time Dud’s common sense had come to the rescue and he was able
-to review his performance in the pitcher’s box without being prompted
-to suicide. After all, he had fared no worse than Gus Weston, he told
-himself comfortingly, and even Ben Myatt had begun distributing passes
-before he had been taken out; although, of course, Ben had far more
-excuse for giving out, since he had pitched six innings.
-
-Dud was still wondering what had happened to him. He had been all right
-until Boynton had made that memorable muff. After that he hadn’t been
-able to get the ball where he wanted it. It wasn’t that his arm had
-tired. It had been just as good as when he had started. And, as Dud
-recalled it now, he hadn’t been nervous; not, anyway, until he had
-issued that first pass in the tenth. It just seemed, looking back on
-the fiasco, that the ball had suddenly simply refused to go where it
-was sent! He wondered whether Mr. Sargent would ever give him another
-chance, whether the fellows were secretly laughing at him. Well, he had
-surely afforded Bert Winslow a fine opportunity to say “I told you so!”
-Bert had all along been politely contemptuous of Dud’s ambition to make
-the first team, although of late he had been very decent to him indeed.
-He rather hoped he wouldn’t run across Bert for a day or two!
-
-Dud didn’t make the mistake of feeling himself disgraced, at least not
-after the first few miserable minutes, but he did feel that he had
-failed pretty badly as a pitcher, and that before the whole school,
-and he dreaded having to face the fellows again. He was pondering the
-idea of remaining away from dining-hall that evening when Jimmy came
-tramping along the corridor and entered.
-
-“Hello, you! Where’d you get to?” Jimmy skimmed his cap to the bed and
-threw himself tiredly into a chair. “Did you see the game out?”
-
-Dud shook his head. “What――what was the score?” he asked dejectedly.
-
-“Just the same as when you ducked; one each.” Jimmy gave a brief but
-graphic history of the final three innings. “Why didn’t you come back
-and see the rest of it?” he concluded.
-
-“I guess I would have if I’d known they weren’t beating us. I’m glad
-they didn’t. Did――did anyone say anything?”
-
-“Say anything? What about?”
-
-“About me, I mean.”
-
-“Oh, that’s what’s worrying you? I thought you looked a little bit
-down-hearted. Don’t you let that bother you, son. They all have to
-go through with that before they arrive. You did pretty well, on the
-whole. Three strike-outs, wasn’t it? And then you pulled us out of
-that hole in the seventh! Don’t be a clam, Dud. No one expects a green
-pitcher to go into a game like that and twirl like a veteran. Why, the
-row those fellows kicked up even made _me_ nervous, away out in the
-field!”
-
-“It wasn’t that,” said Dud sadly. “I don’t know what it was. Of course,
-I was rattled just at first, but afterwards I didn’t pay any attention
-to the noise. I guess Mr. Sargent thinks I’m a pill!”
-
-“Rot! I’ll bet you lasted longer than Pete expected you to. Of course,
-I’m not saying that it wouldn’t have been a bully thing for you if
-you’d gone the distance; you’d have had the whole school inviting you
-to dinner; but you did pretty well as it was. And, say, talking about
-that――being popular, I mean, and making a hit――that little meeting with
-Hobo and Blake was a lucky thing for us, wasn’t it? Look at the way
-they’ve taken you up, Dud! Fine, what?”
-
-“I suppose so,” agreed the other rather listlessly. “They’ve been
-awfully nice to me――――”
-
-“You bet! And a lot of their crowd, too. Why, say――――”
-
-“But I don’t, somehow, care so much about being――being a ‘regular
-feller’ as I did, Jimmy. I――I’d rather be a good pitcher.”
-
-“Isn’t that human nature?” demanded Jimmy, apparently of the ceiling.
-“Just as soon as a fellow gets what he wants, he doesn’t want it! You
-make me tired, Dud! Here I’ve schemed and labored for you――――”
-
-“I know, and I’m awfully much obliged,” said Dud soberly. “Only――please
-don’t do it any more, Jimmy. I’ve had enough of it, I guess.”
-
-“My dear demented friend, you’ve just started! You mustn’t think that
-just because Hobo Ordway and Nick Blake and Bert Winslow and a few of
-that close corporation have taken you up that the battle’s won. Far be
-it from such! The fun’s only started, son. You’ve got two years here
-yet and you want to make hay while the sun shines. Just you leave it to
-me――――”
-
-“No, you leave it to me now,” said Dud. “I guess it’s like Blake said;
-every fellow must hoe his own row. And――and I haven’t got time to――to
-be popular, Jimmy. I just want to get so I can pitch like Ben Myatt.”
-
-“Say, that’s hitching your wagon to a star, all right; Ben being the
-‘star’! Maybe you’re right, though. There’s always the danger of
-having fellows think you’re trying too hard; and they don’t like that.
-Maybe your scheme is the best, Dud. Foxy, too, I call it.”
-
-“I haven’t any scheme,” denied the other impatiently. “I just want to
-quit thinking anything about whether fellows like me or don’t like me.
-I guess if they do it will be because――because I don’t care!”
-
-“That’s what I’m saying,” said Jimmy, grinning exasperatingly. “Just
-let them think you don’t care a fig and they’ll flock to you. Yep,
-that’s a good idea, Dud.”
-
-“Jimmy, if folks didn’t know you better they’d think sometimes that you
-were a regular――regular――――”
-
-“Feller?” asked Jimmy helpfully.
-
-“Bounder!”
-
-“Oh! Thank you kindly. And such is gratitude! Never mind, son, all you
-need is food. Let’s get to it.”
-
-“I don’t think――that is, I’m not very hungry――――”
-
-“Not hungry! You’re not sick, are you?” Dud shook his head. “Then
-what’s wrong with you?”
-
-“Well, if you must know,” replied the other desperately, “I――I don’t
-want to go over there and see the fellows grinning at me.”
-
-“Grinning at you? What would they be doing―――― Say, for the love of
-lemons, Dud, get that idea out of your bean! Why, no one’s grinning at
-you, you three-ply chump! Why should they? Didn’t you go in there and
-save our bacon for us? Didn’t you work three innings like a regular
-‘Matty’? Sure, you did! Then what――――”
-
-“And I went to pieces, too, and filled the bases that time,” said Dud
-bitterly. “Even if they don’t grin I shall know they want to!”
-
-“Piffle! Honest, Dud, I didn’t know you were such a chump. Look here,
-you’ve been wondering again! Don’t tell me! I can see it. You’ve got
-your ‘I-wonder’ expression on! You stop thinking about Dud Baker and
-wash your dirty face and hands and come to eats. I’ll guarantee that
-you won’t get grinned at once, old man. If I see any fellow trying it
-I’ll punch his head!”
-
-After all, Dud only wanted to be reassured and had no real intention of
-missing his supper, for he was undeniably hungry. And so, presently,
-they were off to dining-hall together, and things were just as Jimmy
-had predicted. There were no grins, save an occasional friendly one,
-and no one paid much more attention to Dud than usual. They slipped
-into their places at table――neither had been called to the training
-table yet, since accommodations at that board were very limited――and
-Jimmy, in high spirits, bandied remarks with the others between
-mouthfuls, and Dud tried hard to forget anything that had happened
-since luncheon.
-
-There was, naturally, much talk of the game and much criticism of
-various plays, as there always was, and Jimmy, as a participant, was
-listened to with respect if not with entire credence. At the training
-table, across the hall, there were no signs of depression, if one could
-judge by the talk and laughter. In fact, the whole school was looking
-back on the afternoon’s contest as something very much like a lucky
-victory. And perhaps it was. At all events, a comparison of the scores
-showed that Lawrence had made more hits and fewer errors and that the
-renowned Mr. Fairway had behaved more creditably than the four Grafton
-pitchers judged together.
-
-When Dud and Jimmy left the dining-hall they ran into Nick Blake and
-Bert Winslow in the corridor. Dud had determined to avoid any such
-meeting, but fortune ruled otherwise.
-
-“Hello, James T.,” greeted Nick. “How’s Tris Speaker Junior tonight?
-Hello, Dud Baker.”
-
-“My arms are a trifle lame,” responded Jimmy. “When a fellow makes all
-the hits in a game――――”
-
-“Hah!” ejaculated Nick mirthlessly. “Again, hah! You make me laugh,
-Jimmy. He’s a regular funny fellow, isn’t he, Dud? How are you feeling,
-by the way? Say, that was some twirling you did in the seventh, my
-lad!”
-
-“How about the tenth?” asked Dud, smiling wanly.
-
-“Well, no harm done, you know,” said Nick cheerfully. “They all get
-theirs sooner or later, and I dare say if you’d stayed in you’d have
-pulled yourself out all right.”
-
-“If we hadn’t needed the game so much,” observed Bert, “he’d have
-stayed in, I guess. I was hoping Guy would let him. It’s a bully good
-thing for a pitcher to have to dig his way out, Baker. Gives him
-confidence, you know. If I was captain of a team and a pitcher got in
-a hole I’d just let him stay right there and crawl out of it. Just
-let him have to do it, and if he’s the least bit of good, he will. My
-notion is that if a pitcher thinks he’s going to be relieved any time
-he goes bad, he’s going bad too plaguey often! That sound like sense to
-you, Jimmy?”
-
-“I haven’t heard a word that sounded like sense since I got here,”
-answered Jimmy gravely. “If someone would suggest something to do more
-exciting than hearing Lit and Forum jabber over some subject like:
-‘Resolved: That Marcus T. Cicero was faster on the bases than his
-brother Quint,’ or ‘That the Penguin is mightier than the Swordfish’!”
-
-“That’s so, it’s debate night, isn’t it?” said Nick. “Who’s going? You,
-Bert?”
-
-“I suppose so. You?”
-
-“Well, if there was anything better――――!”
-
-“There’s a moon,” said Jimmy tentatively.
-
-“Go on, pray! Your words interest me strangely,” prompted Nick,
-assuming an attitude of suspense.
-
-“And there’s a river――――”
-
-“I get you! Will you go, Bert?”
-
-“Bathing? I guess so. Let’s find Hugh. You’ll come, Baker?”
-
-“Thanks, but I’ve got――――” Dud stopped abruptly. Jimmy, smiling
-sweetly, had surreptitiously kicked him on the shin.
-
-“Yes, he’ll come,” said Jimmy. “As this happens to be a Saturday night,
-Dud, your excuse of having to dig Latin or something is very poor.
-Let’s find a crowd, fellows.”
-
-“Let’s not,” said Bert. “I’ll round up Hobo and Ted Trafford. They went
-off a minute ago. That’s enough. By the way, though, I suppose you
-fellows know that the rules forbid it?”
-
-“No, honest?” Jimmy was evidently as pained as he was surprised. “Did
-you know that, Nick?”
-
-“News to me, Jimmy! I was never so surprised in my life! Are you sure
-of what you tell us, Bert?”
-
-“Oh, go to the dickens! Come on then before the moon goes down.”
-
-“Or the river evaporates,” added Jimmy. “I’m going to suggest, fellows,
-that we avoid publicity as much as possible. The last time I had
-anything to do with that old river it nearly got me into trouble!”
-
-I feel that I ought to record here that Dud’s conscience made itself
-heard, and that, refusing to transgress the rules of the school, he
-persuaded the others to forego the enterprise. I’d like to record
-that, but I can’t, for Dud’s conscience must have been asleep, and
-ten minutes or so later he was following the others――and Pop Driver,
-who had been discovered in the company of Hugh and Ted Trafford and
-persuaded to join the party――across the Green and Lothrop Field to
-the Beach, as the scanty expanse of sandy shore bordering the Cove
-was somewhat ironically called. And I am forced to relate that the
-moonlight bathing party was a huge success, that it lasted until nearly
-ten o’clock and that faculty remained forever in ignorance of it. So,
-it would seem, for once the transgressor went unpunished. But perhaps
-not, after all, for Nick cut his foot open on a mussel shell or a
-piece of glass and Ted Trafford caught an awful cold that lasted him
-nearly until school closed! Possibly the reason that the others escaped
-retribution was just because their crime was not, after all, especially
-wicked.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-ON THE MOUND
-
-
-Dud wondered――Jimmy wasn’t there to stop him!――what Mr. Sargent would
-say to him on Monday regarding that performance of his in the Lawrence
-Textile game. As a matter of fact, Mr. Sargent said absolutely nothing,
-either then or at any other time. There was very light practice that
-afternoon, most of it batting, and the fellows were dismissed early,
-many of them returning after changing to the practice diamond to watch
-the second team put away the Grafton High School nine. It wasn’t
-a vastly exciting affair, however, for the second, with Joe Kelly
-pitching, had things about its own way. Dud and Jimmy departed at the
-end of the seventh inning, leaving the home team five runs to the good,
-and spent a half-hour on the river in Nick Blake’s canoe. (Jimmy asked
-permission when they returned, and so that was all right!) Jimmy was
-troubled today and made Dud his confidant as they paddled slowly along
-under the drooping boughs. His trouble concerned Starling Meyer. But
-we’ll let Jimmy tell it in his own inimitable way.
-
-“Someone,” said Jimmy morosely, “has told Star he could play baseball.
-Huh! That’s all right, too, but what’s the use of making me let go
-the second and then dumping me in just when the fun begins? How do I
-know I’ll be dumped? Well, I don’t, I suppose. But, listen, if that
-chap keeps on butting in where’ll I be? Ordway and Boynton and Parker
-are sure of the outfield places unless they break a leg or a neck or
-something. Well, sure, that’s O. K.; they’re better than I am. I know
-that. The only chance I get is when one of ’em is out of the game.
-One of ’em’s likely to be out now and then and so I get a whack. All
-right, say we. But here comes this――this Indian, Meyer, butting in and
-snooping around for the crumbs, too. That makes two of us; three, if
-you count Ben Myatt; and Pete’s likely to put Ben in center or right
-any chance he gets because Ben can bat like a whale! If Star Meyer’d
-mind his own business, which is playing hockey and running creation,
-I’d have a fair chance to get into one of the Mount Morris games,
-wouldn’t I? Sure, I would! Parker isn’t very spry on that game leg of
-his, and I’ve noticed that Boynton is looking sort of like a friend of
-mine looked before he went into a decline. And Hobo might fall out of
-his canoe any day and get drowned――if he’d only use it more. I must
-suggest it to him. He doesn’t get enough exercise. Why the dickens
-can’t Star keep out of it? That’s what I want to know. Something told
-me away last winter that I’d have trouble with that galoot before the
-year was over!”
-
-“I thought I was the one,” said Dud slyly.
-
-Jimmy grunted. “So did I. Well, anyway, one good thing is that faculty
-hasn’t forbidden _me_ to take a fall out of him!”
-
-“But you can’t very well thrash a fellow for just playing ball, Jimmy!”
-
-“I can beat him up for interfering with my affairs,” responded the
-other with dignity. “Bet you anything you like he will work around Guy
-Murtha and Guy’ll take him along to Corliss day after tomorrow.”
-
-“I suppose Parker will be back by then,” suggested Dud.
-
-“Parker? Oh, I dare say. But, listen, Dud, between you and me now,
-I don’t believe Parker stands awfully high with Pete. I wouldn’t be
-surprised if he didn’t get back again; regularly, I mean. And if he
-doesn’t, why, maybe little Jimmy T. Logan will have a chance, eh? That
-is, if Meyer doesn’t persuade Guy that he’s a ball-player beforehand.”
-
-“You’re hitting better than Star, aren’t you?”
-
-“N――no, I don’t think so. Wish I were! Still, I get my base a heap
-oftener. I suppose shooting at hockey helps Star hit the ball. Say, do
-you know, Dud darling, I’m going to be sort of peeved and disappointed
-if I don’t get into one of those Mount Morris games? I wasn’t awfully
-keen at first, as you know, but now that I’ve started I’d like to make
-good. Besides,” he added gloomily, “the family’ll be here for that
-second game and I’d feel like an awful chump if I had to swing my legs
-on the bench all the afternoon!”
-
-“You’d be in good company,” said Dud.
-
-“Meaning you?” asked the other, as he turned the canoe back toward
-home. “Oh, you’ll get your chance, Dud. Mount Morris has got some
-hitters, they say, and if she has neither Myatt nor Nate Leddy will
-last the games through. As for Brunswick, I guess he’s a goner for this
-year.”
-
-“There’s Weston, though.”
-
-“That’s so, too. I wouldn’t be a bit surprised to see Gus turn around
-and pitch a corking game some day soon. I guess the trouble with Gus
-is that he’s too temperamental. He and I are alike that way. If the
-weather isn’t just right or the moon’s in the wrong quarter or the
-tide’s too high or his shoe pinches him, Gus can’t pitch a little bit.
-But some day all the signs are going to be just right, and Gus will
-slip on a pair of old shoes, and he will go out there and make ’em eat
-out of his hand.” Jimmy paused. Then: “Maybe,” he added cautiously,
-“you can’t tell about Gus. Like me, he has the artistic temperament.”
-
-“Well,” said Dud, after a long silence and as they swung the canoe into
-the Cove, “I hope you get into all the Mount Morris games, Jimmy, and
-do finely. And I hope,” he added wistfully, “that they let me pitch an
-inning or two in one of them. I――I’d like that.”
-
-“And I,” responded Jimmy, “hope as how you gets your hope! Easy on! Let
-her run, sonny!”
-
-It looked the next day as though Jimmy might be right about Gordon
-Parker, for although that youth was back for practice with his leg
-evidently as useful as ever, he did not get back into the outfield
-when the first and second lined up for the practice game. Instead,
-Boynton played in right, Jimmy in center and Ordway in left until
-the fifth inning, when Star Meyer took Jimmy’s place, much to that
-youth’s disgust. Leddy and Weston pitched that afternoon. Ben Myatt
-had been more affected by the heat on Saturday than he or anyone else
-had suspected at the time, and was said to be nursing himself for the
-next day’s game with Corliss College. Save for pitching to the batters
-in practice, neither Dud nor Brunswick did any work that afternoon.
-Dud watched the game from the bench and listened, during the last two
-innings, to Jimmy’s frank expressions of hurt feelings. Every time a
-fly ball went into center field Jimmy watched it hopefully.
-
-“Hope he muffs it! Hope he mu―――― Isn’t that rotten luck? Anyway,
-that’s a bum throw-in! If I couldn’t do better than that――sometimes――I
-wouldn’t try to get an honest man’s job away from him. Say, you’re
-next, Churchill. Knock a long one into center, will you? Put it about
-fifty feet over Meyer’s head, like a good fellow!”
-
-But in spite of Jimmy’s hopes and criticisms Star played a good enough
-game in center and managed to get a rather lucky hit the only time he
-went to bat. Jimmy tried to bribe Manager Barnes to score it as an
-error for the second team shortstop, but failed.
-
-There was an early and rather hurried dinner for the players the
-next day and the team, eighteen strong, bowled away to the station
-shortly after one o’clock. Much to his surprise, Dud made one of four
-pitchers to accompany it, and Jimmy, too, was of the number. Jimmy’s
-satisfaction, however, was somewhat spoiled by the presence of Star
-Meyer. Parker was left behind. So, too, was Ben Myatt, still suffering
-from what the school physician had diagnosed as “a touch of heat.” Ben
-was instructed to keep out of the hot sunlight and, when playing, wear
-a fold of paper inside his cap. Mr. Sargent, however, had no intention
-of allowing Ben to pitch again until he was so far recovered as not to
-require that paper. The first of the series with Mount Morris would
-be played on Saturday, just three days later, and so Ben had been
-instructed to stay right at home and be very, very good to himself.
-Leddy, Weston, Brunswick and Dud would undoubtedly manage between them
-to dispose of Corliss, for Corliss, although called a college, was
-little more than a preparatory school and was not considered dangerous.
-
-Corliss lay an hour and forty minutes away by railroad, although the
-actual distance was about thirty-eight miles. The team had to change
-at Needham Junction first and, later on, at North Taunton, and in
-consequence was somewhat weary when it finally disembarked from the
-trolley car that had brought it from the Corliss Station to the nearest
-point to the school. They paraded up a tree-shaded street, past some
-yellow-brick building that looked uncomfortably hot and glary today,
-and eventually reached the field, a very ambitious affair, inclosed
-with a brick wall and containing a permanent stand of concrete and a
-picturesque building of the same material roofed with red tiles. The
-fellows secretly admired that field, but they pretended to consider
-it too dressy and made a good deal of fun of the commodious and
-well-appointed building into which they were shown. There they had a
-room all to themselves and three shower baths as well. By the time
-they had changed to playing togs the stand was well sprinkled with
-spectators and a welcoming cheer greeted them as they took the field
-for practice. Only some dozen and a half Graftonians had accompanied
-the nine, for examinations held many at school and others were too
-poor to pay for the trip. But the handful of patriotic youths gathered
-themselves into a small but devoted group in a corner of the big stand
-and from the first appearance of the Scarlet-and-Gray on the diamond to
-the end of the contest made enough noise for thrice their number.
-
-All four pitchers were set to warm up while the fielders practiced.
-Will Brunswick, by this time reconciled to his fate, went through the
-motions in a mechanical fashion, but the other three set to work hard,
-each hoping to get the call. After the Corliss players, a rather hefty
-lot of blue-stockinged and blue-sleeved youths, had taken the field
-and completed their warming up, Mr. Sargent had a consultation with
-Guy Murtha and Pete Gordon. Dud pretended no interest as he sat on the
-bench between Hugh Ordway and Neil Ayer, but secretly he was a very
-anxious boy. Manager Barnes was getting the batting order now from the
-coach and Dud, while answering a remark of Hugh’s, strained his ears to
-hear.
-
-“Blake, Winslow, Ordway, Murtha, Ayer, Boynton, Meyer”――Dud felt sorry
-for Jimmy then――“Gordon and――I’ll give you the pitcher later.” Mr.
-Sargent nodded to Nick Blake. “Start it up,” he said.
-
-Nick went to bat while Mr. Sargent arose and, after watching the work
-of the opposing pitcher, a broad-shouldered and rather slow-moving
-fellow named Walters, for a few moments, moved along and spoke to Nate
-Leddy. Dud’s gaze followed, although he tried not to let it. The coach
-and Leddy spoke for several moments, their eyes all the while on the
-Corliss twirler. At last Mr. Sargent nodded and Leddy settled back in
-his seat, turning to his companion on the left, Boynton, and making a
-remark that brought, as Dud saw, a look of surprise to the face of the
-right fielder. Mr. Sargent remained behind the bench, watching Nick
-Blake trying to find something useful to him amongst the slow, wide
-curves that the blue-legged pitcher was offering. Nick finally slammed
-one across the diamond, but was an easy out, shortstop to first.
-
-Bert Winslow raised a long fly to left field and likewise retired and
-Hugh Ordway, after fouling off a couple, was badly fooled on a drop and
-fanned. As the players arose from the bench to trot into the field Dud,
-who had forgotten the coach for the moment, felt a hand on his shoulder.
-
-“Baker, I’m going to let you start,” said Mr. Sargent. “You’ve pitched
-to Brooks a good deal, haven’t you? Would you rather have him handle
-you than Gordon?”
-
-“He knows my stuff pretty well, sir,” stammered Dud. “But it’s just as
-you say, sir.”
-
-The coach called to Ed Brooks. “You catch Baker, Brooks,” he said.
-“Let’s see what you can do, my boy. Study your batters and watch the
-bases. Barnes, put Brooks down for Gordon and Baker last. All right
-now, you two. Show what you can do.”
-
-Dud started for the mound, drawing on his glove, but Brooks overtook
-him on the way. “Say, Dud, don’t let’s slip up on signals, eh?” he said
-anxiously. “If you don’t get ’em sing out. And if you use that side-arm
-pitch signal beforehand, will you? I’m always afraid of that getting by
-me. Lift your cap in front and I’ll know, see? All right, Dud!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-DUD COMES BACK
-
-
-Dud started out with one idea, which was to redeem himself. He was
-pretty sure that Mr. Sargent would not expect him to go more than five
-innings, six at the very most, and he determined to use every bit of
-strength and science he possessed during those six frames, to pitch
-himself out if necessary, but at all hazards to show form. He was
-nervous at first and showed wildness with his practice balls, and after
-that made a bad start by passing the first man up for Corliss. But
-subsequently he settled down nicely, and although he had no strike-outs
-to his credit in that first inning, he allowed no hits, and the runner
-on first never left that bag.
-
-Grafton got two hits in the second, one rather scratchy, but failed
-to score. Corliss once more got a man to first on a hit that took a
-bad bound in front of Nick Blake and once more watched him die there.
-In the third, after Grafton had retired in one, two three order, Dud
-began to find his control, and he and Ed Brooks disposed of the Corliss
-pitcher and the first two batsmen on the Blue’s list with no trouble,
-Walters fanning, the next man popping a fly to Neil Ayer and the next
-being thrown out at first by Bert Winslow.
-
-Grafton got her first run in the fourth inning. Hugh Ordway was passed,
-Murtha sacrificed him to second and, after Neil Ayer had struck out,
-Boynton slipped a fast grounder down the alley between shortstop and
-second, and Hugh romped home and beat the throw by a yard. Star Meyer
-flied out to center field.
-
-Dud added speed to science in the last of the fourth and two of the
-Blue’s best batsmen fanned wildly, and the little group of Graftonians
-in the corner of the stand cheered themselves patriotically and
-appropriately scarlet of face. The succeeding batter drove a liner into
-Captain Murtha’s glove and the fifth inning began.
-
-Ed Brooks allowed Walters to put him in a hole with the first two
-deliveries, and then, after disdaining a couple of wide ones, swung
-despairingly at a third and somehow managed to get it on the tip end of
-his bat and land it safely behind shortstop. Then began a fusillade of
-the Corliss pitcher that ultimately spelled retirement for that youth.
-Dud, who had rolled a weak one down the first-base path and been an
-easy out the first time at bat, now tried twice to bunt and failed.
-After that there was nothing to do but take a good healthy swing and
-try to get the ball out of the infield. With the score two-and-two, Dud
-cut loose and poked a hit past third-baseman that put Brooks on the
-third sack and himself on first. Blake bunted and the pitcher fielded,
-the latter making the mistake of holding the ball too long to protect
-the plate. When he finally tossed to first he was too late and the
-bases were full.
-
-At this interesting juncture Bert Winslow ought to have stepped into
-the limelight with a smashing home-run or a three-bagger at least, but
-the best Bert could do was to bounce one away to shortstop and Brooks
-was an easy out at the plate. But the bases were still filled, with
-only one man down, and there were cries of “Lift it, Hobo!” “Knock it
-in the nose, Hobo!” as Hugh went to the plate. Walters, showing the
-strain now, pitched two wild heaves which his catcher barely stopped
-and then slipped one across in the groove. Hugh swung at it but was too
-late. A third ball followed and Grafton yelled exultantly. But again
-Walters made good, Hugh not offering. Everything depended on the next
-delivery, and as the ball left the pitcher’s hand the three runners on
-the paths started away. They need not have hurried, though, for the
-ball went low and wide and Hugh walked, Dud crossing the platter with
-the second tally for the Scarlet-and-Gray.
-
-By this time Corliss had two pitchers warming up and it was easy to
-see that Walters’ minutes were numbered. Captain Murtha brought affairs
-to the crisis by landing on the pitcher’s second delivery and lifting
-it high and far to right field. It was well over the fielder’s head,
-and that youth failed to get under it. Two more runs tallied and Guy
-took second. After that Walters passed Ayer and was promptly derricked.
-The new twirler, Hoyt, had difficulty in getting under way, and before
-he succeeded two more hits and as many runs had been scored. Of the
-hits Boynton contributed one and Brooks one. Star Meyer made the second
-out and Dud the third, Dud being robbed of a hit by a pretty running
-catch of a short fly to center.
-
-The score was 6 to 0 when the last half of the fifth started and there
-seemed to be no doubt as to who owned the game. Dud was beginning to
-feel tired, but believed himself fit for another inning, or two if
-necessary. But things broke bad at the start. The first of the enemy to
-face him showed no eagerness to hit and before he knew it Dud was two
-balls to the bad. Then, although he managed to get a strike across, he
-followed with a third ball, and the final result was that the Corliss
-youth smashed a hot liner straight over third base and took two bases
-on the hit. The succeeding batsman fouled out quickly to Winslow. Then
-Brooks tried to catch the runner off second and the ball got away from
-Murtha, who took the throw, and the runner reached third.
-
-Dud felt himself slipping then and shot an inquiring look toward the
-bench. But Mr. Sargent was evidently still unworried, for Leddy and
-Weston were both there and no one was warming up. Dud gritted his teeth
-and went on. The batsman had a strike and two balls on him when Dud,
-trying to break a high one over the inner corner, lost control of the
-ball and it went straight for the batter’s head. But Dud’s shout of
-“_Look out!_” was not necessary. The man at the plate dropped just in
-time and the ball sailed past Brooks and brought up at the net, the
-runner on third sprinting home.
-
-Murtha and the others did their best to steady Dud again, and Ed
-Brooks, walking down to place the ball in Dud’s hand, said: “That was
-my fault, Dud. I ought to have got it. Sorry, old man. Don’t mind it,
-though. Let’s have this fellow, eh?”
-
-Dud nodded. It was nice of Brooks to call it his fault, but of course
-it hadn’t been anything of the sort. Dud glanced again toward the
-bench as he went back to his place on the mound. He wished that Mr.
-Sargent would get his relief ready. He wondered why he didn’t. He was
-giving way to a sort of fright now, although he didn’t show it unless
-by the longer time he took to grip the ball and study Brooks’ signal.
-About him the infield players were speaking words of encouragement.
-The batsman had him in the hole. He must make him hit. But something
-told him that he was worked out, that there was no use trying, that
-today was to be just a repetition of that other day when he had gone to
-pieces there on Lothrop Field with the whole school looking on!
-
-Brooks had signaled for a straight ball and Dud tried to pitch it.
-Instead of being straight, though, it was a hook, but it crossed the
-corner of the plate and the umpire was charitable to Dud. Brooks,
-looking anxious, threw it back slowly and again spread his hands. The
-little group of Grafton rooters cheered. Dud, however, took no joy of
-the doubtful decision. Luck had aided him that time, but this time, he
-told himself, he would surely fail. And fail he did. The ball passed
-well inside the plate and the batsman, staggering away from it, dropped
-his bat and trotted down the path. Corliss was cheering madly now,
-sensing the fact that the Grafton pitcher was at last weakening. Guy
-Murtha hurried to the box and told Dud to take his time, to let them
-hit. Dud muttered agreement, conscious chiefly of disappointment. He
-had expected Guy to take the ball away from him! What, he wondered
-almost angrily, was the matter with them? Couldn’t they see that he was
-through? Why did they want to keep him there when he was only making
-things worse every minute?
-
-None out now and a runner on first. The next batsman didn’t wait for
-a pass but lighted on Dud’s first offering and sent it rolling toward
-third. Dud and Brooks and Winslow all started for it, but it was Bert
-who scooped it up and pegged it to Ayer, and Bert wasn’t set for the
-throw and the ball went a yard away from the first-baseman. The first
-runner dashed to third and the next slid into second base. Dud went
-despairingly back to the mound to face the next ambitious blue-legged
-youth. A hit meant two more runs for Corliss, he told himself. Surely
-then they’d let him go out! But the hit didn’t come just then. Instead,
-it was a short fly that left the bat and Nick Blake ran back and got
-it safely and slammed it home. But the man on third didn’t try to
-score. Then the hit did come, after Dud by some miracle had induced the
-batsman to swing at two wide balls, and it sped into short center field
-and two joyful Corliss runners tallied.
-
-Dud looked inquiringly at Murtha and got only a “Never mind that,
-Baker! Go to it!” Then his eyes sought the bench, and there sat Leddy,
-hands in pockets, and Gus Weston chatting unconcernedly with Barnes
-over the score-book, and Mr. Sargent, leaning forward with hands
-clasped loosely between his knees and his straw hat pulled over his
-eyes! Dud couldn’t understand it at all. Did they want to get beaten?
-Couldn’t they see that he was throwing the game away, that he wasn’t
-any good after all, that he never had been?
-
-“Settle down, Dud!” called Nick Blake. “At a boy! Let’s have ’em, old
-top!”
-
-“One gone!” chanted Captain Murtha. “Let’s have the double, fellows!”
-
-Dud turned desperately to his task again. He tried to remember what the
-fellow facing him now had done before. Struck out, hadn’t he? Or was he
-the chap who had smashed out that double? Well, it was up to Brooks,
-and Brooks wanted a drop. Dud tried to catch the runner at first and
-failed twice and then pitched to the plate. The drop was good and the
-batsman swung at it.
-
-“That’s the stuff!” called Brooks cheerfully. “He can’t hit ’em, Dud!
-Right across now. Show him a good one.”
-
-A wide and low one followed and then another. Two-and-one now, and
-Brooks showing three fingers for another drop. Dud tried it and failed
-and the umpire announced “Ball three!” Corliss shouted and stamped and
-clapped. Dud had none to waste and he took all the time he wanted for
-the next. But it slanted away erratically and the batsman tossed his
-bat behind him and sprang gleefully toward first, while the runner at
-that station went on to second. Murtha came to the box.
-
-“Look here, Baker, what’s the matter with you? Are you trying to
-present them with the game? For the love of Mike, put some of them
-over! Let them hit ’em, I tell you. We’ll take care of them!”
-
-“Maybe,” muttered Dud, “you’d better let me out, Murtha.”
-
-“Let you out? Is that what you’re up to? Well, listen, Baker; you’re
-going to stay in here until you get the third man if it takes all the
-afternoon! So you might as well get busy. You can throw the game away
-if you want to, but you’re going to stay right here, son! Understand
-that?”
-
-Dud viewed him, astonished. Then he nodded. “All right,” he said
-finally. “I’ll do my best.”
-
-“That’s the talk,” responded the captain kindly. “Get a grip on
-yourself, Baker. You’re just as good as you were an hour ago, man! All
-you’ve got to do is to think so! Now settle down and make ’em eat out
-of your hand!”
-
-Dud gave up trying to understand things after that. They meant to
-keep him at it until he had retired the side. That was the principal
-thing to think of. He wasn’t to look for relief but must earn his own
-salvation. Well, in that case he knew where he stood, and that was
-something of a comfort. At least, he wouldn’t have to look over toward
-the bench every few minutes. Either they thought he could hold what he
-had or they were just keeping him in to punish him. Either way, it
-didn’t much matter, he decided. All he had to do now was to retire two
-more batsmen in some way or other. That realization seemed to simplify
-matters remarkably!
-
-Dud turned and studied the bases. A runner on second and a runner on
-first. And one out. Why, that wasn’t so bad! A double play would end
-the trouble, or a hit anywhere in the infield would probably account
-for one. He mustn’t let the batsman bunt toward third, though, for that
-would draw Winslow off his bag. Better give him low ones and try the
-inner corner. If only he could get his slow ball working again he might
-squeeze out of the hole he was in.
-
-“Two fingers,” said Dud to himself. “But that won’t do, Ed. He wants to
-dump one down toward third.” Dud shook his head and Brooks laid three
-fingers across his mitt. Dud nodded. Yes, a drop was the best. If he
-could make it go, he added doubtfully to himself. But he did make it
-go. And the batsman professed intense astonishment when a strike was
-called. Brooks signaled for the same thing again, and again Dud essayed
-it, and again he earned the decision, for this time the batter swung
-viciously at it without, however, any result. Dud breathed easier.
-With two strikes across he could waste a couple and perhaps fool the
-batsman with a hook. Brooks showed two fingers and Dud served a curve
-waist-high but wide of the plate. Then another, a little closer, but
-still not tempting. Dud refused two signals and at last got Brooks to
-show four fingers. Then Dud nodded, glanced behind him to where Murtha
-and Blake were running the blue-legged youth back to base whenever he
-tried to steal a start, and wound up. Forward shot his arm and away
-sped the ball, straight for the plate and fairly high, and around swung
-the bat and swept through empty air! For the ball had been a slow one
-and the batter had hit inches ahead of it!
-
-Dud stopped slipping then, brought up with a round turn, in fact! If he
-could still make that slow ball of his go right he could fool any of
-them! He wondered what had got into him! Why, he was just as good as
-ever! What a silly fool he had been to think anything else! They were
-shouting shrilly and triumphantly over in the corner of the stand and
-Brooks was grinning all over his round, freckled face. Dud spread his
-hand in the dust and fondled the ball and waited calmly for the next
-batsman. He was no longer afraid, no longer doubtful. He had, he told
-himself exultantly, come back!
-
-Brooks asked for a curve and Dud refused it. A fast, straight ball
-instead was what the batter saw speed past him. Perhaps, though, he
-didn’t really see it, for it fairly sizzled with the “steam” that Dud
-put on it. After that a low curve broke badly and then a second one
-barely trimmed the outer corner of the rubber, but the batsman swung at
-the latter and missed it. A foul back of the plate just escaped Brooks
-and spoiled what Dud had intended for a third strike. Two-and-two now,
-and the Corliss coachers shouting imploringly for a hit and the runners
-dancing on their toes, eager to be off. Dud might still waste one if
-he liked, but his fingers, when the ball came back to him, curved
-themselves around the ball cunningly in response to the catcher’s
-signal and Dud stepped forward and pitched, and every ounce of speed
-he had went into that delivery. Straight as an arrow it flashed to the
-plate, cut it squarely in halves and thumped into Ed Brooks’ mitt. The
-batter never even offered at it and his bat was still at his shoulder
-when the umpire waved him aside!
-
-Dud, walking across to the bench, heard the cheers of the tiny band of
-Grafton rooters and smiled a little. Those cheers sounded awfully good
-to him just then! He had come through and the only desire in his heart
-now was to be allowed to finish!
-
-And finish he did, and went straight through to the end of the ninth
-without further punishment. In those four succeeding innings the enemy
-made just three hits, one of them a two-bagger that netted nothing
-beyond a journey to second base. Six strike-outs were added to his
-credit and he made two assists. And in the meanwhile Grafton sweetened
-her total with three more runs, so that when Dud ended the game by
-causing a Corliss pinch hitter to fly out to Boynton in left the score
-stood 9 to 3.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-BEN TELLS A SECRET
-
-
-The team missed connection at North Taunton coming back and had to kick
-their heels about the platform there for more than an hour, reaching
-school finally just before eight, a very tired lot. There was a cold
-supper awaiting them in the dining-hall, and after that had been
-demolished few of the fellows had inclination for anything but bed.
-
-Jimmy, who had remained on the bench all the afternoon, was in a
-particularly pessimistic frame of mind, and Dud’s last conscious memory
-was of Jimmy, pajama-clad, seated on the edge of his bed, muttering
-dire threats against Star Meyer.
-
-Thursday was a busy day for Dud, with examinations beginning in real
-earnest. In the corridor of School Hall at noon he was hailed by Roy
-Dresser. “Say, Baker, Myatt’s looking for you. Told me to tell you to
-drop around to his room if I saw you.”
-
-As there was still a half-hour before dinner, Dud turned his steps
-toward Lothrop and climbed the flight of slate steps that led to the
-second corridor. Ben Myatt roomed with Nate Leddy in Number 8, and both
-occupants of the two-room suite were in when Dud entered. He hadn’t
-seen Myatt for several days and he was surprised to find him stretched
-out on the couch looking rather pale and fagged.
-
-“Hello, Dud,” he said. “Mind if I don’t get up? I’m feeling a bit rocky
-today. Pull up a chair.” Dud replied to Leddy’s greeting and found a
-seat. Leddy went on sorting some books at his desk. “Nate,” continued
-Myatt, “has been telling me about your good work yesterday, Dud. I was
-awfully glad to hear it, son. How’s the arm today?”
-
-“Quite all right, thanks. Oh, it’s a little stiff, but I guess it will
-limber up this afternoon.”
-
-“Better go easy with it. Nine innings is quite a stretch the first
-time. You’ve never gone the full limit before, eh?”
-
-“No, and I thought for a while yesterday that I wasn’t going to be able
-to. I guess Leddy told you what a mess I made of that fifth inning.”
-
-Ben nodded. “I wonder,” he ruminated, “how many of us have had an upset
-in that ‘fatal fifth.’ It seems that the fifth is crucial. Anyway, I’ve
-always had a sort of superstition about it. If I can last out the fifth
-I can go the limit, but almost every game I pitch something happens
-in that inning. Sometimes it’s only a stumble and sometimes it’s a
-regular fall-down. I dare say you thought it funny Pete didn’t pull
-you out yesterday when you went bad, eh?”
-
-Dud nodded his head. “Yes, I expected him to, and when he didn’t
-I――well, I sort of thought he was keeping me in to――to discipline me. I
-suppose he was.”
-
-“Not exactly. We were talking you over the other evening; I guess it
-was the night after the Lawrence game; and Pete said he guessed you
-wouldn’t stand a full game this year but that you might next. I told
-him you could stand it any time if he’d let you do it. ‘You put Baker
-in a game that’s on ice,’ I said, ‘or a game you don’t particularly
-care about winning and let him see himself through. Every pitcher has
-got to get into trouble once and dig out again before he finds himself.
-After he has done it once he knows that he can do it and after that he
-does it.’ Pete thought I might be right and Guy said he was certain of
-it. Great Scott, don’t I know? Haven’t I been through it? I’ve stood up
-there with the crowd yelping and been so scared I couldn’t half see the
-plate! Just had to trust to luck when I let ’em go that they wouldn’t
-fly over the backstop! Don’t you feel, now that you’ve stood the gaff,
-that you could start out this afternoon and pitch nine innings without
-getting wobbly?”
-
-“Yes, I think I could,” responded Dud cautiously. “But I mightn’t. When
-a fellow’s stuff stops breaking right for him and a play goes wrong in
-the infield and there are a couple on the bases――――”
-
-“Right you are,” said Leddy. “I know the feeling, Baker. It’s the
-deuce!”
-
-“It sure is,” agreed Ben. “But what I’m trying to say is that a chap
-has got to get good and scared and get over it before he’s worth a
-hang in the box. You had your scare in the Lawrence game, Dud. I could
-see just how you felt. But they had to pull you out to save the game.
-You had another one yesterday and they didn’t have to pull you out and
-you found it was up to you to crawl out of the hole all by yourself,
-and you buckled down and did it. You didn’t know it, but if we’d been
-trimmed thirty to nothing yesterday you’d still been in there pitching
-’em over when the game ended! That was Pete’s plan from the first. ‘If
-Baker’s in shape,’ he said to me, ‘I’ll put him in and let him pitch
-the whole game.’”
-
-“I’m glad I didn’t know it,” laughed Dud. “I’d have been frightened
-stiff if I had!”
-
-“Wouldn’t have blamed you a mite,” said Nate. “To tell the truth,
-Baker, when Pete told me on the bench there yesterday that he was going
-to put you in for the limit I thought he was crazy. I didn’t expect you
-to last more than four innings. I don’t mind telling you now, because
-it turned out all right and you fooled me beautifully. I apologize. You
-pitched as nice a game for a rookie as I ever saw in my life, old man,
-and that’s a fact!”
-
-“I wish I could have seen it,” said Ben. “Fact is, Dud, I sort of look
-on you as a pupil, although I never really taught you a thing except a
-little common sense. You had everything you’ve got now when I got after
-you that day in the cage, but――――”
-
-“You taught me how to use what I did have,” said Dud stoutly. “If it
-hadn’t been for you I’d never have made good a little bit.”
-
-“Well, all right. Thanks for the testimonial. What I wanted to see
-you about today was this. Nate and I talked it over and we decided
-to put you wise to what’s up. Pete probably thinks it’s better to
-keep quiet about it. Anyway, it wouldn’t help any to let it get over
-to Mount Morris. So you keep it to yourself. I’m dished for the rest
-of the year, Baker. When I was a kid I had a sunstroke. A lot of us
-were on the beach one beast of a hot day and we were doing stunts and
-racing and going on the way kids will, you know. Well, I keeled over
-and was sick for two or three days; had rather a narrow squeak of it,
-I believe. I’ve never had any trouble since, though, until Saturday.
-It was beastly hot that day, and I guess I was feeling sort of punk,
-anyway. Well, the result was that I had to give up, and after I got
-to the Field House I was as sick as a dog and felt like the dickens.
-Now the Doc says I’ve got to keep out of the sun all summer. Oh, he
-says there’s no harm in going around if it’s just ordinarily warm,
-but I’m supposed to wear some sort of a ventilated hat or stick a
-newspaper in it or something. If the day’s all right I’ll have a try
-at twirling Saturday, but I’m pretty sure I’ll be good for only four
-or five innings. That means that Nate here will have to finish out. Or
-Nate may start and I’ll go in if it’s necessary. Anyhow, there’s the
-second Mount Morris game the next Friday, and, in case they get one
-away from us, we’ll have to play them again the next afternoon. See
-what I’m getting at, Dud? You’ve got to take your turn in one of those
-games, old man. You can’t figure it any other way. Gus may get a whack,
-of course, and if Gus happened to have a good day it would help the
-situation a lot. For my part, I don’t believe we can count on finishing
-the series this year in two games. Mount Morris is good and she’s got a
-pitching staff that’s every bit up to ours. So there it is. Nate will
-have to pitch part of the Friday game, at least, and if he does he
-won’t be up to twirling again the next day. We want to win the series,
-naturally, and we’ve been talking it over. And we decided that it
-would be the best thing to put you next to what was up and let you get
-accustomed to the idea. I don’t know how you are that way, Dud, but I
-know that a good many fellows if they were suddenly called on to go in
-and pitch in a deciding game with the rival team would have nerves so
-badly they wouldn’t know a drop from a jump.”
-
-Dud took a long breath. “Gee!” he said. “Can I do it?”
-
-“Yes, I’m sure you can――after yesterday. Yesterday’s experience was
-just the sort of medicine you needed. Don’t you think so yourself?”
-
-“Yes, I do. At least, I don’t think I’d ever go to pieces quite so
-badly again, Ben. But――but pitching against Mount Morris――――”
-
-“Pshaw,” said Leddy. “Mount Morris isn’t so different from Corliss.
-They play a little better, that’s all. The big thing is to just go in
-and tell yourself, and make yourself _believe_, that you’re a heap
-better than any batsman they can put up. Isn’t that so, Ben?”
-
-“Yep, I think it is. Confidence is a big factor in pitching, Dud. And
-we want you to spend the next week or so accumulating a lot of it.
-You’re not likely to have to work Saturday, although you never can tell
-what’ll happen in a ball game. Anyway, you won’t have to work more
-than an inning or two. I’m pretty sure I can go four and Nate isn’t
-likely to break down under five, I guess. I wish to goodness we had one
-south-paw in the bunch!”
-
-“Brunswick’s a left-hander,” offered Dud.
-
-“I know, but he isn’t ready yet. I guess he’ll come around nicely next
-year. Well, that’s the outlook. Now, if you take my advice, you’ll do a
-little work every day, Dud; not a great deal, but enough to keep silky;
-and you’ll get used to the idea of going into one of those Mount Morris
-games and doing a lot of pretty pitching. I’m going to get out of here
-tomorrow and we’ll have a try-out, just you and I, Dud. I want to see
-that cross-fire of yours again. If you can make that good it might be
-a big asset against some of Mount Morris’ right-handed batters. How is
-your hitting nowadays, Dud?”
-
-“Pretty poor, I’m afraid,” replied Dud ruefully.
-
-“Try and brace up with it. You never can tell when a hit will mean a
-whole lot to your team. And a pitcher that can smash out a safety now
-and then――especially when it’s needed a lot――is pretty useful.”
-
-“That’s the only thing that got Ben his place,” said Leddy dryly.
-
-“It helped a lot, anyway,” laughed Ben, “especially when I started in
-with the second and didn’t have much more than my glove. But you try
-to meet ’em between now and next Friday, Dud. And, by the way, better
-not let Pete Sargent know that you’re on. Maybe he will give you a hint
-himself in a day or two, but until he does you let him think you don’t
-suspect anything.”
-
-But Dud got no hint from the coach that week. The next day, Friday,
-Ben lugged Dud off to the practice diamond after the teams had gone
-in and put him through his paces. Dud’s round-arm delivery interested
-him considerably, and Ben had to have a try at it himself, without,
-however, getting any such result as Dud did.
-
-“I like that,” said Ben. “If you can make it a bit more certain, Dud,
-you’ll have a good ball there. I know if you pitched that to me and
-I didn’t know what was coming I’d back out of the box! Let’s try it
-again.”
-
-Dud put in every moment at batting that he could find opportunity for.
-But he didn’t seem to make any improvement. He could land on some of
-Brunswick’s offerings fairly well, but Gus Weston or Leddy nearly
-always got them past him. He wasn’t used in the box on Thursday, and
-had only two innings of work Friday, but his pitching arm was back in
-shape and he assured himself over and over again that he was quite
-ready to face Mount Morris or anyone else. Nevertheless, his heart had
-a way of jumping into his throat sometimes when he suddenly remembered
-what might happen a week hence! Jimmy wasn’t much use to him at that
-time, for Jimmy was having hard work with examinations and was,
-besides, much disgruntled over Mr. Sargent’s preference for Star Meyer
-in center field. Even when, the day after the Corliss game, he dwelt
-on what he termed Dud’s “coup,” he was only half-hearted.
-
-“You own the school now, Dud,” he proclaimed. “Your middle name is
-Popularity. Didn’t I tell you that if you followed my advice and
-specialized on pitching a baseball you’d get to be a regular feller?
-Sure, I did! And you’ve gone and done it!”
-
-Dud, though, failed to discern any enormous popularity. Of course those
-who had seen the game were warm in their praise of his work, and those
-who hadn’t been present looked on him a bit more interestedly, but
-if he had expected to wake up on Thursday and find himself suddenly
-famous――and, as a matter of fact, he hadn’t thought of any such
-thing――he would have been disappointed. No one patted him on the back
-and told him how good he was and no one particularly sought the honor
-of his society. But the Corliss contest had not been a very important
-one and the school had fully expected to win it, anyway. Real fame was
-to be garnered only in a game with Mount Morris.
-
-Saturday dawned hot and breathless, with an unclouded sky overhead.
-There were no examinations that morning and the fellows had nothing to
-do but look forward to the afternoon’s contest with their old rival and
-speculate on the outcome of it. A few heroic ones played tennis and the
-canoes were pretty busy, but the heat made idleness almost a virtue.
-It was rumored at dinner time that Leddy would start in the box for
-Grafton and that Myatt would be held in reserve.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-THE FIRST GAME
-
-
-When, at two o’clock, the invading hordes swept down on Grafton it
-looked as though Mount Morris Academy had arrived in toto. Of the
-hundred and eighty-odd students enrolled at the Greenbank school
-that year, fully a hundred and fifty swarmed over from the station
-after the arrival of the train. They came in hilarious mood, marching
-along Crumbie and River Streets four abreast and waving small green
-megaphones through which they hoped to later roar the enemy into
-subjection. Green and white, the Mount Morris colors――I am aware that
-white is not a color, but how else can I put it?――were much in evidence
-in the shape of pennants and neckties and arm-bands, while a frivolous
-fox-terrier led the procession, straining at his leash, attired in
-a green blanket with the school monogram in white. Altogether, that
-invasion was notable and picturesque, and Grafton, looking on from the
-windows of Lothrop and Trow or from along the campus fence, cheered
-approvingly. Mount Morris cheered back and waved her pennants, turned
-into School Street and disbanded at the gate. Subsequently those who
-had acquaintances at Grafton were to be seen climbing stairways, while
-others wandered around in critical survey of the school buildings.
-
-Add some two hundred Grafton fellows and another hundred sympathizers
-from the village and roundabout and you’ll understand that the seating
-capacity of Lothrop Field that afternoon was severely taxed. Politely,
-but not over-eagerly perhaps, Grafton yielded the grandstands to the
-visitors and townsfolk and found accommodation on the grass. Only a
-band was lacking to make the occasion complete; and I’m not sure that a
-band would have had much chance with all that cheering and singing!
-
-The game started at two-thirty, or, to be exact, four minutes after
-the scheduled time. The sun was pretty hot and what slight breeze
-crept up now and then from the river did little to mitigate its ardor.
-Nate Leddy began proceedings by slipping a strike over on the head of
-the Mount Morris batting list, and the Scarlet-and-Gray cheered what
-they were pleased to consider a good augury. The enemy retired without
-reaching first and when the teams changed places it was seen that Mount
-Morris, instead of putting in her best pitcher, Saylor, was going to
-use Moulton. Moulton was a left-hander and Grafton had taken very
-kindly to his pitching last year in the second game of the series.
-Saylor was evidently to be saved for use against Myatt.
-
-But it was soon apparent that Moulton had progressed in the gentle
-art of pitching a baseball since the previous season, for Blake and
-Winslow both fanned and the best Ordway could do was to fly out to
-second-baseman. Save that the cheering and singing and coaching were
-in their enthusiasm sufficient to mark the occasion as one greatly out
-of the ordinary, no one would have suspected anything unusual from the
-first few innings of the contest. Both teams played hard but ragged
-ball, and the rival scorers had to jot down many errors. And yet, since
-every spectator was thoroughly partisan, those scoreless innings were
-not without their interest. There were some brilliant plays by both
-sides: a running, one-hand catch by Left-Fielder Porter of the visitors
-that deprived Guy Murtha of a two-bagger, a superb throw to second by
-Gordon of the home talent that cut down a green-legged runner, a double
-by Blake and Ayer that brought the fourth inning to an inglorious――or
-glorious, according to whether you sported green or scarlet――ending.
-And the two pitchers, neither seriously threatened, also deserved
-laurels. To offset such commendable incidents, however, there was a
-sickening muff of an easy toss by Murtha at second, the dropping of a
-foul by Ayer after he had it nicely in his hands, the booting of a
-hit by Winslow and a “solid ivory” play by Gordon in the third when he
-called for a pitch-out and then pegged the ball over first-baseman’s
-head when the runner was half-way to second. And the visitors made
-quite as many slip-ups and, I think, more displays of bad judgment of
-the kind that count in results but do not show in the error column.
-
-Leddy met his first batch of trouble in the fifth――the “crucial fifth,”
-as Ben Myatt had called it two days before――when he passed the first
-man up and allowed the next to hit safely past Winslow. After that he
-struck out the next two batsmen but couldn’t prevent a run coming over
-when the following green-leg popped a Texas Leaguer behind Winslow.
-Nick Blake made a valiant effort to get that hit, but the best he could
-do was to scoop it up and get the man at third. Grafton got men to
-third and second in her half, but they died there.
-
-That ended the scoring until the seventh, and it was in the seventh
-that Leddy gave way to Weston in the first half, and that the home
-team put the game away in the second period. Mount Morris began by
-getting a scratch hit that put a runner on first. The next man tried
-to sacrifice, but Leddy threw wild to Blake at second and both runners
-were safe. A short fly to left field settled in Hobo Ordway’s hands and
-he held the runners. Then Leddy let down and passed the next batter
-on four consecutive balls and the bases were all occupied with but one
-out. Leddy showed nervousness and risked a tally by trying to catch
-the runner at second. Only quick work by Blake sent the man at third
-doubling back to that base. With a strike and two balls on the batter,
-Nate let go of a wild one and, although Gordon managed to partly block
-it, the enemy scored her second run. Leddy pitched another ball, worked
-a strike across and finally passed the batter. It was then that Gus
-Weston, who had been warming up to Brooks for two innings, was hurried
-to the rescue.
-
-Gus started erratically by pitching three wild ones in a row and then
-settled down and struck out the green-leg and got a fine salvo of
-applause from some three hundred anxious Grafton sympathizers. Another
-five minutes of suspense followed, during which Dud and Jimmy and the
-other non-combatants sat on the final two inches of the bench and
-clenched their hands and yelled their heads nearly off. In the end,
-after the batsman, who happened also to be Mount Morris’s captain, had
-three balls to his credit and two strikes against him and had fouled
-off exactly five offerings, a screaming fly to center field that Star
-Meyer caught ended the trouble.
-
-But if it ended Grafton’s trouble it only began Mount Morris’s, for it
-was that last of the seventh that saw the downfall of Moulton, the
-Green-and-White’s second-best twirler. Gordon led off with a sizzling
-shot to right that the fielder had to take on the bound and was secure
-on first. Weston went out, second to first. Nick Blake tried the first
-thing that came his way and bounced it off Moulton’s shins, advancing
-Gordon and arriving at first without question. Winslow came across with
-a two-base hit to left that sent Gordon home with Grafton’s first tally
-and a minute later Hugh Ordway slammed one down the third-base line,
-scoring Winslow and putting himself on second.
-
-That was enough for Moulton and he disappeared, a tow-headed youth by
-the name of Whitten taking his place. Whitten, though, was easy from
-the first moment and hit followed hit, interspersed by a couple of
-infield errors, until Grafton had crossed the platter with six runs.
-
-In the eighth Gus Weston almost produced heart disease among the home
-team supporters by passing the first batsman, hitting the next on the
-leg and then committing a most apparent balk and moving the runners to
-third and second. Ben Myatt drew on his glove about that time and moved
-down the field with Brooks, but Ben’s services were not needed, after
-all, for a weak grounder was pegged home for the first out and Gordon
-shot the ball to first for the second. A fly to Boynton, which he
-juggled for one awful instant and then captured, brought the suspense
-to an end.
-
-In the Grafton half of the eighth both Winslow and Ordway hit safely,
-Murtha flied out to center, Ayer got his base on a fielder’s choice
-that failed to catch Winslow at third, and the sacks were again filled
-and the stage set for a tragedy. But the best Boynton could do was to
-pop up an infield fly, and it was left to Coach Sargent, assisted――very
-capably assisted――by one James Townsend Logan, to produce the
-appropriate climax.
-
-It was Star Meyer’s turn at bat, but Star had failed all the afternoon
-to do more than reach first on one occasion by virtue of a fielder’s
-choice. So Mr. Sargent looked about him for a pinch-hitter. There
-was, to be sure, Ben Myatt, but Ben was down the field gently tossing
-the ball to Brooks. Perhaps it was a gleam of eagerness in Jimmy’s
-eyes that decided the coach. At all events, Star Meyer, armed for the
-struggle, was called back half-way to the plate and it was Jimmy who
-jumped to his feet, seized a bat at haphazard, possibly afraid that the
-coach would change his mind if he gave him a chance, and fairly leaped
-to the plate.
-
-Jimmy got a fine round of applause and a lot of advice as to what to
-do. It was evident that many of the audience would be satisfied with
-nothing less than a home-run, but, on the other hand, the advice he
-got from the bench and the coachers was to “just tap it, Jimmy!” Jimmy
-did not so well as the stand demanded and did better than his teammates
-advised. He smote it. He didn’t smite at once, though. He let Whitten
-put one straight over that looked too low to Jimmy and just right to
-the umpire, and he let Whitten follow that strike with two deceitful
-hooks that looked fine at first and then didn’t. And then, when Whitten
-tried to sneak one over again opposite his knee-pads, Jimmy did his
-smiting. Jimmy got that ball on the one square inch of his bat best
-calculated to produce results, a square inch located about four inches
-from the end, and he put all his contempt for Mount Morris and Whitten
-and, incidentally, Star Meyer, into his swing, and the ball traveled
-away with a _crack_ that was heartening indeed to the three impatient
-runners, shot over second-baseman’s upthrust glove, still ascending,
-went curving into center field at a place where neither the guardian of
-that territory nor his left-hand neighbor had any chance of reaching
-it, and finally dropped to earth to roll joyfully along the sward
-pursued by two pairs of agitated green legs!
-
-Need I narrate that all Grafton arose as one and shrieked hysterical
-delight? Or that the bases, filled a scant moment before, were speedily
-emptied? Or that Jimmy, finding them empty and having his choice of
-any, decided to annex second and then, urged on by coachers more
-capable of judging the demands of the moment, spurned second and set
-his heart on third――and would have gone tearing home if Guy Murtha
-himself hadn’t seized him forcibly and thrust him back to the bag?
-Well, perhaps you wouldn’t have guessed the latter details, but I
-fancy you’d have surmised the others. That hit of Jimmy’s went down
-in local history as one of the famous hits of the national pastime.
-It wasn’t that it won the game, for the game was already captured.
-Had he struck out Grafton would still have been returned the victor
-that afternoon. But there was something beautifully satisfying about
-it, one might almost say artistic. The audience was on the _qui vive_
-for it, the setting was right to the most minute detail and it was
-made when and where it would do the most good. To be sure, it might
-have been a home-run and so scored four tallies instead of three, but
-I maintain――and I am supported by Dud and Nick and Hugh and half the
-school――that there is nearly always the element of luck in a home-run,
-whereas Jimmy’s three-bagger was a solid, meritorious, honestly-earned
-hit as soul-satisfying as any homer ever lifted over a fence!
-
-Perhaps you think I am dwelling over-long on the glory of that
-performance and to the holding up of the game. But as a matter of fact
-it ended the game there and then to all intents and purposes. To be
-sure, Gordon did get to first on a pass, while the cheering was still
-going on, but nobody cared, any more than they cared a minute later
-when Gus Weston fanned. Anything that might happen now would be an
-anti-climax. The audience was satisfied, surfeited. Mount Morris had no
-fight left in her and went out in one, two, three order in the ninth.
-
-Subsequently there was chaos and noise and the sight of numerous
-scarlet-and-gray-hosed heroes bobbing about above a sea of joyful
-faces and open mouths. And Mount Morris trotted subduedly off the
-field, after returning Grafton’s cheer, and was next seen attired in
-street clothes being borne in hacks to the station, a number of rather
-tired-looking but still smiling young gentlemen whom Fate had used
-unkindly. And yet, as they passed Lothrop Hall they tossed a final
-cheer behind, and there was a grimness and determination in the tone
-of it that seemed to say: “Make the most of your triumph, Grafton! Our
-turn comes next!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-LEFT BEHIND
-
-
-Grafton jubilated and made glad. Nate Leddy spent a sorrowful evening
-and refused the comfort offered by his roommate. Gus Weston was
-inclined to be talkative about his share in the victory, but no one
-took Gus seriously. Of all those who had taken part in the contest,
-it remained to Jimmy Logan alone to be triumphant. Jimmy triumphed
-and made no bones about it. I don’t mean that he went around throwing
-his chest out or figuratively crowning himself with laurel and with
-bay. Oh, not at all. Jimmy was not self-assertive in the least. He
-only smiled when laudation came his way, and strove to impress others
-as being firmly of the idea that what he had done had been nothing to
-speak of, absolutely nothing. Only, now that it had been mentioned,
-wasn’t it a joke on Star Meyer? Star hadn’t made a hit in the game and
-had fielded――well, anyone knew what Star’s fielding was like! And then,
-just when he had a chance to really do something for himself and the
-team, Pete had yanked him away from the plate. Not, however, that, in
-Jimmy’s belief, Star _would_ have done anything. Probably quite the
-contrary and otherwise. Star, he reflected compassionately, must be
-feeling rather cheap, eh?
-
-Jimmy fairly haunted Star’s waking hours for the next day or two. No
-matter where Star went, there also was Jimmy, Jimmy with a sympathetic
-mien and a sly twinkle in his eye. Star ran across him in corridors,
-on the Green, on the Campus, on the field, everywhere. And, on Sunday
-afternoon, trying to find sanctuary in the library, he hid himself
-behind an atlas of the world in a secluded corner, only to hear a few
-minutes later the sound of footsteps on the floor and to glance over
-the top of his book into the sweetly condoling countenance of Jimmy.
-Star dropped the atlas with a mutter of despair and sought his room.
-
-There were plenty who predicted that Jimmy had ousted Star from center
-field, and Jimmy himself believed that he had, and yet when Wednesday
-came around, bringing final examinations to an end and Yarrow High
-School to the scene, Jimmy again decorated the bench and it was Star
-who ambled out to center field! And, oh, the chagrin of Jimmy!
-
-There isn’t much to tell of that game. Yarrow had been selected because
-she was not calculated to make hard work for Grafton, and she proved
-the wisdom of the selection. Brunswick started in the box for the
-Scarlet-and-Gray and lasted three innings and a third of the next. Then
-Dud went to the rescue and stopped the onslaught of the enemy. He was
-instructed not to exert himself and didn’t need to, but, possibly for
-fear that he might, Gus Weston relieved him in the eighth. Meanwhile
-Grafton kept her plate clean and scored eight runs on her own account.
-Except that it kept the players in form and took the place of a game
-with the second――which team, by the way, was at Greenbank receiving
-a rather conclusive drubbing from the Mount Morris second nine――that
-contest might just as well have not been played. Yarrow High was not
-enough of an opponent to test Grafton’s ability in any line. But it
-served to keep the enthusiasm up, if anything was needed for such a
-purpose, and gave the Scarlet-and-Gray something to while away the
-time with. The next day was to be Graduation Day and many fathers and
-mothers and assorted relatives and friends were already on hand. The
-Glee and Mandolin and Banjo Clubs discoursed in the Gymnasium that
-evening and there was a dance afterwards. The dance, however, was not
-for the baseball players, or, at least, only a few numbers of it, for
-they were supposed to be tucked in bed at ten o’clock. Let’s hope that
-most of them were. I know, though, that Jimmy wasn’t. Jimmy at that
-particular hour was perched rather precariously on the footboard of
-Dud’s bed explaining at great length and with a fine flow of language
-his opinion of Star Meyer and Coach Sargent and Guy Murtha and all
-others who in any way represented authority in baseball affairs. Jimmy
-wasn’t nearly through when Dud fell asleep.
-
-Graduation Day dawned fair and only mildly hot and went, as many
-had gone before at Grafton and as many would later. There were the
-exercises in the hall at eleven, at which some thirty seniors received
-diplomas and some one hundred and eighty others applauded deafeningly.
-Several that we know were among the fortunate young gentlemen: Ted
-Trafford, captain of last fall’s football team; Roy Dresser, Guy
-Murtha, of present fame; Joe Leslie, class president; Gordon Parker,
-Nate Leddy, Ben Myatt, Neil Ayer, Jack Zanetti, of track and football
-renown, and some others doubtless. And――I had almost forgotten――Pop
-Driver! Yes, Pop actually received his diploma at last and bore up very
-modestly under the acclaim that almost swept the roof from the building!
-
-And there was a royal luncheon in dining-hall at one-thirty, and after
-that “spreads,” as the fellows liked to call them, in various dormitory
-rooms, and still later, lemonade and sandwiches and cakes set out on
-a long table in front of Manning. In the evening Forum and Lit held
-their big debate of the year, and Lit won hands down, and the admiring
-fathers and mothers and sisters and aunts and――oh, all the rest of
-them, clapped and beamed and were extraordinarily proud. And then there
-were more refreshments and, at last, everyone went home――somewhere.
-
-The exodus began the next morning, but less than half the students
-deserted. Most of them, accompanied by compliant parents, entrained for
-Greenbank at eleven-ten or twelve-twenty-five to see the ball game. At
-a few minutes after twelve Grafton was pretty well deserted. Mr. Crump,
-the worthy head janitor, remained, I think, and possibly a stray member
-of the faculty, but Doctor Duncan went and “J. P.” went and “Jimmy”
-Rumford and, oh, just about everyone! And so we might as well go too!
-
-The team, fifteen strong exclusive of manager and assistant manager
-and Mr. Sargent and “Dinny” Crowley and “Davy” Richards, left on the
-later train. A five-minute wait at the junction, spent in working off a
-little extra enthusiasm, and then they boarded the main line train and
-were hustled away toward Greenbank and whatever fate awaited them.
-
-Of course most everyone hoped for a second victory since it would
-leave them free to go home for the summer, but there were one or two
-enthusiasts who were willing to see the series go to three games. Among
-the latter was Dud, for Dud wanted very much indeed to pitch in one
-Mount Morris contest, and he saw no likelihood of doing it unless that
-third game was played. Most of the fellows proclaimed their belief that
-Grafton would again take the measure of her opponent this afternoon,
-but secretly they doubted it. Mount Morris had nearly always taken one
-game, and today, playing on her own field, surrounded by her graduation
-crowd, and smarting under the defeat of last week, she was certain to
-make a fine fight for victory.
-
-Mr. Sargent, Murtha, Barnes and Mr. Crowley occupied seats together
-and spent most of the time between Needham Junction and Greenbank
-laying plans for the contest. Dud and Jimmy sat together further back
-in the coach, Jimmy doing his best to make Star Meyer uncomfortable
-by staring at the back of his head. There was a good deal of talk and
-laughter and some horse-play, for the fellows had the coach pretty much
-to themselves until Webster was reached. There was a delay at Webster,
-for a branch line train with which the express made connection had not
-arrived. Most of the fellows disembarked to stretch their legs and
-harry the station agent, and Jimmy and Dud were of the number. Jimmy
-insisted on taking his stand on the platform opposite the window at
-which Star sat and staring him out of countenance until Dud dragged him
-away by main force.
-
-“I’ll bet,” chuckled Jimmy as, having promised to behave, he obtained
-his release from his chum’s grasp, “I’ll bet that Star will be glad
-when he hikes out for home! I never knew a fellow who disliked to be
-looked at as much as he does!”
-
-“Looked at!” said Dud. “You’re enough to drive the fellow crazy!
-I wouldn’t be surprised if he dreams of you at night, you and
-your――er――bacillus stare!”
-
-“I think the word is _basilisk_,” replied Jimmy sweetly. “Not that it
-matters, however. Not that anything matters except whether I beat that
-chump out for the position of center fielder today. Say, where are you
-taking me? Suppose the train starts up?”
-
-“It won’t. You heard the trainman say we were waiting for the local,
-and that comes in over there on the other side of the station. Let’s
-see if there are any fish in this stream.”
-
-“Who cares whether there are or not?” But Jimmy followed along the
-embankment to lean beside Dud over the railing of the culvert and stare
-into the little brook that flowed beneath. “I see a frog down there,
-if that will do you any good. I’d like to catch him and put him down
-Star’s neck!”
-
-They had wandered some forty or fifty yards back from the rear car,
-which the team had taken possession of, and consequently when a bell
-clanged far down the track and the command “All abo-o-oard!” reached
-them, as it did at that moment, they didn’t waste time in expressing
-surprise or consternation but set off as fast as their feet would carry
-them.
-
-“That trainman,” panted Jimmy, “will come to a bad end!”
-
-Whether the conductor failed to see them or whether he gave them credit
-for an astonishing celerity they never knew, but the train began to
-move before they had covered half the distance between the culvert and
-the last platform of the rear car. Running over ties is not conducive
-to speed and for a moment or two they despaired of reaching their
-goal. But they did reach it, just when the end of the station platform
-threatened to defeat their efforts, and Jimmy, leading, grasped a
-handful of iron railing and gave a spring.
-
-What happened next was always very confused in their minds. They had
-noticed that the rear platform was occupied by someone, but had not
-recognized who that someone was. As Jimmy’s fingers closed about the
-railing at the steps a rubber-soled shoe was placed against his chest
-and the very next thing Jimmy knew he was rolling over on the platform
-and Dud was rolling over with him, and the train was rods away!
-
-[Illustration: “Jimmy ... was rolling over on the platform and Dud ...
-with him”]
-
-Struggling somehow to his feet, Jimmy gave chase, shouting like a wild
-Indian and causing a stupendous commotion amongst the few occupants of
-the platform. But all he got for his pains was an ironic farewell wave
-from the figure in the doorway of the last car!
-
-Dud, rather pale of face, joined him, dusting his clothes and staring
-dazedly after the disappearing express. Jimmy, wild-eyed, turned
-sputteringly.
-
-“D-did you see who that was?” he demanded. “It was Star Meyer! He
-pushed me off the step! He――he kicked me off! I might have been killed!
-You wait! You wait till I――――”
-
-But Jimmy was fairly gibbering now. Dud handed his straw hat to him.
-“Never mind about that now,” he said impatiently. “The question is how
-we’re to get to Greenbank. How far is it?”
-
-“I don’t know. You wait till I get my hands on that――that――――”
-
-“Let’s find out,” interrupted Dud anxiously. “The game’s at two-thirty
-and it must be half-past one now. Maybe there’s another train that will
-get us there in time, Jimmy.”
-
-Jimmy stopped his mouthings and hurried after Dud to the waiting-room,
-unconscious of the curious regard of the small audience. The agent
-was most unsympathetic. He had been chivied by the fellows and made
-sport of and he seemed to think that it served these two young rascals
-just about right. His replies to their anxious questions were short
-and discouraging. No, there wasn’t another train to Greenbank before
-two-forty-eight. No, he didn’t know how they were to get there by
-half-past two. (His tone implied that he hoped they wouldn’t!) Yes,
-they might be able to get a carriage to drive them over. There was a
-livery stable about a mile down the road there. And the distance to
-Greenbank by rail was nine miles.
-
-They retired to consider. A mile walk to the livery stable didn’t
-appeal to them and Dud suggested telephoning. Fortunately, there
-was a booth in the corner of the waiting-room and Jimmy possessed a
-nickel. They crowded in and at last, after much delay, got the stable.
-But the voice at the other end was not at all reassuring. They had
-carriages enough and horses enough, but just now there wasn’t anyone to
-drive ’em. If they could wait until two o’clock maybe Billy would be
-back from Chester. Jimmy impatiently suggested that they could drive
-themselves and the stable could send a man over to Greenbank on the
-train to bring the team back. But that didn’t appear feasible to the
-man on the telephone. Mr. Libby, it appeared, had gone to the city.
-(Mr. Libby, they gathered, was the proprietor.) If Mr. Libby was there
-maybe he’d let ’em have a rig, but the speaker declined to shoulder the
-responsibility. In short, the only course was to await the return of
-Billy at two――or maybe half-past――or three, at the latest!
-
-Jimmy hung up the receiver impatiently.
-
-“I suppose there isn’t a trolley?” murmured Dud. They consulted the
-agent once more. He showed peevishness at being required to awake
-from his nap and open the window again and took evident pleasure in
-informing them that the nearest trolley line was four miles distant and
-that it didn’t go to Greenbank, anyway; leastways, not direct; it went
-to West Shoreham first. The window descended with a venomous bang.
-
-Dud and Jimmy, hands in pockets, wandered disconsolately back to the
-platform. There was an unoccupied baggage truck there and they seated
-themselves on it and swung their legs and stared forlornly at a field
-of potatoes.
-
-“I dunno,” murmured Jimmy hopelessly.
-
-Dud consulted his watch. It was now one-forty-six. In three-quarters
-of an hour the game would start. And they wouldn’t be there! Of course
-it wasn’t very likely that he would have had a chance to pitch today,
-anyhow, but there was always the possibility. Dud sighed deeply and
-Jimmy echoed the sigh. It had just occurred to him that there was now
-no question as to who would play center field.
-
-“If I ever lay my hands on that skunk,” broke forth Jimmy, “I’ll――I’ll
-just about――――”
-
-But Dud interrupted by sliding off the truck and walking away down the
-platform.
-
-“Where are you going?” called Jimmy.
-
-“I’m going to Greenbank,” answered Dud.
-
-“How?”
-
-“Walk!”
-
-“Walk! Walk nine miles? Why it’ll take hours!”
-
-“All right,” replied Dud over his shoulder. “Let it. But I’m going to
-get there, just the same, Jimmy.”
-
-“But――here, hold on!” Jimmy followed at a trot. “What’s the use, Dud?
-We won’t get there until the game’s ’most over, and――――”
-
-“Can’t help it. I started out to see that game and I’m going to!
-Besides, a fellow might as well be walking as sitting around on that
-platform. I can do nine miles in two hours, I guess.”
-
-“Two hours! Oh, jimminy!” Jimmy looked longingly back at the shaded
-platform.
-
-“What do you say?” demanded Dud. “Coming along?”
-
-“I suppose so,” said Jimmy in a weak voice. “I don’t see what good it
-is, but――all right, Dud, I’ll have a try at it. Nine miles! Gee!”
-
-“Come on then,” said Dud. “Let’s hike.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-THE BORROWED HAND-CAR
-
-
-It was hot and the walking was hard. They took to the path between the
-tracks, but even that was far from being an ideal surface. Now and then
-a sleeper, longer than the rest, protruded to trip unwary feet and for
-long stretches at a time they walked over ballast. When they had been
-on their way only a few minutes a locomotive whistle sounded in the
-distance behind them and Jimmy was for turning back. It might be, he
-thought, a train to Greenbank. But Dud destroyed his hope.
-
-“It’s that branch line train,” he said. “The one we didn’t wait for.”
-
-“I’d like to push it off the track,” muttered Jimmy. “If it hadn’t been
-for that we wouldn’t be in this fix.”
-
-After another ten minutes conversation ceased altogether. They were
-too hot and tired for talking. The track, with strange perversity,
-ran for a long way through a cut and what breeze there was failed to
-reach them. They watched eagerly for the mile-posts at first, but they
-were unusually far apart, they concluded, and they soon got tired
-of looking for them. A wooden trestle made the going easier while it
-lasted, for there were planks to walk on, but it ended all too soon and
-they were back on cinders and broken stone again. Near the end of the
-third mile they retired to the ditch at one side to let a long freight
-trundle past. Jimmy morosely observed that, of course, the pesky thing
-had to be going in the wrong direction!
-
-They reached a small station at about half-past two and made an assault
-on the water tank in the little room. Perhaps fortunately, the water
-had not seen any ice that day. They rested a few minutes and then went
-on again. A hundred yards down the track Jimmy uttered an exclamation
-and Dud turned to find him pointing dramatically at a hand-car reposing
-on a couple of ties laid at right angles to the rails at one side of
-the way.
-
-“What do you know about that?” asked Jimmy in awed tones.
-
-“What about it?” asked Dud.
-
-“Why, you chump, all we’ve got to do is slide that on the track and get
-to Greenbank in no time at all!”
-
-“And get arrested for swiping railroad property!”
-
-“We won’t swipe it; we’ll just borrow it,” said the other indignantly.
-
-“I guess,” responded Dud dubiously, “it’s harder to work one of those
-things than it is to walk. Besides, we couldn’t lift it onto the rails.”
-
-“I’ll bet we could. And all you have to do is just work those handles
-up and down like a pump, you on one side and I on the other. It may be
-hard, but it’ll be a mighty pleasant change!”
-
-“We’re certain to get in trouble if we try that, Jimmy. Come on. We’ve
-done half the distance, I guess, already.”
-
-“Oh, come on!” Jimmy was already struggling with the hand-car. “We can
-lift it easy enough, Dud. It isn’t heavy. Here, we’ll toss this junk
-off.” And Jimmy ruthlessly slid a box of spikes and some tools to the
-ground. “Give us a lift, Dud!”
-
-Dud hesitated an instant longer and then went to Jimmy’s assistance.
-The car was lumbersome, but they had no great difficulty in trundling
-it along the ties and then swinging it to the rails. Fortunately, a
-bend in the tracks hid them from the little station.
-
-“Climb aboard!” said Jimmy joyfully. “Bend your back, Dud! Let her
-flicker!”
-
-She didn’t “flicker” much at first, though, and it proved to be surely
-a case of “bend your back”! They did a good deal of grunting and
-perspiring before the hand-car found its gait. After that it wasn’t
-hard to keep it going, except that the continual raising and lowering
-of the bars soon began to tire arms and shoulders and backs. But
-Jimmy, although the perspiration was soon trickling down his nose, was
-full of encouragement.
-
-“There’s another mile-post coming, Dud! Say, I’ll bet we’re making
-fifteen miles an hour, eh?”
-
-“More like ten,” panted Dud. “Wish we’d come to a grade so we could
-quit a minute!”
-
-“Bound to be one soon, I guess. Keep it up! We’re doing finely!”
-
-And there was one soon. It began a few rods beyond, but, instead of
-being a down-grade it was the other sort, and for the next ten minutes
-they had their work cut out for them! Dud was all for abandoning the
-hand-car and taking to their legs again, but Jimmy pointed out that
-when they had once reached the top of the hill they’d be able to coast
-down the other side of it. But Jimmy was wrong about that, for when the
-grade did come to an end only a level track awaited them. Still, after
-propelling that thing up a quarter-mile rise, even level track was a
-vast relief, and they let the car run a minute while they dropped the
-handles and mopped their streaming faces.
-
-“What time is it now?” asked Jimmy, easing a wilted collar about his
-neck. They had long since removed their jackets and hats and bundled
-them at their feet.
-
-“Two minutes to three,” answered Dud. “How much farther is it, do you
-think?”
-
-“Only about two miles, I guess. Say, suppose we come to a station?
-We’ll have to beat it by in a hurry, eh?”
-
-“Either that or let this thing go. But there isn’t likely to be another
-station before Greenbank, I guess. Let’s hit her up again.”
-
-They hit her up and overtook another mile-post and were arguing
-breathlessly as to the distance they had covered when a sudden roar and
-clatter down the track behind them put the question out of mind.
-
-“_Train!_” yelled Dud, who was facing the rear. “Stop her, Jimmy!”
-
-Jimmy threw his body across his ascending bar, after one glance behind
-him. A short blast of warning came from the approaching locomotive, and
-then another and another. The hand-car slowed and stopped and before it
-had ceased its momentum two badly scared boys were on the ground beside
-it.
-
-“We’ve got――to get――her off!” cried Dud. “Quick, Jimmy!”
-
-On came the train, still whistling, but now they could hear the grating
-of brake-shoes as the engineer put on the air. Dud had his end of the
-hand-car clear of the rails, but at Jimmy’s end the wheels were caught.
-
-“Give me a lift――here!” panted Jimmy, and Dud sprang to his aid.
-
-Neither dared look back up the track, but they could feel the rails
-pulse as the locomotive bore down upon them, while the screech of
-locked wheels was deafening. It seemed minutes before they managed to
-wrench the hand-car from the track, although it was in reality but a
-matter of seconds from the first warning blast to the instant that,
-pushing the hand-car down the slope beside the railway, the two boys
-literally threw themselves after it. There was a roar, a maelstrom of
-dust, the sound of releasing brake-shoes and the freight, gathering
-speed again, rushed by them.
-
-_Clank-clank! Thump-thump!_ Car after car went past while Dud and
-Jimmy, white-faced, breathless and trembling from their exertions,
-crouched in a tangle of bushes beside the half-overturned hand-car,
-deafened, choked and blinded with dust, shudderingly grateful for their
-escape.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Meanwhile, some two miles distant, Grafton and Mount Morris were
-battling valiantly on a sun-smitten diamond before the gaze of nearly
-a thousand excited spectators. The fourth inning was drawing to its
-close. It had been a slow contest, filled with anxious moments for both
-contenders. Every inning so far had seen runners on the bases and yet
-only one tally had been scored and that for the visitors. In the first
-of the second a pass had been followed by a clean hit and a bad error
-by Mount Morris’ second-baseman and Captain Murtha had dashed over the
-plate. But since then Saylor, for the Green-and-White, and Nate Leddy,
-pitching for the visitors, had managed to stave off runs, although more
-than once a hit would have spelled disaster. Neither Saylor nor Leddy
-had gone unpunished, for there had been hits aplenty for both teams,
-but neither Grafton nor Mount Morris had been able to hit safely when a
-hit would have meant a run. Errors had been frequent and each team had
-been about equally guilty, although the Green-and-White’s slip-ups had
-proved more costly. Now, with two down and Gordon on second, Nate Leddy
-was trying his hardest to solve the mysteries of the sharply-breaking
-deliveries of his rival. Here again a hit would send a tally across,
-and here again the hit was not forthcoming, for Nate, after getting
-Saylor in the hole, fouled off his second strike and then lifted a high
-one to first-baseman.
-
-The fifth began with the tail-end of the Mount Morris batting list
-coming up and Leddy beginning to show wear. Strike-outs had been few
-and Nate had in nearly every case been obliged to serve at least seven
-balls. Mount Morris had displayed a positive passion for knocking
-fouls. Nate’s first two offerings were not good enough and the third
-went bounding off the batsman’s cudgel into the stand. Then came a
-third ball, and simultaneous with the umpire’s decision Ben Myatt left
-the bench and began to warm up with Brooks. Nate had to let that batter
-go. The next one flied out to Boynton. Then came another hit, the
-seventh for the home team, and first and second were occupied. Nate was
-slipping now and from the bench Coach Sargent was watching him as a cat
-watches a mouse. One ball――two balls――a strike――another ball――
-
-Mr. Sargent arose and Guy Murtha hustled in from second to the mound.
-Back of first base Ben Myatt removed his coat and moved into the field.
-Nate passed him the ball and Ben clapped the other on the shoulder as
-he turned toward the bench.
-
-“Myatt pitching for Grafton!” announced the umpire.
-
-Weston had joined Brooks and was tossing the ball to him desultorily,
-his gaze on the diamond. The cheers from the visiting contingent died
-away and Ben took up the task. The batsman accepted the first ball and
-slammed it across the diamond to Nick Blake. Nick dashed to second and
-made the out, but the oncoming runner from first spoiled his throw
-and the double. Two down and men on first and third. But Ben had the
-situation in hand and the next batsman fouled out to Winslow.
-
-Once more Grafton put runners on the bases, Winslow first, after Blake
-had retired by the strike-out route, and then Ordway, the latter
-beating out a bunt by a hair’s-breadth. But then Murtha, swinging like
-a Hercules, only succeeded in driving a liner into shortstop’s glove
-and Neil Ayer’s fly to right was an easy out.
-
-Mount Morris’ first-batsman struck out amidst the joyful whoops of the
-Grafton supporters, but the next man hit safely to short left and was
-advanced by a bunt which Winslow, coming in for on the run, scrambled.
-A double steal followed, Gordon pegging to Winslow too late. Myatt had
-trouble finding the plate and the bags were filled again. But Fortune
-had not yet turned her back on the Scarlet-and-Gray. The Mount Morris
-left fielder, doing his utmost to bring off a sacrifice fly, only hit
-a weak, bounding ball to the pitcher’s box and the runner was out at
-the plate. But Gordon’s throw to first was too late to get the batter.
-Myatt worked a strike over and followed it with a ball. Then a healthy
-swing failed and the score was two-and-one. But a second ball followed
-and then a third, and Grafton saw trouble ahead. The next was a strike,
-not offered at, and Ben gathered himself together for a final effort.
-When the ball left his hand it sped straight for the center of the
-plate with nothing on it but speed. There was a _crack_ of wood against
-leather and out in left field Hugh Ordway, shading his eyes for an
-instant, turned and raced back. A swift turn, a change of direction to
-the right and then a breathless, silent moment in the stand. Down came
-the ball, Hugh stepped forward a pace and then a mighty shout of joy
-and relief arose from the flaunters of the scarlet-and-gray pennants.
-With his back almost at the wall of the red-brick dormitory, Hobo
-Ordway had pulled down one of the longest flies in the history of the
-dual contests!
-
-The seventh began with Grafton still one lone tally to the good.
-Boynton was an easy out, shortstop to first, Star Meyer fanned, Gordon
-got a lucky hit that glanced from Saylor’s glove and rolled safely
-past second-baseman. Myatt received a salvo of applause as he made his
-first appearance at the plate and there were demands for a home-run.
-But Ben was not the old Ben today. Those on the bench realized that he
-was playing on his nerve and Mr. Sargent viewed him anxiously. Ben let
-Saylor put a strike and two balls over before he offered. Then came
-the hit-and-run signal and he swung at a fairly wide one while Gordon
-streaked to second. Ben missed entirely, but the catcher’s hurried
-throw was low and Gordon was safe. Ben spoiled the next one and Saylor
-made it three balls and Grafton howled and whooped expectantly. But
-Ben’s attempt to wallop failed, for the ball only glanced from his
-stick and rolled slowly toward third. Pitcher and third-baseman both
-scurried for it and Saylor fielded it. It was too late to get Gordon
-and the pitcher pegged across to first. Ben, running hard, scented the
-throw and dived feet-foremost to base with the result that he collided
-with the baseman and that youth dropped the ball. Had Gordon started
-for home at that moment he could have reached it safely, but he didn’t
-and a golden opportunity was lost.
-
-Nick Blake let two go by, one a strike and the other a pitch-out. Then,
-on the next delivery Myatt sprinted to second unchallenged. Nick tried
-to hit but failed and found himself in the hole. Saylor coaxed him with
-a drop and then a wide and high one and Nick refused both. It had to be
-good then and it was, and Nick let go at it and dashed for first, while
-Gordon tore in from third and Myatt legged it to third. But Nick’s
-effort was vain, for the Mount Morris third-baseman speared the ball a
-yard in the air!
-
-The Green-and-White was not yet acknowledging defeat, and proved it
-by the way she went after the redoubtable Myatt in the last of the
-seventh. Ben was slow and careful today, lacking his usual certainty
-and dash, and after the first man at bat had smashed a drive down the
-first base line for a single the home team batters lost their awe of
-him and began to make trouble. Ben retired the second man after much
-trouble by making him fly out to Meyer, and Meyer held the runner at
-first by a quick return. But the next man found something to his liking
-and sped it straight over second and the runner on first went on to
-third. Ben’s trip around the bases had been his undoing and he knew
-it, and after he had pitched two balls to the succeeding batsman he
-turned and spoke to Murtha and a consultation followed. Mr. Sargent was
-already on his feet beside the bench. A nod of his head and Guy Weston
-tossed the ball to Brooks and walked toward the mound.
-
-Ben came out with hanging head and staggered when he reached the bench,
-and Davy Richards, a supporting arm around him, led him off to the
-dressing-room.
-
-Weston sped in his warming-up deliveries and then faced his task. A man
-on first and one on third, one down and two balls on the batsman was
-the situation, and Weston didn’t better it any by pitching two balls in
-succession and adding a third runner to the bases! On the bench, Mr.
-Sargent watched dismally. Brunswick, his last chance now, was warming
-up, but it was a question whether Brunswick could do any better than
-Weston. Mr. Sargent was thinking hard things of Dudley Baker at that
-moment!
-
-And consequently it was something of a surprise to him when Dud’s voice
-came to him across his shoulder! “I’m terribly sorry, sir,” Dud was
-saying breathlessly, “but we got left at that place where we stopped,
-Logan and I, and we walked most of the way and stole a hand-car, sir,
-and we just got here.”
-
-Mr. Sargent’s surprise turned to cold disapproval. “Very nice, Baker,”
-he replied scathingly. “It may comfort you to know that you’ve probably
-lost the game for us. I had meant you to pitch today, but――――”
-
-“Yes, sir, thanks, and I’m all ready to if you’ll let me!”
-
-“All ready to!” Mr. Sargent surveyed the boy’s disheveled attire and
-flushed, tired face sarcastically. “You look it! Why, you couldn’t find
-the plate in the condition you are!”
-
-“You try me, sir! I’ll be all right in three minutes, sir! Just let me
-get into my togs, Mr. Sargent, and give me a chance! Will you, sir,
-please?”
-
-Weston had just served another ball to the new batsman. Mr. Sargent
-hesitated only an instant. Then: “I’ll give you a chance, Baker,” he
-said quickly. “Hurry into your togs. Churchill, show Baker where to
-change. I’ll hold the game up as much as I can. But hurry!”
-
-“Yes, sir, I won’t be three minutes! And Jimmy, sir? Logan, I mean. May
-he――――”
-
-“Yes, yes, only don’t stand here! Hurry, I say.”
-
-Mr. Sargent sped Parker to where Brunswick was warming up and in a
-moment Brunswick was listening to the coach’s instructions. In the
-box, Gus Weston, ball in hand, waited uncomprehendingly. Then Murtha
-took the sphere from him, slapped him on the shoulder and sent him
-disgustedly to the bench.
-
-“Brunswick pitching for Grafton!” called the umpire.
-
-But Brunswick’s pitching was an extraordinary affair! If cold molasses
-is slow, then Brunswick was molasses frozen to a state of solidity!
-It took him the better part of sixty seconds to get from bench to
-mound, and once there he had to talk long and earnestly with Murtha and
-Winslow. And then he went at his warming up very, very slowly, with
-a wait between each delivery. Mount Morris protested volubly and the
-stand hooted, but Brunswick was not concerned. Before each delivery he
-examined the ball rather as though he had never seen anything just like
-it before, and then, having assured himself that it was all right, he
-studied the plate and the catcher, and some time later he pitched. Just
-how long it took him to send those five practice balls to Pete Gordon I
-don’t know, but I’m certain that he established a record that afternoon
-for dawdling! And, finally, just as he had pulled his cap down for the
-twentieth time and the batsman was impatiently pawing the dirt and
-waving his bat, an interruption occurred. A brand-new scarlet-legged
-player appeared on the scene and walked toward the box. Brunswick
-dropped the ball and turned away and Mount Morris found the mystery
-explained. Gordon was yielding his mask and protector to Ed Brooks and
-the umpire, removing his own mask, stepped again in front of the plate.
-
-“For Grafton,” he announced, “Baker pitching, Brooks catching! _Play
-ball!_”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-WINNING HIS GAME
-
-
-Bases filled and only one out! Two balls and no strikes on the batsman!
-A hit meant two runs across! All this Guy Murtha explained in quick,
-troubled words to Dud. And Dud, tired of face but eager-eyed, nodded
-quite as though Guy had explained that it was a fine day and that the
-weather prediction was for a continuation of present conditions!
-
-Then Guy went back to his place and the Grafton sympathizers stopped
-cheering and Dud sped his five balls to Brooks, each one just where he
-meant it to go.
-
-Once more the batsman took his place and Dud pitched.
-
-“Str-r-ike!” bawled the umpire, and waved an arm aloft. The batter
-thumped the rubber with his bat. Again Dud launched the ball forward.
-Again it sped straight and true across the platter and knee-high.
-
-“Str-r-ike two!”
-
-The batsman grew wary. He no longer fidgeted but put his whole mind on
-the next delivery. Dud fumbled his cap, took his half wind-up and shot
-his arm to the right and around in a swing. The ball flashed to the
-plate and the umpire hurled his hand aloft with a mighty gesture.
-
-“_He’s out!_”
-
-Strident protest from the retreating batsman and from the Mount Morris
-bench! Cheers wild and triumphant from the Grafton seats and from the
-field! And another green-stockinged player faced his fate. A ball, a
-strike, another ball. Then a drop that was swung at and never touched.
-Two-and-two, and Mount Morris watching her opportunity slip from her
-grasp. Then, while Dud swung his arm up, came a quick cry from behind
-him:
-
-“_He’s off!_”
-
-The man at third was streaking to the plate! But so was the ball, and
-although the batsman swung at it, it lodged safely in Brooks’ mitt and
-Brooks, dropping to his knees, blocked the ambitious runner a foot from
-the plate!
-
-“Can you keep it up?” asked Mr. Sargent wonderingly as Dud sank to the
-bench and Davy Richards flourished a towel in front of his face.
-
-“I think so, sir. I’m going to try awfully hard,” answered Dud.
-
-“Well, go easy on yourself this inning. Let them hit a little if you
-like. There’s another inning coming and maybe several.”
-
-“Yes, sir.” Dud’s gaze, straying along the bench, caught sight of
-Jimmy, Jimmy dressed for play and with an anxious regard fixed on the
-coach. “If you could, sir,” said Dud, “I wish you’d let Logan in. It
-wasn’t our fault that we got left, sir; at least, not wholly; and
-Jimmy’s crazy to play!”
-
-“Logan? Maybe in the next inning. I’ll see. Here! What’s this?”
-
-This was Star Meyer picking himself up from the water bucket, having
-in some way tripped over one of Jimmy’s feet as he passed. Jimmy was
-all sympathy and apologies, but Star only muttered. His haughtiness
-was wholly lacking and the fellows viewed with real concern the almost
-abject manner with which he righted the empty pail and retired into the
-far end of the bench. But Jimmy, catching Dud’s eye, winked wickedly.
-
-The eighth passed into history without witnessing a run for either
-side. Grafton got Ordway to first on a pass and he went on a base when
-Ayer lifted one to left for the second out. Then, while Boynton was
-at bat, Hugh was caught napping at second and another chance to score
-passed into oblivion.
-
-Mount Morris’ first man got a hit and was thrown out at second on an
-attempted steal, Brooks making as pretty a peg to Murtha as one could
-hope to see. The next man struck out miserably. Then followed a
-scratch hit that came near to being an error for Blake. The next man,
-Saylor, flied out to Murtha and ended the eighth.
-
-Boynton started for Grafton in the ninth by beating out a weak hit and
-the scarlet pennants waved again. Meyer, bat on shoulder and stepping
-to the plate, was recalled.
-
-“Logan batting for Boynton!” called the umpire.
-
-Jimmy swung at the first ball, disdained the next two, had a second
-strike called on him, started for the next and changed his mind and
-was glad of it and was finally passed when what Saylor had meant for
-a strike over the inner corner went wrong. With two on bases, Brooks
-was the man of the hour, but Brooks was no hitter and only stood there
-while Saylor fooled him on two slow ones that went for strikes, wasted
-a wide one on him and then made him bite at a drop that actually dusted
-the plate. Although Brooks played the game to the last and sped for his
-base the ball was recovered by the catcher and got there well ahead of
-him.
-
-Dud had as much hope of hitting safely as he had of knocking out a
-home-run. And he knew very well that he would be doing only what was
-expected of him if he struck out as badly as Brooks. But he wanted very
-much to do something a little better than that. As he dug his toes and
-faced Saylor, he recalled Ben Myatt’s remark that a pitcher who could
-hit was pretty useful. And Dud wanted to make himself just that! And
-so he tried as hard as he knew how to keep his eyes on the pitcher and
-study him and then on the ball, and study that, and so see if――
-
-“One ball!” said the umpire.
-
-Dud took a breath. All right so far. It had been too high and he had
-known it. He wondered if Saylor would try it again or――
-
-“Str-r-r-ike!”
-
-Well, that had certainly fooled him! He thought surely it was going
-wide. Saylor had some curve on that one! Dud glued his eyes to the ball
-once more, swung and missed.
-
-“Str-r-rike two!”
-
-That was awful! He was as good as gone now! Unless――
-
-“Two balls!”
-
-Perhaps Saylor would miss it this time. Then it would be three balls
-and two strikes and Saylor would have to pitch! Just why Dud offered
-at the next delivery he didn’t know then and couldn’t have explained
-later. It had all the ear-marks of a fast one on the outside of the
-plate, but for some reason Dud let go at it, and the ball, curving
-inward, met his bat fairly and screeched off into short center,
-low enough to have been speared by second-baseman had he been two
-yards nearer its path and long enough to send Boynton and Jimmy
-hustling home. Jimmy beat out that throw by inches only, but beat it
-nevertheless, while Dud, seeing his chance, streaked to second. And
-Grafton went fairly delirious with joy!
-
-Nick hit safely and advanced Dud, Winslow fouled out to the catcher
-and Hugh Ordway, putting all his strength into a terrific swing, sent
-a screeching fly far into right field but not far enough to be out
-of reach of the guardian of that territory. A long hard run and a
-brilliant catch and the half-inning was over.
-
-Mount Morris tried hard enough in that last period to catch up, but
-she had little chance. Dud had no trouble in striking out the first
-batsman. The next hit safely through second base territory. The third
-went out, Winslow to Ayer, and the fourth, Mount Morris’ last hope,
-swung at a high one, was fooled by a drop that he didn’t like and that
-was labeled a strike, fouled off another and at last, just as the
-shadow of the grandstand had reached the edge of the plate, slammed a
-straight, fast one directly at the pitcher’s box. Dud couldn’t make the
-catch; it was going too hard for that; but he knocked it down, found
-it leisurely enough and tossed to Ayer. And as the big first-baseman
-nestled the ball in his glove the stands flowed onto the field and the
-game was over!
-
-Half an hour later, tired and very, very happy, Grafton was returning
-home. Dud, hero of the hour, but a very retiring, modest――even
-uncomfortable――hero, was wedged between Jimmy and a car window. There
-was much talk, much laughter, much noise, and James Townsend Logan
-was accountable for fully his share of it. Jimmy had just finished
-recounting the history of their hand-car adventure and the subsequent
-heart-breaking hike to Greenbank to as many fellows as could cluster
-within hearing. Blake, sitting on the arm of the seat, one hand
-fondling Jimmy’s damp locks, put a question.
-
-“Where,” he asked, “is Star now, Jimmy?”
-
-Jimmy grinned, felt carefully of a large lump under his left eye and
-made answer solemnly.
-
-“He’s coming by the next train. He was――er――delayed.”
-
-“I hope,” said Nick gently, “that you didn’t――didn’t damage him, Jimmy.”
-
-Jimmy turned and smiled broadly up at the questioner.
-
-“You wait till you see him!” he said in a deep, ecstatic whisper.
-
-Mr. Crowley, pushing his way along the aisle, paused to thrust a hand
-over Jimmy’s shoulder.
-
-“Baker, that was playing ball, my boy,” he said happily. “Shake hands!
-You pitched a fine three innings and, what’s more, you won your own
-game, boy!”
-
-Dud murmured his thanks, aware of the kindly smiling looks from the
-clustered faces, and turned his own face to the window. It occurred
-to him just then that Mr. Crowley’s expression was capable of two
-meanings. Yes, he told himself contentedly, he had at last won his game!
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
- 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.
-
- ――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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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Winning his game, by Ralph Henry Barbour</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. 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.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Winning his game</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Ralph Henry Barbour</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: Walt Louderback</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: October 22, 2022 [eBook #69206]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WINNING HIS GAME ***</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="cover">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="cover" title="cover" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="noi halftitle">WINNING HIS GAME</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="noi halftitle">By Ralph Henry Barbour</p>
-
-<div class="adpage">
-<p class="p2 noic"><span class="smcap">Purple Pennant Series</span></p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>The Lucky Seventh</li>
-<li>The Secret Play</li>
-<li>The Purple Pennant</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="p2 noic"><span class="smcap">Yardley Hall Series</span></p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Forward Pass</li>
-<li>Double Play</li>
-<li>Winning His Y</li>
-<li>For Yardley</li>
-<li>Around the End</li>
-<li>Change Signals</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="p2 noic"><span class="smcap">Hilton Series</span></p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>The Half-back</li>
-<li>For the Honor of the School</li>
-<li>Captain of the Crew</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="p2 noic"><span class="smcap">Erskine Series</span></p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Behind the Line</li>
-<li>Weatherby’s Inning</li>
-<li>On Your Mark</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="p2 noic"><span class="smcap">The “Big Four” Series</span></p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Four in Camp</li>
-<li>Four Afoot</li>
-<li>Four Afloat</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="p2 noic"><span class="smcap">The Grafton Series</span></p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Rivals for the Team</li>
-<li>Winning His Game</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="p2 noic"><span class="smcap">Books not in Series</span></p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>The Brother of a Hero</li>
-<li>Finkler’s Field</li>
-<li>Danforth Plays the Game</li>
-<li>Benton’s Venture</li>
-<li>The Junior Trophy</li>
-<li>The New Boy at Hilltop</li>
-<li>The Spirit of the School</li>
-<li>The Arrival of Jimpson</li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-<p class="noic">D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, Publishers, New York</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<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_305">“The ball, curving inward, met his bat fairly and
-screeched off into short center”</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1 class="nobreak">WINNING<br />
-HIS GAME</h1>
-
-<p class="p2 noic">BY</p>
-
-<p class="noic"><span class="author">RALPH HENRY BARBOUR</span><br />
-<span class="works">AUTHOR OF “RIVALS FOR THE TEAM,” “THE PURPLE PENNANT,” ETC.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="logo">
- <img class="p4 illowe6" src="images/logo.jpg" alt="logo" title="logo" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="noic">ILLUSTRATED BY<br />
-WALT LOUDERBACK</p>
-
-<p class="p4 noi adauthor">D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
-NEW YORK &#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; LONDON<br />
-1917</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="noic"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1917, by</span><br />
-D. APPLETON AND COMPANY</p>
-
-
-<p class="p6 noic">Printed in the United States of America</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_v"></a>[v]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table>
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width: 20%;" />
- <col style="width: 70%;" />
- <col style="width: 10%;" />
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <th class="pr smfontr">CHAPTER</th>
- <th class="tdl"></th>
- <th class="smfontr">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">I.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">Dud Wonders</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">II.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">The Entering Wedge</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">13</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">III.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">29 Lothrop</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">25</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">IV.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">A Chance Meeting</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">36</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">V.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">Dud Loses His Temper</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">49</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VI.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">First Practice</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">59</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">Ben Myatt Advises</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">69</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">A Wild Pitch</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">81</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">IX.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">Jimmy Takes Charge</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">93</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">X.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">The Challenge</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">104</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XI.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">With the Scrubs</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">118</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">On the River</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">130</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">Confession</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">138</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIV.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">Marooned!</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">148</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XV.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">Dud Serves Them Up</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">160</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVI.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">The Track Meet</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">172</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">Baseball, Tennis and Oysters</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">184</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">Dud Goes to the Rescue</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">192</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIX.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">Back to the Bench</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">207</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XX.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vi"></a>[vi]</span></td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">Jimmy Encourages</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">219</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXI.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">On the Mound</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">230</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">Dud Comes Back</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">240</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">Ben Tells a Secret</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">253</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXIV.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">The First Game</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">264</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXV.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">Left Behind</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">274</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXVI.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">The Borrowed Hand-Car</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">286</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXVII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">Winning His Game</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">301</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vii"></a>[vii]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ILLUSTRATIONS">THE ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table>
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width: 90%;" />
- <col style="width: 10%;" />
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#i_frontis">“The ball, curving inward, met his bat
-fairly and screeched off into short center”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><i>Frontispiece</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <th>&#160;</th>
- <th class="smfontr">FACING<br />PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#i_fp038">“‘You’re a sneaky little bounder, that’s
-what you are!’”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">38</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#i_fp144">“‘The canoes have gone!’”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">144</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#i_fp282">“Jimmy ... was rolling over on the platform
-and Dud ... with him”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">282</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[1]</span></p>
-
-<p class="noi title">WINNING HIS GAME</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br />
-<small>DUD WONDERS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Jimmy Logan stood his skis in the corner
-behind the door and, tramping heavily to get
-the clinging snow from his shoes, climbed the
-first flight in Trow Hall slowly and then dragged
-wearied feet down the corridor to Number 19.
-Once inside the room, he said, “Hello,” shied his
-cap onto his bed and sank exhaustedly in the nearest
-chair, stretching his legs across the rug and slumping
-down until the wet collar of his mackinaw came
-in contact with his ears. Whereupon he muttered,
-“Ugh!” and sat up another inch or two.</p>
-
-<p>Across the room, one foot on the floor and the
-other doubled up beneath him on the windowseat,
-was Jimmy’s roommate. His response to the greeting
-had been brief and delivered in a preoccupied
-voice, for Dudley Baker had a book open before
-him on the cushion and held a stained and battered
-baseball in his right hand. His attention was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[2]</span>
-divided between book and ball and had no room
-for Jimmy. The latter’s gaze presently came away
-from his shoes, which were trickling water to the
-rug, and fixed itself on Dudley. He had to sit up
-still higher in the chair to get an uninterrupted view
-of his chum, which proceeding elicited a protesting
-groan from him, and after he had attained it he instantly
-decided that it was not worth while and
-deeply regretted the exertion it had caused him.
-He promptly descended again on his spine, crossed
-his feet and sighed luxuriously.</p>
-
-<p>The dollar clock on Dudley’s chiffonier ticked
-briskly and loudly in the ensuing silence. Outside
-the windows tiny flakes of snow were falling. The
-shadows deepened in the room. In the corridor
-deliberate footsteps sounded and suddenly the transom
-over the door showed yellow and an oblong
-of light appeared on the ceiling. Mr. Crump, the
-school janitor, was lighting the dormitories. Jimmy
-wished that his shoes were off, and his mackinaw,
-and the woolen socks, but as yet he wasn’t equal to
-the task. When Mr. Crump’s footsteps had died
-away on the stairs Jimmy broke the silence.</p>
-
-<p>“What’re you doing?” he asked uninterestedly.
-There was, however, no reply from the window-seat,
-possibly because Jimmy’s tones had been too
-faint to reach there. After a moment Jimmy turned
-his head and stared across a pile of books on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span>
-study table at the three or four inches of Dudley’s
-head that were visible. Then:</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Dud!</em>” he bawled resentfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Huh?”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing, I asked you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, me? Oh, just trying to dope out some of
-this stuff.”</p>
-
-<p>“What stuff?”</p>
-
-<p>“Stuff about pitching. How to hold the ball, you
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” Jimmy subsided again and another period
-of silence followed. Then:</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t expect to play baseball for a while,
-do you?” he asked lazily. “You’d better study how
-to throw a snowball!” He chuckled faintly at his
-joke.</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t so long now,” responded Dud soberly.
-“They’re going to call candidates the twenty-first.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gym work,” grunted the other. “Take my advice
-and keep away from it. Don’t go out for the
-team until it gets out of doors. Are you still thinking
-of trying for the school?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy grunted. “You’ll have a fine show, I don’t
-think! Better try for the second, Dud.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t expect to make it, but it’s good practice,
-and maybe next year——”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll stand more chance with the second, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span>
-have a lot more fun. The second’s going to have
-a regular schedule this year; five or six games, maybe;
-going away for some of them, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I don’t make the first, and I suppose I
-won’t, of course, I’ll try for the second,” said
-Dud. “I asked Murtha this morning if he thought
-it would be all right to try for the first, and he
-said——”</p>
-
-<p>“Guy Murtha said, ‘Yes, indeed, Baker, we want
-all the candidates we can get!’ That’s what they
-always tell you, and then, when you get out there,
-they inform you gently but firmly that you won’t
-do, and hadn’t you better stay with your class team
-this year and try again next? What’s the use? I
-like to play ball, Dud, but you don’t catch me putting
-in a month’s grind in the cage and then getting
-the G. B. as soon as we get outdoors. Me for the
-second—and safety.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re lazy,” replied Dud, shutting his book
-and stowing the ball back of the pillows. “You
-could make the first this spring if you’d try for it.
-You ought to, too.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy shrugged. “Maybe so. But I’d rather
-have a sure place on the second, thanks. Gee, but
-I’m tired!”</p>
-
-<p>“Skiing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; Pete Gordon and Kelly and Gus and I.
-We climbed up to the Observatory and then hiked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span>
-half-way over to the Falls. It was piles of fun
-going down the mountain. Gus Weston took a
-header and turned over about forty-eleven times and
-then went into a snow bank head-first up to his waist.
-But we tried to do too much. My legs feel as if
-they’d never stop aching! What have you been
-doing? Been in here all the afternoon? But, of
-course, you have. I forgot about your tooth. How
-is it? Any better?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I guess I caught a little cold in it. I wish
-that dentist chap would yank it out instead of practicing
-on it!” Dud turned the lights on and perched
-himself across a chair at the opposite side of the
-table, his arms on the back, and observed Jimmy in
-a thoughtful fashion. Jimmy grunted.</p>
-
-<p>“Shoot,” he said. “What’s on your mind?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I’ve been wondering, Jimmy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, gee!” Jimmy groaned deeply. “At it
-again, eh? Well, what is it this time, Dud? The
-other day you were worrying yourself thin because
-you were afraid you were costing your folks too
-much money, or something.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud smiled. “Not exactly worrying,” he replied.
-“Just—just wondering.”</p>
-
-<p>“There isn’t much difference, the way you do it.
-If I——”</p>
-
-<p>“Not so much about how much I was costing
-them as whether they’re going to get their money’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span>
-worth, Jimmy. Sometimes I wonder whether I’m
-really doing any good here. Now you look at it
-this way——”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t! I refuse! Besides, that’s an old one.
-What’s your latest worry?”</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t a worry—exactly. I was only thinking
-that——” He paused. Then: “Oh, I guess it
-isn’t anything, after all. Say, you’d better get out
-of those wet things, Jimmy.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to just as soon as I have strength to
-move. But I want to hear your new—er—problem,
-Dud. Come across. ’Fess up to your Uncle
-Jimmy.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud hesitated, smiling a bit embarrassedly. He
-was a good-looking chap of fifteen, with clean-cut
-features, a rather fair complexion and very bright
-blue eyes. He was small-boned and slim, and, since
-he had been doing a lot of growing the past twelve
-months, he looked a trifle “weedy.” In that respect
-he was a distinct contrast to his roommate, for
-James Townsend Logan was a stocky lad, wide of
-shoulder and broad of chest. Jimmy was sixteen, although
-only four months divided the two boys in age.
-Jimmy’s features were nondescript, but the result
-was pleasing. He wore his red-brown hair rather
-long—Dud said it was because he was too lazy to
-have it cut oftener than once every term—and had a
-short nose and a wide, humorous mouth and a very<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span>
-square chin. He was a member of the upper middle
-class, while Dud was a lower middler.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess it’s sort of silly,” said Dud after a moment.
-“But I’ve been wondering”—Jimmy groaned
-again—“why I don’t know more fellows, Jimmy,
-why I don’t—don’t ‘mix’ better. I don’t believe I
-really care a whole lot——” He paused again.
-“Yes I do, too, though. I’d like to have fellows like
-me, Jimmy, as they do you, and ask me to do things
-and go places and—and all that. Of course, I know
-the trouble’s with me, all right, but—but what is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, piffle, Dud! Fellows <em>do</em> like you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, about the way they like the steps in front
-of School Hall. That is, they don’t exactly <em>like</em>
-me; they just—just don’t <em>dislike</em> me. I guess I’d
-rather have them do that than not care a fig whether
-I’m alive or dead. I suppose this sounds silly,
-but——”</p>
-
-<p>“Honest confession is good for the soul,” responded
-Jimmy lightly. “But I think you’re wrong
-about it, Dud. Or, anyway—now look here——”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose I’m just not cut out to be what you
-might call popular,” interrupted Dud thoughtfully.
-“Well, but still——”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut up and let me talk! The trouble with you
-is that you don’t let fellows find out whether they
-can like you or not. You don’t—don’t ‘mix’—do
-you see? If you’d get into things more——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But that’s just it! How can I when I see that
-I’m not wanted?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s just imagination, Dud. You can’t expect
-fellows to fall all over themselves and hug
-you! You’ve got to show ’em that you’re ready
-to be friends. You’ve got to make the start yourself.
-What do you do when someone says ‘Let’s
-do this or that’? You mutter something about having
-to dig Latin or math and sneak off. Fellows
-naturally think you don’t want to do the things
-they do. Now today, for instance——”</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t have gone, Jimmy, with this plaguey
-toothache!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, no, I guess you couldn’t. But, thunderation,
-Dud, if it isn’t a toothache it’s something else.
-You’ve always got some perfectly wonderful excuse
-for beating it about the time the fun begins.
-Not that you missed much this afternoon, for you
-didn’t, barring a lot of tired muscles, but you often
-do miss things. To be what you call a ‘mixer,’ Dud,
-you’ve got to ‘mix,’ and you don’t know the first
-thing about it. Fellows like you, all right, what
-they see of you, but you don’t give them a
-chance.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud stared thoughtfully at the green shade before
-him. “Ye-yes, I suppose that’s true, Jimmy.
-But I don’t like to stick around when fellows are
-getting up things because I think that maybe they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>
-won’t want me in on it and that if I’m there they’ll
-think they have to ask me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Huh! What if they do have to ask you? Let
-’em! Then when they see that you’re a regular
-feller they’ll ask you next time without having to.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I wonder if I am.”</p>
-
-<p>“Am what?” asked Jimmy ungrammatically.</p>
-
-<p>“A ‘regular feller.’ Maybe I’m not. I wonder——”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy threw up his hands in despair. “Oh, gee,
-he’s at it again! Dud, what you want to do is
-stop wondering. You’re the finest little wonderer
-that ever came down the pike, all right, but you
-spend so much time at it that you don’t get anywhere.
-Now, you take my advice, old chap, and
-stop wondering whether fellows like you or don’t
-like you. Just get out and butt in a little. When
-you see a crowd walk right into the middle of it
-and find out whether it’s a fight or a frolic. And,
-whatever it is, take a hand. Now there’s some
-mighty good advice, Dud, take it from me. I didn’t
-know I had it in me! And let me tell you another
-thing, kid. If you expect to have a show for the
-first team you want to crawl out of your shell and
-rub shoulders with fellows. Get hunky with the
-first team crowd, do you see? Be—be more of a—well,
-more of a regular feller, like I said before.
-Don’t try too hard to be popular, though. Fellows<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-get onto that and won’t stand for it. Just—just
-be natural!”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess I’m being natural,” answered Dud, with
-a smile, “and that is where the trouble is. I guess
-I’ll have to wait until next year. A lower middle
-fellow feels sort of fresh if he tries to mix in with
-upper middlers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Piffle! Lots of your class are thick as thieves
-with upper middle chaps. Look at young Whatshisname—Stiles.
-He’s always traveling with upper
-middlers—Ordway and Blake and that bunch.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ned Stiles has more cheek than I have. Besides,
-I don’t think fellows like him particularly,
-Jimmy. He sort of toadies, doesn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s a perfect ass, if you ask me. But they
-seem to stand for him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but I don’t want to be ‘stood for’; I want
-fellows to—to want me.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. Give ’em a chance then. You’re
-all right, Dud, only you’re shy. That’s what’s the
-matter with you, old chap, you’re just plain shy!
-Never thought of it before. Look here, now, I’ll
-tell you what you do. You forget all about your
-dear little self and get over being—being—gee,
-what’s the word I want? Being self-conscious!
-That’s it! That’s your trouble, self-consciousness.”
-Jimmy beamed approval at himself. “Best way to
-do it is to—to do it! Tell you what, we’ll make<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-a start tonight, eh? Let’s go out and visit someone.
-Who do you know that you’d like to know
-better?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to know Hugh Ordway, for one,” said
-Dud hesitatingly. “But I guess he wouldn’t care
-about knowing me, and so——”</p>
-
-<p>“Stow it! That’s just what you mustn’t do, do
-you see? You mustn’t ‘wonder’ whether a fellow
-wants to know you or not. You just take it for
-granted that he does. Say to yourself, ‘I’m a good
-feller, a regular feller. I’m as good as you are.
-Of course you want to know me. Why not?’ See
-the idea?”</p>
-
-<p>Dud nodded doubtfully. “Still, Hugh Ordway’s
-a bit——”</p>
-
-<p>“A bit what?” demanded Jimmy impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean he’s awfully popular and has piles of
-friends and he wouldn’t be likely to—to want to
-know me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, piffle! Ordway’s just like any of us—except
-that he happens to be English and have a
-Lord or a Duke or something for a father. I don’t
-know him very well myself, but that’s just because
-he trains with the football crowd—Blake and Winslow
-and that bunch. But I know him plenty well
-enough to visit, and that’s just what we’ll do this
-evening, Dud.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe we’d better leave it for some other<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
-night,” replied Dud uneasily. “I’ve got a lot of
-lessons tonight and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Ha, ha!” laughed Jimmy mirthlessly. “Where
-have I heard that before?” He pulled himself from
-his chair with a groan and pointed a stern finger
-at his chum. “You’ll start right in with me this
-very evening, Dud, and be a regular feller! And
-no more punk excuses, either! I’m going to take
-you in hand, son, and when I get through with
-you you won’t know yourself. Here, <em>stop that</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” asked Dud startledly.</p>
-
-<p>“You know what! You were beginning to wonder!
-I saw you! No more of that, understand?
-The first time I catch you wondering I’ll—I’ll take
-my belt to you!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br />
-<small>THE ENTERING WEDGE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">If you have by any chance read a previous narrative
-of events at Grafton School entitled
-“Rivals for the Team” you are sufficiently acquainted
-with the scene of this story, and, also,
-with many of the characters. But since it is quite
-possible that you have never even heard of the
-former narrative, it devolves on the historian to
-introduce a certain amount of descriptive matter at
-about this stage, something he has as little taste
-for as have you. Descriptions are always tiresome,
-and so we’ll have this as short as possible.</p>
-
-<p>Grafton School, then, occupies a matter of ten
-acres a half-mile east of the town of that name
-and at the foot of the hill which is known as Mount
-Grafton. Like many another New England school,
-it is shaded by elms, boasts many fine expanses of
-velvety turf and, so to speak, laves its feet in a
-gently-flowing river. The buildings on the campus
-consist of three dormitories, the more venerable
-School Hall, the gymnasium and the Principal’s
-residence, and of these all save the two latter stretch<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-in a straight line across the middle of the three-acre
-expanse. The gymnasium is slightly back from
-the line and the Principal’s cottage is a bit in advance,
-its vine-covered porch looking along the
-fronts of the other buildings and its rear windows
-peering down into Crumbie Street. School Hall is
-in the center. Trow comes next on the left, and then
-Lothrop. On the right of the older building stands
-Manning, which shelters the younger boys, and
-somewhat “around the corner” is the gymnasium.</p>
-
-<p>Graveled walks lead across the campus, under
-spreading elm trees, to Crumbie Street on one side,
-to River Street on the other, to School Street straight
-in front. Beyond School Street is the Green, a
-block-wide parallelogram on which, at the corner
-of School and River Streets, two smaller dormitories
-stand. These, Morris and Fuller, are converted
-dwellings of limited accommodations. The
-main walk from the steps of School Hall continues
-across the Green to Front Street, beyond which, descending
-gently to the Needham River, is Lothrop
-Field. An ornamental wall and gate commemorate
-the name of the giver. The Field House
-flanks the steps on the left and beyond lie the football
-gridirons, the baseball diamonds, the tennis
-courts and the blue-gray cinder track. The distant
-weather-stained building on the river bank is the
-boathouse.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span></p>
-
-<p>Grafton School looks after slightly over two hundred
-boys between the ages of twelve and twenty.
-At the time of which I am writing, February of
-last year, the number was, I believe, exactly two
-hundred and ten, of which some thirty-five had attained
-to the senior class and about eighty were
-juniors, leaving the upper middle and lower middle
-classes to share the residue fairly equally. The
-faculty numbered twelve, beginning with Doctor
-Duncan, the Principal, and ending with Mrs. Fair,
-the matron. Doctor Duncan’s full title is Charles
-William Duncan, A.M., Ph.D., but he is better
-known as “Charley”! There was—and doubtless
-are—also a Mrs. Duncan and a Miss Duncan, but
-they are not likely to enter into this narrative. So
-much then for our stage setting. I might keep
-on, but I fear you are weary, and I know I am!</p>
-
-<p>Hugh Ordway roomed on the top floor of Lothrop,
-the newest and most luxurious of the dormitories,
-sharing the suite of study and two bedrooms
-with Bert Winslow. Hugh’s father was English
-and his mother American, and, although Hugh had
-been born on the other side and had spent most of
-his sixteen years there, he declared himself to be half
-American. His full name was Hugh Oswald Brodwick
-Ordway, and in spite of the fact that by reason
-of his father being the Marquis of Lockely,
-Hugh had every right to the title of Earl of Ordway,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-he was generally known at Grafton as “Hobo,” a
-nickname evolved from his initials. As he was a
-straight, well-built, clear-skinned, young chap with
-quiet brown eyes and an undeniable air of breeding,
-the nickname was amusingly incongruous if one
-stopped to consider it. But Hugh had been known
-as Hobo Ordway ever since fall, when his cleverness
-as a running halfback on the first football team
-had surprised and delighted the school, and nowadays
-the name was too familiar to excite any comment.
-Hugh’s particular friends were more likely
-to call him “’Ighness,” however.</p>
-
-<p>It was Hugh, alone in the study, who responded
-to the knock at the door shortly after supper that
-evening and who successfully disguised the surprise
-he felt when he recognized his visitors as Jimmy
-Logan and Dudley Baker. He made them welcome
-quite as heartily as though he had been expecting
-them all day, and Dud, who had hung back all the
-way up the three flights of slate stairs, was vastly
-relieved. The conversation skipped from one subject
-to another for the first few minutes, during
-which time Hugh, perched on the window-seat, leaving
-the easy-chairs to his guests, hugged his knees
-to his chin, piloted the conversation and secretly
-wondered at the visit.</p>
-
-<p>You are not to suppose, however, that Hugh was
-the only one of the three at his ease. Such a supposition<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
-shows on your part a vast ignorance of
-Jimmy Logan. Jimmy was a stranger to embarrassment.
-Had Hugh been the President of the
-United States or the King of England or—well,
-“Home Run” Baker, Jimmy would have been just
-as splendidly at ease as he was this moment. He
-might have assumed a more dignified attitude in the
-Morris chair and his voice might have held a more
-respectful tone, but beyond that—no, not Jimmy!
-Just now Jimmy was humorously recounting his
-skiing adventures that afternoon and Hugh was
-chuckling over them. Dud smiled when Hugh
-laughed, sitting rather stiffly in his chair, and tried
-his best to look animated and pleasant and only
-succeeded in looking anxious and uncomfortable.
-Jimmy did his best to get Dud to talk, but Dud’s
-conversation consisted largely of “Yes” and “No”
-and Hugh secretly thought him a bit of a stick.
-Jimmy was wondering whether to withdraw as gracefully
-as possible before Dud created any worse impression
-when the door opened to admit a black-haired,
-dark-eyed fellow of seventeen who, with
-less command over his features than Hugh, looked
-frankly surprised when he saw who the visitors
-were. The surprise even extended to his voice as
-he greeted them.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Jimmy,” said Bert Winslow. “What
-are you doing up here? Haven’t seen you around<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
-here for ages.” He spoke to Dud then, hesitating
-a moment as though not certain of the latter’s name.
-Dud, noting the fact, felt his embarrassment increase
-and wished that Jimmy would give the word
-to leave. But Jimmy had already abandoned
-thoughts of withdrawing. He liked Bert Winslow,
-just as most fellows did, and welcomed the chance
-to talk to him. Bert and Jimmy were both members
-of “Lit”—short for Literary Society—and only
-two evenings ago had been pitted against each other
-in one of the impromptu weekly debates and had
-struggled along nip and tuck until Jimmy, abandoning
-facts, had in a wild flow of rhetoric won the
-meeting. Bert alluded to it now as he tossed his
-cap through the open door of his bedroom.</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmy, that was a fine lot of hot air you got
-off the other night,” he said with a grin. “Didn’t
-your folks ever teach you anything about the beauties
-of truthfulness?”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy laughed. “Sure, but I had to beat you
-somehow, Bert. Besides, what I said may be so
-for all I know!”</p>
-
-<p>“Huh! You just said the first thing that came
-into that silly head of yours! Did you ever hear
-such a mess of rot as he sprang, Hugh?”</p>
-
-<p>Hugh smiled. “It sounded all right! Some of
-the figures were corking. You must have a wonderful
-memory, Logan!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Memory!” snorted Bert, seating himself beside
-Hugh on the window-seat. “There wasn’t a figure
-that was right! I looked it up afterwards. Did
-you hear him, Baker? Oh, no, you’re Forum, aren’t
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Dud. He tried very hard to follow
-that up with something brilliant or amusing
-in regard to Jimmy’s debating, but couldn’t think
-of anything, possibly because Bert’s tone had held
-some of the careless contempt with which members
-of a society spoke of its rival, and Dud wished
-just for the moment that he, too, was “Lit.”</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps Hugh thought that his chum had verged
-on discourtesy, for he observed quickly: “They
-tell me you chaps have some awfully good talkers
-in Forum, Baker.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud agreed. “I guess Joe Leslie is our best;
-he and Guy Murtha.”</p>
-
-<p>“Murtha’s better than Joe, I think,” said Jimmy.
-“Anyway, he did a lot better last year in the debate
-with Mount Morris.”</p>
-
-<p>“Joe’s a wonder at hammering home facts,” said
-Bert. “Guy’s better at the eloquence stuff, though.
-Speaking of Guy, Hugh, reminds me that I told
-him you were going to try for the outfield this spring
-and he said he was mighty glad because if you
-could get on the base he was certain you could get
-around.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but I say, Bert, I don’t know that I shall!
-Try for baseball, I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you will!”</p>
-
-<p>“But I don’t know much about it. You say it’s
-quite different from cricket, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite, ’Ighness! You’ve seen baseball played,
-haven’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, once or twice, but——”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think a fair cricket player would easily
-get the hang of baseball,” said Jimmy. “I guess
-it’s as hard to catch a cricket ball as a baseball, isn’t
-it? I suppose you’re a rattling good cricket player,
-Ordway.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, really I’m not,” exclaimed Hugh. “I’ve
-played a bit at it, of course. You chaps bowl—I
-mean pitch to the batters so like thunder, don’t you?
-I fancy I’ll be scared to stand up there, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“You might if Gus Weston was pitching,” laughed
-Bert. “You going to play this year, Jimmy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I guess so. What would the dear old second
-do without me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you trying for the first, though? You’re
-as good a fielder as Parker, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“I may. The fact is, Bert, I’m sort of used to
-the dear old second. It would be like leaving home
-to go to the first. Still, I may decide to break home
-ties and meet you fellows there.”</p>
-
-<p>“I fancy you’re not likely to meet me there,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-said Hugh. “I’ll be an awful dub if I try it, I know.
-Do you play, Baker?”</p>
-
-<p>“A little,” answered Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Dud’s the coming Mathewson,” said Jimmy.
-“Got to watch him, we have. Some twirler!”</p>
-
-<p>“Really?” asked Bert, evidently not much impressed.
-“That’s fine, Baker. The second rather
-needed pitchers last spring.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s going out for the first,” said Jimmy.
-“Dud’s like me, you know. When Duty calls——”
-Jimmy smiled eloquently.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, though, Logan, who is this Johnnie you
-spoke of? Mathews, wasn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not Johnnie; Christopher,” replied Jimmy
-gravely. “I referred to Mr. Christopher Mathewson,
-better known as ‘Matty,’ the Dean of American
-Pitchers. Dud and ‘Matty’ are as thick as
-thieves; that is, Dud is! Dud reads everything
-‘Matty’ writes and can tell you off-hand how many
-games ‘Matty’ pitched last year and all the other
-years, and how many he won, and what his averages
-are and all the rest of it. He has a gallery of
-Mathewson pictures and he’s the proud possessor
-of a ball that Mathewson used in a game with
-Philadelphia back in 1760 or thereabouts. I don’t
-know how he got that ball, but I suspect that he
-swiped it.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was given to me,” said Dud defensively. Then<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-he added, embarrassed: “You mustn’t mind what
-Jimmy says. He talks a lot of nonsense.”</p>
-
-<p>“I say, though,” exclaimed Hugh, “I do hope you
-get on the first, Baker. It must be a lot of fun to
-do the pitching, eh? More fun than fielding, I
-fancy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you pitched much?” inquired Bert politely.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been trying to for a couple of years,” answered
-Dud. “I don’t suppose I’ll make the first
-this year, of course, but Murtha said he’d be glad
-to have me try, and so——”</p>
-
-<p>“You must make allowances for his modesty,”
-said Jimmy. “He’s really rather a shark at it. He
-can tell you just how to pitch any ball ever discovered,
-from a straight one to a ‘floater.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Question is, I guess,” Bert laughed, “whether
-he can <em>pitch</em> ’em. I know <em>how</em> to pitch a ‘knuckle
-ball,’ but I can’t do it. I remember now, Baker,
-you pitched some on the second last year, didn’t
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only three games, or parts of them, Winslow.
-I dare say I won’t be good enough this year, but—I
-thought I’d try.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” said Bert heartily. “Nothing like
-trying. The trouble is, though, you’ve got some
-good ones to stack up against, eh? There’s Nate
-Leddy and Ben Myatt——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span></p>
-
-<p>“And Gus Weston,” observed Jimmy gravely.</p>
-
-<p>Bert smiled. “Just the same, Gus has pitched
-some good games for us. But isn’t he a wonder
-when he goes up?”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy chuckled. “Gus Weston can go up quicker
-and higher than any fellow I ever saw,” he said.
-“And when he <em>is</em> wild——” He ended with an impressive
-whistle.</p>
-
-<p>“He looked pretty promising last spring,” continued
-Bert. “Remember the game he pitched
-against Middleboro? They only got six hits off
-him, I think.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and Kelly is another chap that is likely to
-make good this year,” said Jimmy. “Oh, we’re
-pretty well off for twirlers, but you wait until Dud
-gets going. And speaking of going, Dud, what do
-you say if we do a little of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t rush off,” said Bert. “Well, come around
-again, Jimmy.”</p>
-
-<p>Probably the invitation was meant to include Dud,
-but Hugh thought that Dud might not interpret it
-so and added cordially, “Yes, do, fellows!”</p>
-
-<p>On the way downstairs Jimmy said: “Well, we
-got out of that pretty well, Dud. I thought for
-a while you were going to spoil everything by monopolizing
-the conversation the way you did,
-but——”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t seem to know what to talk about,” said<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-Dud ruefully. “I guess Ordway thought me an
-awful ass.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he rather pointedly invited you to come
-back, so I don’t think you need to worry about
-that. The next time——”</p>
-
-<p>“There won’t be any next time,” interrupted the
-other. “It’s just like you said, Jimmy. I can’t mix
-and there’s no use trying.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, there is! We’ve just started. That
-was the—the entering wedge, so to say. We’ll
-drop around again next week. And between now
-and then I’ll put you through a course of sprouts,
-old chap. We’ll mix in society. Just as soon as
-you can learn to forget your plaguey self, Dud,
-you’ll get on finely. The trouble is with you that
-you just sit and worry about what fellows are thinking
-of you. But I’ll break you of that quick
-enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess we’ll call it off,” muttered Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“And I guess we won’t,” was the firm response.
-“Having set my hand to the plow, Dudley, I never
-look back. That’s me. My full name is Grim Determination.
-All others are impostors. Accept no
-substitutes. Guaranteed to comply with the Pure
-Food Law. After you, Dud. One flight and turn
-to the right, please.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br />
-<small>29 LOTHROP</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">True to his promise—or threat, if you think
-with Dud—Jimmy haled his protesting
-friend from room to room in the evenings,
-made him join the throngs on the ice or the toboggan
-slide in the afternoons and on all occasions
-dragged him into the conversations and, to
-use his own expression, “got him in the spot-light.”
-It can’t be truthfully said that his efforts met with
-overwhelming success, however. Dud didn’t shine
-as a conversationalist or display any traits calculated
-to win popularity. No one disliked him in the
-least. Most of the time few were really conscious
-of his presence, in spite of Jimmy’s untiring efforts.
-Personally, as has been suggested, Dud didn’t take
-kindly to being exhibited and exploited, and when
-a fortnight or so after the inception of the undertaking
-Jimmy actually got to telling jokes and crediting
-them to Dud, the latter was supremely uncomfortable.
-Jimmy would chuckle and say: “Dud
-got off a good one the other day, fellows.” And
-then he would follow with some more or less brilliant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-remark or joke that sounded to Dud horribly
-flat. Generally the hearers laughed and shot surprised
-glances at the silent and embarrassed Dud,
-but he didn’t win recognition as a wit or a sage for
-all of that. Had they heard the things from Dud
-first-hand they might have been more impressed.
-As it was the credit went rather to Jimmy than
-Dud.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy played Boswell to Dud’s Doctor Johnson
-with remarkable enthusiasm and patience. He
-evolved all sorts of schemes, most of which his
-chum promptly refused to consider, designed to
-waft Dud into the white light of publicity. For instance,
-he conceived the brilliant idea of having Dud
-write a notable article for <cite>The Campus</cite>, the school
-monthly. Dud had no serious objection to that
-project, but it fell through because neither of them
-could think of a subject to write on. Then Jimmy
-suggested that Dud get someone to break through
-the ice on the river so Dud could rescue him. Jimmy
-said he would be glad to impersonate the drowning
-character if he wasn’t afraid of catching cold and
-having rheumatism in his throwing arm. It was
-all highly entertaining for Jimmy and he thoroughly
-enjoyed it, but Dud was getting very tired of it.
-Every now and then Jimmy had what he called a
-“show down.” At such times he would take a list
-from his drawer in the study table and check off<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
-the names of fellows whose acquaintance Dud had
-succeeded in making since the last time.</p>
-
-<p>“Churchill, we got him. Check for Churchill.
-He was a brand new one, wasn’t he? Roy Dresser,
-check. Dresser was rather a success, Dud. I think
-he rather took to you. We must call there again.
-I’ll make a note of that. Dresser’s room is a good
-place to meet fellows. Parker, check. Parker’s an
-ass, anyway. Ayer—I say, Dud, we haven’t met
-Neil Ayer yet. Do you know him at all?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only to speak to.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll go after Ayer this evening, then. I know
-where to find him. He will be in Joe Leslie’s room,
-I guess. Foster Tray, check. Tray’s a good sort.
-Zanetti—that’s another chap we’ve missed. We’ll
-have to find him with Nate Leddy some time. I
-don’t know him at all. He’s a good fellow to know,
-though. Stands in with the football and the track
-crowds. I tell you what, Dud! Why not go out
-for the Track Team?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because I can’t do anything,” laughed Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know you can’t?” asked Jimmy,
-untroubled. “Besides, you wouldn’t have to really
-<em>do</em> anything. You could have a try at something
-and you’d meet a lot of fellows. Jumping isn’t
-awfully hard. Why not try the broad jump?”</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t do that and pitch too, you idiot.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so. I forgot. Still, some fellows do<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-go in for baseball and track. There’s Cherry, for
-instance. Well, never mind. Maybe we’d better—er—concentrate.”
-Jimmy sat back and studied
-Dud speculatively, tapping his pen against his teeth
-the while. “What we’ve got to do, Dud,” he continued
-presently, in the tones of one who has reached
-a weighty conclusion after much thought, “is to
-put it all over those other box artists. That’s our
-line, Dud. We’ve got to spring you as a startling
-phenom! Yes, sir, that’s the game!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all well enough, Jimmy, but suppose I
-can’t pitch a little bit when the time comes?”</p>
-
-<p>“By Ginger, you’ve got to! Look here, you’re
-wasting time. You ought to be at it every day.
-You ought to get down in the cage in the gym and
-practice. What time is it now? Nearly six, eh?
-Too late today, then. But tomorrow we’ll put in
-a half-hour, and the next day, too, and right along
-until they call candidates. I’ll catch you. I’ll borrow
-a mitt somewhere. It’ll be good fun, too.
-Practice for both of us. Great scheme, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mind?” asked Dud eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Love to! We’ve got a week yet and you ought
-to be able to get a lot of practice in a week. That’s
-settled, then. But we mustn’t forget the—er—the
-social side of the campaign. So let’s see.” Jimmy
-bent over his list again. “Quinn, check. Milford—had
-him before. Forbes——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span></p>
-
-<p>The second visit to Hugh Ordway’s study came
-off right on schedule, nine days after the first call,
-but on this occasion Dud and Jimmy found the room
-jammed from door to windows with fellows and a
-loud and even violent argument going on. Their
-appearance went practically unnoticed and they
-found seats with some difficulty and became for
-a while silent listeners. The argument proved to
-be concerned with the election the evening before
-of one Starling Meyer as captain of the Hockey
-Team. The hockey team had just finished a disastrous
-season, ending with a second defeat by
-Grafton’s ancient rival, Mount Morris. Lack of
-hard ice had aided in the team’s demoralization, but
-besides that things had gone badly from start to
-finish, and there were many who credited the afore-mentioned
-Meyer with having been largely to
-blame. “Pop” Driver, who played right guard on
-the eleven and was normally good-natured to a fault,
-expressed the views of the anti-Meyer faction.</p>
-
-<p>“Meyer,” Pop was saying, “has caused more
-trouble all the winter than he’s worth. Everything
-that Yetter’s wanted to do one way, Star’s insisted
-on doing another. You fellows know that, all of
-you. Look at the way they changed the style of
-play in the middle of the season. Yetter started
-out playing four men on defense and it worked all
-right. Then Star got to saying that we weren’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-scoring enough points and that the four-men-back
-business was all wrong. He grouched and sulked
-about it until Yetter gave in to him. After that
-we got licked right along, with one or two exceptions,
-and finally Yetter went back to the old style
-again, and Star threatened to quit and there was
-the dickens to pay for awhile. Star’s simply no use
-unless he can be the whole shooting-match.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, they’ve made him captain,” said Jim
-Quinn, football manager, “so now he can show what
-he knows.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no sense in blaming everything on Star
-Meyer,” declared Ned Musgrave. “Yetter’s a
-good chap, but he hadn’t any business being captain.
-There’s where the whole trouble began. If
-Yetter——”</p>
-
-<p>“Warren would have been all right,” said Bert
-Winslow, “if Star had let him alone. But Star
-hates to see anyone else have any say about anything.
-He’s a peach of a hockey player, I’ll grant
-you that, but he’s a peach of a trouble-maker, too.
-And I’ll bet you anything things will be in a worse
-mess next year than they were this.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t they elect Gus Weston?” asked Roy
-Dresser. “Gus would have made a dandy leader.”</p>
-
-<p>“Because Star pulled all the strings he could,”
-answered Pop, “and scared the fellows into voting
-for him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I happen to know, Pop,” interposed Musgrave
-warmly, “that more than three-fourths of the team
-wanted Star for captain long before election. You
-might as well be fair to him, Pop. Give him a show.
-Don’t convict a fellow before he’s tried, I say!”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Ned,” answered Pop good-naturedly.
-“We’ll let him have his trial. Maybe you’re right,
-too. Star may make a better captain than he did
-a first lieutenant. Let’s hope so. I won’t be here
-to see, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“What makes you think so?” inquired Nick Blake
-maliciously, raising a laugh at Driver’s expense.
-Pop, as he himself put it, was doing the four-year
-course in five, and there was always some doubt
-as to his getting through in five. Pop grinned now
-and shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ll give me my diploma to get rid of me,
-Nick,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy, who had remained quiescent until now,
-took advantage of a momentary lull in the discussion
-and chuckled. Pop, beside him, turned inquiringly.
-“What’s on your mind, Jimmy?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“I was just thinking of something Dud got off
-awhile ago,” replied Jimmy, still visibly amused.
-Dud threw an entreating look at him, but Jimmy pretended
-not to see it.</p>
-
-<p>“Dud who?” asked Pop.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Dud Baker, over here.” Jimmy’s glance indicated
-his friend. “We were talking about the
-hockey team losing so many games one day and
-Dud said he guessed the trouble with them”—Jimmy
-had managed to gain the attention of
-the room by now—“was that they were weak from
-Star-vation!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud looked anything but like the author of the
-bonmot at that moment, but the audience laughed,
-even Ned Musgrave, and Jimmy credited himself
-with a bull’s-eye.</p>
-
-<p>“The pun,” observed Nick Blake gravely, “is
-considered the lowest form of humor.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think that’s mighty clever,” exclaimed Hugh.
-“You’re hipped because you didn’t think of it yourself,
-Nick.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dry up, ’Ighness! I was about to say when you
-so rudely interrupted that it is, of course, necessary
-to consider one’s audience, and that, having the
-mentality of the audience in mind, Baker’s joke may
-be considered clever, even brilliant. For my
-part——”</p>
-
-<p>“Choke him, somebody,” said Bert. “After all,
-say what you like about Star, you’ve got to acknowledge
-that there’s much to ad-Meyer about——”</p>
-
-<p>But Nick’s groan of anguish drowned the rest,
-and Dresser, pretending disgust, arose to depart,
-setting the example for several others. Jimmy, fearing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-that Dud’s gloomy silence might undo the effect
-created by the joke, thought the moment a good
-one for retiring and led his chum away. Outside,
-Dud remonstrated again.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you wouldn’t, Jimmy,” he said. “I feel
-such an awful fool when you spring those jokes
-and tell fellows I made ’em. They must know I
-didn’t!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why? You do say things as good as that, don’t
-you? When there’s no one but me around, I
-mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. Maybe. I didn’t think that was
-awfully funny, anyway, Jimmy.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy chuckled. “I do. And the others did.
-Cheer up, Dud. I’ll make a celebrity of you in
-spite of yourself!”</p>
-
-<p>Later, back in Number 29 Lothrop, Bert Winslow
-laughed suddenly while he was getting ready
-for bed and Hugh, hearing, called across from his
-own bedroom.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the joke, Bert?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was thinking of the one Jimmy Logan sprung;
-about the hockey team being weak from Star-vation.
-It isn’t so bad, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Rather clever, but it was that chap Baker who
-said it, wasn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess so. But look here,” continued Bert, appearing
-in his doorway in the course of a struggle<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>
-with his collar, “why is it Baker never gets off any
-of those things himself? It’s always Jimmy Logan
-who springs ’em. All Baker does is to sit and look
-glum. If he’s so all-fired clever why doesn’t he say
-something once in a while? I think he’s a bit of
-a pill.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s not so bad, I fancy,” replied Hugh.
-“Maybe you have to know him. Some chaps are
-like that, if you know what I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but——” Bert’s voice died out until he had
-at last wrenched the refractory collar from his
-neck. Then: “Here’s another funny thing, Hugh,”
-he said. “Jimmy lugs that fellow around every
-place with him; sort of butts in with him everywhere.
-You’d think Jimmy was a—a nurse-maid
-or something. Looks to me as if he was trying to
-introduce his young friend into Society. I wouldn’t
-care a bit if he forgot to bring him up here the
-next time.”</p>
-
-<p>“What have you got against him?” inquired
-Hugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing much. He’s only a lower middler,
-though, and lower middlers ought to keep to their
-own set. Besides, look at the cheek of the kid!
-Going to try for pitcher on the first! What do
-you know about that?”</p>
-
-<p>“But if he’s really any good at it,” began the
-other.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span></p>
-
-<p>“How could he be? He can’t be more than fifteen,
-I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“You were young once yourself, old chap.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but I didn’t try to pitch on the first team,”
-grumbled Bert. “He’s too fresh.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you just what’s the matter with him,”
-said Hugh, appearing in the study in a suit of pink-striped
-pajamas. “He’s shy, Bert.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shy! And going out for the first nine!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know it doesn’t look so,” laughed Hugh, “but
-that’s just what his trouble is, and I rather fancy
-that Logan, out of pure kindness, is trying to bring
-him out, if you know what——”</p>
-
-<p>“Pure kindness!” scoffed Bert. “Jimmy’s kind
-enough, I guess, but if that’s his game you can bet
-all you’ve got that he’s doing it for a lark. I know
-Jimmy!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br />
-<small>A CHANCE MEETING</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Two days after the visit to Hugh Ordway’s
-room Jimmy Logan’s joke which he had
-attributed to Dud bore unexpected fruit.
-The remark had tickled the fellows who had heard
-it and consequently they very promptly repeated it,
-with the natural result that within twenty-four hours
-it got around to Starling Meyer himself. Star, as
-he was generally called, was a large, good-looking
-boy of seventeen, well supplied with self-conceit.
-He was a rattling good hockey player, undoubtedly
-the best in school, and a fair performer with the
-second nine in the outfield. There his athletic
-prowess ended, for he considered—or pretended to
-consider—track sports unimportant and football unscientific.
-He was a clever student and stood high
-in class, and was, in consequence, rather a favorite
-with the faculty. As a member of the Forum Society
-his activities were critical rather than constructive,
-for he took no part in the debates beyond attending
-them and pointing out the deficiencies of the
-debaters in a superior manner. Most fellows liked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-him, especially those who were not clever in the
-lines he affected, and even those who saw through
-his poses and couldn’t stand his conceit accorded
-him honor for his brilliancy in class-room and on
-the ice. Although Star roomed next door to Dud,
-the latter knew him only as he knew three-fourths
-of the students, that is, to nod to on passing. Once
-or twice, since they had both been rather unimportant
-members of the second baseball team last
-year, they had spoken. But beyond that they were
-strangers, and so when, two days after that visit
-to 29 Lothrop, Star Meyer stopped Dud in front
-of Trow by the simple but effective method of seizing
-him by the arm, Dud was somewhat surprised.
-Star was scowling and Dud didn’t need more than
-one glance at his face to realize that he was angry.
-Even when angry, however, Star didn’t allow himself
-to forget his pose of contemptuous superiority,
-and now when he spoke he managed a one-sided
-smile designed to remind Dud of the honor being
-done him.</p>
-
-<p>“Baker, you’re a remarkably fresh young kid,”
-began Star, “and some day that mouth of yours
-is going to get you into a heap of trouble. Ever
-think of that?”</p>
-
-<p>Dud, puzzled, moved restively in the bigger boy’s
-grasp but failed to get free. “I don’t know what
-you mean, Meyer,” he protested.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you do. What’s the good of lying? After
-this you leave my name out of your funny jokes;
-hear?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know what——” began Dud again.
-Then recollection of Jimmy’s bon-mot came to him
-and he flushed.</p>
-
-<p>“The next time I’ll kick you from here to the
-river,” said Star in a quietly venomous tone. “I’d
-do it now for a couple of buttons, too. You leave
-my name strictly alone, Baker, after this. Understand
-me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but honest, Meyer, I didn’t say——”
-Then, however, Dud had to stop, for, although innocent,
-to insist on the fact would put the blame
-on Jimmy. He dropped his eyes. “All right,” he
-muttered.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow that phrase seemed to add fresh fuel
-to Star’s smoldering anger, for he took a fresh
-and very painful grip on Dud’s arm and said: “All
-right, is it? Well, it isn’t all right, kid! <a href="#i_fp038">You’re
-a sneaky little bounder, that’s what you are!</a> Saying
-smart-aleck things and then trying to lie out
-of it! Don’t you ever mention my name again. If
-you do I’ll get you and you won’t forget it in a
-hurry. Now you beat it!”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_fp038">
- <img src="images/i_fp038.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_38">“‘You’re a sneaky little bounder, that’s what you are!’”</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>With a sudden wrench at the captive arm, Star
-spun Dud around and aimed a kick at him. Fortunately,
-a premonition of what was happening<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-caused Dud to jump aside and Star’s foot missed
-its goal. Dud, angry himself now, turned with
-clenched fists and flashing eyes. But the situation
-was distinctly hopeless. Star topped him by a head
-and Dud was suddenly conscious of his own physical
-inferiority. Still he might have tried conclusions
-had it not been for the smile of haughty contempt
-on the other’s countenance. Somehow that smile
-was too much. It seemed to say: “What, you dare
-to show disrespect to <em>me</em>? Begone, impious mortal!”
-Dud’s fingers straightened again, he gulped
-down his resentment, stole a doubtful glance at a
-group of fellows who were looking on curiously from
-the dormitory steps and walked away, trying his best
-to appear dignified and unconcerned but secretly
-feeling like a whipped cur. Later, when he recounted
-the episode to Jimmy the latter took him
-to task vigorously.</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you tell him you didn’t say it? I’m
-not afraid of the big fraud!”</p>
-
-<p>“Considering you’d told everyone that I had said
-it——”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that’s so.” Jimmy frowned mightily.
-“Well, then, why didn’t you light into him? Don’t
-you see that the fellows who were watching you
-will think you were afraid of him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wanted to, but—but somehow he looked so—so
-sort of <em>superior</em>——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yah! That’s Star’s best bluff! Bet you anything
-if you’d hit him just one little tap on the nose
-he’d have run! Hang it, Dud, you’ve got to play
-up, boy! Here I am making you out a regular
-feller, and the first chance you get to—to put yourself
-in the lime-light you fall down! Why, you had
-the finest sort of an opportunity to distinguish yourself!
-Think what it would have meant to you,
-Dud! Fellows would have said: ‘What do you
-know about young Baker licking Star Meyer
-right in front of Trow this morning? Had it all
-over him, they say! Beat him something brutal!
-Some class to that kid, eh?’ That’s the way
-they’d have talked you up. Now you’ve gone
-and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be an ass,” begged Dud with spirit.
-“You know plaguey well I couldn’t lick Star. He’s
-six inches taller than I am, and he’s at least seventeen
-years old, and he’s—he’s stronger——”</p>
-
-<p>“Son, when you get in a row with another chap,”
-replied Jimmy emphatically, “don’t you stop to figure
-out how much bigger or stronger he is. You
-jump in and get the first lick at him. You’ll be
-surprised to find what a lot of inches that first whack
-takes off the other chap! What you should have
-done——”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I didn’t,” said Dud shortly. “You
-wouldn’t have, either, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span></p>
-
-<p>Jimmy grinned. “Never mind what I’d have
-done, Dud. I’m not making a name for myself.
-I’m not——”</p>
-
-<p>“Neither am I. You are. And I’m getting sick
-of it. It’s no use, anyway. Let’s drop it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Drop nothing,” replied Jimmy vigorously.
-“We’re getting on famously. Why——”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve just said I’ve queered myself!”</p>
-
-<p>“I said you’d missed a chance to make a hit. So
-you have. But we can fix that all right. Those
-fellows who saw it will talk, I guess, but we can
-talk too. Who were they?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. Stiles was one, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“The sweetest little gossip in school,” commented
-Jimmy. “All right, Dud, you leave it to me. Your
-Uncle James will fix it all hunky for you. You sit
-tight and—yes, that’s the game! Dud, you must
-go around looking very dignified for a couple of
-days.”</p>
-
-<p>“Rot!”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean it. You must make fellows think that
-you resisted a great temptation and that it has—er—has
-sobered you. Get me?”</p>
-
-<p>“What temptation?” asked Dud, puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, the temptation to lose your temper and
-beat Star up, of course,” explained Jimmy patiently.
-“That’s our line, don’t you see? It was only by—by
-superhuman control that you manfully resisted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-the impulse to fell him to the ground! Great stuff,
-what? You just wait till I tell it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmy, for the love of lemons don’t start anything
-else! Every time you get to talking you put
-me in a hole. You’ve got fellows thinking I’m a
-wit, and they all look at me in a funny sort of a
-way as if they were waiting for me to spring something
-bright, and I get tongue-tied and can’t think
-of a thing to say. And you’re telling it around that
-I’m going to be a wonderful pitcher, too. They
-don’t believe that, of course, but it makes me look
-silly. And now you want to make me out a—a
-scrapper——”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all, not at all! Star resented your remark
-about him and spoke insultingly to you. You
-gave him a beautiful calling down and he didn’t
-dare talk back. Then, when your back was turned,
-he tried to kick you, and you, stifling your—er—your
-natural and excusable indignation, kept your
-temper wonderfully and walked superbly away. All
-through the encounter your dignity was sublime!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud groaned. “You’ll simply make me out an
-awful ass and fellows will laugh at you—and me.
-I wish you wouldn’t, Jimmy!”</p>
-
-<p>“That remark merely shows how little you appreciate
-my powers of diplomacy,” replied the other
-in tones of sorrowful resignation. “But never
-mind. I shall continue to do my best for you, Dud,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
-even though my efforts are unappreciated, misunderstood.
-Leave it all to me, my young friend.
-Appear very dignified and—and aloof. Let’s see
-you look aloof, Dud.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud only looked disgusted.</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit like it,” resumed the other cheerfully.
-“More like this. Get it? Sort of hinting at a
-secret sorrow or—no, that’s not exactly the idea,
-either. You want to look like the hero in the second
-act of the play, when everyone thinks he stole the
-jewels and the heroine spurns him. He knows that
-he’s innocent, you see, and knows that the audience
-will know it in the last act. So he just looks disdainful
-and a bit sad and sort of moons around by
-himself and smokes a good deal to salve his sorrow——”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t smoke,” interrupted Dud practically.
-“They won’t let me, and I don’t like it anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy waved his hand airily. “You get the idea,
-though, Dud. ‘Too proud to fight’ is your line, old
-chap. Now shut up and let me think.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy’s thinking resulted in action. That afternoon
-about four he might have been observed lingering
-idly in front of School Hall, hands in pockets,
-whistling tunelessly, evidently quite at a loose end.
-Nick Blake tried to entice him up to Lit to play
-pool, Gus Weston suggested the joys of a trip to
-the village for hot soda and Pete Gordon strove<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>
-to lure him to his room. Jimmy resisted heroically
-and was left to his devices. It was a particularly
-disagreeable afternoon, with a hard wind freezing
-the pools along the walk, and Jimmy from time to
-time glanced impatiently at the big doors behind him.
-But it was nearly the half-hour before they finally
-opened again to emit Ned Stiles. Warned by the
-creaking of the portal, Jimmy instantly assumed the
-appearance of one who, passing, has his attention
-attracted by the sound of an opening door. This
-in the face of the fact that he had been all along
-aware that Stiles, in trouble with Mr. Gibbs, the
-history instructor, had been having an after-school
-séance with “Gusty” in a classroom. Stiles was an
-upper middler, seventeen years old, an uninteresting
-and rather sycophantic youth whom Jimmy secretly
-disliked very much. Stiles suspected the fact and
-was consequently somewhat surprised when Jimmy,
-after nodding briefly, halted and awaited him at the
-foot of the steps.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Stiles. Rotten day, isn’t it? Seen Guy
-Murtha lately?”</p>
-
-<p>Stiles shook his head, changing his books from
-one elbow to the other in order to reach his handkerchief
-and blow a very red nose. Stiles always
-had a cold in winter and snuffled from October to
-April.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t find him anywhere,” continued Jimmy in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
-preoccupied tones, accommodating his steps to those
-of the other boy and continuing on toward Trow.
-“Star Meyer said he thought he’d gone to the village.
-I want to see him awfully.”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t seen him all day, I guess,” said Stiles.
-He was hoping that some of the fellows would look
-from their windows and see him hob-nobbing with
-Jimmy.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I guess I can get him at supper,” said the
-latter. Then he chuckled, and, in response to Stiles’
-unspoken question, explained, “I was thinking of
-Star. He hasn’t got over it yet, I guess. Grumpy
-as anything he was.”</p>
-
-<p>“Got over what?” asked Stiles eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t you hear about it?” Jimmy looked at
-him incredulously. “Why, Dud Baker gave him an
-awful calling down this morning and Star took
-it like a lamb. Say, that kid certainly has got
-spunk!”</p>
-
-<p>Stiles viewed the other suspiciously, but Jimmy’s
-countenance expressed truth and quiet amusement.
-Stiles grunted. Then he said “Huh!” doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Star was mad as a hornet about something Dud
-said; some joke or other, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>Stiles nodded. “Yes, about the hockey team dying
-of Star-vation.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was that it? Well, anyway, he got after Dud
-and wanted Dud to apologize and Dud told him to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
-chase himself, that it was all true and that every
-fellow in school knew it, and a lot more. And Star
-was mad enough to bite! Think of Dud getting
-away with it!”</p>
-
-<p>“I saw it,” said Stiles, “but it didn’t look—just
-like that to me. Star had Baker by the arm and it
-looked like he was reading the riot act to him. And
-then he tried to kick him and Baker beat it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good thing for Star he did, then,” said Jimmy
-knowingly. “I’d hate to stand up to Dud Baker
-when he was riled!”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know he was—that sort,” said Stiles interestedly.
-They had reached the entrance to Trow
-and paused at the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Dud Baker? Didn’t you ever hear why he left
-the school he was at before he came here?”</p>
-
-<p>Stiles shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it isn’t a nice story to tell, although it
-wasn’t all Dud’s fault. I heard it from a fellow
-who was there and saw it. In fact, he helped to
-carry the other fellow to his room. He was three
-years older than Dud and a whole head taller, too,
-they say. But Dud isn’t the sort of fellow you can
-bully. Or he wasn’t. Nowadays Dud will stand a
-lot. I guess after that fracas he learned to keep
-his temper. The other fellow was in bed a month.
-It was such a close shave for him that it sort of
-sobered Dud up and he will go most any length<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-now to keep from scrapping. He’s got an awful
-punch, they say.”</p>
-
-<p>Stiles looked vastly amazed, but Jimmy, glancing
-from the corners of his eyes, saw to his satisfaction
-that there was no incredulity in the amazement.
-Stiles had swallowed the yarn whole and
-was gasping for more. But Jimmy knew the value
-of silence.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I guess I’ll run over to Lothrop. If you
-should see Guy you might tell him I’m looking for
-him. So long.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, look here, Logan,” called Stiles eagerly;
-“what was it Baker said to Star, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know just what he told him, but it
-was aplenty. And Star took it, too!”</p>
-
-<p>“But he—he kicked Baker! We saw him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Never!” replied Jimmy vehemently. “He may
-have kicked <em>at</em> him. In fact, some fellow told me
-he did aim a kick at Dud when Dud’s back was
-turned. Said Dud turned like a tiger on him then
-and he thought sure it was all up with Star. But
-Dud controlled himself and walked quietly away.
-Gee, I couldn’t have done that, Stiles! It must
-have been great to see, wasn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why—er—yes, only——” Stiles paused. “It
-looked to us as if Baker was scared, Logan. Of
-course he wasn’t, but that’s what it looked like. I
-didn’t know he was such a scrapper.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Who, Dud?” Jimmy spread his hands expressively.
-“Take my advice, old man, and don’t
-let him hear you say he looked scared, though
-maybe he wouldn’t touch you. And then again he
-might lose control of that temper of his and——
-Better not risk it, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t think of it,” said Stiles earnestly. “I
-didn’t really think he was scared, you know; only
-some of the other fellows who saw it said it <em>looked</em>
-that way. Don’t tell Dud Baker I said that, will
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Me? No indeed. In fact, I wouldn’t mention
-the thing to him at any price. He’s awfully
-touchy, you see, and ever since this morning he’s
-been sort of like a bear with a sore head. I guess
-there’s times when he wishes he’d forgotten himself
-and let fly! Well, so long!”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy walked on toward Lothrop and Ned
-Stiles plunged through the door and hurried down
-the corridor to leave his books and then spread his
-news to all who would hearken to it. And Jimmy,
-approaching the first entrance to Lothrop Hall,
-winked gravely at the ornamental brass knocker.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br />
-<small>DUD LOSES HIS TEMPER</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">“Winter,” observed Jimmy very disgustedly
-one morning toward the last of February,
-“is sure ‘lingering in the lap of
-spring,’ as the poet hath it. Between you and
-me, Dud, I guess winter’s fallen asleep there!
-Here it is almost March and everything’s still
-covered up with snow or ice. Or water,” he
-added a second later, his gaze falling to the pools
-of melting snow that lay in the hollows of the
-campus.</p>
-
-<p>The windows were wide open and the air that
-came in, while chill and damp, still, somehow, held
-a suggestion—or perhaps a faint promise—of
-spring. But the sky was leaden, between the walks
-the sod was hidden under patches of dirty snow
-or ice that had begun to melt a little and the whole
-morning world had a tired and bedraggled look.
-Jimmy, still attired in pajamas, shivered and turned
-disapprovingly away. Then his gaze fell on Dud
-and the disapproval increased, for Dud, half awake
-a moment before, had nestled down on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span>
-rumpled pillow again and was sleeping peacefully.
-Jimmy was righteously indignant.</p>
-
-<p>“Wake up, you sluggard!” he bawled, pulling the
-clothes from the other. “Here I’ve been talking
-to you for five minutes, saying perfectly gorgeous
-things, and you haven’t heard a word! Get up,
-you lazy loafer, and hear the birdies sing—or
-sneeze! Come out of there!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud came out, rather in a heap, blinking confusedly,
-and strove to pull the clothes from the bed
-to his shrinking form on the floor. But Jimmy was
-merciless, and Dud was forced to arise grumblingly
-and rub his sleepy eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Wh—what time is it?” he yawned.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind what time it is,” replied Jimmy severely.
-“It’s time you were up and doing——”</p>
-
-<p>“‘With a heart for any fate,’” murmured Dud
-poetically if sleepily. “What day is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Great Jumpin’ Jehosophat!” exclaimed Jimmy.
-“He doesn’t even know the date! It’s a Tuesday,
-darling, and the month’s February, and the year——”</p>
-
-<p>“Then it’s today practice begins,” said Dud. “I
-knew there was something.” He arose and sought
-his bath robe. “I’ll bet it’s awfully early. I don’t
-hear anyone up.”</p>
-
-<p>“You hear me up,” responded his roommate.
-“As a matter of fact, I don’t know just what time<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
-it is, because you forgot to wind the clock and my
-watch has stopped and I couldn’t find yours. But
-it must be long after six——”</p>
-
-<p>“Six!” grunted Dud in deep disgust. “What do
-you go pulling me out of bed at six for? I’m going
-back again!”</p>
-
-<p>“I said it was long after six. Where’s your
-watch? Have a look at it.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud discovered that article at last dangling over
-the back of a chair, it having escaped from a pocket,
-and in more mollified tones informed Jimmy that
-it was twenty to seven. In the corridor a door
-opened and slippered feet pattered toward the bathroom.
-Jimmy set his watch and the clock, found
-his own robe and then, pausing at the door, asked
-solicitously:</p>
-
-<p>“How’s the old arm, Dud?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sore,” was the answer. Dud bent it and flexed
-it—it was his right one—and observed it scowlingly.
-“It’s lame all the way to the shoulder. <em>Ouch!</em> And
-the shoulder’s lame, too!”</p>
-
-<p>“Too bad,” said Jimmy. “I was afraid you
-might overdo it, Dud.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, whose silly idea was it, anyway?” demanded
-Dud indignantly. “Who suggested practicing
-every day, I’d just like to know?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did, of course, but I didn’t tell you to do too
-much of it and lame yourself, did I? What you’ve<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>
-gone and done, Dud, is catch cold in it. You ought
-to be mighty careful that way. You ought——”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dry up,” grumbled Dud. “You make me
-tired. If you know so pesky much about it, why
-didn’t you say something before? I wouldn’t have
-caught cold in it if you hadn’t insisted on slopping
-around in that rink yesterday with the water up to
-your ankles! No wonder I caught cold!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ll have to lay off a few days, old chap.
-It’ll be all right again, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s fine, isn’t it, when I’ve got to report for
-practice this afternoon?”</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t have to pitch, though,” responded
-Jimmy consolingly. “Just do the setting-up stuff.
-Come on and get your bath.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want any bath,” muttered Dud, still feeling
-of his pitching arm with cautious fingers. “You
-go ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dud,” said the other severely, “you’ve got a
-grouch. You must have got out of bed the wrong
-way.”</p>
-
-<p>“I did, when you pulled me out,” was the pointed
-reply. “And who wouldn’t have a grouch, I’d like
-to know? I’ll have a fat chance to do any pitching,
-won’t I?”</p>
-
-<p>“You can tell ’em you lamed yourself, can’t you?
-Cheer up, Dud, and come ahead before the crowd
-gathers. I’ll rub it for you when we get back.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Huh! I guess that’s what’s the matter with it
-now. You nearly killed me last night with your old
-massaging, as you called it.”</p>
-
-<p>“It may hurt a little,” said Jimmy earnestly, “but
-it’s awfully good for you. It’s regular Swedish stuff,
-Dud. I learned it from a chap at home who works
-in the gym. We ought to have some liniment,
-though. I wonder if that liquid dentifrice stuff of
-yours would do.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll do my own rubbing, thanks,” replied the
-other ungraciously. “If it hadn’t been for you——”</p>
-
-<p>“Help!” wailed Jimmy, hurrying through the
-door. Then came the sound of quick scurrying in
-the corridor, and Dud, still mooning on the side of
-the bed, guessed that Jimmy and some other chap
-were racing for a bathtub. Dud hoped the other
-fellow would win. He continued to explore the
-lamed muscles of his arm for several minutes, finding
-a grim satisfaction in the twinges of pain he
-evoked. Finally, however, he slung the cords of
-his bath-robe together and dejectedly followed the
-others down the corridor. As luck would have it,
-three other youths were awaiting their turns at the
-tubs, while Starling Meyer reached the washroom
-at the same moment Dud did. Star fixed a haughty
-and scornful glare on the younger boy.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m ahead of you,” he announced briefly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span></p>
-
-<p>Most any other time Dud would have acquiesced
-without a murmur, but this morning his peevishness
-made him combative and courageous. “Like fun
-you are,” he replied scowlingly.</p>
-
-<p>A perceptible thrill went through the other members
-of the waiting group. Dud Baker and Star
-Meyer were going to have a scrap! They had heard
-of Dud’s fighting reputation, and now they were to
-witness an example of that youth’s quality! They
-almost held their breaths in the excitement, their
-round eyes traveling from Star to Dud and back
-again expectantly. Star frowned portentously.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll see,” he remarked coldly.</p>
-
-<p>“You bet we’ll see,” agreed Dud, a strange recklessness
-taking possession of him. Somehow this
-morning Star didn’t look nearly so formidable, perhaps
-because his eyes were still heavy with sleep or
-because the flaming red bath-robe in which he was
-enveloped was so palpable an affront to good taste.
-Star stared an instant in perplexed surprise and then
-deliberately turned his gaze away from Dud’s pugnacious
-countenance, indicating contempt and scorn
-and several other things that riled Dud still further.
-From the cubicles holding the tubs came the rush
-and splash of water and the voices of the bathers.
-No healthy boy ever bathed silently, and the four
-in the tubs were, judging from the sounds, remarkably
-robust! Jimmy was chanting a football pæan<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
-at the top of his lungs, another boy was singing
-something remarkably tuneless and repetitional and
-the other two were exchanging badinage across the
-partition at the tops of their voices.</p>
-
-<p>After a moment one of the doors opened, a very
-pink-hued youth emerged and it was the turn of one
-of the interested trio. Oddly enough the latter
-showed a strange disinclination to avail himself of
-his prerogative. Instead he offered in a whisper
-to let one of the others precede him. But the reply
-was a shake of the head, the boy not even removing
-his fascinated gaze from Dud.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing for it but to go then, and the
-youth went, disappearing behind the door most reluctantly.
-Star moved impatiently from one foot
-to the other. “You fellows in there, get a move
-on,” he advised loudly. “We’ve been waiting here
-ten minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Keep on waiting, old chap,” replied Jimmy, interrupting
-his song. “Don’t know who you are,
-but you’re an awful fibber. I say, Dud, are you
-there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” growled Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Hand me a piece of soap from the stand, will
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>Dud wanted to say no, but thought better of it
-and ungraciously crossed the washroom and secured
-a cake of soap. “Catch,” he called.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Stop it!” squealed Jimmy. “Don’t chuck! Here,
-pass it in.” The door opened a bit and Jimmy’s
-face appeared in the slit. “Squeeze in,” he whispered.
-“I’m through.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud thrust the door open and entered, and
-Jimmy quickly bolted it again. “Who’s out there?”
-he whispered. But before Dud could inform him
-Star Meyer’s voice was raised in indignant protest.</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t do that, Logan! It isn’t Baker’s turn.
-There are three of us ahead of him. You come out
-of there, Baker!”</p>
-
-<p>“I only took half a bath, Star,” replied Jimmy
-amiably. “I’m letting Dud have the other half.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you are! No funny business now! Here,
-Benson, it’s your turn. Go ahead in. They can’t
-do that.”</p>
-
-<p>Benson, a slim, unaggressive youth, stared at Star
-in alarm. “I—I’m in no hurry, thanks, Meyer.
-I—I’d just as lief wait, thanks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you, whatever your name is, it’s your
-tub!”</p>
-
-<p>The second boy shook his head and grinned. “I
-don’t like that one,” he replied diplomatically. “The
-plug leaks. I’ll wait.”</p>
-
-<p>Star scowled and looked doubtfully at the closed
-door. For some reason intense quiet prevailed.
-Not a splash was heard. “Then if you fellows won’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
-take it,” he said resolutely, “it’s my turn. That’s
-my tub, Baker. You’d better come out of there.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be out when I’ve had my bath,” was the
-truculent reply, followed by a sound very much like
-that caused by a hand descending approvingly on a
-bare shoulder. Star strode across and rattled the
-door, but the only response was the gurgling of
-water as the plug was withdrawn.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll report you to Mr. Gibbs,” announced Star
-loftily. “You’re supposed to take your turn. You’d
-better let me in there.”</p>
-
-<p>Just then the door opened and Jimmy came out.
-Star drew back a step and Dud quickly shot the bolt
-again. Jimmy smiled sweetly and carelessly at Star.
-“Don’t be a grouch, old man,” he said. “There’s
-lots of water yet.”</p>
-
-<p>Star fell back on his haughty attitude and observed
-Jimmy as from Olympian heights. Jimmy
-chuckled. “Great stuff, Star,” he approved. Then
-he nodded affably to the round-eyed Benson and
-took himself gracefully from sight. At that moment
-another cubicle emptied itself of its occupant and
-Star, swallowing his wrath, absent-mindedly entered
-it, leaving the two waiting youths to scowl blankly
-at the closed door. After a moment Benson ejaculated
-in a careful whisper: “<em>Hog!</em>” The other
-boy nodded agreement. “I thought he and Baker
-were going to scrap,” he confided sotto voce. “Gee,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-I wish they had. And I wish Baker had done him
-up! He’s just a big bluff, that’s what he is!” From
-the further cubicle came the sound of song. Dud
-was regaining his temper.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br />
-<small>FIRST PRACTICE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">There was a large attendance at half-past
-three that afternoon in the baseball cage.
-Some forty-odd candidates, most of them
-last year’s first and second team members, had assembled
-for work, while fully as many others were
-on hand to watch proceedings. Not that anything
-very exciting promised, but it was a raw, uncomfortable
-sort of day outside and fellows were glad
-of any event that offered a half hour’s mild amusement.
-The cage was not a very ambitious affair,
-for it had been an after-thought and had been built
-after the building was erected and at a sacrifice of
-one of the two bowling alleys, which, thrown into
-the space formerly occupied by a storeroom, supplied
-area for a modest cage. It was large enough
-to throw at base distance in and to hold batting
-practice in if the batter didn’t attempt anything
-more than a tap. Also, of course, it made an excellent
-place for the pitchers to limber up.</p>
-
-<p>Dud and Jimmy went over to the gymnasium together,
-for the latter had finally decided to try his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-luck with the first nine. When, having got into his
-gymnasium suit, Dud looked around for Jimmy, he
-was rather disconcerted to find himself confronting
-Starling Meyer across the bench. Dud didn’t feel
-so brave today, and would have been just as satisfied
-if he hadn’t run across the hockey star. But
-the latter only glared in a haughtily disgusted manner
-and turned his back, and Dud heaved a sigh of
-relief, not loud but fervent, and made his way unobtrusively
-out of the locker-room. He was careful
-to nod or speak to such fellows as he knew, although
-lots of times it took a good deal of courage. He
-was obeying Jimmy’s directions, however.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t wait for fellows to speak to you,” Jimmy
-had ordered. “Speak first. Don’t act as if you
-were afraid they wouldn’t know you, either. Just
-say, ‘Hello, Smith,’ sort of careless-like, or, if you
-don’t know them fairly well, just nod and smile.
-Don’t grin, smile. Like this.” And Jimmy turned
-the corners of his mouth up slightly and nodded his
-head very briefly. “Get the idea! ‘I know who
-you are, but I don’t recall the name.’ But don’t try
-that on the big fellows like—well, like Murtha and
-Trafford and those chaps. You want to be polite
-to them, sort of cordial, too. Only don’t let them
-think you’re trying to swipe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which I am,” Dud had interpolated a trifle bitterly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Not at all! You’re merely being—er—tactful.
-There’s a difference. Tact and diplomacy are great
-things, Dud. You want to practice ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“Toadying, I call it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Tut, tut! Nothing like it. Call it—call it a
-studied effort to please!”</p>
-
-<p>“Call it what you like,” Dud had replied somberly.
-“It’s poor business.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some of our greatest citizens have been diplomats,
-Dud. Look at me!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud’s gaze picked out a number of baseball
-celebrities whom, under Jimmy’s tutelage, he had
-come to know well enough to speak to. In every
-case, if he found himself near enough to speak
-he spoke, or, failing that, he nodded, trying to look
-quite at his ease and not succeeding very well. Guy
-Murtha was there, of course, for Guy was this
-year’s captain. He was eighteen, a tall, decidedly
-plain youth with so many likable qualities that one
-soon forgot about his features. And Bert Winslow
-and Nick Blake were talking together further on,
-and near by were Ben Myatt and Pete Gordon and
-Nate Leddy. And Hugh Ordway was one of a
-group the rest of whom Dud knew only by sight.
-Jimmy appeared from somewhere and about that
-moment Mr. Sargent, the physical director and
-baseball coach, came in with Tris Barnes, the manager.
-Mr. Sargent, or “Pete,” as he was called, was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>
-short and square, with a beard and mustache and
-a pair of restless brown eyes behind the big round
-lenses of his spectacles. He had a nervous, impatient
-manner of speaking and was quite likely, to
-the secret amusement and delight of the fellows,
-to get his words twisted when the least bit excited.</p>
-
-<p>“All out of the cage, please, but team candidates,”
-was his order. “Close that door, somebody. Better
-bolt it, Churchill. Now, fellows, if you’ll kindly
-top stalking—ah—stop talking, we’ll get started.
-Captain Murtha, want to say anything?”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess not, sir. There’ll be plenty of time to
-talk later on, won’t there? I’d like to say, though,
-that we’re going to need more candidates than are
-here today and I wish you fellows would try and
-get others to come out. There’s no use waiting
-until we get outdoors, for this work in the cage
-is very important and fellows who miss it won’t
-stand much show. Our season begins pretty early
-this spring, a week earlier than last year, and we
-haven’t any too much time to get in shape. I’d
-like mighty well to see fully twenty more fellows
-here tomorrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes; this is a very poor showing,” agreed
-Mr. Sargent. “Well, we’ll make a start, fellows.
-We’re going to have setting-up work this afternoon
-and for a few days. How’s that, Barnes?
-No, no dumb-bells today, thanks. Just get in line,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-fellows, will you? About four rows will do. That’s
-it. Now then, follow me, please. And keep your
-mind on what you’re doing. One, two, three, four!
-Stretch the arms out as far as they’ll go. All right.
-Now the wrists; twist! One, two, three, four, five,
-six, seven, eight—keep it up! All right!”</p>
-
-<p>It soon became tiresome to Dud, for he hadn’t
-been in training and the gymnasium work twice
-weekly had not been strenuous. It was, he reflected,
-rather remarkable to find so many muscles
-that creaked in unsuspected places! Almost in front
-of him, in the second row, Star Meyer was going
-through the evolutions easily and gracefully and
-untiringly, and with something of his usual haughty
-disdain for anything not of his own devising. In
-gymnasium shirt and trunks Star showed strong
-and muscular, and Dud felt a warm satisfaction
-over the fact that he and Star had not come to blows
-that morning in the bathroom! Star’s legs were
-things to admire as the muscles played over them
-like whip-cords and Dud wished that he had paid
-a little more attention to his physical condition during
-the past year or two. He imagined that his
-own thin, elongated body must look strangely out
-of place there with all those other well-conditioned
-ones. Further along, where he could just be seen
-out of the corners of Dud’s eyes, stood Jimmy,
-sturdy and stocky, loafing a bit when Mr. Sargent’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>
-gaze was not on him. Dud wanted to loaf, too,
-but didn’t dare.</p>
-
-<p>The calisthenics lasted less than a half-hour, by
-which time Dud was not the only one breathing
-hard and perspiring freely, and then Barnes set
-the candidates’ names down. When it was Dud’s
-turn to register Star Meyer was nearly at his elbow,
-a fact which added to Dud’s embarrassment.</p>
-
-<p>“Name?” asked the manager.</p>
-
-<p>“Dudley Baker, Upper Middle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Age, Baker?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fifteen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Experience?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was on the second nine last year.”</p>
-
-<p>“Position?”</p>
-
-<p>“P-pitcher, please.”</p>
-
-<p>Someone sniggered. It wasn’t Star, for Star
-never sniggered. It was too low and common.
-Star only looked insultingly amused. Barnes looked
-a little amused, too, although he tried not to.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Baker. Get on the scales and let
-me know your weight tomorrow. Don’t forget,
-please.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud, aware of more than one amused countenance,
-moved away and sought the locker-room, conscious
-that his cheeks were very red. Jimmy, already
-out of his gymnasium togs, noticed and
-frowned disapprovingly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why the blushes, Dud?” he asked severely.</p>
-
-<p>Dud muttered something evasive and passed on
-to his locker. But later Jimmy wormed it out of
-him. Jimmy always could. And Jimmy frowned
-once more. “We’ll have to do something with
-Star,” he said thoughtfully, “something to make him
-have a little more respect for his betters. I wonder——”</p>
-
-<p>Dud laughed. “I thought wondering was my
-stunt, Jimmy.”</p>
-
-<p>“So it is. I don’t wonder, then. I—I merely
-speculate. Look here, Dud, know what I think?”
-Dud shook his head hopelessly. “Well, then,”
-Jimmy went on, “I think you’d better have a show-down
-with Star.”</p>
-
-<p>“What sort of a—a show-down?” faltered Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean pick a quarrel with him and fight him.
-You see, Star has a good deal of influence, and I’m
-afraid he’s been talking. One or two things have
-reached me, you know. What we’d better do is
-make an impression on him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re not much of a slugger, are you?” Dud
-shook his head. “No, I suppose not,” continued
-Jimmy thoughtfully. “Well, neither am I, but I
-guess there are a few tricks I could teach you. Besides,
-I have a hunch that Star isn’t any fonder of
-scrapping than you are. I wouldn’t be a bit surprised<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-if you could bluff him, Dud. Of course, I
-may be wrong, but that’s my idea of him.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a fine idea,” said Dud sarcastically, “but
-suppose you’re wrong? Then what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, then you’ll have to mix it up a bit,” replied
-the other quite cheerfully. “But we won’t
-try it until we’ve got in shape some. We’d ought
-to have a couple of pairs of light gloves. Know
-any fellow who has any, Dud?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t,” answered the other emphatically.
-“And if you think I’m going to stand up to Star
-Meyer and have him knock me around just to—just
-to please you, you’re horribly mistaken. Nothing
-doing!”</p>
-
-<p>“To please me! I like that! It isn’t to please
-me, you silly chump; it’s for your own good. Star
-is distinctly—distinctly inimical to your interests,
-and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and he’d be distinctly inimical to my nose,”
-interrupted Dud warmly. “And I like my nose the
-way it is. You may not, but I do. I’m not going
-to fight him, and that’s all there is to it!”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy was plainly disappointed. “It seems the
-only way, though, Dud,” he said pleadingly. “If
-you know any better way—— And besides you’ve
-got a reputation for slugging to keep up. What will
-fellows think if you let Star sneer at you and don’t
-call him down?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You had no business telling fellows I was a
-fighter,” said Dud. “You didn’t consult me about
-that and I’m not responsible now for what they
-think. I’m not a fighter and never was and never
-could be. I don’t know anything about it. And—and
-I don’t want to.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy sighed and shrugged. “You’re extremely
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">difficile</i>, Dud,” he said in a discouraged tone. “I
-plan things for you——”</p>
-
-<p>“Plan things! I should say you did! You’re a
-bully little planner, Jimmy, but I don’t like your
-plans. Think up something that won’t get me
-killed, please!”</p>
-
-<p>“Piffle! What if Star did give you a black eye?
-You’d have the credit of putting up a game fight
-and fellows would like you better. I tell you, Dud,
-a fellow’s got to risk something now and then!”</p>
-
-<p>“You do the risking then,” replied the other a
-trifle sullenly. “I don’t want any black eyes,
-thanks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, all right then. Still, we’ve got to take Star
-down a peg or two, Dud. But don’t you worry. I’ll
-fix my giant intellect on the problem. Leave it all
-to me, old chap.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” answered Dud bitterly, “and find myself
-all beaten up some fine day! Look here, Jimmy, I
-guess this thing’s gone about far enough. Let’s
-drop it now. I—I guess I don’t care so much about<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
-being a ‘regular feller’ as I did. It—it’s too plaguey
-strenuous!”</p>
-
-<p>“Give it up just when we’re beginning to show
-results?” cried Jimmy in amazement. “Never!
-When I start a thing, Dud, I see it through. That’s
-me, old chap. Having once set my hand to the
-plow——”</p>
-
-<p>Dud groaned in despair. “Well, then,” he muttered,
-“I wish you’d go off and plow somewhere
-else!”</p>
-
-<p>“Cheer up, Dud, the dawn is breaking!” Jimmy
-slapped him encouragingly on the back. “We’ll
-make a regular feller of you yet!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all well enough, Jimmy, but what I want
-to know is this. What’s Star Meyer going to do
-when he hears that I’m telling it around school that
-he’s afraid of me? It’s a wonder to me that he
-hasn’t heard it already!”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy winked. “I sort of think he has, Dud,”
-he said softly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br />
-<small>BEN MYATT ADVISES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">If, however, Starling Meyer had heard Jimmy’s
-version of that encounter with Dud, he certainly
-gave no sign. When he and Dud met,
-which was frequently now that daily baseball
-practice was going on in the cage, he either looked
-over Dud’s head or deigned him a fleeting and disdainful
-glance. But Dud didn’t feel at all badly
-because he received no more attention. In fact, he
-was extremely glad every time he looked at Star
-and pondered on that youth’s wealth of muscle and
-length of arm, and he hoped from the bottom of his
-heart that Star would keep right on treating him
-with distant disdain—the more distant the better!</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Jimmy, being a firm believer in preparedness,
-had procured two pairs of light-weight
-boxing gloves from different sources and Dud, much
-against his inclination, was made to don a pair every
-day before supper and do his best to master the
-rudiments of self-defense. I don’t believe, just between
-you and me, that Jimmy knew a whole lot
-about boxing, but at least he knew more than his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>
-friend did. Dud was the veriest tyro and those
-first lessons, undertaken by Dud with no relish and
-one might well say under compulsion, were strange
-affairs. With the study table drawn back to the
-length of the green cord connecting droplight and
-ceiling plug—the droplight met a natural fate during
-the third lesson—an eight-foot “ring” was secured,
-and in this, with much thudding of shoes and
-thumping of gloves, the two feinted and parried and
-struck. The striking, though, was somewhat one-sided
-at first, Jimmy being the striker and Dud the
-strikee, to coin a convenient word. Anyone pausing
-outside the door of Number 19 might have heard,
-in spite of the closed transom, a conversation calculated
-to arouse curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“Watch your head now!... Well, I warned
-you, didn’t I?... Keep your right in front of
-you! Don’t drop your arm like that or.... Now
-lead! Quick! Oh, put some pep in it, Dud!...
-More like this; see?... Feint with your right
-and come up quick with your left straight for my
-chin!... Get it? Try it again.... That’s better,
-only you’re too slow. You give it away beforehand.
-Keep your eyes on mine and don’t look where
-you’re going to hit.... Sorry, Dud! Was it too
-hard?... You had your guard down, you see....
-Quicker on your feet, old chap! Keep moving!
-Don’t get set or I’ll.... I just wanted to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
-show you what would happen, Dud. Don’t get mad
-about it. The only way to learn.... Good one!
-You got me that time! Right on the nose! Bully
-work!...”</p>
-
-<p>After some half-dozen lessons Dud began to
-learn. And Jimmy, having procured a paper-covered
-book in the village which was entitled “Boxing
-Self-Taught,” studied it diligently and became more
-proficient. I doubt that Jimmy, even when at his
-best, was what might be termed a scientific boxer,
-and Dud never developed beyond the hammer-and-tongs
-stage, but they got to fancying themselves
-quite a bit after a fortnight or so and talked learnedly
-of “hooks” and “upper-cuts” and “side-stepping”
-and other mysterious things. And by that
-time Dud had become really interested and viewed
-Star Meyer with far less awe. In fact, though
-I grieve to relate it, he even got to the point
-where he speculated on what it would feel like
-to place his fist in violent contact with Star’s supercilious
-nose! The conclusion that he invariably arrived
-at was that the sensation would be distinctly
-pleasurable! But much to Jimmy’s disappointment—and
-a little to Dud’s, too, I fancy—Star offered
-the latter no possible excuse for doing such a thing.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s afraid of you,” grieved Jimmy. “Isn’t
-that the limit? A big, husky chap like him——”</p>
-
-<p>“He,” corrected Dud.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span></p>
-
-<p>“——Being afraid of a fellow six inches smaller,”
-continued the other, superbly disregarding the interruption.
-“Wouldn’t it make you weary? What
-we’ve got to do, Dud, is force a quarrel on him.
-There’s no use waiting for him to start anything!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but why?” asked Dud doubtfully. “As
-long as he isn’t bothering me——”</p>
-
-<p>“He <em>is</em> bothering you! He—he’s a thorn in your
-flesh!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” said the other vaguely. “Is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course he is! He’s talking, too. Some of
-the things he’s said have got back to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” asked Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind what. You wouldn’t want to hear
-’em, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud laughed. “You’re making that up, Jimmy,”
-he charged. “You’re just dying to get me into a
-scrap with him. I wouldn’t mind—much, although
-I guess he’d lick me, but I don’t see any use in
-fighting him about nothing. Of course, if he <em>did</em>
-anything, or <em>said</em> anything——”</p>
-
-<p>“Haven’t I been telling you——”</p>
-
-<p>“And I heard him say it,” added Dud hastily,
-“why, that would be different.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, if you’re going to wait for him to knock
-you down!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not,” replied Dud indignantly, “but I can’t
-fight him for nothing at all!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Huh!” Jimmy viewed his chum gloomily. “I
-don’t see what use it is then to go to all that trouble
-to learn to fight if—if you aren’t going to make use
-of—of your knowledge. That’s an economical
-waste, Dud. And waste is sinful.”</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t a waste,” said Dud. “It’s a good thing
-to know how to defend yourself. Besides, that boxing
-business has put my arm back in shape for pitching.
-It feels great nowadays. Just feel of that
-muscle, Jimmy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not bad,” decided the other, grudgingly. Then,
-more brightly: “Say, you ought to be able to hand
-Star a peach of a wallop with that, Dud! Well, all
-we can do is hope for the best. We don’t want to
-fight, but if we have to——”</p>
-
-<p>“We?” queried Dud. “I don’t see where you
-come into it! You’re always talking about ‘we’ fighting
-Star Meyer, but it’s me——”</p>
-
-<p>“I,” said Jimmy sweetly.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s I, then, who would have to do it. If you
-want Star licked so plaguey much why don’t you do
-it yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy considered a moment. “Well, say, that
-isn’t a bad idea,” he replied at last. “Someone
-ought to do it, that’s sure! If you’re quite certain
-you don’t mind——”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m dead sure,” said Dud emphatically.</p>
-
-<p>“Then maybe——” Jimmy felt of his arm muscles.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
-“I’ll think it over,” he concluded thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>Baseball practice had by this time really become
-baseball practice. I mean by that that the period
-of dumb-bell exercises and setting-up drills had
-passed and the candidates, reënforced by some dozen
-or so late-comers, were passing and batting and
-learning the tricks of the game. The battery candidates
-comprised Nate Leddy, Ben Myatt, Gus
-Weston, Will Brunswick, Joe Kelly and Dud Baker,
-pitchers, and Pete Gordon, Hal Cherry and Ed
-Brooks, catchers. Of the pitchers, Myatt was last
-year’s star and a clever twirler, Leddy was a good
-man but not so dependable. Weston had speed but
-little control, and the others were still unknown
-quantities, except that both Kelly and Dud had
-twirled a few times for the second nine the spring
-before. Pete Gordon was the regular catcher
-and Brooks the second-choice man. Cherry was a
-beginner who showed promise. At the end of the
-first two weeks of indoor work, the battery candidates
-were given their first try-out one afternoon
-at the conclusion of the regular practice, and Dud,
-somewhat to his surprise, survived. Still, as Jimmy
-kindly pointed out to him later, that didn’t mean
-much since it was the custom to keep all the would-be
-pitchers until the team got out of doors. Nevertheless,
-Dud was encouraged and did his level best<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>
-to make good. Myatt, a big, likable chap of eighteen
-or over, took a real interest in the efforts of
-the younger members of the staff and was generous
-with advice and instruction. One afternoon, shortly
-before the candidates got out-doors for the first time,
-he took Dud in hand after practice.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, Baker,” Ben called as Dud was leaving the
-cage, “got time to pitch me a few?”</p>
-
-<p>Dud, pulling his glove off, turned back. “Why,
-yes,” he answered. “Want me to?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Yell to Ed Brooks to lend me his mitt, will
-you?” A minute later Ben took his place in front
-of the net and thumped the big mitten encouragingly.
-“All right now, boy! Try a few easy ones. That’s
-nice. I say, Baker, mind if I give you a hint or
-two?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d be awfully glad if you would,” replied Dud
-eagerly. “I know I’m not much good.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who says so?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do.” Dud smiled.</p>
-
-<p>But Ben shook his head reprovingly. “You
-ought to be the last one to say it,” he announced
-gravely. “First thing you want to do, boy, is stop
-tying yourself in a knot on your wind-up. You’ll
-never last nine innings if you go through all that
-gymnastic stuff. What’s the big idea?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” faltered Dud. “That’s the way
-I’ve always done it, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, I wouldn’t do it any more. You see if
-you can’t reach the toe-plate without going through
-so many motions. Cut out that second swing of
-yours, why don’t you? Here’s you.” Ben went
-through an exaggerated imitation of Dud’s wind-up.
-“Too much work, see? If you had a man on second,
-now, you couldn’t do half that, boy; he’d be
-sliding into the plate before you were through. Get
-your body into it and stop throwing your arm
-around. It’s the body that puts the speed into the
-ball. You want to start easy and work up gradually
-until, when the ball leaves your hand, you’re
-at the top of the pitch. The way you do it, Baker,
-you get a lot of motion up and then lose it before
-you pitch. And you tire yourself a lot. I couldn’t
-last five innings if I threw my arms around like that.
-I hope you don’t mind my criticizing you, Baker.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud didn’t, and tried to say so, but his response
-was not much more than a murmur. However, Ben
-went on cheerfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Just at first you won’t have the control you
-have now, I guess, but after you’ve got on to the
-hang of it you’ll find you can pitch a lot easier. Just
-try it, will you?”</p>
-
-<p>Dud’s first attempt was a complete failure, for
-he started unthinkingly on that second swing, tried
-to stop it and got so confused that he didn’t even
-let the ball out of his hand. Ben suggested getting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-used to the wind-up before trying to pitch, and so
-Dud twirled and twisted a number of times, uncomfortably
-conscious of the few loiterers watching
-through the netting, and finally got so that he was
-able to reach the moment of delivery without falling
-over his feet. But when he tried to pitch a few
-straight balls into Ben Myatt’s mitten he discovered
-that the change in his method had seemingly spoiled
-his direction, for more than once Ben had to reach
-for a wide one or else scoop one off the floor.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t worry about that,” said Ben. “You’ll get
-your eye back again. That’s enough for now, I
-guess. There’s one more thing I’d suggest, though,
-Baker. You’re trying to pitch too many different
-things. You were hooking them in and out and
-dropping them and trying to float ’em, too. You
-don’t need all that, boy. Not yet, anyhow. You
-take my advice and learn to pitch a good straight
-ball. Get so you can send it high, low, in or out or
-right in the groove. Then learn to change your pace
-without giving it away to the batsman. After that
-there’s plenty of time for drops and hooks. I tell
-you, Baker, the fellow that has control is the fellow
-the batters hate to stand up to. This thing of having
-fifty-seven varieties of balls doesn’t cut much
-ice, old man.” Ben opened the door and gently
-pushed Dud out ahead of him and they went across
-to the locker-room. “A chap who can tease the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
-batter with the straight ones, slip one across for a
-strike now and then, follow a fast one with a slow
-one and do it all without changing his style is
-the fellow who wins his games. I’m not saying
-hooks and floaters and all those aren’t useful, for
-they are, but I do say that when a fellow’s beginning
-he ought to pin his faith to just one thing, and
-that’s control. Don’t be worried if they hit you
-hard at first; they’re bound to; but just keep on
-learning to put ’em where you want to, and the
-first thing you know you’ll be fooling them worse
-than the curve artist. Practice that new wind-up,
-boy, and cut out all the unnecessary gee-gaws that
-just use up your strength. Nine innings is a whole
-month sometimes and it’s the very dickens to feel
-your muscles getting sore along about the sixth.
-So long, Baker. Good luck.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud thought it over while he stood under the
-shower and while he pulled on his clothes. Maybe
-Ben Myatt was right, he reflected, but he was a
-bit proud of his ability to “put something on the
-ball” and confining himself to straight ones didn’t
-sound interesting. For a moment he wondered if
-Ben was trying to steer him away from his hooks
-and drops so that he wouldn’t prove a rival. Then
-the absurdity of that suspicion dawned and he
-smiled at it. In the first place, Ben wouldn’t be in
-school another year, and in the second place Dud<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
-was certain that he would never be able to pitch as
-Ben could if he kept at it all his life! In the end, by
-which time he was tying his scarf in front of one
-of the little mirrors, he decided that Ben’s advice
-was excellent and that he would follow it, for a
-while at least.</p>
-
-<p>The next afternoon, Hal Cherry, catching Dud
-and Kelly, looked a trifle surprised and a bit disgusted,
-too, when Dud’s delivery suddenly exhibited
-a strange eccentricity. Cherry had to spear the air
-in all directions that day, and Mr. Sargent, watching
-and counseling the fellows, followed Dud’s doings
-with dubious eyes. Nor was Dud perceptibly
-more steady the day following, and Brooks, who
-caught him, protested more than once. By that time
-Dud was getting discouraged and was strongly
-tempted to go back to his former more elaborate
-and far more labored wind-up, and would have done
-so probably had it not been for Ben Myatt’s brief
-encouragement after practice.</p>
-
-<p>“Haven’t got the hang of it yet, I see, Baker,”
-remarked the veteran. “Keep on, though. It’ll
-come to you in another day or two, I guess. Try
-not to slow up just before your pitch, boy. That’s
-your trouble now.”</p>
-
-<p>Pondering that hint, Dud hauled Jimmy out of
-bed early the next morning and conducted him out
-back of the dormitory, where, stationed midway between<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>
-two windows, he made cheerful efforts to get
-his hands on the balls that Dud pitched him. Many
-of them, however, bounded unchallenged from the
-bricks and trickled back to Dud. One particularly
-wild heave came so near a window that Dud shivered,
-pocketed the ball and led the way back to the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>“If,” said Jimmy disgustedly, on the way, “that’s
-a sample of what you can do with this simplified
-wind-up you’re telling about you’d better go back to
-the old stuff. There’s nothing in it, Dud!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to stick it out a bit longer, though,”
-was the answer. “Ben says it will take time,
-Jimmy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and patience,” said Jimmy sarcastically,
-“the catcher supplying the patience. After you’ve
-‘beaned’ a few batters, Dud, they’ll put you in jail
-as a danger to the community. I’m glad I don’t
-have to stand up to you!”</p>
-
-<p>Two days after that, March having departed
-very lamb-like, the cage was abandoned and outdoor
-practice began.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-<small>A WILD PITCH</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">April at its best is an uncertain month, and
-April this spring lived up to its reputation.
-No sooner had the baseball candidates
-grown accustomed to the feel of soft and springy
-turf under their feet than a three-days’ rain began
-and they were forced to retire again to the dim
-and unsympathetic cage. The track and field candidates
-defied weather conditions until the cinders
-held pools of water and the pits became of the consistency
-of oatmeal porridge. Then the sun shone
-forth again and, after another day of indoor confinement,
-the players once more trailed down to
-Lothrop Field. The diamond was far from dry,
-but the sun was warm and a little south-east breeze
-promised its best efforts. Candidates for the second
-team were called out that afternoon, and Jimmy,
-whose status with the first was still a matter for conjecture,
-thought seriously of returning to the fold.
-Dud, however, refused to sanction the step and so
-Jimmy grumblingly stayed where he was.</p>
-
-<p>“I know just how it’ll be, though,” he said pessimistically.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
-“They’ll keep me here until Crowley’s
-got his second team all made up and then they’ll
-drop me. Oh, all right!” He stretched his legs
-and leaned more comfortably back against the railing
-of the stand. “After all, it’s too nice a day to do
-anything. I pity those poor dubs out there catching
-flies and wrenching their arms throwing the ball in.
-Me for the quiet, untroubled life of a substitute outfielder.
-You’ll have to go in and pitch pretty quick,
-Dud; Pete’s got his eye on you now; but I’ll just
-sit here and keep this bench warm and——”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy’s remarks were rudely interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi, Logan!” called Mr. Sargent. “Go on out
-there to left and get your hands on some of those
-flies. Lively, now! Send Boynton in.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy arose with alacrity, casting a despairing
-glance at Dud, and ambled off. Hugh Ordway,
-seated further along the bench, got up and joined
-Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Awfully pretty, isn’t it?” observed Hugh, nodding
-toward the wide expanse of new green that led
-away to the ribbon of river beyond. “Reminds me
-a lot of home—I mean England.” It sounded as if
-he was correcting himself, and Dud asked:</p>
-
-<p>“But England is your home, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>Hugh nodded. “I suppose it is, only when I’m
-here I like to remember that I’m part American, if
-you know what I mean.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Your mother is American, isn’t she?” asked
-Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, she was born in Maryland. Her folks have
-lived there for a long time. It’s a bit odd, Baker,
-but sometimes I feel as if I were more U. S. A. than
-British. Being sort of half-and-half like that, a fellow
-doesn’t quite know where he is, if you know
-what I mean!”</p>
-
-<p>“I dare say,” murmured Dud. It was the first
-time that Hugh Ordway had ever approached him,
-and he felt rather embarrassed. The desire to make
-a good impression on the other only resulted in
-tying his tongue up. But Hugh appeared not to notice
-the fact.</p>
-
-<p>“How are you getting on,” he asked, “with your
-bowl—your pitching?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just fair, I guess. How do you like it? Baseball,
-I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“Crazy about it! I’ll never learn to play decently,
-I fancy, but it’s a jolly game, isn’t it? What I like
-best is batting, only I can’t seem to hit the ball very
-well yet. Myatt fools me every time, you know. I
-got a couple of good ones off Nate Leddy the other
-day, though. Are you pitching today?”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess Pete will put me in for an inning or
-two later. He’s giving us all a chance now. I—I’m
-pretty rotten so far.”</p>
-
-<p>“Haven’t found yourself yet, I fancy. It takes a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-bit of time, eh? Bert says a lot of us will be
-dropped to the second pretty soon. I say, Baker,
-I wasn’t thinking of you, you know!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’ll get dropped, all right, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hope not, I’m sure. In my own case I wouldn’t
-mind a bit. Maybe I could play well enough to
-make the second. Or a class team perhaps.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought you—you fielded very well the other
-day,” said Dud politely.</p>
-
-<p>Hugh laughed. “You’re spoofing, I fancy. I did
-catch a few, but I was beastly scared of them. Bert
-says I looked as if I were going to catch them in my
-mouth! Odd feeling you have when those balls
-begin to come down, getting bigger and bigger every
-second, and you’re wondering whether you’ll catch
-them or if they’ll hit you on the nose! Jolly good
-fun, though! Corking! Lots more exciting than
-cricket.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it? I never played cricket.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no end! Cricket’s a bully good game, too,
-but it’s a lot more quiet and—er—sedate, if you
-know what I mean. Well, I’ll toddle. Hope you
-get on finely, Baker. And drop in some time, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks,” answered Dud. Then, as Hugh
-moved away, he blurted: “Did you really mean
-that, Ordway?”</p>
-
-<p>“What? Why, of course!”</p>
-
-<p>“Then—then I will. I didn’t know——” Dud’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>
-voice trailed off into silence as he dropped an embarrassed
-gaze. Hugh smiled and nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Right-o, Baker! Glad to have you.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud, wishing he hadn’t made such a fool of himself,
-bent stern attention on his glove until the red
-had subsided from his cheeks. “He will think me an
-awful kid,” he reflected. “Asking things like that
-and—and blushing like a silly girl! And of course
-he couldn’t say anything else. You won’t catch me
-going!”</p>
-
-<p>Further self-communing was cut short by Mr.
-Sargent. “All right, Baker,” called the coach.
-“Warm up, will you? Brooks will catch you. See
-if you can’t steady down today.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud squirmed out of his sweater, pulled his glove
-on and joined Ed Brooks in front of the first-base
-stand. Brunswick had taken Kelly’s place in the
-box and it would be Dud’s turn next. As Brooks
-tossed the ball to him and spread his hands invitingly
-wide apart Dud hoped hard that he would be
-able to steady down, but doubted it. As yet the
-recollection of that impulsive question to Ordway
-still made his face burn. Consequently when, after
-pitching a half-dozen easy ones to warm his arm,
-he began to put on a little speed, he was pleased as
-well as surprised to find that some of his old control
-had come back. Encouraged, he made greater efforts
-to put the ball where he wanted to and, unconsciously,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>
-began to “steam up.” But Brooks cautioned
-him and Dud slowed down.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s pitching ’em,” called Brooks. “They’re
-all straight, though, Dud, or pretty near it. Try a
-slant.”</p>
-
-<p>But Dud resisted the temptation to “hook” one
-and shook his head. Instead, he sent over a slow
-one that fooled Brooks completely and brought
-from the latter a laugh at his own expense. “Do it
-again,” he urged, as he threw the ball back. “I
-want to get used to those.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll wait until you’re not expecting it,” laughed
-Dud.</p>
-
-<p>There was no line-up today, but first and second-string
-players were batting and running the bases,
-taking their places in the field ultimately to let others
-come in. Weston, Kelly and Brunswick had held
-the mound for an inning or two apiece, while Ben
-Myatt and Nate Leddy were trying to improve their
-hitting, a thing that the latter was rather weak at.
-Presently the outfielders were called in in a body and
-others took their places, and changes were made in
-the infield. Brunswick went to the shower and Dud
-to the pitcher’s box. Pete Gordon was still catching.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Baker!” called Pete. “Strike ’em out,
-boy. Put her over now.”</p>
-
-<p>Neil Ayer fouled one and then landed on the
-next and went to first, and Bert Winslow took his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>
-place. The pitchers were not expected to work
-hard, for a batsman stayed in until he hit or was
-caught out. Bert was difficult to dispose of, since he
-cannily refused everything that wasn’t distinctly a
-strike, and Dud pitched a dozen deliveries before
-Bert found one he liked and rapped it to deep center.
-Meanwhile Mr. Sargent was coaching Ayer
-from first to second and on to third, making him
-slide to every base even though he was not threatened.
-When, however, he tried to steal home on
-Dud’s wind-up, Dud managed to keep his head, send
-in a fast one and saw Ayer nailed a yard from the
-rubber.</p>
-
-<p>It wasn’t especially interesting work and some of
-the hits were screechers into deep right, left or center
-that the outfielders couldn’t begin to get their
-hands onto. Dud had not had much experience in
-fielding his position and was momentarily in fear
-that a hot liner would come at his head. If one did,
-he was quite certain he would duck and quite disgrace
-himself. But when, after some nine or ten
-batters had faced him, Captain Murtha hit one
-squarely on the nose and it came straight at Dud,
-the latter involuntarily put up his hands and, while
-he didn’t make the catch, knocked it down, recovered
-it and tossed out Murtha at first. He got a
-round of applause from the stand for that, which
-so rattled him that his next delivery shot past Gordon<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>
-a good four feet to his right and let in a runner
-from third. The batter sent the next one off on a
-voyage to deep center and took two bases. The
-base-runners were taking such extraordinary chances
-and Mr. Sargent was making such a hullabaloo back
-of first that Dud began to lose his control badly,
-and he was forced to put exactly eleven balls across
-before Weston, tired of waiting for a good one,
-reached for a wide ball and fouled out to first-baseman.</p>
-
-<p>Then Star Meyer faced him and Dud made up his
-mind to make Star work for his hit. Star viewed
-the pitcher with amused contempt and Dud felt his
-cheeks tingle. But he set his teeth and sent a high
-one across that the batter disdained and followed it
-with one that barely cut the inner corner of the plate
-and was just knee-high. Star looked doubtful about
-it, but Gordon proclaimed it “a daisy, Star! They
-don’t come any better.” That apparently impressed
-Star, for he swung hard at the succeeding delivery,
-which, happening to be one of Dud’s slow ones,
-crossed the plate almost a second after the swing!
-Someone laughed and Star frowned haughtily. Dud
-tempted him with another wide one and then sneaked
-one across right in the groove and caught the batter
-napping. Gordon thumped the ball into his glove
-before he threw it back, a signal of commendation
-with the big catcher.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That’s the stuff, Baker!” he called. “That’s
-pitching ’em, boy!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud tried another slow one and again Star swung
-too soon and again a laugh greeted the performance.
-This time, with the ripple of laughter, came
-a smatter of applause from the handful of spectators
-on the stand. Star’s countenance lost its
-haughtiness and his mouth set grimly. Dud decided
-that he might as well let Star hit and get rid of him,
-and so he tried to put one over shoulder-high and
-across the middle of the plate. But something went
-wrong. Dud was convinced afterwards that his
-foot had turned on a pebble. At all events, instead
-of traveling straight and true into Gordon’s waiting
-mitt, the ball took an erratic slant and brought up
-against Star’s shoulder. There was speed on the ball
-and the batter had scarcely tried to dodge it, and
-now he dropped his bat, clapped a hand to his
-shoulder and performed a series of most unconventional
-steps about the plate. Dud started toward
-him, but Gordon was already at his side and so Dud
-contented himself with a sincere “Awfully sorry,
-Meyer!”</p>
-
-<p>But Star, impatiently throwing off the catcher’s
-hand, turned an angry countenance to Dud. “You
-meant to do that, Baker! You did it on purpose.
-I’ll get you for it, too! You can’t——”</p>
-
-<p>But Mr. Sargent interposed then. “Tut, tut,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-Meyer! It was purely an accident. You must learn
-to get out of the way of them. Sorry if it hurt you,
-though. Get Davy to rub it for you. That’ll do for
-today.”</p>
-
-<p>Star, pausing to cast a final ominous look at Dud,
-recovered his poise and, rubbing his injury, retired
-haughtily. Many amused glances followed him,
-for no one there doubted that it had been purely
-accidental and Star’s loss of temper had struck them
-as unnecessary. The incident ended Dud’s usefulness
-for that day, for his delivery became so wild
-that Mr. Sargent quickly took him out, putting in
-Weston to finish the practice.</p>
-
-<p>Dud, yielding the ball shamefacedly, retired to
-the bench and donned his sweater. He was quite
-aware of the fact that Mr. Sargent meant him to
-return to the Field House, but the thought of the
-irate Star Meyer, who, by the time Dud got there,
-would doubtless be just getting into his clothes, deterred
-him. Instead, then, of leaving the field, Dud
-found a place on the bench and pretended deep absorption
-in the practice. Presently, though, a better
-idea presented itself. Across on the other diamond
-the second was putting in its first day of work under
-the tuition of “Dinny,” as Mr. Crowley, the assistant
-physical director, was called. He would,
-he decided, wander over there as unostentatiously as
-possible, and so escape Mr. Sargent’s eagle eye. But<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>
-it proved a mistaken move, for just at the moment
-that Dud detached himself from the few idlers on
-the bench, Mr. Sargent happened to look across the
-diamond, and his impatient voice quickly followed
-his glance.</p>
-
-<p>“Baker! Go ahead in! I told you once!”</p>
-
-<p>The fellows on the bench grinned and Dud tried
-his best to make it appear that he wanted nothing
-better in life than to do that very thing! But, just
-the same, once behind the stand and out of view of
-those on the diamond, his feet moved very slowly
-along the path. I don’t believe that Dud was a coward,
-for one may have no stomach for physical combat
-and yet be brave enough in other ways, but I
-am quite certain that he wished heartily all the way
-across to the Field House that the tall and dignified
-form of Star Meyer would appear at the doorway
-and proceed homeward before he reached there!
-But nothing of the sort happened, and when Dud
-entered the locker-room he was just in time to hear
-Star finish an account of the recent episode for the
-benefit of three boys who lolled on the benches in
-various stages of undress.</p>
-
-<p>“He was afraid to give me one I could hit and so
-he whanged one straight at me. I wasn’t looking
-for it and couldn’t get out of the way, and it got me
-right on the shoulder. He threw it as hard as he
-could, too, and that arm will be out of commission<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-for days. Pete had the cheek to tell me that it was
-an accident! Accident! Yes, it was—not! You
-wait till I get a chance at that fresh kid!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br />
-<small>JIMMY TAKES CHARGE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Dud’s first impulse was to turn back, but one
-of Star’s audience had seen him already, and
-so, after a moment of hesitation, he went
-on and, since Star had his back toward the door,
-reached his locker before the speaker saw him.
-Then there was an instant’s silence. Dud pulled
-open the locker door, took his towel out and dropped
-it on the bench. Then:</p>
-
-<p>“Got canned, did you?” asked Star. “Maybe
-you’ll learn after a while that you can’t do that sort
-of thing and get away with it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t mean to hit you, Meyer, honestly,” returned
-Dud. “I—I’m awfully sorry. There was a
-pebble or something——”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, forget your pebbles! You know very well
-you meant to hit me. You’ve been doing a lot of
-talking around school lately. I’ve heard it. And
-I’d have given you a mighty good spanking if you’d
-been big enough to notice.” Star had walked around
-the end of the bench and now faced Dud like an outraged
-Jove from a yard away. Dud tried hard to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-appear undisturbed, but the mere publicity was
-enough to send the blood into his cheeks and put a
-tremor in his voice as he answered.</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t been talking about you, Meyer,” he
-said as stoutly as he could. “And, anyhow, you
-needn’t try to bully me. I’ve apologized for that—that
-accident, and that’s all I can do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you apologize, do you?” Star laughed
-amusedly. “Well, apologies don’t answer, kid. If
-you weren’t so small I’d kick you around the room,
-you—you ugly-faced little insect!”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind my size!” cried Dud, throwing discretion
-to the winds in the sudden flare of anger.
-“And never mind about my looks, either! Any time
-you want to start kicking you go ahead, Meyer! I’m
-not afraid of you! You’re a bluff, a big bluff, that’s
-all you——”</p>
-
-<p>Star’s right hand shot out suddenly and the open
-palm landed hard on Dud’s cheek. The blow sent
-him sprawling across the bench, but he was on his
-feet again in an instant, his face white save where
-the impact of Star’s hand had left a tingling red
-stain. Star, smiling crookedly, had stepped back,
-ready for Dud’s rush. But the rush wasn’t made,
-for at that instant “Davy” Richards’ voice came
-sternly from the doorway.</p>
-
-<p>“Here, boys! Stop that! Look you, Meyer,
-leave him alone! What mean you hitting a boy beneath<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>
-your size, eh?” Davy was Welsh and when
-excited relapsed into a brogue as broad as it was
-difficult of reproduction in type. Star looked
-around, shrugged his shoulders and laughed
-lightly.</p>
-
-<p>“I wasn’t hitting him, Davy. I merely slapped
-his face for him. If I ever really hit him he’d
-know it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, no more of it in this house! ’Tis no place
-for fighting. And you there, you, Baker, behave
-yourself, do you hear me? No more now or I’ll
-take a hand myself!” Davy retired grumbling, and
-one of the audience of three chuckled as he got up
-and sauntered out. The others exchanged glances
-of amusement and went on with their dressing. Star
-nonchalantly retired to his own bench, leaving Dud
-standing with clenched fists and angry face in the
-middle of the floor, for once unconscious of the curious
-gazes of others.</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t finished yet, Meyer,” he said at last in a
-low voice.</p>
-
-<p>Star glanced up contemptuously. “You’ll be finished
-if you try any more funny stunts with me,
-Baker,” he said threateningly. “And I want you to
-stop talking about me, too. Hear that? The next
-time I’ll do a lot more than slap your ugly face for
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll fight me!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t bother to!” Star laughed. “I might
-break you in two if I hit you!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll fight me,” reiterated Dud doggedly. “If
-you won’t——”</p>
-
-<p>He stopped, for Davy was glowering at him from
-the doorway.</p>
-
-<p>“Look you, Baker, what I say I mean! One
-more word about fighting while you’re in this place
-and out you go!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud subsided and silence reigned until the door
-opened to admit a number of released second team
-candidates, by which time Dud was ready for his
-shower. When he returned to the lockers Star had
-gone. By that time the room was crowded from end
-to end, for practice was over and some forty-odd
-boys were struggling for space. Jimmy spied his
-chum and pushed his way to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Dud, it was fine!” he whispered delightedly.
-“Only why didn’t you put it a foot or so higher and
-‘bean’ him? Did you see him again?”</p>
-
-<p>Dud nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Was he mad?” demanded Jimmy eagerly.
-“Hello, what are you looking so funny about? You
-didn’t—I say, Dud, you two didn’t——” He
-paused expressively.</p>
-
-<p>“We had words,” replied Dud in low tones, “and
-he—slapped my face.”</p>
-
-<p>“Slapped——” Jimmy whistled. Then: “Great<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>
-stuff, Dud! What did you do? Where were you?
-I wish I’d seen it!”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t do anything. Davy butted in. I’m going
-to fight him, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course! Slapped your face, eh, the big bully?
-That—that’s a fighting matter, Dud. When are
-you going to do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“He refused; said he wouldn’t bother with me;
-said he might break me in two! But he’s got to
-fight, Jimmy!”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet he has!” agreed Jimmy enthusiastically.
-“But listen: let me get my shower. You wait for
-me, will you? We’ve got to talk this over, you
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>“There isn’t anything to talk over,” said Dud
-flatly. “He’s got to fight me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but if he says he won’t—— You wait for
-me, see? I won’t be a minute.” And Jimmy, beaming
-broadly, dashed off.</p>
-
-<p>Dud found a corner by the door and waited, listening
-idly to the chatter of the fellows. Nearby
-Foster Tray, struggling with a stubborn shirt, remarked
-in smothered tones:</p>
-
-<p>“Did you see Baker peg Star in the arm, Mil?
-It was a fierce old biff!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Oscar Milford, “and Star was
-hopping mad.” He chuckled. “Said Baker did it
-on purpose. Well, maybe he did. I don’t know.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>
-But they say Baker’s got Star scared of him, for
-some reason.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, piffle! A kid like that? Not likely! But
-it isn’t sense getting mad about being hit with a ball.
-Gee, if I got peeved every time I got whacked last
-year——”</p>
-
-<p>A good-natured altercation over the possession
-of a bath towel that both Leddy and Parker
-laid claim to drowned the rest of Tray’s remark
-and Dud slipped further along. Captain Murtha
-ran across him a moment later and stopped an
-instant.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, Baker, you did mighty well there for a
-while today. Keep it up, old man. But don’t lay
-out any more of the team, eh? You might leave us
-short-handed!” Guy laughed, nodded and went on,
-and presently, showing numerous evidences of having
-dressed hurriedly, Jimmy arrived a bit breathless
-and dragged Dud outside. There, one arm
-through Dud’s, he led the way back to the dormitory.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” he demanded eagerly, “let’s have the
-whole story.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I stepped on a pebble or something and
-the ball got away and hit Star on the shoulder.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” chuckled Jimmy, “I saw that. Something
-ought to be done about those pebbles!” And he
-winked meaningly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But it was a pebble!” declared Dud. “I didn’t
-mean to hit him!”</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t!” Jimmy was incredulous, incredulous
-and disappointed. “Gee, I thought of course
-you did it so he’d get mad and fight! Are you
-sure?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I am,” answered Dud shortly. “Don’t be
-a fool, Jimmy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, all right, then. It was an accident.” Jimmy
-sighed. “Then what?”</p>
-
-<p>Dud brought the narrative to its conclusion by
-the time they were crossing the campus, and Jimmy
-disengaged his arm in order to slap Dud approvingly
-on the back. “Fine!” he declared. “Just
-what we wanted! By the time we put this thing
-through, Dud, you’ll be the most talked-of fellow in
-school!”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to be talked of. I’m sick of all
-that rot. All I want is to show Star Meyer that he
-can’t slap me and—and get away with it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! But it’ll do you a lot of good if you lick
-him, don’t you see? Fellows will call you a plucky
-kid and all that. Oh, there’s nothing to it, Dud!
-Here’s where we make good, old son!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not likely to lick him,” replied the other
-quietly. “I dare say he will beat me to a pulp,
-but he won’t do it before I’ve got in a few,” he
-added grimly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right, too, but it’s going to make a lot
-bigger hit if you get the decision,” responded Jimmy.
-“No, you’d better make up your mind to lick him,
-Dud.”</p>
-
-<p>“Make up my mind!” replied the other impatiently
-as they traveled together down the corridor.
-“How’s making up my mind going to help? He can
-lick me, and you know it. And I know it. What’s
-the good of talking rot like that?”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know he can?” asked Jimmy eagerly.
-“I’ll bet you anything Star’s got a yellow
-streak in him somewhere. And you’ve been learning
-right along, haven’t you? Why, say, I call you a
-mighty clever boxer right this minute, Dud! Yes,
-I do, honest! And—I say, what time is it? Fine!
-We’ve just got time to put on the gloves for a few
-minutes. I was reading in that book——”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not going to put on the gloves,” answered
-Dud decidedly. “I’ll fight him just as I am. All
-that scientific stuff isn’t much good, anyway. It
-didn’t keep him from almost knocking me flat on the
-floor this afternoon, did it?”</p>
-
-<p>“But you weren’t looking for it! If you’d
-known——”</p>
-
-<p>“Besides, the thing is to get him to fight. He says
-he won’t. How can I make him, Jimmy?”</p>
-
-<p>“We-ell——” Jimmy studied the question with
-his head on one side and his mouth pursed. At last:<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
-“There are two or three ways, I guess. You might
-challenge him publicly or you might just walk up
-and slap his face the way he slapped yours or you
-might——”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s good enough,” interrupted Dud. “Come
-on!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on! Where are you going?”</p>
-
-<p>“To find him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but—but wait! Hold on! See here, Dud,
-you can’t walk into a fellow’s room and biff him, you
-know!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why can’t I?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because it isn’t done, old chap. Violation of—er—hospitality
-and all that, you know. What you
-want to do is to find him some time when other fellows
-are around, see? Then he can’t possibly refuse.
-But you want to make sure that a faculty isn’t
-looking! Better wait now until morning and get
-him in School Hall; in the corridor, say. Yes, that’s
-the idea. There’ll be a crowd around, and——”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d rather do it now,” said Dud. “Maybe—by
-tomorrow—I might not—might not want to so
-much!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s all right. I’ll keep you up to it, son.
-Trust me. You see, Dud, this is a wonderful opportunity
-and we want to make the most of it. You
-wait until the morning and then find Star in the corridor
-between recitations. There’s bound to be a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
-crowd there. Imagine the sensation when you step
-up to him and let him have it right on the cheek!
-Maybe you’d ought to say something, too, something—er—effective.
-Let’s see now. Suppose——”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Jimmy, this isn’t any silly pageant!
-I don’t care whether anyone’s around or not. All
-you think about is making a public show of it! You
-make me tired!”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing of the sort,” returned Jimmy indignantly.
-“All I say is that if you’re going to do it
-you ought to do it right! What’s the good of balling
-it all up when, by using a little—er—a little
-headwork, you can make a great big hit? No, sir,
-you listen to me. I’m managing you in this affair,
-Dud. Just you sit still and leave the whole business
-to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Leave it to you——” began Dud bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>“Besides, I’ve got a better scheme, old chap!
-Let’s do it shipshape, eh? After supper I’ll call on
-Star and take your challenge to him. Then, if he
-says he won’t fight, we’ll go ahead with the public
-insult scheme. But that will be giving him a chance
-to accept like a gentleman. And, of course, whether
-he accepts or doesn’t, the thing is just bound to leak
-out.” Jimmy grinned. “Those things always do.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish,” said Dud moodily, “I’d kept my mouth
-shut and not told you anything about it. You’re
-bound to go and hire a brass band and make a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>
-hullabaloo! I dare say”—sarcastically—“you’ll be
-selling tickets for the fight!”</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove, that isn’t a bad idea! I don’t mean to
-sell tickets, but we might issue invitations or—or
-something. ‘You are cordially invited to be present
-at an informal scrap between Dudley Baker and
-Starling Meyer at five-thirty on Friday. R. S.
-V. P.’”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you’d quit making a silly joke of it,” complained
-Dud. “If you think it’s so terribly funny,
-why don’t you fight him yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>“I would in a minute if he slapped my face,” replied
-Jimmy promptly. “Maybe he will when I
-take the challenge to him. Gee, I wish he’d try it!
-Still, I suppose you’d claim the right to the first
-scrap. Well, that’s settled, then. Come on to supper
-now. Better be sort of careful what you eat,
-you know. You want to keep in condition. What
-do you say to tomorrow afternoon before supper
-down at the Beach? We’d be out of sight there and
-it would be handy for fellows to get to after practice.
-No use staging the affair too far away if we
-want a good attendance, eh? Got to consider folks’
-comfort some, you know. All ready?”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X<br />
-<small>THE CHALLENGE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">“Come in!”</p>
-
-<p>Starling Meyer turned from the window
-in Number 17 and faced the door. Ernest
-Barnes, Star’s roommate, looked up from his
-book and glanced curiously in the same direction as
-the portal opened briskly to admit Jimmy Logan. It
-lacked but a few minutes of study hour and Jimmy,
-with the door of the next room slightly ajar, had
-made certain of Star’s return before starting on his
-errand. Beyond the partition—there was a connecting
-door between the rooms, but that was never opened—Dud
-was dubiously awaiting Jimmy’s report.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” said Star eloquently as Jimmy advanced
-jauntily enough but with a most sober countenance
-into the radius of light from the study table.
-“Hello, Logan, what do you want?”</p>
-
-<p>Barnes’ greeting was just a nod, civil but not enthusiastic,
-and having made it he went back to his
-book.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, fellows,” said Jimmy. “Mind if I sit
-down, Meyer?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Help yourself.” Star eyed the caller suspiciously.
-“This is an unexpected honor,” he added
-sarcastically.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy nodded. “Yes, isn’t it? Fact is, I’m on
-a painful errand, Meyer. Mind if I speak before
-Barnes?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, cut the comedy, Logan,” replied Star impatiently.
-“What nonsense are you up to, anyway?”</p>
-
-<p>“No nonsense at all, really,” Jimmy assured him
-earnestly. “It’s like this, Meyer. I’m here on
-behalf of my friend, Baker. You see, he isn’t
-just satisfied with the way things were left this
-afternoon. He feels that—er—the matter ought to
-be settled more—er—more definitely. See what I
-mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, rot! I’m not going to fight that kid, Logan.
-He’s too small. Tell him to forget it. And
-look here, you!” Star’s voice took on an edge. “I
-want you to quit meddling in my affairs, too, Logan.
-I know what you’ve been up to. You and
-that roommate of yours are altogether too
-fresh.”</p>
-
-<p>“Me?” asked Jimmy innocently. “What have I
-done, Meyer?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve talked a whole lot too much, that’s what
-you’ve done. And you’ve egged Baker on to—to
-make trouble. I want you to stop it, both of you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, I may have talked some,” Jimmy allowed
-calmly. “Everyone has a right to talk——”</p>
-
-<p>“If they’re careful what they say, yes! But——”</p>
-
-<p>“Anyway, that isn’t what I came to see you about.
-I’ve talked it over with Dud and we’ve concluded
-that you ought to give him satisfaction. You see,
-Meyer, slapping a fellow’s face and then refusing
-to go on with it looks—well, a bit funny, eh? Now
-what we propose is that you and Dud meet, say tomorrow
-afternoon at half-past five, down at the
-Beach, and settle the matter in a quiet, gentlemanly
-way. What do you say to that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I say no,” replied Star shortly. “I haven’t any
-intention of fighting him. All I will do is slap his
-face again if he doesn’t let me alone. He’s been
-telling it around—or you have—that I’m afraid of
-him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Um,” said Jimmy thoughtfully. “Well—er—if
-you don’t fight him won’t it look as if he was
-right?”</p>
-
-<p>Star flushed angrily. “Don’t be a fool, Logan!
-I’d take the two of you on and lick the tar out of
-you if it wasn’t beneath me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I see! Then I’m to tell Dud that you refuse?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell him anything you like! And now you get
-out of here or I’ll throw you out!”</p>
-
-<p>Barnes had displayed a remarkable aloofness up<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
-to the present moment, but now he raised his eyes at
-last from his book and judicially, even hopefully,
-compared the two before him. The result of the
-comparison, however, seemed to disappoint him,
-for he sighed and went back to his occupation
-again, apparently dismissing the matter from his
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>“And what would I be doing?” asked Jimmy
-brightly. “I’ll tell you frankly, Meyer, that your
-attitude is a great surprise to me. It’s a great disappointment,
-too. I’d hoped for better things,
-Meyer. The fellows are going to be mightily disappointed
-when they hear about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“So you intend to talk some more, do you?” demanded
-the other exasperatedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Me? Oh, my, no! But these things have a way
-of getting out, you know, Meyer.” Jimmy shook
-his head sadly. “This school is a frightfully gossipy
-little community.” He got up and turned toward
-the door. “If you think better of it, all you’ve
-got to do is just let me know. I wish you’d think it
-over, Meyer.”</p>
-
-<p>“You get out of here!” retorted Star threateningly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going. I don’t know what Dud will say,
-though, when I tell him!”</p>
-
-<p>“I fancy,” sneered Star, “that he will be a good
-bit relieved!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Dud? Oh, dear, no!” responded Jimmy gently.
-“He’s awfully keen about it, Dud is. It’ll be a horrible
-disappointment to him, Meyer. Well, so
-long.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy passed out with melancholy mien, closing
-the door softly behind him and then pausing an instant
-to chuckle before he opened the next portal.
-A moment later his expression of wicked glee
-changed to one of utmost decorum, for to his surprise
-he found that Dud had a visitor and that the
-visitor was none other than Mr. Russell. Mr. Russell,
-better known as “J. P.,” was the Greek instructor
-and one of the house masters in Trow.
-Jimmy said “Good evening, sir,” in the most deferential
-tones, shot a quick, inquiring glance at Dud
-and then paused uncertainly.</p>
-
-<p>“Am I in the way, Mr. Russell?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all, Logan. I’ve finished my business
-with Baker. Possibly I’d better acquaint you with
-it and enlist your assistance.” Mr. Russell smiled
-gently. “We’ve heard that Baker had a quarrel
-this afternoon with another boy and was heard to
-threaten him. As you know, both of you, fighting
-is not tolerated here, and I felt it my duty to drop
-in and warn Baker against—ah—any infringement
-of the rules. He has explained the circumstances
-and I must acknowledge that he has grounds for—ah—complaint.
-But the matter must be settled<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>
-amicably, boys, and I shall depend on you, Logan, as
-an older boy, to see that your friend here does nothing
-he will be sorry for. Personally, I believe that
-there is something to be said for—ah—a physical
-encounter under such circumstances, but rules are
-rules and we are here to obey them. You agree with
-me, Logan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Absolutely, sir,” replied Jimmy emphatically.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I may depend on you to see that nothing
-occurs which—ah——”</p>
-
-<p>“You may, sir,” said Jimmy resolutely. “In fact,
-I’ve already been talking it over with Dud, Mr. Russell,
-and I’m certain he doesn’t intend to make any
-trouble. You see, just at first he was a bit peeved.
-Any fellow would have been if another fellow had
-slapped his face like that. But after I’d talked to
-him a while——”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy paused because Dud was grinning and Mr.
-Russell had emitted what was an unmistakable
-chuckle.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid, Logan, your counsel didn’t prevail,
-after all,” said the instructor, “for I found Baker
-in a decidedly uncompromising state of mind. I
-think you’d better have another talk with him.” Mr.
-Russell arose, still smiling, and moved to the door.
-“My advice to both you boys is to be sensible. Good
-evening.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now what the dickens did he mean by that?”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
-asked Jimmy, frowning perplexedly after the instructor.
-Dud laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“He meant that your bluff didn’t fool him a bit,
-you silly ass, if you want to know. I told him I
-meant to fight Meyer the first chance I got. Then
-you came in and began talking too much, as usual.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” said Jimmy, grinning. “So that’s it?
-Well, now what’s to be done? I put it up to Star
-and he ab-so-lutely refused the invitation.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess that ends it,” said Dud. “I certainly
-don’t intend to have any scrap with him now when
-faculty’s on the watch. J. P. says they’d chuck me
-if I got caught at it. He’s not a bad sort, J. P.”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it the very dickens!” muttered Jimmy,
-plunging his hands in his pockets and viewing his
-chum forlornly. “Just when everything was coming
-around our way, too!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud shrugged philosophically. “I’ll get even with
-him some time, even if I can’t fight him now,” he
-declared grimly. “Don’t you worry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but that isn’t going to help us much now,”
-replied Jimmy perplexedly. “You see, I insisted that
-you were crazy for a scrap and Star will think——”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, who cares what Star thinks? Who cares
-what anybody thinks?” asked Dud impatiently.
-“I’m sick of the whole business.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve got to save our faces, though,” said the
-other, shaking his head. “And so I guess——”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
-His face lighted suddenly. “That’s the ticket! By
-Jove, Dud, we’ll get credit out of this yet!”</p>
-
-<p>“What silly scheme are you thinking about now?”
-asked his chum dubiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, all we’ve got to do is to tell the truth!”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>All?</em>” asked Dud sarcastically. “I’d say that
-was a whole lot for you to try, Jimmy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, just let it get around that faculty got
-wind of the thing and, knowing your reputation as
-a scrapper, sent J. P. to forbid you to fight! Great
-stuff, that!” Jimmy laughed delightedly. “Why,
-it’s almost as good as the scrap!”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Jimmy, I’m tired of the whole thing,
-I tell you. Let it drop, won’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! Only we’ve got to have the last word,
-Dud! Now don’t pester me any more. I’ve got to
-dig a bit.”</p>
-
-<p>But if Jimmy really studied, appearances were deceptive,
-for when, during the next hour, Dud occasionally
-glanced across the table, it was always to
-behold Jimmy with his hands locked behind his head,
-his gaze on the ceiling and a thoughtfully rapturous
-smile on his face. After study hour was over he
-disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Dud asked no questions the next day. As he had
-truthfully told Jimmy, he was tired of the whole affair.
-He was still deeply resentful toward Star
-Meyer, but his anger had cooled and he had no intention<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span>
-of getting into trouble with the faculty for
-the scant satisfaction of being bruised up further
-by that youth. He was tired, too, of trying to become
-“a regular feller,” to use Jimmy’s descriptive
-phrase. What the latter liked to call “the campaign”
-had been, so far as beneficial results were
-concerned, a total failure. To be sure, Dud had
-enlarged his circle of acquaintances vastly; he was
-now on nodding or speaking acquaintance with fully
-three-fourths of the fellows; but what, as he asked
-himself disconsolately, was the good of knowing
-chaps if they didn’t like you afterwards? He could
-still count on the fingers of one hand the fellows
-who really showed any disposition to be friendly:
-Hugh Ordway, Ben Myatt, Guy Murtha, Roy Dresser
-and Ed Brooks. He tried in vain to find a sixth.
-There was Jimmy, of course, but Jimmy was understood.
-Of the friendly ones only Ordway and Dresser
-could be called disinterested, he decided. Murtha
-was friendly because he wanted Dud to make
-good as a pitcher, Myatt because he took a sort of
-proprietary interest in the younger twirler, and
-Brooks because it had fallen to his lot to catch Dud
-frequently, and there had sprung up between them a
-sort of comradeship that, so far, ended with each
-day’s work-out. As to Hugh Ordway, Dud suspected
-that that youth showed friendliness because
-he was naturally kind-hearted and had taken pity<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
-on him. So that left only Roy Dresser, and Dresser
-was much older than Dud and went with the football
-crowd and, in the natural course of events,
-their paths seldom crossed. It would have been perfectly
-feasible for Dud to call on Dresser, but that
-would have required an amount of assurance that
-the younger boy didn’t possess. No, judging by results,
-that “campaign” had not been a colossal success!</p>
-
-<p>Just now, however, Dud didn’t care so much
-whether he was popular or not. He was very full
-of baseball and secretly consumed by the ambition
-to make good as a pitcher and win a place on the
-first team. For the present that provided sufficient
-interest. He didn’t really believe that he would
-succeed in his ambition; at least, not this year; but
-one may lack belief and still hope, and Dud was doing
-a whole lot of hoping. So far he had done as
-well as any of the “rookies” without, however, having
-distinguished himself in the least. He could
-flatter himself that neither Brunswick nor Kelly had
-been used more often than he, and he took encouragement
-from the fact. Sometimes he regretted that
-he had taken Ben Myatt’s advice and changed his
-style. If he hadn’t, he told himself, he might have
-showed a lot more by this time. Generally, though,
-he recognized the fact that Ben’s advice had really
-been very sensible and that eventually, if not this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
-season, then next, he would find himself better off
-for having followed it. So far, though, the improvement
-that Ben had promised had developed
-very slowly, and he had days of discouragement. It
-seemed that what accuracy he had possessed before
-had quite left him. He could show speed and he
-could fool four batsmen out of five with his change
-of pace, but when the score got to be two-and-two
-and it was necessary to put them over he was as
-likely as not to be as wild as a hawk. Obeying Ben,
-he still avoided “hooks,” making up his mind to
-leave such things quite alone until he was able to
-put the straight ones where he wanted them. Plenty
-of pitchers will tell you that it is harder to pitch a
-straight ball than a curve, and it’s very nearly true.
-It is, in fact, entirely true in the case of a young
-pitcher who has started out pitching curves to the
-practical exclusion of straight balls. And Dud,
-having taught himself very largely, had begun his
-pitching career on the erroneous assumption that a
-wide knowledge of “hooks” and “curves” and
-“jumps” and other freakish things is a pitcher’s
-best asset. It is not, though, for the simple reason
-that no pitcher ever combined a large variety of
-deliveries with that most valuable of all assets, control.
-“Putting it where you want it” is what counts,
-and the pitcher who can put a straight ball just
-where it will do the most good can dispose of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
-batsman in far better style than one whose wide
-curves and drops and jumps refuse to break over
-the plate. All this Dud learned for himself eventually,
-but just now he was accepting it on faith, and
-his faith often failed him.</p>
-
-<p>The day after Mr. Russell’s visit to Number 19
-Dud very carefully avoided a meeting with Star
-Meyer. When he left his room he listened to make
-sure that his neighbor was not also about to emerge,
-and in School Hall he searched the corridors between
-recitations in order that he would not find
-himself embarrassingly confronted by Star. When
-you have earnestly vowed to make another fellow
-fight it is a bit disconcerting to have to pass him by
-meekly! Dud’s endeavors met with complete success
-until he entered the Field House in the afternoon
-to get into his playing togs. Then, as he
-feared, fortune deserted him. The first occupant
-of the room his eyes lighted on was Star, while,
-oddly enough, Star glanced across at the doorway
-at that instant and saw Dud. But that was all there
-was to it, for Star removed his gaze without a
-flicker of recognition, and Dud went to his own
-locker, fortunately the width of the room away from
-Star’s, and attended strictly to the matter of making
-a hurried change of attire. Some of the fellows
-who had learned of the encounter between the two
-the afternoon before watched them expectantly until<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
-Star, ready for work, left the building with Weston
-and Milford. Dud avoided the glances of the others
-as he pulled his togs on. They knew, he was
-certain, that he had sworn revenge against Star and
-were naturally viewing him disparagingly as a
-“quitter.” Had he overheard a whispered conversation
-in one corner of the locker-room, however,
-he wouldn’t have been troubled so much.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you see Star sneak out?” chuckled Jones, a
-rather stout youth with ambitions looking toward
-a position in the first team outfield. “I’ll bet
-he’s mighty glad faculty read the riot act to
-Baker!”</p>
-
-<p>“What was that?” asked Churchill, a third-choice
-shortstop.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t you hear? Why, Star and Baker had a
-row in here yesterday and went for each other, and
-Davy had to separate them. Star was mad because
-Baker hit him with the ball when he was at bat.
-Baker was wild, they say, and swore he’d get Star
-the first chance. So Davy pipes off the faculty and
-J. P. beats it to Baker’s room and tells him that if
-he doesn’t leave Star alone faculty’ll jump him hard.
-So, of course, Baker has to promise to behave, but
-they say he’s hopping mad and will get Star yet. I
-thought maybe he’d forget and light into him just
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, peanuts! I guess Star isn’t afraid of that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
-kid. Why, look at him! Star’s six inches bigger
-every way!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right,” responded Jones, “but they
-say Baker’s a regular terror when he gets started.
-Got thrown out of one school because he nearly
-killed a fellow there.”</p>
-
-<p>“That right?” asked the other incredulously.</p>
-
-<p>“Surest thing you know, old scout! Ned Stiles
-was telling me. He knows the fellow Baker beat
-up.” Jones gazed speculatively and admiringly at
-the unconscious Dud and shook his head. “He
-doesn’t <em>look</em> awfully scrappy, does he? But, say,
-I’ll bet he could hand you an awful wallop with that
-right of his! They say he’s as clever as anything on
-his feet; just dances all around the other fellow and
-does about as he likes. You all ready?”</p>
-
-<p>On the way out Churchill, regarding Dud in surreptitious
-awe, encountered that youth’s gaze, and,
-as Dud at the instant happened to be frowning
-darkly at his thoughts, Churchill was ever after convinced
-that Dud was a fellow to be treated with the
-utmost respect!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br />
-<small>WITH THE SCRUBS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Dud speedily forgot all about Star Meyer,
-social aspirations and everything else except
-baseball, for they had their first practice
-game that afternoon and, although Dud wasn’t
-called on to work during the first three innings, he
-became vastly absorbed in the proceedings. Mr.
-Sargent made up one team of seasoned veterans of
-previous campaigns, with Gus Weston pitching and
-Gordon catching, and formed the opposing team of
-the newer candidates, giving the twirling job to
-Nate Leddy and letting Ed Brooks catch him. Since
-it was the first contest of the year both teams were
-on their toes and went into it hard. From the practice
-diamond Mr. Crowley’s second nine looked on
-enviously when the opportunity allowed.</p>
-
-<p>Weston pitched nice ball for the regulars for two
-innings, mowing down the opposing batsmen impartially
-and even monotonously. But in the third,
-Ben Myatt, playing left field for the scrubs, landed
-on one of Gus’s offerings and drove it far into right
-center, where neither Star Meyer nor Gordon Parker<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>
-could reach it in time to prevent him from reaching
-third. That put the following batsmen on their
-mettle, and before the inning was over Gus Weston
-had yielded four hits for a total of seven bases and
-three runs had crossed the plate. As, however, the
-regulars had by that time scored thrice owing to
-two singles and as many errors of the scrub’s infield,
-the contest was far from decided. Weston managed
-to survive the fourth inning, although decidedly
-wobbly. He allowed two hits and passed Barnes,
-and the scrubs were yelling for a tally when Hugh
-Ordway fanned and made the last out, leaving an
-irate runner on third.</p>
-
-<p>Brunswick went on the mound for the regulars in
-the fifth and Dud took Leddy’s place for the scrub.
-After that, as might have been expected, the fielders
-were much busier and runs began to trickle across
-quite frequently. Dud pitched three innings that
-afternoon and performed fairly creditably. Ed
-Brooks, fast rounding into form as a catcher, knew
-Dud’s failings and jockeyed him along with a lot
-of skill and wisdom. More than once Dud found
-himself in a hole, and if he escaped, as he generally
-did that day, it was more due to Brooks than to him.
-The catcher never hesitated to demand the third
-strike when it was due, leaving it to Dud to put on
-enough steam or to fool the batter with an unexpected
-slow ball, and it must be said to Dud’s credit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>
-that he frequently delivered the goods. But at that
-he was hammered hard by the head of the opposing
-batting list, and could only find consolation in the
-fact that Brunswick fared but little better at the
-hands of the scrubs.</p>
-
-<p>Brunswick gave way to Joe Kelly in the eighth,
-and in that half-inning the scrubs almost snatched the
-game away from their haughty opponents. Kelly
-was wild and ineffective and filled the bases with the
-first three men up. Jimmy Logan, who had never
-set the world on fire with his batting, bunted cannily
-down the first-base line, managed to get in the way
-of Kelly’s throw to the plate and not only saw two
-runners score but reached first in safety himself.
-Prentiss fouled out on the second delivery and Jimmy
-was caught going down to second. Dud, whose turn
-it was at bat, had but slight hope of turning in a hit.
-But Kelly had another ascension—or perhaps merely
-continued his first!—and got himself in the hole to
-the tune of one strike and three balls. Dud let another
-strike go by and then hit at the next delivery.
-Luck favored him, for Nick Blake, at short, made a
-miserable stop of a weak grounder and threw to first
-the fraction of a second too late, and the runner
-from third was safe. That run brought the scrubs’
-score to 11 to the regulars’ 13 and, even with two
-down, the scrubs dreamed of tying it up. But Boynton
-dispelled the illusion by popping a weak fly to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
-Neil Ayer at first, and, since the practice period was
-up, Mr. Sargent called the game. For the succeeding
-half-hour the scrubs busied themselves to a man
-telling just how they would have won the game had
-it gone nine innings!</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless pitching four innings to the tune of nine
-hits and two passes isn’t anything remarkable, but
-Dud left the field that afternoon treading on air. If,
-he confided to himself, he had mixed a few hooks
-in with those straight ones and, perhaps, succeeded
-in getting a “floater” over nicely a few times, he
-would have cut those nine bingles down to three or
-four! And, anyway, Pete hadn’t taken him out, as
-he had Brunswick, which showed that at least the
-coach was fairly satisfied with him. And when,
-while he was pulling off his togs, Guy Murtha
-stopped an instant to say “Good work, Baker: I
-like your style,” the air under Dud’s feet became
-roseate clouds! He didn’t even recall Star Meyer’s
-existence until, on the way to the showers, he literally
-ran into that youth. And then, instead of falling
-back, abashed, he pushed past the other with a
-fine indifference and rattled the curtain along the rod
-in Star’s face!</p>
-
-<p>Afterwards, going across the Green in the early
-twilight, he overtook a group of fellows and, contrary
-to his usual custom of passing them with a
-muttered and doubtful greeting, he fell into step with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>
-Bert Winslow, much to that youth’s surprise, and
-carelessly offered an observation to the effect that
-it had been a dandy game. Bert agreed unenthusiastically,
-shot a curious side-glance at the other,
-felt some of his antipathy toward him vanish
-and remarked quite cordially: “You’re more of
-a pitcher than I thought, Baker. Where’d you
-learn it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t learned it yet,” answered Dud, conquering
-his shyness with an effort that left him almost
-breathless. “Anyway, <em>you</em> didn’t have much
-trouble hitting me, Winslow.”</p>
-
-<p>Bert accepted the compliment as merited, which
-it was, and thought better of the other’s discernment
-and modesty, and while he was beginning a reply
-Nick Blake, walking a few steps ahead, turned and
-regarded Dud gravely and remarked sadly: “I’ll
-give you a quarter next time, Baker, if you’ll tip me
-off when you’re going to pitch one of those slow
-ones. I don’t mind hitting the air, but I hate to
-break my back. Besides, I’m extremely sensitive
-to ridicule, Baker.”</p>
-
-<p>The others laughed and Dud was spared the necessity
-of a reply by Bert Winslow. “If you were
-really sensitive to ridicule, Nick, you wouldn’t try
-to play,” he observed crushingly. Nick resented
-the insult promptly and battle ensued. Dud left the
-adversaries rolling on the turf, applauded by several<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span>
-spectators, and made his way on to Trow, feeling
-much embarrassed and extremely happy.</p>
-
-<p>The happiness was reflected in the letter which
-he wrote home the next afternoon, for that was
-Sunday, and Dud, while he sometimes dashed off a
-hurried note on a weekday, made it a practice to always
-fill four pages with his somewhat scrawly writing
-on Sundays. His epistles invariably commenced
-the same way:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Mother, Father and Sisters</span> [there were two
-of the latter]:</p>
-
-<p>I am well and getting on nicely. I hope you are all well
-when this reaches you.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>After that he might change the rest of the contents
-from week to week, but Mrs. Baker, who read
-the letters aloud to a more or less attentive audience,
-could get through the first two sentences while
-she was still fixing her reading glasses on her nose.
-Today Dud’s letter was far more cheerful than
-usual. In fact, it started right out being cheerful,
-and the weather, generally dwelt on at length, was
-utterly neglected.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>A good deal has happened since I wrote last and things
-are getting pretty busy here. Something doing every minute
-in the big tent, like Jimmy says. Yesterday I pitched four
-whole innings in the first practice game we have had and did
-pretty well take everything in consideration. Dad will say<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
-I’m boasting but I’m not because if I hadn’t done pretty well
-Mr. Sargent would have canned me quick, I guess. They
-only got nine hits off me and Guy Murtha who is captain
-and a peach of a whanger only got one real hit off me and
-one that was mighty scratchy. I guess I did as well as
-Brunswick and I know I did better than Joe Kelly because
-Joe had an ascension and handed out passes to beat the band.
-Well, we’re getting down to business here now all right,
-everybody’s doing something, the Track Team has been out
-about a fortnight and so have we, nearly, and the tennis
-cracks are out on the courts and some of the fellows who
-play golf go over to the Mt. Grafton links. They let the
-school fellows play there for nothing, but I guess Charley
-pays them something for the privilege by the year. I’d like
-to try my hand at golf, but I guess it wouldn’t be good for
-my pitching. I’m still sticking to straight balls, like I told
-you last week, but if I can get my control back pretty soon
-I’m going to try hooking them again. I guess you’ll begin
-to think I don’t do anything here at School but play baseball,
-but that isn’t so because ever since mid-year exams most of
-us have been digging like anything. I’m all square again
-with Mr. Gring, but I told you that last week. He says
-if I could write English as well as I talk it I’d be all right
-but just the same I got Good on my last comp and would
-have got Excellent only for punctuation. Jimmy says I’m
-a punk punctuater. I guess I am, all right, too.</p>
-
-<p>We play our first game the 25th with the second team
-and then we play Portsmouth Grammar the 28th. I’ll send
-a card with the schedule on it so you will know when we
-play and whom. We have sixteen dates this spring but some
-of them aren’t filled yet. It’s very hard to get teams around
-here to play us because we usually beat them badly and they
-don’t like it. I had a row with Starling Meyer in the Field<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>
-House the other day and he slapped me and Davy, he’s the
-trainer, butted in. I was going to make Star fight but faculty
-got wise and J. P. came up and said if I did I’d get in
-trouble, so I didn’t. But I’ll fix him some other way.
-Jimmy is well and as crazy as ever. He is out for the first
-too and I guess he will make it, anyway he has more chance
-than I have, but I feel very much more encouraged since
-Pete let me pitch all through the last of the game yesterday
-like I told you. I didn’t get your letter until Friday last
-week so I guess dad forgot to post it again. You ask him
-if he didn’t. He will say Pooh, Pooh, but I’ll bet anything
-he did. I’m getting on fine. I’ve met some more fellows
-who are on the nine and everything’s fine and dandy. Please
-tell dad that I’d like it if I could have my allowance a little
-before the first this month because I have to dig down for
-the track team assessment. They voted to tax all of us fifty
-cents apiece, which is O.K. only I haven’t got it to spare.
-Love to you all,</p>
-
-<p class="noic">Your aff. Son,</p>
-
-<p class="right smcap">Dudley.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dud was highly pleased with that letter, for he
-discovered that he had bettered his usual four pages
-by two more. There was besides, he decided, a
-literary flavor to it that most of his epistles lacked;
-and he was certain that his father would chuckle
-about forgetting to post that letter; and maybe he
-would send the allowance right away!</p>
-
-<p>After it was finished he and Jimmy went down to
-the Beach and, since they had no canoe of their own
-and the punts belonging to the school were hard to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>
-row and likely to prove leaky, borrowed one of the
-many that reposed under the trees along the Cove.
-They were in doubt for a while as to which particular
-craft to requisition, since it was distinctly advisable
-to select one whose owner was not likely to
-want it that day. The difficulty was finally solved by
-Dud, who recalled the fact that young Twining was
-in the infirmary with German measles. Twining
-was only a junior, anyway, and juniors had few
-rights even when perfectly well, and still fewer when
-they weren’t! So Dud blithely led the way to a
-gorgeous light blue Old Town, and together they
-bore it to the muddy water of the Cove and clambered
-in.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the best canoe here, too,” observed Jimmy
-contentedly, as he dipped his paddle at the bow.
-(Jimmy took the bow paddle because, or so he declared,
-there was more responsibility connected with
-that position. Dud, while not deceived in the least,
-never objected, for he had a notion that stern paddling
-would develop his arm muscles.) “They say
-that little bounder has heaps of money, millions and
-millions; that is, his dad has. Did I ever tell you
-about the old darkey woman who used to work for
-us? She was telling mother about some man who
-was terribly rich, you know, and mother said, ‘I suspect
-he’s a millionaire, Dorah.’ ‘A millionaire, Mis’
-Logan!’ says she. ‘Bless yo’ heart, honey, that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>
-man’s got sev’ral millions of airs!’ Guess that’s the
-way with Twining’s dad, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a peach of a canoe that Ordway’s got,”
-said Dud, after he had laughed at Jimmy’s story.</p>
-
-<p>“Too fancy,” replied the other as they left the
-Cove and headed down the river. “He has about
-everything in it except a grand piano!”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose it cost a lot,” said Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll bet it did. I told him the other day that it
-was too pretty to use, and he said he thought it was,
-too. Seems he didn’t know much about canoes and
-let Bert Winslow order it, and Bert got all the trimmings
-the law allows. That’s like Bert. I guess
-it’s too heavy to handle well. Here comes Brew
-Longley and Foster Tray. Don’t forget to speak
-now!”</p>
-
-<p>A battered green canoe occupied by two youths
-passed and salutations were exchanged. For once
-Dud managed to get just the proper amount of
-mixed hauteur and friendliness in his greeting.
-Somehow, since yesterday, it wasn’t so hard to do
-things like that. Tray, a football player and track
-team member, laughed as the canoes passed. “See
-you got a canoe now, Jimmy,” he called.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy waved his paddle nonchalantly. “Yes, it’s
-a poor thing but mine own. I’ll let you use it, Tray,
-any time you like. I believe in lending to them as
-hasn’t.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You believe in borrowing, too, don’t you?”
-laughed Longley.</p>
-
-<p>“Anything but trouble,” responded Jimmy, over
-his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>They paused near the old wooden bridge beyond
-the boathouse to watch an automobile dash by at
-some forty miles an hour, and Jimmy sighed as he
-began to paddle again. “I always think every time
-that the old affair will fall into the river, but it never
-does. I never do have any luck!” Beyond the
-bridge, where the river widened as it wound through
-the marshes, they met a canoe at about every turn.
-Many were drawn to the bank, and their crews were
-usually lying at ease above. About two miles beyond
-the bridge and within view of Needham Falls
-they overtook a white canoe, or a canoe that had
-been white at one time, apparently empty, since at
-a little distance nothing showed but an idle paddle
-and the backs of the seats.</p>
-
-<p>“That,” mused Dud, “looks like Ordway’s. It
-must have got away from him somewhere further
-back. We’d better tow it home, hadn’t we?”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess so. Got anything we can tie it up with?”
-Jimmy altered the direction of his craft to run
-alongside the derelict.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe we can use my belt,” Dud suggested.
-But at that moment they came near enough to see
-into the white canoe and discovered that it was far<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
-from empty, since two forms were stretched out flat
-on the bottom. One had the colored pages of a
-Sunday paper over his face and was consequently
-unrecognizable, but the other was unmistakably Nick
-Blake himself. Jimmy signaled to stop paddling
-and the canoe floated silently alongside.</p>
-
-<p>“Asleep!” whispered Jimmy. Dud nodded.
-Their eyes questioned. Here, plainly, was a
-Heaven-sent opportunity to perpetrate a joke, but
-what form the joke was to take was not easily decided.
-Dud watched Jimmy expectantly, and Jimmy
-frowned thoughtfully, benignantly down on the recumbent
-forms. If, he pondered, there was some
-way of fixing a line to the white canoe without waking
-the occupants it would be a lark to tow it down
-to the Falls and tie it up there in plain sight of the
-trolley bridge. But Nick or his companion would
-probably wake before they had accomplished that
-deed. And, besides, there was no rope handy.
-Jimmy was for once at a loss. So, evidently, was
-Dud, for the latter returned Jimmy’s inquiring look
-blankly. The precious moments passed. And then,
-while Jimmy still racked his usually prolific brain,
-Nick’s lips opened, although not his eyes, and Nick’s
-voice murmured: “Hello, Jimmy! How well
-you’re looking. Isn’t he, ’Ighness?”</p>
-
-<p>And from under the newspaper came the reply in
-dreamy accents: “Oh, rather! Perfectly ripping!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII<br />
-<small>ON THE RIVER</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">“You chumps!” growled Jimmy in deep disgust.
-“What do you think you’re doing,
-anyway?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a sad story,” murmured Nick. “We were
-shipwrecked six—seven—how many days ago was
-it, Mr. Ordway?”</p>
-
-<p>“Seven, Mr. Blake.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, seven days ago, sir, and ever since we have
-been tossed about in this tiny boat at the mercy of
-the sea and tempest and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Elements,” suggested the voice from under the
-comic supplement.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, elephants! At last—at last——”</p>
-
-<p>“Get that in about no food nor water,” prompted
-the other in a hoarse whisper.</p>
-
-<p>“I forgot to say that there was no time to provision
-the boat. For six days——”</p>
-
-<p>“Seven!”</p>
-
-<p>“For seven days we were without food or drink,
-and at last, weak and exhausted, we lay down in the
-bottom of the boat and died.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, so you’re dead?” asked Jimmy interestedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Dead as anything,” replied Nick cheerfully.
-“You dead, Mr. Ordway?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fearfully, thanks.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought so. When one is dead one’s memory
-is apt to be a bit uncertain, though. That’s why I
-asked. Gentleman here inquired. Very kind of him,
-I’m sure. Wasn’t it kind of him, ’Ighness?”</p>
-
-<p>“Extraordinarily kind! Most polite, I’m quite
-sure!”</p>
-
-<p>“The trouble with you fellows,” said Jimmy solicitously,
-“is that you’ve been lying around here in
-the sun. What you need is a local application of
-cold water to the cranium——”</p>
-
-<p>“Doesn’t he talk beautifully, ’Ighness?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s wonderful,” sighed the other.</p>
-
-<p>“And it’s my duty to attend to the matter,” concluded
-Jimmy. Nick opened his eyes then and the
-colored supplement quivered emotionally.</p>
-
-<p>“Respect the dead, Jimmy,” warned Nick, “or
-I’ll forget that I’m a lifeless corpse and lay you out
-with a paddle. Who’s there with you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Dud Baker.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, the sprightly Baker,” murmured Nick.
-“Salutations, Baker.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hello,” replied Dud from the further end of
-the canoe. “Hello, Ordway.”</p>
-
-<p>Hugh cast aside the paper and carefully assumed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
-a sitting position. “Hello, Baker,” he said. “Nick,
-I fancy we’re rescued.”</p>
-
-<p>“Too late,” answered his companion in disaster
-gloomily. “We’re dead. It’s perfectly silly to come
-along at this late day and rescue us, Jimmy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you’re dead it’s up to us to bury you.
-Mind if we don’t sew you up in sacks, Nick? We’re
-awfully shy of sacks.”</p>
-
-<p>“I mind terribly. I couldn’t think of being buried
-at sea without a sack. I suppose you’ll tell me next
-that you haven’t even a cannon ball to sink me with!”</p>
-
-<p>“He might use a couple of those doughnuts,”
-suggested Hugh, poking with one foot at a bundle
-in the middle of the canoe.</p>
-
-<p>“Doughnuts?” asked Jimmy eagerly. “Got eats
-in there, fellows?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.” Nick pulled himself up with a groan.
-“We’re off on a picnic, Jimmy. And that reminds
-me, Hugh, that it’s about time we looked for a picturesque
-sylvan glade somewhere. Seen any of
-those things, Jimmy?”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy, who had been working the light blue canoe
-along until it now rocked companionably beside the
-white one, shook his head. “No,” he answered.
-“Let’s—er—let’s look at one of those doughnuts,
-Nick.”</p>
-
-<p>Nick viewed him speculatively and then dropped
-his gaze to the bundle. “I wouldn’t want to expose<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
-them to the air, Jimmy. They get stale so soon,
-you see. But I’ll describe them to you. They’re
-big and fat and sort of a lovely golden-brown color,
-and they’ve got sugar sprinkled on their circumferences,
-so to speak. Honest, Jimmy, they’re awfully
-<em>tasty</em> doughnuts. You’d like ’em, I feel sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stingy brute! Come across, Nick. I’m as hungry
-as a bear. You’ve got plenty, I’ll bet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Depends,” replied Nick, clasping his hands
-about his knees, “what you call plenty. We’ve got
-only a dozen.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can have a couple of my six,” laughed
-Hugh, reaching for the luncheon.</p>
-
-<p>“One moment,” interposed Nick. “Tell you
-what, ’Ighness. Here we are with more food than
-we can eat, and here are two famished mariners
-miles from port. What’s the answer?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, we invite them to dinner, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Correct! Turn your old tub around, Jimmy,
-and paddle back to the willows and we’ll go ashore
-and have a banquet. We’ve only got three chops,
-but there’s lots of bread and butter and some cheese
-and a can of peaches. Only we forgot to bring an
-opener, and so I don’t just see—— You don’t happen
-to carry a can-opener with you, do you Baker?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, but I think I can-opener without one,” replied
-Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Wow!” said Jimmy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span></p>
-
-<p>Nick turned with great difficulty and viewed Dud
-reproachfully. “You shouldn’t do that,” he said.
-“I don’t mind for myself. I’m strong. But Hugh
-here won’t get that before tomorrow morning at
-eleven-thirty-nine, and meanwhile he will puzzle
-that poor English bean of his and get faint and
-dizzy. You shouldn’t, Baker, you shouldn’t!”</p>
-
-<p>“Get what?” asked Hugh innocently.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy laughed and Nick nodded sorrowfully at
-him. “Listen, ’Ighness,” he explained patiently.
-“It was like this. I asked Baker if he carried a can-opener
-with him. Get that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Perfectly. And he said he could open it without
-one. What’s the joke?”</p>
-
-<p>Nick cast his hands aside hopelessly. “What’s
-the use? What’s the use?” he demanded. “Come
-on and let’s paddle. I’m sta-a-arved!”</p>
-
-<p>“How about getting back for supper?” inquired
-Jimmy. “It’s ’way after five now.”</p>
-
-<p>“We get lost or we have an upset or something,”
-rejoined Nick carelessly. “We discussed that, but
-I forget now just what we decided.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right for you,” objected Jimmy as he
-and Dud swung their craft around, “but what about
-us? We can’t all get upset?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” asked Nick, reaching for his paddle.
-“There’s plenty of water, isn’t there?”</p>
-
-<p>“But, I say, Nick,” remonstrated Hugh, “if we<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
-tell them we were upset we’ll have to get our clothes
-wet, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Um, that’s so. I hadn’t thought of that. Oh,
-well, never mind now. We’ll think up something
-going back.”</p>
-
-<p>“We might let the canoes get away from us and
-have to chase them,” suggested Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Perfect!” applauded Nick. “Baker, you have
-a great mind. Tell you what, my hearties. After
-we get to the willows we’ll carelessly let the canoes
-get away, see? Then we’ll catch ’em further downstream.
-They won’t ask us how <em>far</em> we had to chase
-’em. Even if they do we can be vague.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe we’d better try to get back on time,”
-said Hugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Squealer!” Nick, in the stern, reproachfully
-splashed Hugh’s back. “There’s no fun picnicking
-if you have to go home right away and eat another
-meal.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, all right, old chap,” agreed Hugh. “Only
-don’t throw any more water down my neck. It’s
-beastly cold.”</p>
-
-<p>There was silence then for a few minutes while
-the two canoes passed leisurely down the winding
-stream, side by side. Westward, the sun was dropping
-close to the greening summit of the low hills
-and the April day was almost at its end. There
-was a perceptible chill in the little breeze that crept<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>
-across the meadows and made catspaws on the quiet
-surface of the water. Early blackbirds were fluttering
-along the banks ahead of the canoes, uttering
-their creaky notes and simulating wild alarm. A
-fish leaped after a reckless insect and fell back with
-a startling splash, sending widening circles away in
-the amber glow. They didn’t paddle much, for
-there was enough current to bear them along.
-Jimmy frankly shipped his blade and watched the
-drops trickle. Nick’s voice came across the few
-yards of water.</p>
-
-<p>“Somebody will please say some poetry,” he requested.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“‘Now fades the glimmering landscape on the sight,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And all the air a solemn stillness holds,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Save where the beetle wheels his droning flight,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And drowsy tinklings lull the distant folds.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“‘Save that from yonder ivy-mantled tower</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The moping owl——’”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“That’ll be about all of that,” interrupted Nick.
-“If you don’t know anything cheerful, ’Ighness, dry
-up. ‘The moping owl’! Where do you get that
-stuff, anyway?”</p>
-
-<p>“Chap name of Gray wrote it,” replied Hugh
-meekly.</p>
-
-<p>“Thought so! Same fellow who did that ‘Elegy
-on a Country Cemetery,’ or whatever it is. He was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
-a jovial old Johnnie, wasn’t he? Bet you he’d have
-been swell company at a funeral!”</p>
-
-<p>“If you want something bright and sparkling,”
-offered Jimmy, “I know a nice little poem about a
-hanging! It begins——”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind how it begins! Want to spoil a
-perfectly good appetite? I say, you fellows, we’ll
-race you to the willows. Dig, ’Ighness!”</p>
-
-<p>Followed a spirited race around the last bend to
-where a group of willows leaned out over the shadowed
-water. Victory was claimed by both crews,
-and the matter was never finally settled, for Nick
-tactfully introduced the subject of supper in the middle
-of the argument and leaped ashore with the
-brown-paper package that contained the precious
-viands. Dried marsh grass and the paper from the
-bundle started a fire at the foot of one gnarled willow,
-and small pieces of driftwood, deposited by
-some winter flood, were piled on. Meanwhile Hugh
-made the discovery that they had failed to provide
-salt for the chops and that Nick had neglected to
-bring his folding cup. Jimmy helpfully reminded
-them that it was an ancient custom, or so he had
-read, to substitute gunpowder for salt when the latter
-was not to be had, and so <em>that</em> was all right!
-Nick called him an idiot and borrowed his knife to
-sharpen a stick on which to broil the chops. In
-payment Jimmy helped himself to a doughnut.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-<small>CONFESSION</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">A quarter of an hour later they were sitting
-around the bed of glowing coals busily
-concerned with the chops and bread and
-butter. The chops were decidedly underdone in the
-middle although beautifully crisp outside, and Nick
-came in for some criticism as a cook. But each of
-the four ate his share—it had proved rather a problem
-to divide three chops into four equal portions!—and
-so, if the proof of “the pudding is in the eating,”
-Nick was vindicated. They had also brought
-four potatoes to roast, but it was decided that life
-was too short and appetites too impatient to wait for
-them, and so Jimmy buried them in the ground,
-after carefully cutting them into quarters, and agreed
-to share the proceeds of the crop in September with
-the others, estimating the yield at two pecks. When
-they were thirsty they went down the bank, climbed
-into a canoe and leaned their heads into the river,
-thus, as Nick pointed out, getting not only a drink
-but a bath.</p>
-
-<p>The doughnuts, now diminished to eleven, were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span>
-served out as dessert, Jimmy, of course, receiving
-only two as his share, and were consumed with the
-peaches and cheese. Jimmy’s knife was rather the
-worse for its encounter with the can, but Dud kept
-his promise of opening the latter. They speared
-the peaches out with slivers, passing the can around
-the circle until nothing was left but the juice. Then
-they drank that. Afterwards they tossed the can
-into the river and threw pebbles at it until it floated
-slowly out of range. By that time it was fully twilight
-and the April evening was growing chill. So
-they built up the fire again and sat closer, huddling
-together for better protection from the little breeze
-that whispered through the dead grass and leafless
-boughs. For a while no one showed much inclination
-for conversation, but after a while Hugh let
-fall a murmured remark and presently they were
-talking desultorily of this and that, or, at least,
-Jimmy and Hugh and Nick were. Dud, as usual,
-had little to say, and finally Nick remarked:</p>
-
-<p>“Shut up, Baker, and let someone else get a word
-in. I never heard such a chatterbox.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy chuckled. “Isn’t he gabby?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Is he like this in the room, Jimmy?” Nick inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“N-no, and that’s the funny part of it. When he
-and I are alone together he’s just full of words;
-can’t get them out fast enough. In company, though,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>
-he’s horribly otherwise. I’ve been trying to break
-him of it, but”—Jimmy sighed lugubriously—“nothing
-doing.”</p>
-
-<p>“I dare say he believes in waiting until he has
-something to say,” offered Hugh. “Is that the idea,
-Baker?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know.” Dud laughed uncertainly.
-“I never seem to think of things when—when I’m
-around with a crowd.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you don’t call us a crowd, do you?” demanded
-Nick. “Come on now; loosen up; spring
-some of those scintillant remarks that Jimmy is always
-repeating. Know what he does, Baker? Well,
-he tells ’em around and sort of gets the credit for
-’em himself. Of course, he says you said them, but
-there’s a sort of—of inflection in his voice that gives
-you the idea that he put you up to it or—or something;
-if you know what I mean, as Hugh would
-say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Dud’s full of bright things,” said Jimmy
-carelessly. “Only the trouble is he doesn’t talk for
-publication.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you’re his press agent, eh?” laughed Nick.
-“I’ve often wondered——” He stopped. Then he
-laughed softly and Jimmy was aware that he was regarding
-him mirthfully in the half darkness.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the bally joke?” murmured Hugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, nothing. That is——” Nick fell into<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
-silence again. Then: “Most of the things Jimmy
-tells sound a whole lot like Jimmy,” he stated suggestively.
-There was a moment’s silence, broken
-at last by Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“They are Jimmy’s,” he said quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“Here, don’t try to put the blame on me!” Jimmy
-laughed loudly. “That’s a punk trick, Dud!”</p>
-
-<p>“Honest confession is good for the soul,” said
-Nick lightly. “Come across, Jimmy. What’s the
-idea? Everyone knows you’ve been touting Baker
-like anything ever since Christmas recess. What is
-it, a conspiracy?”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy laid a twig carefully on the fire. “I don’t
-know what you’re talking about,” he grumbled.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, you do, old man! We’re all friends
-together, you know, and nothing you say will be
-used against you. That all right, Baker?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t ask him,” replied Jimmy. “He’d tell you
-anything. He’s incapable of the truth. Say, what’s
-the matter with getting back, fellows?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, there’s plenty of time,” said Nick. “Joking
-aside, Jimmy, just what is the big idea?”</p>
-
-<p>“Go ahead and tell,” urged Dud. “I don’t mind.
-Besides, they won’t talk.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you!” said Jimmy in disgust. “What is
-there to tell? Well, all right, fellows. Only this is
-just between us, understand? It’s a little scheme of
-my own. You see, Dud here is—well, he’s just as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span>
-you see him now. He thinks big thoughts and he’s a
-nice boy, but he’s a graven image when he gets outside
-his room. Well, he likes fun as much as the rest
-of us but he doesn’t get it because he always thinks
-he isn’t wanted around. He—he’s shy, you know.
-At least, I suppose that’s it. I never was that way
-and don’t know much about it.”</p>
-
-<p>Nick and Hugh laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“So I said one day: ‘Dud,’ I said, ‘you do like I
-tell you and I’ll have you mixing in no time at all.
-I’ll make a regular feller of you, and it won’t cost
-you a cent. All you’ve got to do is what I tell you.’
-So Dud said: ‘Oh, pshaw!’ or words to that effect,
-but agreed to try the scheme. First thing I did was
-to make a list of fellows he ought to know. Then
-we started in and got acquainted. It was hard sledding
-because just as soon as I got him into a bunch
-of fellows he’d get tongue-tied. Well, I saw that
-that wouldn’t do and so I began to get off the good
-things Dud said——”</p>
-
-<p>“All of which you made up?” chuckled Nick.</p>
-
-<p>“No, not all, honest. Some I did, of course. Dud
-didn’t deliver the goods fast enough. And—well,
-that’s all there is to it. Perfectly legitimate, you
-see, although Dud has had his doubts now and then
-and threatened mutiny once or twice. We’ve got on
-fairly well. I haven’t exactly popularized him yet,
-but I haven’t done so badly either. Lately he’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
-been sort of kicking over the traces and refusing to
-pull, but we’re progressing slowly. Now you know
-all about it. If either of you chaps blab I’ll punch
-your head.”</p>
-
-<p>“So that’s it,” mused Nick. “Some scheme, eh,
-’Ighness?”</p>
-
-<p>“Rather!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad you know,” said Dud, embarrassed,
-“because it’s always seemed so silly for Jimmy to
-go around getting off a lot of funny jokes and crediting
-them to me, and then—then for me to just
-stand around and act like a dummy. I suppose we
-went into it as a sort of lark, or—well, I don’t
-know. I suppose it sounds funny to you chaps. But
-I wanted you to know.”</p>
-
-<p>“I knew already,” said Hugh. “That is, I guessed
-a long time ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Honest?” exclaimed Jimmy. “Say, that’s queer,
-because when I asked Dud which of the fellows he’d
-like to——”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut up, Jimmy!” implored Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Why? There’s no harm in it, you chump. I
-asked Dud who he’d like to know most and he
-said——”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Please</em> dry up, Jimmy!”</p>
-
-<p>“He said Hugh Ordway. That’s why we butted
-in on you one night a long while ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really? Well, you know, that’s quite a compliment,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>
-Baker. I’m afraid, though, you didn’t find
-me—what’s the word, Nick?”</p>
-
-<p>“Responsive?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, yes. Or appreciative, I guess; that’s better.
-If I’d known——”</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t expect Baker to tell you, did you?”
-asked Nick. “If you really wanted to know a fine,
-respectable member of the community, though,
-Baker, why didn’t you select me? I can’t understand
-you wanting to know this cold-blooded Britisher.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think we called on you next,” answered Dud,
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you? Well, thanks for small favors! But
-look here, Jimmy, it’s been fun for you, I guess, but
-you haven’t done Baker much good, you idiot! A
-fellow’s got to work out his own—his own salvation
-at school. No one else can do it for him. Now
-you let Baker hoe his own row, and——”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all you know about it,” replied Jimmy
-tranquilly. “Dud is on speaking terms with about
-every fellow worth knowing now and before I took
-him in hand——”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right, but I’d rather have a half-dozen
-real friends than be able to say ‘Hello’ to
-everyone. All Baker needs is to put his chin up and—and
-get out and—and mix!”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure!” agreed Jimmy sarcastically. “That’s all!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>
-But suppose he can’t do it? Suppose he hasn’t got
-the—the assurance? Then what? Why, that’s
-where I come in, do you see?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re an ass,” laughed Nick. “Baker, you
-take my advice and discharge your press agent.
-He’s no good. Anyway, you won’t need him any
-more.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s funny about being popular, or whatever you
-like to call it,” mused Hugh. “Funny, I mean, how
-some fellows are and some aren’t; and lots of times
-the popular chaps aren’t the ones you like best, if
-you know what I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very clear, ’Ighness; almost pellucid,” said Nick.
-“Just the same——”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think I ever wanted to be what you’d
-call popular,” interrupted Dud. “I never could be,
-I’m sure. All I did want was to know more fellows
-and not feel quite so much out of everything. Of
-course, being a lower middler I dare say it’s cheeky
-to want to mix with fellows in the upper classes——”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t see it that way,” said Nick. “Very commendable
-ambition, I’d call it. Shows a desire to
-seek—er—refinement and wisdom, and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, let’s get back,” said Jimmy. “I’m freezing
-to death. Besides, you chaps may say what you like,
-but I know that without my skillful handling of the
-case Dud wouldn’t be sitting here tonight listening
-to you talk a lot of poppycock, Nick. Results are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
-what count, and as a—a press agent, if you like, I’ve
-produced results. Now someone tell me I haven’t!”</p>
-
-<p>“If you call this a result,” began Nick doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I do! Dud has shown you two chaps
-that, whether he’s a brilliant conversationalist or
-isn’t, he’s a perfectly human sort of a chump, and
-you both like him a little better than you did yesterday,
-and tomorrow Dud can go around and mention
-to a few fellows that last evening he picnicked
-with Ordway and Blake on the river, and the fellows
-will think, ‘Now if Baker is in with Ordway and
-Nick Blake he must be all right,’ and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be a rotter, Jimmy!” begged Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Rotter nothing! It’s so, isn’t it? Mind, I don’t
-say you will tell about it, but you could. You
-won’t, as a matter of fact, because you don’t play
-the game for all it’s worth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Honest, Jimmy, you’re enough to sicken a fellow,”
-said Nick. “If I thought you believed what
-you preached, or practiced it——”</p>
-
-<p>“I do,” insisted Jimmy stoutly.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t,” contradicted Dud. “Come on home
-before you talk any more nonsense.”</p>
-
-<p>“I deny the nonsense,” replied Jimmy good-naturedly,
-“but I’m perfectly willing to go home. I’ve
-been trying to for half an hour. Help me up, someone.
-My legs are stiff with the cold. I say, we
-mustn’t forget to let the canoes get adrift, fellows.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, rot,” said Hugh. “If we’ve got to lie, let’s
-lie decently.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why lie at all, then?” asked Dud. “Let’s just
-say that we wanted to have supper on the river, and—and
-had it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bad idea,” applauded Nick. “Who knows
-but that we’ll get off easy that way? Faculty will
-be so surprised when we don’t offer any of the usual
-excuses that they’ll probably forget to put us on
-pro. Anyway, let’s try it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll try anything once,” murmured Jimmy, as he
-stretched his numbed legs. “I wonder, though, if
-we can see our way back? Bet you we’ll run into
-the bank every two minutes! Where the dickens is
-that canoe? I thought we left it right here. And
-where’s——” Jimmy stopped and turned toward
-the others approaching. “Say, fellows, I know an
-awfully good joke,” he drawled.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” demanded Nick suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p>“Get ready to laugh. All set? Well, <a href="#i_fp144">the canoes
-have gone!</a>”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_fp144">
- <img src="images/i_fp144.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_147">“‘The canoes have gone!’”</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-<small>MAROONED!</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">“Gone!” exclaimed Hugh. “My word! But
-how——”</p>
-
-<p>“Cut out the comedy, Jimmy,” said Nick.
-“Aren’t they there, really?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you come and have a look. Maybe your
-sight is better than mine. I haven’t my glasses with
-me and so, of course, I may be mistaken, but nevertheless
-and notwithstanding——”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll be switched!” muttered Nick, holding
-a flaring match aloft in the darkness. “Now how
-the dickens——”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess,” offered Dud, “that getting in and out
-of them to drink pushed them off.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the jolly story,” agreed Hugh. “But
-they were there the last time I went down.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who took the last drink?” asked Jimmy.</p>
-
-<p>“You did, didn’t you? Did you see both canoes
-then?”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy turned to Nick in the gloom and considered.
-At last: “I didn’t notice,” he confessed.
-“It was pretty dark then——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But I say,” interrupted Hugh, “what are we
-going to do, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Beat it home, ’Ighness,” responded Nick, “if
-you know what I mean. There’s no use looking for
-the pesky things tonight. I dare say, anyway, they’ll
-run aground somewhere before they get very far.
-What we’ve got to do is foot it back. How far is
-it, Jimmy?”</p>
-
-<p>“About a mile and a half,” answered Jimmy
-gloomily, “and most of the way across this plaguey
-marsh. Unless we strike across that direction and
-find the Yarrow road.”</p>
-
-<p>“That would be worse than looking for the
-canoes,” said Nick. “Best thing to do is follow
-the river as well as we can. Come on!”</p>
-
-<p>“I say, if I fall in you might sing out so I’ll know
-which way to swim,” suggested Hugh. “Tomorrow
-I’m going to buy an anchor for that canoe, Nick;
-that is, if I ever find it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gee!” muttered Jimmy.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” asked Nick.</p>
-
-<p>“I was just recalling the interesting fact that the
-canoe we were in belongs to young Twining, the little
-beast, and he will be likely to be quite peevish if
-it’s lost.”</p>
-
-<p>“How inconsiderate!” laughed Nick. “He’s a
-junior, isn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right then. You can point out to him
-that it’s a great honor for him to have his canoe lost
-by an upper middler. Besides, it’ll turn up in the
-morning. Oh, thunder!”</p>
-
-<p>“I should say so!” agreed Hugh, scrambling out
-of the ditch he had followed Nick into. “’Ware
-water, fellows!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud and Jimmy escaped that time, but during the
-next half-hour or so they had their share of misfortunes.
-There was no moon and the stars were partly
-hidden by light clouds and it was impossible to see
-more than a pace ahead at any time. They never
-actually tumbled into the river, but they frequently
-stumbled down the bank and only saved themselves
-by prompt laying hold of whatever they could reach,
-as when Nick, walking too close to the edge and
-finding himself slipping, promptly clutched Hugh’s
-leg and nearly doubled the catastrophe! It seemed
-more like an hour than a half-hour since they had
-left the willows before they caught sight of the old
-bridge looming indistinctly above them. After that
-the rest was easy, for they had only to break their
-way through the bushes that clad the embankment
-and foot it along Crumbie Street to the corner of the
-campus, their path now illumined by the infrequent
-street lights. Under the first of them they stopped
-to take stock. Every one of them was wet to the
-knees or above and plastered here and there with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>
-the nice, dark, rich mud of the marshes. It was almost
-eight o’clock and any hope they may have entertained
-of reaching their various rooms undetected
-had long since vanished. Nick sighed philosophically
-as he turned to continue his journey, his shoes
-<em>squish-squashing</em> at every step.</p>
-
-<p>“Anyway,” he said, “when we tell them we lost
-the canoes and had to walk home they’ll just have
-to believe us! That is the one bright spot in the surrounding
-gloom.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve always wondered,” mused Jimmy, “how it
-would feel to be on probation.”</p>
-
-<p>“You ought to know by this time,” chuckled Dud.
-“You’ve been there twice already.” For some reason,
-Dud seemed less troubled by the impending disaster
-than the others.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy sniffed. “I don’t know, Mr. Baker, where
-you get your information, but you have been sadly
-misled. The other occasions to which you doubtless
-allude——”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut up, Jimmy,” warned Nick. “And, say,
-we’d better part company about now. You and
-Baker beat it up here and Hugh and I’ll amble
-careless-like over to River Street. I hate to
-attract attention, I’m that modest. Nighty-night!”</p>
-
-<p>“Same to you,” replied Jimmy. “And thanks for
-a pleasant party. Although I must say that your<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
-arrangements for getting us home were a bit—ah—primitive!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t mention it! Farewell, brothers. We
-meet in prison!”</p>
-
-<p>Whether by design or accident, Mr. Russell’s
-study door was wide open as Dud and Jimmy
-quietly slipped from the stairway well into the
-first-floor corridor of Trow, and, although they
-didn’t think it advisable to stop to pass the time
-of day with the instructor, they stopped just the
-same.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Logan, is that you?” It was “J. P.’s” voice.
-The two boys retraced their steps and halted at the
-doorway.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” replied Jimmy brightly.</p>
-
-<p>“And Baker, too, I see. Well, young gentlemen,
-where have you been? We missed your bright
-and smiling faces at supper tonight.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Russell seemed to be in a pleasant mood,
-though one couldn’t always be certain from appearances,
-and so Jimmy, as spokesman, smiled his most
-winning smile and answered truthfully: “In the
-mud, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed? Yes, I see. All the evidence tends to
-corroborate your quaint statement. But why in the
-mud, Logan?”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy hesitated an instant and then decided to
-make a clean breast of the matter. Mr. Russell<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
-heard him through, smiling pleasantly. And when
-the tale was told he said: “A most interesting
-narrative, Logan, on my word. You show a nice
-sense of dramatic construction. But really, boys,
-I’m rather afraid trouble will come of this. You
-know there’s a rule about being in bounds by six
-o’clock on Sundays, eh? By the way, you brought
-your fellow miscreants back with you, I trust? I
-refer to Ordway and Blake.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir; they’re back,” replied Jimmy dispiritedly.
-Mr. Russell’s tone now wasn’t so reassuring.</p>
-
-<p>“And they, too, were—ah—in the mud?”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy grinned. “You’d think so if you saw
-them! They fell right in a ditch once!”</p>
-
-<p>“Really?” Mr. Russell smiled quite broadly.
-“Well, I suppose it’s all a grand lark with you
-youngsters, eh? Dear, dear, what a thing it is to
-be young! Get those wet things off, boys, and stay
-in your room for the rest of the evening. Possibly——”
-He caught himself up. Then: “We’ll
-hope for the best. Hm! Better look to your ways
-for awhile, though, both of you. How about that
-little matter we spoke of recently, Baker? Any—ah—any
-developments?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir. I—I quit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wise youth! Go your ways, young gentlemen.
-Ponder on your sins and”—Mr. Russell took<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
-up his book again—“refresh your souls with the
-sweet communion——”</p>
-
-<p>The rest was only a mumble. Dud and Jimmy
-stole noiselessly away.</p>
-
-<p>Fortune was good to them on the morrow. They
-were assembled, a sober quartette, in Dr. Duncan’s
-office after breakfast and gravely reprimanded and
-told that only a diligent application to studies could
-wipe out the stain of their guilt. Promises of unfaltering
-labor being at once forthcoming from each,
-they were dismissed with a final admonition to mend
-their ways and, they thought, a sigh of relief from
-the principal, never at his best in the rôle of Stern
-Authority.</p>
-
-<p>After a ten o’clock recitation, Nick and Jimmy
-hurried up the river in Nick’s canoe and recovered
-the lost craft, Twining’s being found lodged against
-the bridge timbers and Hugh’s a half-mile up the
-stream, entangled in a sunken branch. That, to
-all appearances, ended the affair, but in reality
-there was one important consequence that was lost
-sight of, which was the acceptance of Dud into the
-circle in which Nick Blake and Hugh Ordway revolved.
-It didn’t happen all at once, and for a
-week or two Dud himself didn’t realize it, but at
-the end of that period he suddenly discovered himself
-sitting with Hugh and Nick and Bert Winslow
-and Ted Trafford in Nick’s room very gravely discussing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
-such important subjects as The Value of the
-Sacrifice Hit, Overhand versus Underhand Pitching,
-When to Use the Pinch-Play and The Duties
-of a Third-Baseman on a Bunt to His Territory
-with a Man on Second. Perhaps Dud didn’t take
-a very large part in the discussion, but when he had
-anything to say he found voice to say it, and a few
-remarks from him on the subject of underhand
-pitching were well received. But the main thing
-was that he was there, not on sufferance but, as it
-seemed, quite naturally and as a matter of course.
-He surreptitiously pinched himself, found he was
-actually awake and then, for a moment, was visibly
-embarrassed.</p>
-
-<p>I don’t pretend that either Hugh or Nick would
-have been broken-hearted if Dud hadn’t been present
-that evening, nor shall I attempt to guess just
-how much of the friendliness they displayed was
-due to sympathy. On the other hand, they were
-more than willing to have him there, and, when
-they thought of it, were at some pains to make him
-feel welcome. Ted Trafford took his cue from his
-host, and Bert Winslow’s attitude was one of careless
-toleration. He still looked on Dud with suspicion.
-Jimmy Logan couldn’t foist any lemon on
-him, as he once eloquently put it to Hugh! Still,
-he didn’t actually dislike the younger boy, and, save
-for an occasional mildly sarcastic comment occasioned<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>
-by what he called Dud’s cheek in trying to
-squirm his way into upper class company and the
-first team, he treated the latter decently enough.
-The evening ended with ginger-ale and grape-juice,
-mixed in equal proportions in a pitcher, the scant
-remains of a pineapple cheese and some crackers.
-Ted Trafford and Dud went back to Trow together,
-rather silently since Ted was sleepy and Dud had
-nothing important to say, and parted in the corridor.
-Dud reflected afterwards that Trafford might
-have said, “Come and see me some time, Baker,”
-or something to like effect. But he didn’t. He
-merely nodded sleepily, yawned and murmured:
-“Night!” Dud was a bit disappointed, and without
-cause. Ted Trafford, who was a big, good-hearted
-senior, would have issued that invitation had
-it occurred to him that the younger boy would have
-set any store by it. As it was, the thought didn’t
-enter his mind. If Baker was a friend of Nick and
-Hugh, why, that was all there was to it. “Any
-friend of my friend,” is the way Ted would have
-put it.</p>
-
-<p>Followed a week bare of real incident. Dud, like
-the other members of that picnic party, applied himself
-doggedly to his lessons in an effort to get square
-with the Office again and turned out each week-day
-afternoon for baseball practice. Sometimes he
-pitched for the scrubs and more often his work consisted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>
-of serving them up to the batters at the net
-and, afterwards, being relieved by Kelly or Brunswick,
-practicing batting himself. The first game of
-the season came off that Wednesday afternoon, with
-the second team as the opponent. It wasn’t much
-of a contest. Errors swelled the score of each team
-and all sorts of delays slowed the game up so that
-there was time for only seven innings. Dud took
-no part, the twirling being performed by Ben Myatt
-for three innings and by Nate Leddy for the rest of
-the game. The second team pitchers were severely
-handled and the first won by the decisive score of
-17 to 7.</p>
-
-<p>If there was any special sensation in that contest
-it was in the sudden eminence of “Hobo” Ordway
-as a batter. Hugh, going into the line-up in the
-fourth inning, came twice to bat and on each occasion
-smashed a long, clean two-bagger into left-center.
-In the field he had only three chances, but
-he took them all. It was only in throwing in that
-Hugh was weak. Jimmy went to right field for
-three innings, made one rather brilliant running
-catch of a long fly, failed to get a hit and retired
-in favor of a pinch hitter in the sixth. After that
-Wednesday game life settled down again rather
-monotonously, but not uninterestingly, for Dud. On
-Saturday the team journeyed away and played Portsmouth
-Grammar School and won handily against a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span>
-weak adversary. Dud didn’t accompany the team as
-a member nor did he go along with the half-hundred
-ardent rooters. Neither did Jimmy. Mr.
-Russell in refusing their request for leave, intimated
-that the afternoon might be spent far more profitably
-in study. “J. P.” was kindly but firm. Doubtless
-his advice was well-meant and worthy of consideration,
-but I regret to say it was not followed.
-Instead, the two boys went trout fishing in Three
-Gallon Brook, a mile back of school. Dud used
-flies and got not even a nibble. Jimmy, with a plentiful
-supply of angle-worms, landed a four-inch sunfish.
-As no one, so far as they were aware, had
-ever caught, seen or suspected the presence of a
-trout in Three Gallon Brook, they were not disappointed.
-The only feature of the excursion not
-counted on occurred when Dud slipped from a rock
-during the effort to free his line from a snag and
-landed in three feet of extremely cold water. Fortunately
-that happened after Jimmy had landed
-his catch and so they were about ready to go home,
-anyway. Jimmy carried the sunfish back to school
-dangling from an alder branch. That is, it dangled
-until they reached the school grounds. Then it was
-placed tenderly in Jimmy’s coat pocket and smuggled
-to Number 19. When he returned from supper
-he brought salt, and the fish was fried over the
-gas—with the door and transom carefully closed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
-and both windows wide open—and consumed in a
-peculiarly flabby and underdone condition. Jimmy
-partook with gusto, or pretended to, but Dud did
-scant justice to the repast. Jimmy said he was jealous.
-Gus Weston happened in before the penetrating
-aroma of the sunfish had been entirely dissipated
-and asked anxiously what the trouble was. Whereupon
-Jimmy stopped trying to dislodge a bone that
-had worked its way in back of his tongue and described
-movingly the size, ferocious aspect and fighting
-qualities of that fish, recounting with much detail
-the long, exhausting struggle incident to its capture.
-And Weston diplomatically vowed that he believed
-every word of it; and had either of them a rattling
-good detective story to lend him?</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV<br />
-<small>DUD SERVES THEM UP</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Between Dud and Starling Meyer existed
-an armed neutrality. They passed with covert
-glances, avoided each other when possible
-and doubtless caused some disappointment to a
-certain element in the school who had been for
-several weeks eagerly expecting a fracas between
-the two. The boxing lessons had been abandoned,
-since, as Jimmy pathetically pointed out, there was
-no use getting ready for something that couldn’t
-happen. The gloves were returned to their owners,
-and, robbed of self-defense as a principal interest in
-life, Jimmy gave his attention to playing baseball.
-It occurred to him at about this time that it wouldn’t
-look well for Dud to make the first team, even as a
-substitute, and for him to get chucked back to the
-second nine. So the Monday after the Portsmouth
-Grammar School game Jimmy buckled down to
-make good. Right field seemed the only position
-open to him, and even to earn that he would have
-to beat out Harold Boynton, and Boynton, while
-not an exceptional fielder, was a pretty fair hitter.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span>
-Therefore it behooved Jimmy to get busy and learn
-to “lam ’em out” a bit better. His first step was to
-attempt to bribe Brunswick and Dud to pitch easy
-ones when he was at the net. Failing at that, he
-sighed and set out to conquer by labor. Jimmy always
-preferred to take short cuts. The longest
-way around might suit some fellows, but he took
-it only as a last resort. Having, however, made up
-his mind to the circuitous journey, Jimmy was
-capable of settling down to the task and seeing it
-through.</p>
-
-<p>On Wednesday the second team was again defeated,
-and on the following Saturday Grafton High
-School, supported by a large and noisy mob of pennant-flaunting
-boys and girls, engaged the attention
-of the first team. The batting order that afternoon
-gave a line on what was likely to be the final selections:
-Blake, ss; Murtha, 2b; Parker, cf; Winslow,
-3b; Ayer, 1b; Ordway, lf; Boynton, rf; Gordon, c;
-Myatt or Leddy, p. There might be, probably
-would be, changes later on in the arrangement of
-the players for batting purposes, but it was generally
-conceded that the team as made up that day
-was practically as it would be six weeks later. It
-was likely that Ben Myatt would occasionally be
-played in center field, for Ben, aside from being a
-remarkable pitcher, was a steady outfielder and a
-good hitter. There were some critics who sneered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
-at Hugh Ordway’s presence on the nine, hinting
-at favoritism, and it must be acknowledged that
-Hugh accomplished little that afternoon to vindicate
-his selection for the middle-garden position. Hugh
-had a bad day, missing one easy fly and failing to
-reach first base once. His muff in the third inning
-let in two runs and made the outcome doubtful
-until the sixth, when a single by Guy Murtha
-with one down, a sacrifice by Parker, a screeching
-two-base hit by Bert Winslow and an error by
-third-baseman landed two tallies for the home
-team.</p>
-
-<p>The score stayed at five to five until the ninth,
-when the home team started a rally. Bert Winslow,
-first man up, was passed. Neil Ayer laid a bunt in
-front of the plate, sending Bert to second and going
-out himself at first. Mr. Sargent sent Milford to
-bat in place of Hugh and Milford came through
-with a clean single that landed him on first. Bert,
-however, was out at the plate by inches only. With
-two gone, a second pinch-hitter was sent to the rescue
-in the person of Gus Weston. As a pinch-hitter
-Gus was ordinarily something of a joke, but on this
-occasion he turned the laugh on High School’s
-pitcher, landing on the first offering and sending it
-down the third-base line for a hit that advanced
-Milford to second. Gordon followed with a pop-fly
-that should have been an easy out, but which second<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-baseman and shortstop managed between them to
-let fall safe.</p>
-
-<p>With bases full and Nate Leddy up—Myatt had
-gone through five innings and been sent to the
-showers—Mr. Sargent took a chance and let Nate
-go to bat. Evidently the latter was instructed to
-wait out the pitcher, for he stood idly by while two
-strikes and two balls went across. Then the coach
-called him back and Jimmy Logan was sent in to
-distinguish himself. Anyone but Jimmy would have
-suffered from nerves, I fancy, for it is something
-of an ordeal to step up to the plate with two out,
-bases filled and the pitcher’s score two-and-two.
-But Jimmy approached the task with beautiful assurance.
-Some said he even swaggered a little.
-Perhaps he did, and perhaps that swagger was the
-undoing of the opposing pitcher. At any rate, all
-Jimmy had to do was dodge two wild deliveries and
-trot, smilingly, to first, while Milford ambled over
-the plate with what proved eventually to be the winning
-run. Nick Blake brought the inning to an
-end a moment later when he sent a long fly to the
-outfield.</p>
-
-<p>Grafton High School begrudged that victory and
-showed it, at the time by the half-hearted way in
-which they cheered their successful rival, and later
-by sending a challenge for another contest on High
-School grounds. The challenge was accepted and a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
-vacant date a week and a half later was awarded
-her. Since faculty rules prohibited the team from
-playing away from the school on Wednesdays during
-April and May, a special dispensation was asked
-for and obtained, and the game came off in due time
-and High School went down in decisive defeat, the
-score at the end of the seven innings played being
-9 to 2 in favor of Grafton.</p>
-
-<p>Before that, however, Leeds High School had
-administered the first beating to the Scarlet-and-Gray
-to the tune of 3 to 0. It was a good game and
-Grafton showed up well in all departments except
-that of hitting. Leeds’ pitcher was a hard proposition
-and only four scattered hits were registered
-by Grafton. On the other hand, Leddy, who started
-in the box for his team, was found for six hits in
-four innings, one of them a three-bagger, and although
-Ben Myatt, who relieved him, held the enemy
-well in hand, the mischief was already done.
-In the eighth and ninth innings that day Mr. Sargent
-used every available player in his determined
-effort to stem the tide of disaster, even Dud getting
-a chance to show his batting prowess and rapping
-a liner straight into the hands of shortstop as his
-contribution to the cause. Jimmy, called into the
-fray in the eighth, managed to get hit with an in-shoot
-and so, luckily, earned his base. It was Starling
-Meyer who came nearest to accomplishing anything<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span>
-in the batting line, for Star, after watching
-two good ones pass him, landed on what was palpably
-intended for a wide one and managed to drop
-it behind first base some three inches inside the
-foul line. Unfortunately there was no one on the
-bases to take advantage of the miracle.</p>
-
-<p>As a result of the Leeds game there followed, beginning
-on the next Monday afternoon, a series of
-batting practices that for the rest of the week, barring
-Wednesday and Saturday, left no time for line-ups.
-There also followed a change in the batting
-order and a slight shakeup of the team. Bert Winslow
-took Guy Murtha’s place as second batter, Guy
-following him and Parker slipping into fourth position.
-Gordon and Boynton also changed locations.
-Milford was tried out at first and for the next three
-weeks he and Neil Ayer had a very lively struggle
-for the first sack. Eventually Ayer came into his
-own again, although had batting ability alone entered
-into it Milford would undoubtedly have won
-the place. Jimmy got several opportunities to show
-what he could do in right field and Starling Meyer
-received some recognition in center. Southlake Academy
-was defeated on the nineteenth at Southlake,
-Gus Weston pitching for once a remarkably steady
-game until he was taken out in the seventh. By that
-time the contest was on ice and Coach Sargent sent
-Brunswick in for a couple of innings of experience.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-Experience came his way, too, to the tune of four
-hits for a total of six bases, but luckily only one run
-resulted.</p>
-
-<p>Track and field sports were by now engaging
-much of the school’s interest. The team had held
-its handicap games the last of April, had defeated
-St. James Academy the week before and was at
-present very busily at work getting into condition
-to meet Mount Morris, Grafton’s principal rival,
-on the twenty-sixth. Over on the big oval ribbon
-of gray-blue cinders the twenty-odd youths who wore
-the scarlet-and-gray stripe across their chests or who
-hoped to wear it after next Saturday, sprinted and
-ran and hurdled, while about the jumping pits a
-dozen or fifteen others strove mightily with shot
-and hammer and vaulting-pole or worked zealously
-at the jumps. Nowadays the audience at the first
-team diamond was smaller each afternoon, and one
-heard much learned talk of dual records, and the
-names of Zanetti and Tray and Keyes and Yetter
-and Musgrave and many others pursued one from
-breakfast to bedtime. “Dinny” Crowley divided
-his time as best he could between Track Team and
-second nine, while Davy Richards, at last really
-in his element, loomed large in importance. Davy
-had a reputation as a trainer of track and field talent
-to vindicate and Davy in the process of vindicating
-was a fine imitation of a tyrant. Even Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>
-Sargent forsook baseball for a space each day and
-gave his attention to the weight men and jumpers,
-for “Pete” in his day had held a college record for
-two years with the hammer and had, as a side issue,
-leaped his twenty-two feet-odd for the honor of the
-Blue. So for one week at least baseball took a back
-seat at Grafton and the real heroes were the slim-waisted,
-bare-legged chaps in fluttering white trunks.</p>
-
-<p>The ball team met Middleboro High School on
-Wednesday afternoon and had no trouble in winning
-a 14 to 3 contest that offered little in the way
-of excitement or suspense to the listless spectators.
-It was an intolerably hot day for May and audience
-and players alike drooped. For Grafton, Nate
-Leddy started the twirling, but after his teammates
-had scored eight runs on the opponents in five innings
-Nate ambled off and Joe Kelly tried his hand.
-Joe was not a success, for the enemy took most
-kindly to his slants, and after facing two innings
-of trouble Joe likewise retired and Dud was given
-his first taste of hostile batsmen.</p>
-
-<p>With the score 12 to 3, Dud was not expected to
-kill himself, and Ed Brooks, who had taken Gordon’s
-place behind the plate with the advent of
-Kelly on the mound, was all for an easy life. But
-Brooks was reckoning without Dud’s ambition to
-win a place on the list of battery candidates. Dud
-had warmed the bench and twirled his glove during<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
-so many games that this opportunity presented itself
-to him as Heaven-sent and he resolved to use all
-the skill he knew and all the control he possessed.
-For a fortnight he had been experimenting with his
-curves again and, at Ben Myatt’s suggestion, had
-even attempted a side-arm delivery that looked
-promising. He had little fear of being punished
-much, but he went to the mound and picked up the
-ball determined to deny any sort of a hit to the
-opponents. That is why he shook his head so frequently
-at his catcher, much to that gentleman’s
-surprise, and why when Middleboro’s tail-enders
-faced him in that first of the eighth he worked so
-carefully and cunningly that one after another the
-three last batters on the list retired without even
-fouling-off a ball! The Middleboro pitcher stood
-like a graven image while Dud shot two fast ones
-over the outer corner of the rubber, wasted one for
-luck and then ended the inning with a slow ball
-that floated as perfectly over the center as though
-it had been rolled on wires! For the first time during
-the game the somnolent spectators showed enthusiasm
-as Dud dropped the ball and made for
-the bench. Brooks squeezed in beside him and
-thumped him on the knee.</p>
-
-<p>“Great work, Dud!” he said. “We made ’em
-look like pikers, didn’t we?”</p>
-
-<p>“You!” laughed Parker, sitting next him. “What<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
-did you do, Eddie? Baker scratched every signal
-you gave him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Me?” asked Brooks sarcastically. “Oh, nothing!
-I just held him, that’s all! You get up there
-and put your mitt against some of Dud’s fast ones
-and see how simple it is! Say, Dud, it would be
-fine if we could send them down in the next inning
-the same way, eh? Only thing is, that fellow Dollard,
-who bats second, is a pretty good hitter. He’s
-made two already out of three times up.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the first fellow like?” asked Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Chapman? I guess that’s his name. Plays
-third. Oh, he’s not dangerous. He wants his base.
-Sneak over the first one for a strike and then tease
-him a couple of times with high ones. He’ll go
-after them every time. But Dollard’s not so easy.
-He waits for the good ones.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then we’ll have to see that he doesn’t get them,”
-replied Dud simply.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you can keep on working the corners
-the way you did last inning you’re all right. That
-ump has his eyesight with him. If he didn’t you’d
-get the worst of it lots of times.”</p>
-
-<p>Grafton tallied twice more in her half of the
-eighth and then Dud went back to the mound and
-faced the small and stocky third-baseman. But he
-wasn’t hard. Once Dud thought he had lost his
-wish, but the ball rolled foul before it reached the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
-third sack. After that there was no more trouble.
-Chapman, if that was his name, bit at a high one
-and missed it badly, let a ball go by and then again
-swung too late at a fast one that crossed the plate
-and retired disgruntled to the bench.</p>
-
-<p>But Dollard was more canny. Dollard had to
-have good ones. Dud tried him on two that looked
-fair until they broke, but the batter treated them
-with contempt. Then Dud tried him out with a
-slow one and caught him napping. Dollard fouled
-the next one into the stand and the score was two-and-two.
-Brooks signaled for a straight one, hoping
-to finish him off, but Dud shook his head. Instead,
-he changed his position in the box a mite,
-wrapped his fingers about the ball, wound up,
-stepped forward and swung his arm wide at the
-height of his elbow. Brooks had to jump for that
-ball, for it proved a cross-fire indeed, and there was
-a perceptible moment of hesitation before the umpire
-reached his verdict. But when he did he said
-“<em>You’re out!</em>” so decisively as to make up for the
-hesitation. Dollard voiced objections all the way
-to the bench and let it be known by the manner in
-which he slammed his bat to earth that he was totally
-out of sympathy with that umpire! But the
-crowd cheered the strike-out and jeered the victim
-and the next batsman stepped to his place.</p>
-
-<p>Then, for once, and for the first time since he had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>
-profited by Ben Myatt’s advice, Dud went back to
-his hooks and that third batter swung and dodged
-and swung again while Dud brought the game to
-an end with exactly four deliveries!</p>
-
-<p>Two days later there came the final cut in the
-first squad and six disappointed candidates were
-turned over to the second team. One of the six
-was a pitcher, but his name was not Baker. It was
-Kelly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI<br />
-<small>THE TRACK MEET</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">It was Saturday afternoon and Dud, squeezed
-into a seat on the little grandstand between
-Roy Dresser and Ernest Barnes, was watching
-the Track and Field Meeting of Grafton and Mount
-Morris. The baseball crowd had gone off to play
-the Rotan College Freshman Team and by what
-Dud considered a horrible error of judgment on
-the part of the coach he had not been taken along.
-Of course, he hadn’t expected to pitch even one
-inning against the college nine, but he did think
-that Mr. Sargent might have included him among
-the substitutes. How was a fellow to learn if he
-didn’t watch the team play? And to add to his
-sense of injury, Jimmy had actually accompanied
-the nine to play right field! Of course that was
-only because Boynton was entered in the athletic
-meet and someone had to take his place, but it didn’t
-make Dud any more reconciled. There were moments
-when he almost wished that the team would
-run up against the defeat that was predicted for it!</p>
-
-<p>Still, those moments were of the past, for during<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
-the last half-hour Dud had been far too excited
-over the events taking place before his eyes to
-recall the injustice done him. The sprints, the half-mile,
-the high hurdles, the shot-put and the high
-jump had been decided and the rivals were within
-two points of each other, Mount Morris leading
-with 28. Just now nine eager youths, four wearing
-the green-and-white of Mount Morris and five the
-scarlet-and-gray of Grafton, were awaiting the pistol
-at the start of the quarter-mile and Dud’s eyes were
-riveted on them. Warren Yetter, on whom Grafton’s
-hopes rested, was the second man from the
-pole and, oddly enough, Kirkwell, the Mount Morris
-crack, was at his right elbow. Dud could see them
-talking to each other smilingly, but for all of that
-a bit constrainedly. Then the nine bodies poised,
-there was an instant’s silence and the sharp report
-of the starting pistol sounded on the still air. The
-runners leaped away, jockeyed for positions in the
-first dozen strides and swept past the stand like
-frightened deer. Dud was on his feet, and so too
-were all those around him. Inarticulate sounds
-made a background for the strident shouts and yells
-of encouragement. Along the grass a Mount Morris
-youth, an official of some sort, raced beside the
-runners, dangling a white sweater with a broad
-green band on it, yelping and urging. Now they
-were at the first corner, Kirkwell leading and Yetter<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span>
-a yard behind him. Tenney, of Grafton, strove to
-pass Yetter on the outside and was followed closely
-by a Mount Morris runner. At the next corner the
-first four were strung out and hugging the rim:
-Kirkwell, Yetter, Tenney and Number 54. Dud
-sought hurriedly for his program to discover the
-identity of Number 54, realized the next moment
-that he didn’t care, swept his gaze back across the
-field quickly and joined his voice in the roar that
-swept from the stand. Yetter was sprinting gamely
-now. Only a yard separated him from Kirkwell.
-Tenney was certain of third place. The finish was
-only a few yards away. Yetter crept up and up!
-The shouts increased. The stand was a pandemonium.
-The officials, packed about the finish line,
-were waving and shouting, too, all but the judges
-and timers. Yetter and Kirkwell swept to the line
-side by side! Or did they? Wasn’t the Mount
-Morris man a little ahead as they disappeared behind
-the group there? The tumult had quieted,
-but now it broke forth again and the shouting came
-from the other end of the stand. Across the field
-a half-dozen jubilant Mount Morris fellows were
-tossing their hats in air and signaling victory!</p>
-
-<p>“That was a peach of a finish,” said Roy Dresser,
-with a sigh of relief. “Warren almost had
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>“That puts them another point ahead,” said Dud,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-grudgingly crediting Mount Morris with 5. “Gee,
-I thought Yetter was supposed to have the four-forty
-cinched!”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess he ran it inside his best time,” replied
-Roy. “Kirkwell was better, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>The announcer was bawling forth the result:
-“Four-Hundred-and-Forty-Yards-Run! Won by C.
-J. Kirkwell, Mount Morris! W. H. Yetter, Grafton,
-second; A. L. Tenney, Grafton, third. Time,
-52⅗ seconds!”</p>
-
-<p>“Wow!” exclaimed Roy. “That’s a fifth better
-than the dual record! I told you Warren was going
-some!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud tried to glean comfort from the fact, but
-those five points stared at him obstinately. They
-were putting the low hurdles across the cinder for
-the final heat, while at the end of the oval lithe
-forms sprang in air to waft themselves over the bar
-nearly ten feet above the ground or to go, doubled
-up like an animated jack-knife, flying into the brown
-loam of the jumping pit. Behind the stand the
-hammer-throwers were still busy. Dud watched
-Jim Quinn launch himself upward with his long pole,
-straighten a tense body and drop across the trembling
-bar and sighed with relief. The pole vault
-might decide the meeting and so far Quinn was more
-than holding his own.</p>
-
-<p>Musgrave and Keyes, of Grafton, and Torrey<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-and Capper, of the rival school, crouched far up the
-track. At the finish a handkerchief waved. The
-four figures set, straightened and leaped away from
-their marks and the sound of the pistol followed
-them. Down they came, stride, stride, stride, leap;
-Torrey gaining between hurdles, Keyes pulling him
-back at the timbers; Musgrave and Capper falling
-behind but fighting gamely for third place. On and
-on to the growing roar of the excited watchers,
-hurdle after hurdle falling behind. Torrey well in
-advance now, but Keyes pushing him for every ounce
-of strength in his body. Two more hurdles left.
-Torrey is over! Keyes is over! A mad race for
-the final obstacle, Torrey again gaining on the flat,
-but Keyes, head back, feet twinkling, only a yard
-behind. Up again and over, almost side by side
-at the next stride. Then the dash to the string,
-Torrey, arms upthrown, breaking it a stride ahead of
-Keyes! Mount Morris shouts wildly and Grafton
-joins, for Ned Musgrave has beaten out his rival
-handily and again the points go five to Mount Morris
-and four to Grafton, and Mount Morris had
-been conceded first and third places!</p>
-
-<p>Dud is a trifle comforted as he sinks back to his
-seat and scratches agitatedly with his stubby pencil.
-Barnes, munching chocolate philosophically, asks
-the score.</p>
-
-<p>“Thirty-eight to thirty-four,” replies Dud.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span></p>
-
-<p>“We’re a goner then.”</p>
-
-<p>“We are not! Wait till the mile run comes off!
-Foster Tray will win that at a walk, and we may
-get second place too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and Mount Morris will win the broad jump
-and the hammer.” Barnes pushes the last of the
-chocolate between stained lips and wipes sticky fingers
-on a dingy handkerchief. “Say, I wonder
-how the baseball game is coming out.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll get licked. Here come the milers.
-Who’s the fellow in the blue and yellow bathrobe,
-Roy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Milton. He ought to do pretty well. He ran
-fifth last year and they say he’s a lot faster now.
-I don’t see——”</p>
-
-<p>“The bar is now at nine feet, ten and one-half
-inches!” announces a voice, and they turn their gaze
-to see a Mount Morris youth rise in air, straighten
-and come hurtling to earth with the bar on top of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“So sorry,” murmurs Roy Dresser. “Hope he
-does it again next time.”</p>
-
-<p>The megaphone artist trots into the middle of
-the arena and faces the stand, a slip of paper in
-his hand. The voices are stilled as he places the
-scarlet horn to his mouth. “At the end of the fifth
-inning——”</p>
-
-<p>Deep silence now!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span></p>
-
-<p>“—At Rotan the score stands: Grafton 5——”</p>
-
-<p>An outburst of cheers, quickly stilled.</p>
-
-<p>“—Rotan 11!”</p>
-
-<p>A moment of gloom, broken by ironical cheers
-from the Mount Morris end of the stand.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you know about that?” asks Dud wonderingly.
-“They must have hammered Myatt for
-fair! Eleven to five! Gee!”</p>
-
-<p>“What I want to know,” observes Barnes, “is
-how we got five!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud observes him in faint disgust. “Oh, I suppose
-they gave them to us! Don’t you think we
-can play ball at all?”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t think we could hit that fellow Gibbs,”
-Barnes answers carelessly. “He’s a wonder, you
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, even wonders have their off days. I
-guess Myatt had one today! Gee, eleven runs!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m just as well pleased I didn’t go, Baker. The
-crowd will be dead sore when they get back. It
-costs nearly two dollars to make that trip.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve just simply got to get this meet,” mutters
-Dud. “We can’t get beaten all around today!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve known it to happen,” says Roy unfeelingly.
-“Here they go! Must be two dozen of ’em!”</p>
-
-<p>In truth there were exactly fourteen, about evenly
-divided between the two schools. They hustled
-away confusedly and went to the corner weaving in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
-and out, slowing their strides. Four times around
-a quarter-mile track is no pleasure jaunt and they
-knew it. Foster Tray was well in the rear of the
-bunch and he stayed there as long as the pace suited
-him, but at the finish of the first lap he had crawled
-up to third place, with Towne, of Mount Morris,
-and Milton, of Grafton, leading in that order. The
-field was already strung out, for the pace had been
-fairly fast for the tyros. In the backstretch a Mount
-Morris youth sprinted from the center of the first
-bunch and swept into the lead, no one disputing him.
-But he lasted only to the beginning of the homestretch
-and when the leaders came past the stand
-again Towne was first and Tray second. Milton
-was back in fourth place, behind a teammate. Then
-came three Mount Morris fellows and, after them,
-a straggling line of pluggers.</p>
-
-<p>The time was shouted to them as they went by,
-but there was too much shouting from the stand
-for Dud to hear it. At the next corner Milton
-hustled past the third runner and fell in behind Tray,
-and Grafton cheered that indication of pluck. But
-by the time the backstretch was once more ahead
-Towne and Tray were yards to the good and both
-Milton and the man behind him were losing ground.
-There was no sign of weariness shown by either of
-the leaders. Towne was running a fine, steady race
-and seemed well within himself. Tray, not so pretty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-a runner, looked to be tiring, but he kept his position
-to the fraction of an inch, a single stride behind
-his rival, his spikes hugging the rim closely. Around
-the corners they came, into the stretch, to a chorus
-of cheers and shouts and shrill yells of advice, entreaty
-and encouragement. The gong clanged its
-announcement of the final lap. Fifteen yards or so
-behind the two leaders came Milton, fighting doggedly
-to keep ahead of a Mount Morris youth but
-losing gradually. By this time the track showed
-tired contestants everywhere. Towne and Tray
-were already lapping the rear-guard.</p>
-
-<p>Stride for stride, the green ribbon and the scarlet
-passed the turns and reached the backstretch.
-There was still no sign of a change of pace, no altering
-of the steady strides. Now they were half-way
-through the final circuit, moving together across
-the green turf like a single machine. But suddenly
-cries leapt from the watchers. Towne had started
-his sprint! Already a yard separated the two! And
-now it was a good two strides! They were rounding
-the third corner, heads back, digging for all they
-were worth! Tray was falling behind! The spectators
-in the stand were on their feet, hands outstretched
-and beckoning, lungs roaring forth shouts
-of triumph or of despair. Into the stretch the two
-white-clad figures swept. Surely Tray had pulled
-up again! He had! He was running stride for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>
-stride with the Mount Morris man! He was gaining!
-Why, there was nothing to it but Tray! What
-a sprint! Two yards between them now, three—four!
-And Tray still opening up daylight and the
-finish growing nearer and nearer! The stand was
-emptying, the audience piling down to crowd the
-track at the finish line. It was difficult to see now,
-but there was a head bobbing up and down a few
-yards away, and another——</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Track! Track! Keep back there! Give them
-room, fellows!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Grafton! Grafton! Grafton!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Tray! Tray! Tray!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Come on, Towne! Mount Morris! Mount
-Morris!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>You can do it! Come on! Come on!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Then a veritable babel of sound as a white-clad
-runner stumbles into sight at the end of the throng,
-is caught by ready arms and borne staggering to
-the turf. Grafton cheers fill the air. Another runner
-subsides on the grass. Cries of “<em>Track! Track!
-Let them finish! Everyone off the track!</em>” And
-then Milton, white of face, dragging his unwilling
-feet beneath him, fighting for breath, crosses the
-line a scant two yards ahead of a Mount Morris
-youth and plunges forward on his face. After that
-they jog in one by one, but no one sees them, for the
-race is over and Grafton has won first place and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span>
-third and added eight much-needed points to her
-score!</p>
-
-<p>Dud, separated in the confusion of that rush
-down from the stand from his companion, waited to
-hear the announcement of the time, hoping to learn
-that Foster Tray had made a new record for the
-mile. But four minutes and fifty-four seconds was
-not sensational, and so he followed the crowd to
-the pole-vault. The broad jumpers had just finished
-and Mount Morris had won first place, leaving four
-points for Grafton, and the figures stood 46 to 44,
-the Green-and-White still two points ahead. The
-hammer-throw had not yet been heard from, Dud
-learned, but Quinn was sure of first in the pole-vault.
-Dud joined the ranks of the anxious onlookers
-and watched while Mount Morris’s talent
-tried and failed to equal Jim Quinn’s ten feet and
-one inch, watched while Hanson of Grafton struggled
-for third place in the vault-off between him and
-Joy of Mount Morris and grieved when he lost out.
-And then, while Dud was figuring and calculating
-and staring at the unwelcome result which showed
-Mount Morris still a point ahead, a wildly leaping
-junior shot around the stand bringing an end to
-suspense.</p>
-
-<p>Grafton had won first and second place in the
-hammer-throw! Driver had thrown a hundred and
-thirty-nine feet and four inches! And Gowen had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
-done almost as well! And Mount Morris’s best
-was only——</p>
-
-<p>But Dud didn’t care what Mount Morris’s best
-had been! He was scrawling a big black 8 on his
-program and shouting to no one in particular:</p>
-
-<p>“What do you know about that? Grafton, 57;
-Mount Morris, 51! Well, I guess! Six points
-to the good! Oh, we’re not so bad, not so bad!
-Fifty-seven to fifty-one! What do you know about
-that?”</p>
-
-<p>No one heard him, I fancy, for there was a great
-deal of noise about that time.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII<br />
-<small>BASEBALL, TENNIS AND OYSTERS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">There was yet nearly three-quarters of an
-hour before supper time and Dud, still
-elated and excited over the track victory,
-turned his steps to River Street and, skirting the
-school grounds, swung west and made for the station.
-The ball team, unless it missed its connection
-at the Junction, would be in at a quarter to six. Dud
-was not alone in his journey to the station, for the
-carriages bearing the Mount Morris athletes passed
-him half-way along the shaded village road and
-several boys, fortunate youths living nearby who
-had procured leave of absence over Sunday, were
-trailing along, suit-cases in hand. Dud witnessed
-the departure of the Mount Morris track team and
-the fellows off for home and then, seated on a baggage-truck,
-watched the shadows creep down the
-hillside across the tracks and thought of a great
-many things. He speculated on what had happened
-at Rotan to result in Grafton’s defeat, wondered
-whether by any stroke of fortune the Scarlet-and-Gray
-had redeemed herself in the later innings and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span>
-then tried to imagine himself in the box for Grafton,
-facing those doughty Rotan freshies and mowing
-them down one-two-three! He couldn’t quite
-visualize the scene, however, and gave up with a
-sigh. Then he wondered how long it would be before
-Mr. Sargent would let him start a game, and
-what would happen when he did! And at that instant
-there was a whistle far down the track, the
-few loiterers came to life along the platform and
-the baggage man requisitioned his truck.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie was one of the first off the train and was
-all for returning to school in the barge until Dud
-reminded him that he had walked all the way over
-to meet him and didn’t propose to pay any fifteen
-cents to ride back. Whereupon Jimmie good-naturedly
-set out with his chum on foot.</p>
-
-<p>“Twelve to seven,” he answered in reply to Dud’s
-request for the final figures. “What was the matter?
-Why, nothing much, except that we couldn’t
-hit that pitcher of theirs and they slammed Myatt
-all over the lot in the third. Why the dickens
-Pete didn’t yank him out I don’t know. Maybe it’s
-just as well he didn’t, though. I guess they’d have
-battered Leddy something brutal. Those dubs sure
-can hit the pill, son!”</p>
-
-<p>“How did you get on?” asked Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Rotten, thanks! I muffed a peach of a fly and
-let two runs cross, worse luck! It was in that awful<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>
-third. The sun got square in my eyes just at the
-last moment. I had the old thing sighted nicely
-until I had to drop my hands to make the catch.
-Then it went plum through ’em. There were three
-on bases and so two of them scored. The other
-one could have, too, if he’d had any sense, for it
-took me about ten seconds to find the ball after I
-muffed it. But the fellow slowed up at third and
-by that time it was too late.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you hit any?”</p>
-
-<p>“I got one, and it was a corker. I’d have had
-two bases on it if Blake hadn’t held me up at first,
-the chump! I wasn’t awfully strong with the stick,
-Dud, but I got a base every time I went up!”</p>
-
-<p>“You did? How, for pity’s sake?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the first time I rolled one in front of
-base and the catcher threw to second to get Ordway.
-He didn’t, though, for Hobo’s a regular flash on the
-bases, and we were both safe. The next time I got
-pinked in the arm, the next time I hit between short
-and third—some little sizzler, that was, old scout!—and
-the last time I worked Mr. Pitcher for a
-pass.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gee, you’re a lucky chap,” said Dud enviously.</p>
-
-<p>“Lucky? Nothing of the sort. Brains, son,
-brains! Besides, do you call it lucky to have a
-long, easy fly go right through your fingers? Huh!
-Luck didn’t do anything for little Jimmy today!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>
-Say, how’d the meet come out? Heard we’d won it,
-but what was the score?”</p>
-
-<p>They talked track meeting until the campus was
-reached and then Dud returned to the subject of the
-ball game. “They tried Star Meyer in center for
-a couple of innings; Parker got his leg spiked and
-Star wasn’t so bad. Made a pretty catch of a long
-one that went nearly to the fence and managed to
-beat out a bunt in the ninth. I suppose the first
-thing I know I’ll have to down him as well as Boynton.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud looked surprised. “Do you think you’ve
-got a show, Jimmy?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” asked the other, bristling. “Boynton’s
-not much better than I am. He muffs ’em, too,
-now and then. Of course, he’s hitting better, but
-I’ll wager he doesn’t get to first any oftener. But
-if they go and lug Star into the business, why,
-that’s different. I can’t win out against the whole
-school!”</p>
-
-<p>“But you say they played Star in center. And
-you’re after right, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m after anything I can get, son. A fellow
-who can play center can play right or left, can’t
-he? An outfielder’s just an outfielder, you see, and
-you can’t play more than three of ’em at a time—and
-get away with it. Just now there are about six
-of us, all trying for three jobs. I wish Star Meyer<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>
-would go soak his head and not butt in on baseball!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud laughed. “You might suggest it to him,
-Jimmy. Who pitched besides Myatt? Did Brunswick
-get in?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody. Ben went the distance. They couldn’t
-touch him much after that rotten third. Got a
-couple of hits in the fifth and about one each inning
-after that. They made their last run in the
-eighth with two down. A fellow cracked a two-bagger
-down the left foul-line and tried to steal
-third, and did it because Winslow let the ball drop.
-Then the next fellow hit an easy one to Ayer and
-Myatt didn’t cover base in time and the chap on
-third scrambled in. I guess it was just as well Pete
-didn’t derrick Ben, after all, because he certainly
-pitched a corking game after that third inning. Gee,
-but I’m hungry! Wish I was at training table,” he
-added wistfully. “They get steaks there!”</p>
-
-<p>They went over to Nick Blake’s room after supper
-and found Hugh and Bert and Guy Murtha
-there, and there was much baseball talked and many
-“might-have-beens” discussed. Dud, as a non-participant,
-had little to say, and Hugh, who might
-have talked a good deal since he had rather distinguished
-himself by his work at the bat and on the
-bases, was almost as silent. After awhile, on the
-excuse of showing Dud a new book, Hugh led the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
-other off upstairs and they settled down full-length
-on the window-seat, beside the open casements, and
-had a fine, chummy talk. Dud could talk well
-enough when there was but a single listener, and tonight
-Hugh found the younger boy far from dull.
-By the time Bert Winslow came in, yawning, they
-had discovered numerous bonds of sympathy such as
-mutual likes and dislikes and an intense desire to
-make good at baseball. Hugh, entering the game
-as the veriest tyro and with a deal of doubt and
-not much enthusiasm, was now a rabid “fan” and
-almost amusingly eager to make a name for himself.</p>
-
-<p>Bert, I think, wanted to go to bed, but was too
-polite to start while there was a visitor present, and
-so toppled into a chair and joined the conversation.
-Dud realized that Bert didn’t care very much for
-him and so tried to get away a few minutes after
-the other’s advent, but Hugh wouldn’t have it.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, sit down and behave yourself, Baker! It
-isn’t late. I say, Bert, Baker and I have been discovering
-that we have lots of things in common, if
-you know what I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really?” Bert stifled a yawn. “Such as what,
-’Ighness?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, baseball, for one, you know. Tennis, too.
-And oysters——”</p>
-
-<p>“Oysters!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes. You see I happened to think that a dozen
-nice cold raw oysters would taste corking. They
-would, wouldn’t they?”</p>
-
-<p>“Out of season, you chump.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never! That’s only prejudice, old chap. Well,
-anyway, oysters was one thing—<em>were</em> one thing, I
-should say. English is beastly confusing at times,
-eh? And then we found that Baker knew my part
-of the country, down Maryland way, you know.
-He comes from Delaware.”</p>
-
-<p>“So would I,” laughed Bert.</p>
-
-<p>“Delaware,” replied Dud, smiling, “is small but
-select. Where’s your home, Winslow?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pennsylvania; Shrevesport. Know it?”</p>
-
-<p>Dud shook his head. “Some of my folks lived
-in Pennsylvania once, a good many years ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a good state. They were foolish to leave
-it,” yawned Bert. “Hope they didn’t have to?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, in a way I believe they did. You see
-one of them was an officer in the American Army,
-and when Howe occupied Philadelphia they thought
-it might not be healthy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” said Bert. Hugh smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“Still,” continued Bert, “they needn’t have gone
-to Delaware, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think they did just then. A couple of
-them were with Washington at Valley Forge. I
-think the women went to New Jersey until Philadelphia<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
-was evacuated again. I don’t know just what
-happened then. We’ve been living in Delaware
-only since my grandfather’s time. He moved there
-from Philadelphia to improve his state.”</p>
-
-<p>“Improve his state? You mean he was—was
-hard up?” asked Bert suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t say. I’ve been told it was to improve
-his state. That’s all I know.”</p>
-
-<p>Hugh laughed. “You began it, Bert! Honors
-are even. As judge of the debate, I declare it a
-draw.”</p>
-
-<p>Bert smiled slowly. Then: “All right, Baker,”
-he said amiably, “you win! Fact is, I don’t know
-anything about Delaware or a thing against it.
-Sorry if I trod on your toes.”</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t, Winslow; I moved them out of the
-way,” laughed Dud.</p>
-
-<p>After the latter had taken his departure and the
-two roommates were preparing for bed, Hugh heard
-a grunt from the opposite chamber. “What’s troubling
-you?” he called.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing,” was the answer. “I was just thinking
-that that kid isn’t such a fool, after all, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” replied Hugh, winking at himself in the
-glass, “I rather fancy he had you, old top.”</p>
-
-<p>Bert’s only response was another grunt, but it
-sounded assenting.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-<small>DUD GOES TO THE RESCUE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Grafton had now played seven contests
-with outside teams and had won five and
-lost two. Six games remained; seven in
-case it became necessary to play a third game with
-Mount Morris. On the whole the nine had showed
-average strength. The pitching had been good and
-defensively the team had more than held its own
-against contenders. But both Coach Sargent and
-Captain Murtha would have been anything but displeased
-if the batting had been heavier or had even
-shown promise of improvement. The remaining
-games were all, with the exception of that with Yarrow
-High School, scheduled just before the second
-Mount Morris contest, hard ones. St. James Academy
-especially was looked on as a difficult opponent,
-and Lawrence Textile School as scarcely less dangerous.
-Both teams boasted pitchers of reputation,
-and unless Grafton’s stick work improved she was
-not likely to pile up much of a score against either
-visitor. Of course, it could be argued that a team
-with a perfect defense is in no danger of defeat, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>
-on the other hand, a team with no power of attack
-can’t win games. And Guy Murtha, being captain
-and in his last year at school, naturally wanted very
-much to come off victor in those remaining contests.
-Fortunately, the St. James and Lawrence Textile
-games were to be played on Lothrop Field, a circumstance
-which would aid to some extent. The
-meeting with Corliss College was to be played away
-from home, but Corliss—or Careless, as the Graftonians
-liked to call it—while strong, was not the
-problem that either of the other two was. As for
-Yarrow High—well, that was only a practice game
-to fill in between the first Mount Morris engagement
-on the ninth of June, which was a Saturday, and
-the second one, which fell on the following Friday,
-the Mount Morris Class Day. In case each of the
-ancient rivals secured a game the play-off would
-be at Grafton the next day, the teams remaining
-after the close of the schools to settle the controversy.</p>
-
-<p>On the Monday succeeding their defeat at Rotan
-the players were given a particularly strenuous afternoon
-of it. With the exception of Gordon Parker,
-whose leg still protested at the injury done it by
-a Rotan baseman’s spikes, all the players were out
-and not one was spared, unless we exempt Ben
-Myatt. Dud put in a hard afternoon, for he pitched
-six innings for the scrubs and was fairly well hammered.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>
-Still, he managed to keep the hits of the
-regulars so well scattered that Mr. Sargent was satisfied
-to leave him on the mound until, in the seventh,
-it became advisable to let a pinch hitter take
-his place. After that Weston finished up for the
-scrubs and was so erratic that the one-run lead
-handed over to him by Dud soon vanished, the regulars
-winning out by the score of 9 to 6. When Dud
-heard the result in the Field House later he tried
-to be sorry for Weston, but the effort wasn’t very
-successful. Dud, you see, was already entertaining
-visions of pitching a half-game or so against Mount
-Morris and thus winning his letter. Not that the
-letter part of it interested him so much, however.
-Just the glory of being in a Mount Morris game
-would be enough for him. Of course, he couldn’t
-figure out as yet just how that desirable result was
-to come about. There was Ben Myatt for the first
-game and Nate Leddy for the second, or the other
-way around, with Weston to take a hand if needed.
-As for Brunswick, Dud wasn’t worrying about him.
-Brunswick was keeping along at about the same
-pace he had begun the season on, neither worse nor
-better, while Dud could honestly assure himself that
-he was improving from day to day, or, at least,
-from game to game. And he didn’t have to rely
-wholly on his own verdict, for others had seen
-the improvement and told him of it. Ben Myatt<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>
-had praised him warmly, Captain Murtha had had
-a good word more than once and Mr. Sargent had
-let Dud see that he wasn’t blind to the latter’s growing
-ability.</p>
-
-<p>But Dud was forced to presuppose a third game
-in the big series before he could see himself turning
-back the Mount Morris hitters, and a third
-game might not materialize. Of course, if Gus
-Weston kept on blowing up every time he went into
-the points, why, that would improve Dud’s chances
-a whole lot, and it was this thought that made it difficult
-for Dud to grieve over the loss of that game
-to the scrubs! With Weston out of the way——</p>
-
-<p>But Weston was an old hand, had been pitching
-for three years and was just as likely to steady down
-again the next time and send his stock soaring again.
-All that was to be done, reflected Dud, was to hope
-for the best—which, from Gus Weston’s point of
-view, was the worst!—and keep right on getting
-better and better every day. He didn’t wish anyone
-ill luck, but if only Leddy might have a slight
-attack of measles or something and Gus Weston develop
-a bum wing—well, Dud was forced to admit
-that it would be Providential!</p>
-
-<p>But the measles didn’t afflict Leddy nor did Weston
-complain of trouble in his arm, and practice went
-on each day and Dud pitched or didn’t pitch but
-always stood in front of the net and took his turn<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>
-at “looking like a silly goat,” to use his own expression,
-while he tried to connect with the puzzling offerings
-of Leddy or Weston or Brunswick.</p>
-
-<p>St. James descended like a wolf on the fold on
-Wednesday and took Grafton’s measure without a
-great deal of trouble. To be sure, the game went
-to the fifth inning before St. James solved Leddy’s
-slants and by that time Grafton had herself assailed
-the opposing twirler for three hits and scored one
-run. But when the visitors did take to Leddy’s ways
-they took enthusiastically. Nate got through the
-fifth with difficulty, some brainless base-running on
-the part of the enemy aiding him out of a tight place,
-but in the sixth, after the bases were filled with
-only one out and two runs already across, he was
-retired from service and Myatt went in to save the
-day. And Myatt might have done it had he been
-backed by errorless fielding, but Nick Blake booted
-one in the seventh and Ayer fumbled a heave a minute
-later and two more runs came over. Grafton
-managed to add to her score in the eighth, increasing
-it to two when Winslow cracked out a two-bagger
-after Nick Blake had been passed to first and
-had stolen second. But that was the last of the
-home team’s scoring, while, just to clinch the game,
-St. James broke through with a couple of hits, one
-good for two bases, and added a fifth run in the
-ninth. Grafton tried everything she knew in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
-effort to start a rally in the last half of that inning,
-but the best she could do was to get Ayer as far
-as third base, at which station he remained while
-Hugh Ordway reached first on a weak infield hit
-that bounded erratically, and Jimmy, batting for
-Boynton, hit into a double, his luck for once deserting
-him. So 5 to 2 was the final score, and it pretty
-fairly represented the merits of the two teams. St.
-James had been there with the hits when hits meant
-runs and Grafton had failed to show any attack
-worthy the name. In view of results, it was cold
-comfort to know that, outside two errors and a
-wild pitch by Leddy, she had played an excellent
-defensive game. Results were what counted and
-another defeat had been scored up against Grafton.</p>
-
-<p>That game came off on the last day but one in
-May, and on Friday June came in with a spell of
-torrid weather. The heat combined with the knowledge
-of impending final examinations tended to rather
-take the starch out of fellows, and the ball players
-were no exception. Practice became half-hearted, in
-spite of Guy Murtha’s impassioned pleas and scoldings,
-and when Saturday dawned things looked bad
-for Grafton as regarded that Lawrence Textile contest.
-Most of the fellows were pulling their feet behind
-them and wearing worried frowns. The mercury
-climbed up to eighty-four at noon that day and
-what breeze had made life bearable in the forenoon<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>
-died away entirely. Lawrence arrived shortly after
-one o’clock and, after getting a taste of conditions in
-the region of Grafton, willingly consented to a postponement
-of the start of the game from two-thirty
-to three o’clock. The delay, however, was of not
-much avail, for at the half-hour it was just as hot
-as it had been at two-thirty, and the spectators went
-to the field armed with newspapers and fans and all
-sorts of devices to shield their perspiring countenances.</p>
-
-<p>Coach Sargent again altered the batting order.
-Parker, while probably able to get in, was not used
-and Jimmy took his place in center field. Hugh
-Ordway went to third place on the list and Jimmy to
-seventh. Ben Myatt started the game, with Gordon
-behind the bat. Lawrence’s twirler was a tall,
-able-looking chap of about twenty years, unless appearances
-were deceptive, named Fairway. Nick
-Blake was responsible for an excruciating pun when,
-during Grafton’s third time at bat, he confided to
-Jimmy that it looked as if that pitcher was in a fair
-way to beat them. Jimmy charitably assumed that
-Nick was affected by the heat. Up to that time
-neither team had presented more than three men at
-the plate in an inning, the two pitchers going very
-smoothly and working the corners for all they were
-worth. But in that last of the third the luck broke
-for the home team.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span></p>
-
-<p>Jimmy, surviving Nick’s pun, chose a likely bat
-and took his stand. Being first man up, it was required
-of Jimmy that he secure his base by any
-method short of robbery. Fairway sneaked the
-first one over on him and teased him with a slow
-ball, which Jimmy wisely let pass. After that an
-attempt to bunt resulted in a foul down the third-base
-side. With two against him, Jimmy took a
-firmer grip of his bat and bent all his energies to
-the task. Naturally, Fairway could afford to waste
-a ball, and did so, and it was two-and-two. Jimmy
-took heart. The next one looked good and he swung
-briskly. Another foul resulted, the first-baseman
-almost making the catch. Another offering curved
-up to him and again he laid his bat against it and
-again it went foul. Fairway dragged his sleeve
-across his perspiring face, had a good look at the
-signals and unlimbered. The ball shot in, knee-high
-and looking good, and Jimmy started his swing.
-But something warned him in time and he recovered
-just as the ball took a most deceptive drop in front
-of the plate.</p>
-
-<p>“Ball—three!” called the umpire. Jimmy grinned
-and hitched his trousers. From the bench came encouraging
-and approving cries. Jimmy stepped out
-of the box and wiped his damp hands in the dust.
-Then he wiped them on his trousers. Then he
-stepped back with bat poised.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span></p>
-
-<p>“All right, Fairy!” called the catcher. “Right
-over now, old man!”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy’s smile broadened. “Fairy” was such an
-amusing title for that tall, husky youth down there!
-Then the ball was singing up to him, his bat was
-swinging at it, there was a <em>slap</em> and Jimmy was legging
-it to first. But again he had fouled, and again
-the Fates that rule over the lives of such as James
-Townsend Logan came to his rescue. The catcher,
-running back with gaze set skyward, hands poised
-for the descending ball, managed at the last instant
-to get the sun’s rays fairly in his eyes. The ball
-struck his mitten, bounded out, was juggled and
-dropped to the sod. A shrill shout of joy arose from
-the Grafton bench. The catcher angrily sped
-the ball to third and looked for his mask in a
-very disgruntled manner. Jimmy held it out to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Hard luck,” said Jimmy consolingly. “Next
-time I’ll put it where you can catch it.”</p>
-
-<p>The Lawrence backstop grunted.</p>
-
-<p>That trifling incident proved psychological, as
-many trifling incidents do in baseball, and Fairway’s
-next attempt at a strike passed a foot wide of the
-base, and Jimmy, dropping his bat, trotted to base
-amidst the plaudits and laughter of the spectators.
-The coachers got busy on the instant, Captain Murtha
-at first and Bert Winslow at third, and sent a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>
-veritable fusillade of interesting remarks across the
-diamond.</p>
-
-<p>“On your toes, Jimmy! Take a lead! Watch
-his arm! Look out! Up again! At a boy! Here
-we go! Go on! Go on! <em>Who-oa!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy, hooking a leg back to the bag, grinned,
-climbed to his feet again, shook the dust from his
-togs and inched along the base line. Fairway gave
-him up after two attempts and turned his attention
-to Pete Gordon. Gordon was there to sacrifice, of
-course, and the safest way to do it was to bunt.
-But Pete was the slugging kind of a hitter, the sort
-who doesn’t very frequently connect, but slams out
-wicked liners or screeching flies when he does.
-Bunting, therefore, was not his strong suit, and his
-two attempts failed, the first one going foul and the
-second resulting in a harmless swing against the
-atmosphere. After that, with two strikes against
-him and only one ball to his credit, Pete was not
-dangerous, and when he finally hit one it arched
-amiably into center fielder’s hands and Jimmy retraced
-his steps to first.</p>
-
-<p>Myatt, however, did better, for Ben landed
-against the second delivery and whizzed it over the
-pitcher’s upraised glove and safely into the field,
-and Jimmy slid to second unhurriedly. Nick Blake
-went out on strikes, and it was Bert Winslow who
-came through with the longed-for safety, rapping<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>
-the ball straight down first base line and a yard to
-the right of the baseman’s best reach. Jimmy
-scampered home, Myatt reached third, and
-Bert managed to get to second ahead of right
-fielder’s throw. But that ended Grafton’s chances
-for the time, for the best Hugh could do was to
-lift a fly to short left that shortstop got after a
-run.</p>
-
-<p>At one to nothing the game went to the fifth,
-Myatt holding the enemy harmless in the fourth and
-Grafton failing to reach first base in her half. But
-in the first of the fifth a fumble by Winslow put a
-runner on first. Myatt struck out the next two batsmen
-and Grafton’s adherents began to breathe easier.
-But Fairway, the Lawrence twirler, who had
-fanned ingloriously the time before, took a liking to
-Myatt’s first offering and poked it straight between
-Blake and Winslow. Result, an eager youth on third
-casting longing eyes at the plate! Also, an equally
-anxious runner on second, Fairway having gone on
-to that sack during the throw to the plate.</p>
-
-<p>Myatt started in with the head of the opposing
-batting list by putting himself promptly in the hole,
-pitching three remarkably poor balls one after another.
-Then he got two strikes across, neither of
-which was offered at, and tried to follow it with a
-third. But the heat was beginning to tell on Myatt,
-and the next attempt, while it looked pretty good<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span>
-from the bench, was adjudged a ball and the bases
-were full.</p>
-
-<p>“Weston,” called Mr. Sargent, “get a ball! You,
-too, Baker.”</p>
-
-<p>Possibly the sight of the two relief pitchers and
-Brooks trudging off to warm up put Myatt on his
-mettle, for he fairly stood the next batsman on his
-ear, fanning him with just four deliveries while the
-Grafton sympathizers cheered and yelped. Three
-disappointed runners left as many bases and turned
-sadly to their positions.</p>
-
-<p>Grafton tried hard to add to her score in her half
-of the fifth, but Fairway was quite master of the situation.
-The sixth passed without a thrill, even if
-Lawrence did manage to work a pass and get a
-scratch hit. Nothing came of it, for Blake, Murtha
-and Ayer pulled off a double and stopped the rampage.
-For Grafton, Winslow, Ordway and Murtha
-went out in order.</p>
-
-<p>The seventh witnessed Myatt’s Waterloo. For
-several innings he had been in bad shape owing to
-the heat, and when he faced the first batsman in the
-seventh it was not difficult to see that he was working
-on pure nerve. When the first man had found
-him for a single and he had pitched three balls to
-the second, Murtha stepped over and held a conference.
-Myatt shook his head and Bert Winslow
-joined them. Over behind third Gus Weston and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>
-Dud had taken up their work again, and Will
-Brunswick had been sent to join them.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a job open for somebody,” remarked
-Brooks, throwing the ball to Gus. “Ben’s quitting.”</p>
-
-<p>The three pitchers, their backs to the bench, never
-turned, but three pairs of ears were, you may be
-certain, very alert. It was Weston who was summoned,
-and Gus, throwing aside his sweater, which
-he had worn tied across his chest, lolled onto the
-field. Dud watched him enviously, first because he
-had been chosen to relieve Myatt and secondly because
-he was able to approach the honor with such
-a wonderful assumption of indifference!</p>
-
-<p>Weston pitched his trial deliveries, rather wildly
-as a matter of fact, received the intelligence that the
-batter had three balls to his credit and no strikes, and
-instantly supplied him with a fourth! The Lawrence
-coaches and the Lawrence players on the bench
-hooted and jeered joyfully as the batsman walked to
-first, the runner on first jogged down to second.
-But that was what might have been expected, that
-pass to the batter, for it is no mean task to go to
-the mound with the score three against you and keep
-the batsman from walking. Dud had to acknowledge
-that as he and Brunswick and Brooks retired
-to the thin strip of shade afforded by the little house
-in which were stored the tennis nets.</p>
-
-<p>But this was not Weston’s day. To Grafton’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span>
-dismay, Gus very promptly passed the third man,
-working only one strike against him, and behold, the
-bases were filled and there were no outs! So suddenly
-can the fortunes of battle shift in the game of
-baseball! Brooks, his gaze on the bench, jumped
-to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on, fellows!” he said. “At it again!
-Peter signaled.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gee,” murmured Brunswick, “I don’t see much
-use warming up a day like this! I haven’t a square
-inch on me that’s dry!”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind your troubles, Willie; shoot ’em!”
-responded Brooks, grinning as he drew his mitt on.
-“One of you guys will have to go in there in about
-two shakes. They’re holding the game now for
-you to limber up your old arms. Shoot ’em, Dud!”</p>
-
-<p>Over on the diamond Captain Murtha and Bert
-Winslow and Nick Blake had surrounded the unfortunate
-Weston, Pete Gordon, ball in hand, standing
-guard at the plate. A faint breeze came up from
-the river and awakened murmurs of relief from
-the sweltering spectators. Lawrence demanded that
-the game go on, half a dozen impetuous youths
-leaping from the bench to confront the umpire. The
-group in the center of the diamond melted and Weston
-held up his hand for the ball. Gordon tossed
-it back to him, knelt and signaled.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Gus, now?” he encouraged. “Make<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span>
-’em good, old man! Let’s get this one! Slide ’em
-over!”</p>
-
-<p>The infielders crept up to short-field, the runners
-capered and took daring leads and the coachers
-shouted themselves hoarse. Gus wound up and shot
-the ball away. It dropped prettily across the base,
-but the batter refused it and the umpire upheld him.</p>
-
-<p>“Ball!” announced the latter. Weston, hands on
-bent knees, stared as though dumfounded. Then he
-straightened, turned on his heel and cast his arms
-derisively apart. Lawrence jeered enjoyably.</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty good, Gus,” called Gordon. “Never
-mind, though. Let’s have it this time!”</p>
-
-<p>But Weston, though he took time and pains, shot
-one in that sent the batsman staggering out of his
-box and sent Guy Murtha to the mound. “That’ll
-do, Gus,” said Guy. “This isn’t your day, old man.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s so beastly hot,” grumbled Weston.</p>
-
-<p>Murtha nodded non-committingly and raised
-a hand. At the bench Mr. Sargent turned to Nate
-Leddy. “Better warm up,” he said. “We may
-need you. Send Baker in.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX<br />
-<small>BACK TO THE BENCH</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">The coach met Dud at third. He appeared
-smiling and unworried, but his characteristic
-trick of jumbling his words betrayed the
-fact that he was not as calm as he looked.</p>
-
-<p>“Think you can go in there and pull us out of this
-mess, Baker?” he asked. “Take all the time you
-want and set your gignals right—I mean get your
-rignals sight—er—well, go ahead, my boy, and show
-what you can do!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud made no answer, which was perhaps just as
-well since had he replied truthfully to the coach’s
-question he would have been forced to say that he
-was quite certain that he couldn’t do anything of
-the sort! Instead, he walked toward the mound
-with a fair appearance of ease and in a condition
-of blue funk. Murtha met him, and although the
-latter smiled cheerfully and tried his best to look as
-if he thought all his troubles were now past, it
-wasn’t difficult for Dud to perceive that the captain
-was a bit disappointed in Mr. Sargent’s selection.
-He would have much preferred Nate Leddy, but he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>
-had a good deal of confidence in the coach’s judgment
-and, after all, young Baker had shown real
-pitching more than once.</p>
-
-<p>“Good boy, Baker,” he said cheerfully. “Let’s
-see what you can do now. Listen, let Gordon do
-the head-work, see? Just try to give him what he
-wants. They’ve got three on and no one out, Baker,
-and the score’s two against you. Whatever you do,
-old man, don’t pass him. Let him hit if you have
-to and try to make him pop up. Do your best,
-Baker, for we want this game!”</p>
-
-<p>Guy handed him the ball and Dud, very trembly
-at the knees, conscious of the hot glare of sunlight
-that made heat waves dance along the paths, conscious
-of the encouraging voices of teammates and of
-hearty applause from the stand, wrapped his fingers
-about the leather and sent in his first “warming-up”
-ball. A whoop of joy and derision came from the
-visitors’ bench, for the ball had almost eluded the
-spry Gordon. Back it came and Dud, trying his
-best to calm his nerves, shot it in again. It was
-all right that time and the next. Then the ball
-struck the ground in front of the plate and Gordon
-had to drop and block it. One more, high and wide,
-ended the practice and the Lawrence third-baseman
-stepped up to the plate again as the umpire called
-“Play!” From the Lawrence bench and from the
-Lawrence coachers came a sudden hubbub of sound,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
-but through it Dud heard Nick Blake’s cheerful
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re all with you, Dud! Go to it, son!”</p>
-
-<p>“Dud!” Nick had never called him that before,
-and somehow the thought steadied him remarkably.
-To be sure, his knees were still a trifle wobbly as he
-studied Gordon’s fingers laid against the back of
-his mitt, but the stage-fright was passing.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s get him, Baker,” called Gordon as he arose
-from his crouch and held hands wide apart. “You’ve
-got the stuff, old man!”</p>
-
-<p>With a man on third watching for the least excuse
-to race home, a full wind-up was out of the question,
-and Dud realized that he must depend more on
-cunning than speed. Gordon had shown three fingers
-horizontal, and three fingers horizontal called
-for a low curve ball. Dud, emulating the example
-of Myatt, surveyed the bases slowly, pulled his cap
-down, tried to shut out the wild cries of the coachers,
-snuggled the ball in his fingers, threw his arm
-up, took his stride and pitched.</p>
-
-<p>At the plate the batter moved up on the ball, hesitated
-and let it pass.</p>
-
-<p>“Strike!” said the umpire.</p>
-
-<p>There was cheering from the stand, yells of triumph
-from the players in the field, but Dud scarcely
-heard them. Gordon, walking down the alley,
-thumped ball and mitt together. “That’s the stuff,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>
-Baker!” he cried. “One-and-two now! Let’s have
-him out!” He tossed the ball back, a watchful eye
-on third, went back to his place, crouched, signaled
-and again held hands wide apart. He wanted
-a drop and he got it, but it shaved too closely the
-outer corner and the umpire judged it a ball. Gordon
-turned indignantly.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>What!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“You heard what I said,” returned the official
-crisply.</p>
-
-<p>Gordon grinned and returned the ball. “It looked
-good, Baker! Let’s have it again!”</p>
-
-<p>But it was “one finger” this time, and the fast
-one that sailed straight across the plate caught the
-batsman napping, and the umpire’s “<em>Strike—two!</em>”
-was drowned in a shout of joy from the Grafton
-sympathizers.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the pitching, Dud!” called Nick, scooping
-a handful of dust from the base path and tossing
-it joyfully into the air. “Fine work, Baker!”
-“Keep after him!” “No one walks!” They were
-all calling encouragement to him now. He almost
-forgot the shouting, cavorting runners and the bawling
-coachers. Back came the ball once more, Gordon
-grinning widely. Then he dropped to one knee
-and laid four fingers across the big brown mitt.</p>
-
-<p>“Right in the slot, old man! He can’t see ’em!
-At a boy! Let her come!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span></p>
-
-<p>And Dud let her! It was a slow one that did the
-trick, a ball that sped away from the mound with
-all the ear-marks of a moderately fast straight delivery
-but that never crossed the rubber until the
-batsman’s sharp swing had passed harmlessly.
-Then it descended into Gordon’s eager hands and
-the umpire waved an arm skyward.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>He’s out!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>How the stand shouted then and how silent the
-Lawrence bench suddenly became! The third-baseman,
-disgusted and puzzled, dragged his dishonored
-bat away with him and tossed it contemptuously
-into the pile. But that was only one down, and a
-big, capable-looking youth with a grim determination
-shown in his tight-set mouth was already waiting.
-A wide one that went as a ball, a drop that the
-batter tried for and missed, a second ball—Dud
-had attempted to cut the inner corner of the plate
-with a hook and had failed by an inch—and then,
-in response to Gordon’s signal of one finger, a fast
-one that reached the batsman waist-high and which
-he met with his bat.</p>
-
-<p><em>Crack!</em></p>
-
-<p>He was speeding to first, the bases were emptying.
-Dud, heart in mouth, turned in time to see Nick
-Blake spring two feet into the air and spear the
-ball, and then, without a wasted motion, dash across
-the second sack a scant instant before the runner<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
-from first slid, feet foremost, into it in a cloud of
-dust!</p>
-
-<p>Nick had played the double unassisted and the
-side was out! Grafton stood up in the stand and
-shouted herself hoarse. Dud, still a little dazed by
-the suddenness of the triumph, stood a moment beside
-the pitcher’s box ere he turned toward the
-bench. Then Guy Murtha was with him, had him
-by the arm and was laughing softly and saying extravagant
-things that he probably wouldn’t have
-said five minutes later. But Dud didn’t altogether
-sense them. He only knew during the ensuing minute
-that Nick had saved him—and the game! And
-if he could have done what he wanted to do he’d
-have embraced that youth on the spot. As it was,
-ignorant that some of the applause was really meant
-for him, he made his way to the bench and sat down
-a bit breathlessly, and someone was waving a dampened
-towel in front of him and there was much talk
-and laughter.</p>
-
-<p>And so Grafton started her half of the seventh
-with the score still 1 to 0 and Ayer at bat. Ayer
-popped innumerable fouls into all sorts of out of the
-way places and then, with two strikes and one ball
-against him, stood inertly by and let a perfectly good
-straight one pass. He shook his head dejectedly
-as he turned away. Boynton reached first on second-baseman’s
-questionable error—the Lawrence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span>
-scorer gave Boynton a hit—and went to second a
-moment later when Jimmy was thrown out at first.
-Gordon brought the inning to an end by fouling out
-to third-baseman.</p>
-
-<p>Then Dud was back in the box again and Gordon
-was shouting one thing and signaling another and
-again the Lawrence coachers were doing their level
-best to rattle him. But that first of the eighth was
-easy work for Dud. The luck was all Grafton’s.
-The first of the enemy beat out a bunt and then
-was caught by Gordon going to second. Dud scored
-his second strike-out on the next man, using just four
-deliveries. The succeeding batter proved more troublesome,
-for after Dud had worked two strikes
-across he began to lay against the others and foul
-them off with a fine impartiality. Everything, it
-seemed, was fish that went to his net, and Dud was
-beginning to despair of ever getting rid of him. He
-slipped up once and sailed one over the stubborn
-batsman’s head, and added a second ball to the
-score. Then, however, Gordon signaled a low curve
-and this time the ever-ready bat missed! So did
-Gordon, for that matter, but he found the rolling
-sphere and got it to Ayer well ahead of the runner.
-Dud got a round of applause all to himself this time,
-as he went back to the bench to pick out his bat, but
-he was so busy wondering just how much of a fool
-he would look when he stood up there and tried to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span>
-hit the redoubtable Fairway that he didn’t even hear
-it.</p>
-
-<p>I’d like to tell you, in view of what occurred later,
-that Dud picked out one of Fairway’s slants and
-drove it across River Street for a home-run. But
-nothing of that sort happened, and if Dud didn’t
-look like a fool at the bat on that occasion it was
-only because pitchers aren’t supposed to be hitters.
-Dud was an easy proposition for the rival twirler.
-He promptly forgot everything he had ever learned
-about batting and swung wildly at the first two offers,
-held himself away from temptation at the third one
-and fanned the air an inch above the succeeding ball.
-He returned to the bench shame-facedly, but no one
-paid any attention to his fiasco and it dawned on him
-that he had done just what they had expected him to
-do and a great big determination arose in him to
-do better the next time, to learn how to judge a ball
-rightly and to eventually become that rara avis
-of baseballdom, a pitcher who can hit! But there
-was, it proved, no second chance for him today.
-Nick Blake fanned as effectively if not as promptly
-as Dud had and Bert Winslow was thrown out at
-first. And the ninth inning began.</p>
-
-<p>Once more Dud proved his mastery of the enemy,
-but there were no strike-outs for him this time. The
-first Lawrence batsman hit to Winslow and went out
-at first, the next man flied out to Ordway and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span>
-third, after Dud had put two strikes across, lighted
-on a low curve and popped it unexpectedly into short
-right for a base. Dud made three attempts to catch
-him napping and failed and the next minute the runner
-was sliding to second ahead of Gordon’s hurried
-throw. But Lawrence got no further, for the
-following batsman, trying hard to hit safely out of
-the infield, merely succeeded in smashing a liner into
-Ayer’s hands.</p>
-
-<p>Once more Grafton swung her bats and tried to
-break the deadlock. The heat was moderating now
-and long shadows were creeping across the diamond,
-but the players of both sides were fagged and wilted
-and prayed for the end of the contest. But it wasn’t
-to come yet, for Ordway fanned, Murtha flied out
-to left field—it would have been a wonderful hit if
-that fielder hadn’t raced back like a rabbit and made
-a one-hand catch that brought applause even from
-the Grafton adherents—Ayer beat out a bunt and
-Boynton hit a weak grounder to shortstop and the
-ninth had passed into history.</p>
-
-<p>Dud was back at his post again, a little tired, too,
-in spite of the fact that he had worked only two innings.
-He had the head of the list against him now
-and realized that this was no time for slip-ups. Lawrence
-began enthusiastically. The little, blond-headed
-second-baseman outwitted Gordon and Dud
-and walked to first. The next batsman fouled out<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span>
-to Ayer. Then came a sharp <em>rap</em> and the ball sailed
-over second base and there were two on and only
-one out. But things looked better a few minutes
-later, for Dud scored his third strike-out, turning
-the left-fielder ignominiously back to the bench.
-That surely ought to have ended things for all practical
-purposes, but right there Luck took a hand in
-the game. The next batsman was anxious to hit,
-and Gordon knew it. In consequence the latter signaled
-high ones and Dud tried to serve them up.
-They caught him on the second for a strike, after
-the first had gone as a ball, and then Dud fooled
-him with a low one that barely crossed and the
-score was two-and-one. It seemed all over but the
-shouting and Gordon risked all on the next delivery.
-One finger was the signal and Dud sped the fast one
-in breast-high with not a thing on it but steam. The
-batsman leaned against that nice ball and drove it
-far and high into right field and although Boynton
-was under it he missed the catch. And although
-he recovered it quickly and sped it back to second,
-and Guy Murtha pegged it on to third, the runner
-there was safe and the chap who had hit took
-advantage of the play and slid to second unchallenged.</p>
-
-<p>Lawrence caught hopefully at the chance before
-her. A pinch hitter took the place of the center
-fielder. Gordon had no line on the new man and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
-had to guess his tastes. A high one was refused
-and was judged a ball, a curve that just didn’t cut the
-outer corner went as another ball. Gordon signaled
-for a drop and the batter bit at it and had one
-strike against him. Then another drop failed to
-please the umpire and Dud was in the hole. Gordon
-called for a high one over the plate and Dud
-tried to put it there. But he didn’t. The ball went
-wide and Dud saw with dismay the batsman trotting
-to first and heard the triumphant yelps of the enemy.
-Another pinch hitter was up and Gordon, a little
-anxious of countenance now, was asking for a curve
-ball. Dud responded and scored a strike, the batter
-hitting hard but uselessly. Then came a ball,
-then a second. Gordon was calling all sorts of encouragement.
-Guy Murtha came over and told Dud
-to take his time. His teammates were assuring him
-that he could do it. The enemy’s coachers, back of
-first and third, were howling and dancing like Comanche
-Indians. The runners were running back
-and forth along the paths. Pandemonium was fairly
-loose and the din thumped against Dud’s ears excruciatingly.
-He felt his courage ebbing out of his
-finger-tips. He wanted to ask Murtha to let him
-quit, to put someone else in, but was more afraid to
-do that than he was to go on. Gordon was pleading
-for a straight one. Dud glued his eyes to the catcher’s
-chest, took his half wind-up and sped the ball.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
-And even as he released it he knew that he had
-failed again!</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Ball—three!</em>” called the umpire through the din.</p>
-
-<p>Gordon was hurrying down the alley toward him,
-shaking the ball at him, his eyes blazing.</p>
-
-<p>“Settle down!” he growled. “Put ’em over!
-You can do it! Now get on to yourself!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud took the ball, nodded dazedly and turned
-back to the mound. Murtha was there, Murtha and
-Winslow, too, and the captain was looking over past
-third base and juggling a pebble in his dirt-grimed
-hands. When he turned his gaze sought Dud grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“Guess you’d better let someone else in, Baker,”
-he said. “Sorry, but we need this, old man.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud passed him the ball, tried to say something,
-he didn’t know what, and turned, white-faced and
-with hanging head, toward the bench.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX<br />
-<small>JIMMY ENCOURAGES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">That game with Lawrence Textile went to
-thirteen innings and ended, still a tie, 1 to 1,
-to allow the visitors to get their train.
-Nate Leddy, going to the rescue with three on, two
-out and the pitcher’s score one-and-three, pulled out
-of the hole very neatly. Instead of attempting the
-difficult feat of striking the batsman out, Nate
-dropped one over knee-high and the ball went
-straight up from the swinging bat and straight
-down again into Gordon’s mitten, and Lawrence
-saw her golden opportunity vanish. After
-that for three innings, although the suspense kept
-up every moment, neither side got anywhere near a
-score. Leddy and Fairway, the latter showing fatigue
-and substituting control for speed, were masters
-every minute. Fairway’s work to the very end
-was such that the spectators applauded him every
-time he left the mound or went to bat. After
-that hair-raising, nerve-racking tenth inning, Grafton
-could feel only satisfaction at the outcome.
-Even Captain Murtha had no regrets, and if<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>
-Coach Sargent was disappointed he made no sign.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps, aside from the Lawrence players, the
-only disconsolate one was Dud. He had hurried
-from his shower straight to his room, his main desire
-being to get out of the way before the game ended
-and the fellows came piling into the Field House,
-and so he didn’t learn the outcome of the contest
-until Jimmy arrived, half an hour later. By that
-time Dud’s common sense had come to the rescue
-and he was able to review his performance in the
-pitcher’s box without being prompted to suicide.
-After all, he had fared no worse than Gus Weston,
-he told himself comfortingly, and even Ben Myatt
-had begun distributing passes before he had been
-taken out; although, of course, Ben had far more
-excuse for giving out, since he had pitched six innings.</p>
-
-<p>Dud was still wondering what had happened to
-him. He had been all right until Boynton had made
-that memorable muff. After that he hadn’t been
-able to get the ball where he wanted it. It wasn’t
-that his arm had tired. It had been just as good
-as when he had started. And, as Dud recalled it
-now, he hadn’t been nervous; not, anyway, until he
-had issued that first pass in the tenth. It just seemed,
-looking back on the fiasco, that the ball had suddenly
-simply refused to go where it was sent! He
-wondered whether Mr. Sargent would ever give him<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span>
-another chance, whether the fellows were secretly
-laughing at him. Well, he had surely afforded Bert
-Winslow a fine opportunity to say “I told you so!”
-Bert had all along been politely contemptuous of
-Dud’s ambition to make the first team, although of
-late he had been very decent to him indeed. He
-rather hoped he wouldn’t run across Bert for a day
-or two!</p>
-
-<p>Dud didn’t make the mistake of feeling himself
-disgraced, at least not after the first few miserable
-minutes, but he did feel that he had failed pretty
-badly as a pitcher, and that before the whole school,
-and he dreaded having to face the fellows again.
-He was pondering the idea of remaining away from
-dining-hall that evening when Jimmy came tramping
-along the corridor and entered.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, you! Where’d you get to?” Jimmy
-skimmed his cap to the bed and threw himself tiredly
-into a chair. “Did you see the game out?”</p>
-
-<p>Dud shook his head. “What—what was the
-score?” he asked dejectedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Just the same as when you ducked; one each.”
-Jimmy gave a brief but graphic history of the final
-three innings. “Why didn’t you come back and see
-the rest of it?” he concluded.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess I would have if I’d known they weren’t
-beating us. I’m glad they didn’t. Did—did anyone
-say anything?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Say anything? What about?”</p>
-
-<p>“About me, I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s what’s worrying you? I thought you
-looked a little bit down-hearted. Don’t you let that
-bother you, son. They all have to go through with
-that before they arrive. You did pretty well, on
-the whole. Three strike-outs, wasn’t it? And then
-you pulled us out of that hole in the seventh! Don’t
-be a clam, Dud. No one expects a green pitcher to
-go into a game like that and twirl like a veteran.
-Why, the row those fellows kicked up even made
-<em>me</em> nervous, away out in the field!”</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t that,” said Dud sadly. “I don’t know
-what it was. Of course, I was rattled just at first,
-but afterwards I didn’t pay any attention to the
-noise. I guess Mr. Sargent thinks I’m a pill!”</p>
-
-<p>“Rot! I’ll bet you lasted longer than Pete expected
-you to. Of course, I’m not saying that it
-wouldn’t have been a bully thing for you if you’d
-gone the distance; you’d have had the whole school
-inviting you to dinner; but you did pretty well as it
-was. And, say, talking about that—being popular,
-I mean, and making a hit—that little meeting with
-Hobo and Blake was a lucky thing for us, wasn’t it?
-Look at the way they’ve taken you up, Dud! Fine,
-what?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose so,” agreed the other rather listlessly.
-“They’ve been awfully nice to me——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You bet! And a lot of their crowd, too. Why,
-say——”</p>
-
-<p>“But I don’t, somehow, care so much about being—being
-a ‘regular feller’ as I did, Jimmy. I—I’d
-rather be a good pitcher.”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t that human nature?” demanded Jimmy, apparently
-of the ceiling. “Just as soon as a fellow
-gets what he wants, he doesn’t want it! You make
-me tired, Dud! Here I’ve schemed and labored
-for you——”</p>
-
-<p>“I know, and I’m awfully much obliged,” said
-Dud soberly. “Only—please don’t do it any more,
-Jimmy. I’ve had enough of it, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear demented friend, you’ve just started!
-You mustn’t think that just because Hobo Ordway
-and Nick Blake and Bert Winslow and a few of that
-close corporation have taken you up that the battle’s
-won. Far be it from such! The fun’s only started,
-son. You’ve got two years here yet and you want to
-make hay while the sun shines. Just you leave it
-to me——”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you leave it to me now,” said Dud. “I
-guess it’s like Blake said; every fellow must hoe his
-own row. And—and I haven’t got time to—to be
-popular, Jimmy. I just want to get so I can pitch
-like Ben Myatt.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, that’s hitching your wagon to a star, all
-right; Ben being the ‘star’! Maybe you’re right,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span>
-though. There’s always the danger of having fellows
-think you’re trying too hard; and they don’t
-like that. Maybe your scheme is the best, Dud.
-Foxy, too, I call it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t any scheme,” denied the other impatiently.
-“I just want to quit thinking anything
-about whether fellows like me or don’t like me. I
-guess if they do it will be because—because I don’t
-care!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I’m saying,” said Jimmy, grinning
-exasperatingly. “Just let them think you don’t care
-a fig and they’ll flock to you. Yep, that’s a good
-idea, Dud.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmy, if folks didn’t know you better they’d
-think sometimes that you were a regular—regular——”</p>
-
-<p>“Feller?” asked Jimmy helpfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Bounder!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Thank you kindly. And such is gratitude!
-Never mind, son, all you need is food. Let’s
-get to it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think—that is, I’m not very hungry——”</p>
-
-<p>“Not hungry! You’re not sick, are you?” Dud
-shook his head. “Then what’s wrong with you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you must know,” replied the other desperately,
-“I—I don’t want to go over there and see
-the fellows grinning at me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Grinning at you? What would they be doing——<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span>
-Say, for the love of lemons, Dud, get that
-idea out of your bean! Why, no one’s grinning at
-you, you three-ply chump! Why should they?
-Didn’t you go in there and save our bacon for us?
-Didn’t you work three innings like a regular
-‘Matty’? Sure, you did! Then what——”</p>
-
-<p>“And I went to pieces, too, and filled the bases
-that time,” said Dud bitterly. “Even if they don’t
-grin I shall know they want to!”</p>
-
-<p>“Piffle! Honest, Dud, I didn’t know you were
-such a chump. Look here, you’ve been wondering
-again! Don’t tell me! I can see it. You’ve got
-your ‘I-wonder’ expression on! You stop thinking
-about Dud Baker and wash your dirty face and
-hands and come to eats. I’ll guarantee that you
-won’t get grinned at once, old man. If I see any
-fellow trying it I’ll punch his head!”</p>
-
-<p>After all, Dud only wanted to be reassured and
-had no real intention of missing his supper, for he
-was undeniably hungry. And so, presently, they
-were off to dining-hall together, and things were
-just as Jimmy had predicted. There were no grins,
-save an occasional friendly one, and no one paid
-much more attention to Dud than usual. They
-slipped into their places at table—neither had been
-called to the training table yet, since accommodations
-at that board were very limited—and Jimmy, in
-high spirits, bandied remarks with the others between<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
-mouthfuls, and Dud tried hard to forget anything
-that had happened since luncheon.</p>
-
-<p>There was, naturally, much talk of the game and
-much criticism of various plays, as there always was,
-and Jimmy, as a participant, was listened to with
-respect if not with entire credence. At the training
-table, across the hall, there were no signs of depression,
-if one could judge by the talk and laughter.
-In fact, the whole school was looking back on the
-afternoon’s contest as something very much like a
-lucky victory. And perhaps it was. At all events, a
-comparison of the scores showed that Lawrence had
-made more hits and fewer errors and that the renowned
-Mr. Fairway had behaved more creditably
-than the four Grafton pitchers judged together.</p>
-
-<p>When Dud and Jimmy left the dining-hall they
-ran into Nick Blake and Bert Winslow in the corridor.
-Dud had determined to avoid any such
-meeting, but fortune ruled otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, James T.,” greeted Nick. “How’s Tris
-Speaker Junior tonight? Hello, Dud Baker.”</p>
-
-<p>“My arms are a trifle lame,” responded Jimmy.
-“When a fellow makes all the hits in a game——”</p>
-
-<p>“Hah!” ejaculated Nick mirthlessly. “Again,
-hah! You make me laugh, Jimmy. He’s a regular
-funny fellow, isn’t he, Dud? How are you feeling,
-by the way? Say, that was some twirling you did
-in the seventh, my lad!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span></p>
-
-<p>“How about the tenth?” asked Dud, smiling
-wanly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, no harm done, you know,” said Nick
-cheerfully. “They all get theirs sooner or later,
-and I dare say if you’d stayed in you’d have pulled
-yourself out all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“If we hadn’t needed the game so much,” observed
-Bert, “he’d have stayed in, I guess. I was
-hoping Guy would let him. It’s a bully good thing
-for a pitcher to have to dig his way out, Baker. Gives
-him confidence, you know. If I was captain of a
-team and a pitcher got in a hole I’d just let him stay
-right there and crawl out of it. Just let him have
-to do it, and if he’s the least bit of good, he will.
-My notion is that if a pitcher thinks he’s going to be
-relieved any time he goes bad, he’s going bad too
-plaguey often! That sound like sense to you,
-Jimmy?”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t heard a word that sounded like sense
-since I got here,” answered Jimmy gravely. “If
-someone would suggest something to do more exciting
-than hearing Lit and Forum jabber over some
-subject like: ‘Resolved: That Marcus T. Cicero was
-faster on the bases than his brother Quint,’ or ‘That
-the Penguin is mightier than the Swordfish’!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so, it’s debate night, isn’t it?” said Nick.
-“Who’s going? You, Bert?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose so. You?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, if there was anything better——!”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a moon,” said Jimmy tentatively.</p>
-
-<p>“Go on, pray! Your words interest me
-strangely,” prompted Nick, assuming an attitude of
-suspense.</p>
-
-<p>“And there’s a river——”</p>
-
-<p>“I get you! Will you go, Bert?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bathing? I guess so. Let’s find Hugh. You’ll
-come, Baker?”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, but I’ve got——” Dud stopped
-abruptly. Jimmy, smiling sweetly, had surreptitiously
-kicked him on the shin.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, he’ll come,” said Jimmy. “As this happens
-to be a Saturday night, Dud, your excuse of having
-to dig Latin or something is very poor. Let’s find
-a crowd, fellows.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s not,” said Bert. “I’ll round up Hobo and
-Ted Trafford. They went off a minute ago. That’s
-enough. By the way, though, I suppose you fellows
-know that the rules forbid it?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, honest?” Jimmy was evidently as pained as
-he was surprised. “Did you know that, Nick?”</p>
-
-<p>“News to me, Jimmy! I was never so surprised
-in my life! Are you sure of what you tell us, Bert?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, go to the dickens! Come on then before
-the moon goes down.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or the river evaporates,” added Jimmy. “I’m
-going to suggest, fellows, that we avoid publicity<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span>
-as much as possible. The last time I had anything
-to do with that old river it nearly got me into trouble!”</p>
-
-<p>I feel that I ought to record here that Dud’s conscience
-made itself heard, and that, refusing to
-transgress the rules of the school, he persuaded the
-others to forego the enterprise. I’d like to record
-that, but I can’t, for Dud’s conscience must have
-been asleep, and ten minutes or so later he was following
-the others—and Pop Driver, who had been
-discovered in the company of Hugh and Ted Trafford
-and persuaded to join the party—across the
-Green and Lothrop Field to the Beach, as the scanty
-expanse of sandy shore bordering the Cove was
-somewhat ironically called. And I am forced to relate
-that the moonlight bathing party was a huge
-success, that it lasted until nearly ten o’clock and
-that faculty remained forever in ignorance of it. So,
-it would seem, for once the transgressor went unpunished.
-But perhaps not, after all, for Nick cut his
-foot open on a mussel shell or a piece of glass and
-Ted Trafford caught an awful cold that lasted him
-nearly until school closed! Possibly the reason that
-the others escaped retribution was just because their
-crime was not, after all, especially wicked.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI<br />
-<small>ON THE MOUND</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Dud wondered—Jimmy wasn’t there to stop
-him!—what Mr. Sargent would say to him
-on Monday regarding that performance of
-his in the Lawrence Textile game. As a matter of
-fact, Mr. Sargent said absolutely nothing, either
-then or at any other time. There was very light
-practice that afternoon, most of it batting, and the
-fellows were dismissed early, many of them returning
-after changing to the practice diamond to watch
-the second team put away the Grafton High School
-nine. It wasn’t a vastly exciting affair, however, for
-the second, with Joe Kelly pitching, had things about
-its own way. Dud and Jimmy departed at the end
-of the seventh inning, leaving the home team five
-runs to the good, and spent a half-hour on the river
-in Nick Blake’s canoe. (Jimmy asked permission
-when they returned, and so that was all right!)
-Jimmy was troubled today and made Dud his confidant
-as they paddled slowly along under the drooping
-boughs. His trouble concerned Starling Meyer.
-But we’ll let Jimmy tell it in his own inimitable way.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Someone,” said Jimmy morosely, “has told Star
-he could play baseball. Huh! That’s all right,
-too, but what’s the use of making me let go the second
-and then dumping me in just when the fun begins?
-How do I know I’ll be dumped? Well, I
-don’t, I suppose. But, listen, if that chap keeps on
-butting in where’ll I be? Ordway and Boynton and
-Parker are sure of the outfield places unless they
-break a leg or a neck or something. Well, sure,
-that’s O. K.; they’re better than I am. I know that.
-The only chance I get is when one of ’em is out of
-the game. One of ’em’s likely to be out now and
-then and so I get a whack. All right, say we. But
-here comes this—this Indian, Meyer, butting in and
-snooping around for the crumbs, too. That makes
-two of us; three, if you count Ben Myatt; and Pete’s
-likely to put Ben in center or right any chance he
-gets because Ben can bat like a whale! If Star
-Meyer’d mind his own business, which is playing
-hockey and running creation, I’d have a fair chance
-to get into one of the Mount Morris games, wouldn’t
-I? Sure, I would! Parker isn’t very spry on that
-game leg of his, and I’ve noticed that Boynton is
-looking sort of like a friend of mine looked before
-he went into a decline. And Hobo might fall out
-of his canoe any day and get drowned—if he’d only
-use it more. I must suggest it to him. He doesn’t
-get enough exercise. Why the dickens can’t Star<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>
-keep out of it? That’s what I want to know. Something
-told me away last winter that I’d have trouble
-with that galoot before the year was over!”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought I was the one,” said Dud slyly.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy grunted. “So did I. Well, anyway, one
-good thing is that faculty hasn’t forbidden <em>me</em> to
-take a fall out of him!”</p>
-
-<p>“But you can’t very well thrash a fellow for just
-playing ball, Jimmy!”</p>
-
-<p>“I can beat him up for interfering with my affairs,”
-responded the other with dignity. “Bet you
-anything you like he will work around Guy Murtha
-and Guy’ll take him along to Corliss day after tomorrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose Parker will be back by then,” suggested
-Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Parker? Oh, I dare say. But, listen, Dud, between
-you and me now, I don’t believe Parker stands
-awfully high with Pete. I wouldn’t be surprised if
-he didn’t get back again; regularly, I mean. And
-if he doesn’t, why, maybe little Jimmy T. Logan
-will have a chance, eh? That is, if Meyer doesn’t
-persuade Guy that he’s a ball-player beforehand.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re hitting better than Star, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“N—no, I don’t think so. Wish I were! Still, I
-get my base a heap oftener. I suppose shooting at
-hockey helps Star hit the ball. Say, do you know,
-Dud darling, I’m going to be sort of peeved and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span>
-disappointed if I don’t get into one of those Mount
-Morris games? I wasn’t awfully keen at first, as
-you know, but now that I’ve started I’d like to make
-good. Besides,” he added gloomily, “the family’ll
-be here for that second game and I’d feel like an
-awful chump if I had to swing my legs on the bench
-all the afternoon!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’d be in good company,” said Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Meaning you?” asked the other, as he turned
-the canoe back toward home. “Oh, you’ll get your
-chance, Dud. Mount Morris has got some hitters,
-they say, and if she has neither Myatt nor Nate
-Leddy will last the games through. As for Brunswick,
-I guess he’s a goner for this year.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s Weston, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so, too. I wouldn’t be a bit surprised to
-see Gus turn around and pitch a corking game some
-day soon. I guess the trouble with Gus is that he’s
-too temperamental. He and I are alike that way.
-If the weather isn’t just right or the moon’s in the
-wrong quarter or the tide’s too high or his shoe
-pinches him, Gus can’t pitch a little bit. But some
-day all the signs are going to be just right, and Gus
-will slip on a pair of old shoes, and he will go out
-there and make ’em eat out of his hand.” Jimmy
-paused. Then: “Maybe,” he added cautiously,
-“you can’t tell about Gus. Like me, he has the artistic
-temperament.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Dud, after a long silence and as they
-swung the canoe into the Cove, “I hope you get into
-all the Mount Morris games, Jimmy, and do finely.
-And I hope,” he added wistfully, “that they let me
-pitch an inning or two in one of them. I—I’d like
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I,” responded Jimmy, “hope as how you
-gets your hope! Easy on! Let her run, sonny!”</p>
-
-<p>It looked the next day as though Jimmy might
-be right about Gordon Parker, for although that
-youth was back for practice with his leg evidently
-as useful as ever, he did not get back into the outfield
-when the first and second lined up for the practice
-game. Instead, Boynton played in right, Jimmy
-in center and Ordway in left until the fifth inning,
-when Star Meyer took Jimmy’s place, much to that
-youth’s disgust. Leddy and Weston pitched that
-afternoon. Ben Myatt had been more affected by
-the heat on Saturday than he or anyone else had
-suspected at the time, and was said to be nursing
-himself for the next day’s game with Corliss College.
-Save for pitching to the batters in practice,
-neither Dud nor Brunswick did any work that afternoon.
-Dud watched the game from the bench and
-listened, during the last two innings, to Jimmy’s
-frank expressions of hurt feelings. Every time a
-fly ball went into center field Jimmy watched it hopefully.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Hope he muffs it! Hope he mu—— Isn’t that
-rotten luck? Anyway, that’s a bum throw-in! If
-I couldn’t do better than that—sometimes—I
-wouldn’t try to get an honest man’s job away from
-him. Say, you’re next, Churchill. Knock a long one
-into center, will you? Put it about fifty feet over
-Meyer’s head, like a good fellow!”</p>
-
-<p>But in spite of Jimmy’s hopes and criticisms Star
-played a good enough game in center and managed
-to get a rather lucky hit the only time he went to bat.
-Jimmy tried to bribe Manager Barnes to score it as
-an error for the second team shortstop, but failed.</p>
-
-<p>There was an early and rather hurried dinner for
-the players the next day and the team, eighteen
-strong, bowled away to the station shortly after one
-o’clock. Much to his surprise, Dud made one of
-four pitchers to accompany it, and Jimmy, too, was
-of the number. Jimmy’s satisfaction, however, was
-somewhat spoiled by the presence of Star Meyer.
-Parker was left behind. So, too, was Ben Myatt,
-still suffering from what the school physician had
-diagnosed as “a touch of heat.” Ben was instructed
-to keep out of the hot sunlight and, when playing,
-wear a fold of paper inside his cap. Mr. Sargent,
-however, had no intention of allowing Ben to pitch
-again until he was so far recovered as not to require
-that paper. The first of the series with Mount
-Morris would be played on Saturday, just three days<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
-later, and so Ben had been instructed to stay right
-at home and be very, very good to himself. Leddy,
-Weston, Brunswick and Dud would undoubtedly
-manage between them to dispose of Corliss, for
-Corliss, although called a college, was little more
-than a preparatory school and was not considered
-dangerous.</p>
-
-<p>Corliss lay an hour and forty minutes away by
-railroad, although the actual distance was about
-thirty-eight miles. The team had to change at Needham
-Junction first and, later on, at North Taunton,
-and in consequence was somewhat weary when it
-finally disembarked from the trolley car that had
-brought it from the Corliss Station to the nearest
-point to the school. They paraded up a tree-shaded
-street, past some yellow-brick building that looked
-uncomfortably hot and glary today, and eventually
-reached the field, a very ambitious affair, inclosed
-with a brick wall and containing a permanent stand
-of concrete and a picturesque building of the same
-material roofed with red tiles. The fellows secretly
-admired that field, but they pretended to consider it
-too dressy and made a good deal of fun of the
-commodious and well-appointed building into which
-they were shown. There they had a room all to
-themselves and three shower baths as well. By the
-time they had changed to playing togs the stand
-was well sprinkled with spectators and a welcoming<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span>
-cheer greeted them as they took the field for practice.
-Only some dozen and a half Graftonians had
-accompanied the nine, for examinations held many
-at school and others were too poor to pay for the
-trip. But the handful of patriotic youths gathered
-themselves into a small but devoted group in a corner
-of the big stand and from the first appearance
-of the Scarlet-and-Gray on the diamond to the end
-of the contest made enough noise for thrice their
-number.</p>
-
-<p>All four pitchers were set to warm up while the
-fielders practiced. Will Brunswick, by this time
-reconciled to his fate, went through the motions in
-a mechanical fashion, but the other three set to work
-hard, each hoping to get the call. After the Corliss
-players, a rather hefty lot of blue-stockinged and
-blue-sleeved youths, had taken the field and completed
-their warming up, Mr. Sargent had a consultation
-with Guy Murtha and Pete Gordon. Dud
-pretended no interest as he sat on the bench between
-Hugh Ordway and Neil Ayer, but secretly he was a
-very anxious boy. Manager Barnes was getting the
-batting order now from the coach and Dud, while
-answering a remark of Hugh’s, strained his ears
-to hear.</p>
-
-<p>“Blake, Winslow, Ordway, Murtha, Ayer, Boynton,
-Meyer”—Dud felt sorry for Jimmy then—“Gordon
-and—I’ll give you the pitcher later.” Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span>
-Sargent nodded to Nick Blake. “Start it up,” he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>Nick went to bat while Mr. Sargent arose and,
-after watching the work of the opposing pitcher, a
-broad-shouldered and rather slow-moving fellow
-named Walters, for a few moments, moved along
-and spoke to Nate Leddy. Dud’s gaze followed, although
-he tried not to let it. The coach and Leddy
-spoke for several moments, their eyes all the while
-on the Corliss twirler. At last Mr. Sargent nodded
-and Leddy settled back in his seat, turning to his
-companion on the left, Boynton, and making a remark
-that brought, as Dud saw, a look of surprise
-to the face of the right fielder. Mr. Sargent remained
-behind the bench, watching Nick Blake trying
-to find something useful to him amongst the
-slow, wide curves that the blue-legged pitcher
-was offering. Nick finally slammed one across
-the diamond, but was an easy out, shortstop to
-first.</p>
-
-<p>Bert Winslow raised a long fly to left field and
-likewise retired and Hugh Ordway, after fouling
-off a couple, was badly fooled on a drop and fanned.
-As the players arose from the bench to trot into the
-field Dud, who had forgotten the coach for the moment,
-felt a hand on his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Baker, I’m going to let you start,” said Mr. Sargent.
-“You’ve pitched to Brooks a good deal,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span>
-haven’t you? Would you rather have him handle
-you than Gordon?”</p>
-
-<p>“He knows my stuff pretty well, sir,” stammered
-Dud. “But it’s just as you say, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>The coach called to Ed Brooks. “You catch
-Baker, Brooks,” he said. “Let’s see what you can
-do, my boy. Study your batters and watch the bases.
-Barnes, put Brooks down for Gordon and Baker
-last. All right now, you two. Show what you can
-do.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud started for the mound, drawing on his glove,
-but Brooks overtook him on the way. “Say, Dud,
-don’t let’s slip up on signals, eh?” he said anxiously.
-“If you don’t get ’em sing out. And if you use that
-side-arm pitch signal beforehand, will you? I’m always
-afraid of that getting by me. Lift your cap
-in front and I’ll know, see? All right, Dud!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII<br />
-<small>DUD COMES BACK</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Dud started out with one idea, which was
-to redeem himself. He was pretty sure
-that Mr. Sargent would not expect him to
-go more than five innings, six at the very most, and
-he determined to use every bit of strength and science
-he possessed during those six frames, to pitch
-himself out if necessary, but at all hazards to show
-form. He was nervous at first and showed wildness
-with his practice balls, and after that made a bad
-start by passing the first man up for Corliss. But
-subsequently he settled down nicely, and although
-he had no strike-outs to his credit in that first inning,
-he allowed no hits, and the runner on first never left
-that bag.</p>
-
-<p>Grafton got two hits in the second, one rather
-scratchy, but failed to score. Corliss once more got
-a man to first on a hit that took a bad bound in front
-of Nick Blake and once more watched him die there.
-In the third, after Grafton had retired in one, two
-three order, Dud began to find his control, and he and
-Ed Brooks disposed of the Corliss pitcher and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span>
-first two batsmen on the Blue’s list with no trouble,
-Walters fanning, the next man popping a fly to Neil
-Ayer and the next being thrown out at first by Bert
-Winslow.</p>
-
-<p>Grafton got her first run in the fourth inning.
-Hugh Ordway was passed, Murtha sacrificed him to
-second and, after Neil Ayer had struck out, Boynton
-slipped a fast grounder down the alley between
-shortstop and second, and Hugh romped home and
-beat the throw by a yard. Star Meyer flied out to
-center field.</p>
-
-<p>Dud added speed to science in the last of the fourth
-and two of the Blue’s best batsmen fanned wildly,
-and the little group of Graftonians in the corner of
-the stand cheered themselves patriotically and appropriately
-scarlet of face. The succeeding batter
-drove a liner into Captain Murtha’s glove and the
-fifth inning began.</p>
-
-<p>Ed Brooks allowed Walters to put him in a hole
-with the first two deliveries, and then, after disdaining
-a couple of wide ones, swung despairingly at a
-third and somehow managed to get it on the tip end
-of his bat and land it safely behind shortstop. Then
-began a fusillade of the Corliss pitcher that ultimately
-spelled retirement for that youth. Dud, who had
-rolled a weak one down the first-base path and been
-an easy out the first time at bat, now tried twice to
-bunt and failed. After that there was nothing to do<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span>
-but take a good healthy swing and try to get the ball
-out of the infield. With the score two-and-two, Dud
-cut loose and poked a hit past third-baseman that put
-Brooks on the third sack and himself on first. Blake
-bunted and the pitcher fielded, the latter making
-the mistake of holding the ball too long to protect
-the plate. When he finally tossed to first he was
-too late and the bases were full.</p>
-
-<p>At this interesting juncture Bert Winslow ought
-to have stepped into the limelight with a smashing
-home-run or a three-bagger at least, but the best
-Bert could do was to bounce one away to shortstop
-and Brooks was an easy out at the plate. But the
-bases were still filled, with only one man down, and
-there were cries of “Lift it, Hobo!” “Knock it in
-the nose, Hobo!” as Hugh went to the plate. Walters,
-showing the strain now, pitched two wild heaves
-which his catcher barely stopped and then slipped
-one across in the groove. Hugh swung at it but was
-too late. A third ball followed and Grafton yelled
-exultantly. But again Walters made good, Hugh
-not offering. Everything depended on the next delivery,
-and as the ball left the pitcher’s hand the
-three runners on the paths started away. They need
-not have hurried, though, for the ball went low and
-wide and Hugh walked, Dud crossing the platter
-with the second tally for the Scarlet-and-Gray.</p>
-
-<p>By this time Corliss had two pitchers warming up<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span>
-and it was easy to see that Walters’ minutes were
-numbered. Captain Murtha brought affairs to the
-crisis by landing on the pitcher’s second delivery and
-lifting it high and far to right field. It was well
-over the fielder’s head, and that youth failed to get
-under it. Two more runs tallied and Guy took second.
-After that Walters passed Ayer and was
-promptly derricked. The new twirler, Hoyt, had
-difficulty in getting under way, and before he succeeded
-two more hits and as many runs had been
-scored. Of the hits Boynton contributed one and
-Brooks one. Star Meyer made the second out and
-Dud the third, Dud being robbed of a hit by a pretty
-running catch of a short fly to center.</p>
-
-<p>The score was 6 to 0 when the last half of the
-fifth started and there seemed to be no doubt as to
-who owned the game. Dud was beginning to feel
-tired, but believed himself fit for another inning, or
-two if necessary. But things broke bad at the start.
-The first of the enemy to face him showed no eagerness
-to hit and before he knew it Dud was two balls
-to the bad. Then, although he managed to get a
-strike across, he followed with a third ball, and the
-final result was that the Corliss youth smashed a hot
-liner straight over third base and took two bases on
-the hit. The succeeding batsman fouled out quickly
-to Winslow. Then Brooks tried to catch the runner
-off second and the ball got away from Murtha,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span>
-who took the throw, and the runner reached third.</p>
-
-<p>Dud felt himself slipping then and shot an inquiring
-look toward the bench. But Mr. Sargent was
-evidently still unworried, for Leddy and Weston
-were both there and no one was warming up. Dud
-gritted his teeth and went on. The batsman had a
-strike and two balls on him when Dud, trying to
-break a high one over the inner corner, lost control
-of the ball and it went straight for the batter’s head.
-But Dud’s shout of “<em>Look out!</em>” was not necessary.
-The man at the plate dropped just in time and the
-ball sailed past Brooks and brought up at the net,
-the runner on third sprinting home.</p>
-
-<p>Murtha and the others did their best to steady
-Dud again, and Ed Brooks, walking down to place
-the ball in Dud’s hand, said: “That was my fault,
-Dud. I ought to have got it. Sorry, old man.
-Don’t mind it, though. Let’s have this fellow, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>Dud nodded. It was nice of Brooks to call it his
-fault, but of course it hadn’t been anything of the
-sort. Dud glanced again toward the bench as he
-went back to his place on the mound. He wished
-that Mr. Sargent would get his relief ready. He
-wondered why he didn’t. He was giving way to a
-sort of fright now, although he didn’t show it unless
-by the longer time he took to grip the ball and
-study Brooks’ signal. About him the infield players
-were speaking words of encouragement. The batsman<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
-had him in the hole. He must make him hit.
-But something told him that he was worked out,
-that there was no use trying, that today was to be
-just a repetition of that other day when he had gone
-to pieces there on Lothrop Field with the whole
-school looking on!</p>
-
-<p>Brooks had signaled for a straight ball and Dud
-tried to pitch it. Instead of being straight, though,
-it was a hook, but it crossed the corner of the plate
-and the umpire was charitable to Dud. Brooks,
-looking anxious, threw it back slowly and again
-spread his hands. The little group of Grafton rooters
-cheered. Dud, however, took no joy of the
-doubtful decision. Luck had aided him that time,
-but this time, he told himself, he would surely fail.
-And fail he did. The ball passed well inside the
-plate and the batsman, staggering away from it,
-dropped his bat and trotted down the path. Corliss
-was cheering madly now, sensing the fact that the
-Grafton pitcher was at last weakening. Guy Murtha
-hurried to the box and told Dud to take his time,
-to let them hit. Dud muttered agreement, conscious
-chiefly of disappointment. He had expected Guy
-to take the ball away from him! What, he wondered
-almost angrily, was the matter with them?
-Couldn’t they see that he was through? Why did
-they want to keep him there when he was only making
-things worse every minute?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span></p>
-
-<p>None out now and a runner on first. The next
-batsman didn’t wait for a pass but lighted on Dud’s
-first offering and sent it rolling toward third. Dud
-and Brooks and Winslow all started for it, but it
-was Bert who scooped it up and pegged it to Ayer,
-and Bert wasn’t set for the throw and the ball went
-a yard away from the first-baseman. The first runner
-dashed to third and the next slid into second
-base. Dud went despairingly back to the mound to
-face the next ambitious blue-legged youth. A hit
-meant two more runs for Corliss, he told himself.
-Surely then they’d let him go out! But the hit didn’t
-come just then. Instead, it was a short fly that left
-the bat and Nick Blake ran back and got it safely
-and slammed it home. But the man on third didn’t
-try to score. Then the hit did come, after Dud by
-some miracle had induced the batsman to swing at
-two wide balls, and it sped into short center field
-and two joyful Corliss runners tallied.</p>
-
-<p>Dud looked inquiringly at Murtha and got only
-a “Never mind that, Baker! Go to it!” Then his
-eyes sought the bench, and there sat Leddy, hands
-in pockets, and Gus Weston chatting unconcernedly
-with Barnes over the score-book, and Mr. Sargent,
-leaning forward with hands clasped loosely between
-his knees and his straw hat pulled over his eyes!
-Dud couldn’t understand it at all. Did they want
-to get beaten? Couldn’t they see that he was throwing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
-the game away, that he wasn’t any good after
-all, that he never had been?</p>
-
-<p>“Settle down, Dud!” called Nick Blake. “At a
-boy! Let’s have ’em, old top!”</p>
-
-<p>“One gone!” chanted Captain Murtha. “Let’s
-have the double, fellows!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud turned desperately to his task again. He
-tried to remember what the fellow facing him now
-had done before. Struck out, hadn’t he? Or was
-he the chap who had smashed out that double?
-Well, it was up to Brooks, and Brooks wanted a
-drop. Dud tried to catch the runner at first and
-failed twice and then pitched to the plate. The
-drop was good and the batsman swung at it.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the stuff!” called Brooks cheerfully. “He
-can’t hit ’em, Dud! Right across now. Show him
-a good one.”</p>
-
-<p>A wide and low one followed and then another.
-Two-and-one now, and Brooks showing three fingers
-for another drop. Dud tried it and failed and the
-umpire announced “Ball three!” Corliss shouted
-and stamped and clapped. Dud had none to waste
-and he took all the time he wanted for the next.
-But it slanted away erratically and the batsman
-tossed his bat behind him and sprang gleefully toward
-first, while the runner at that station went on
-to second. Murtha came to the box.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Baker, what’s the matter with you?<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span>
-Are you trying to present them with the game? For
-the love of Mike, put some of them over! Let them
-hit ’em, I tell you. We’ll take care of them!”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” muttered Dud, “you’d better let me out,
-Murtha.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let you out? Is that what you’re up to? Well,
-listen, Baker; you’re going to stay in here until you
-get the third man if it takes all the afternoon! So
-you might as well get busy. You can throw the game
-away if you want to, but you’re going to stay right
-here, son! Understand that?”</p>
-
-<p>Dud viewed him, astonished. Then he nodded.
-“All right,” he said finally. “I’ll do my best.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the talk,” responded the captain kindly.
-“Get a grip on yourself, Baker. You’re just as good
-as you were an hour ago, man! All you’ve got to
-do is to think so! Now settle down and make ’em
-eat out of your hand!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud gave up trying to understand things after
-that. They meant to keep him at it until he had
-retired the side. That was the principal thing to
-think of. He wasn’t to look for relief but must
-earn his own salvation. Well, in that case he knew
-where he stood, and that was something of a comfort.
-At least, he wouldn’t have to look over toward
-the bench every few minutes. Either they
-thought he could hold what he had or they were
-just keeping him in to punish him. Either way, it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span>
-didn’t much matter, he decided. All he had to do
-now was to retire two more batsmen in some way
-or other. That realization seemed to simplify matters
-remarkably!</p>
-
-<p>Dud turned and studied the bases. A runner on
-second and a runner on first. And one out. Why,
-that wasn’t so bad! A double play would end the
-trouble, or a hit anywhere in the infield would probably
-account for one. He mustn’t let the batsman
-bunt toward third, though, for that would draw
-Winslow off his bag. Better give him low ones and
-try the inner corner. If only he could get his slow
-ball working again he might squeeze out of the hole
-he was in.</p>
-
-<p>“Two fingers,” said Dud to himself. “But that
-won’t do, Ed. He wants to dump one down toward
-third.” Dud shook his head and Brooks laid three
-fingers across his mitt. Dud nodded. Yes, a drop
-was the best. If he could make it go, he added
-doubtfully to himself. But he did make it go. And
-the batsman professed intense astonishment when a
-strike was called. Brooks signaled for the same
-thing again, and again Dud essayed it, and again he
-earned the decision, for this time the batter swung
-viciously at it without, however, any result. Dud
-breathed easier. With two strikes across he could
-waste a couple and perhaps fool the batsman with
-a hook. Brooks showed two fingers and Dud served<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span>
-a curve waist-high but wide of the plate. Then another,
-a little closer, but still not tempting. Dud
-refused two signals and at last got Brooks to show
-four fingers. Then Dud nodded, glanced behind
-him to where Murtha and Blake were running the
-blue-legged youth back to base whenever he tried to
-steal a start, and wound up. Forward shot his arm
-and away sped the ball, straight for the plate and
-fairly high, and around swung the bat and swept
-through empty air! For the ball had been a slow
-one and the batter had hit inches ahead of it!</p>
-
-<p>Dud stopped slipping then, brought up with a
-round turn, in fact! If he could still make that
-slow ball of his go right he could fool any of them!
-He wondered what had got into him! Why, he was
-just as good as ever! What a silly fool he had been
-to think anything else! They were shouting shrilly
-and triumphantly over in the corner of the stand
-and Brooks was grinning all over his round, freckled
-face. Dud spread his hand in the dust and fondled
-the ball and waited calmly for the next batsman.
-He was no longer afraid, no longer doubtful. He
-had, he told himself exultantly, come back!</p>
-
-<p>Brooks asked for a curve and Dud refused it. A
-fast, straight ball instead was what the batter saw
-speed past him. Perhaps, though, he didn’t really
-see it, for it fairly sizzled with the “steam” that Dud
-put on it. After that a low curve broke badly and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span>
-then a second one barely trimmed the outer corner of
-the rubber, but the batsman swung at the latter and
-missed it. A foul back of the plate just escaped
-Brooks and spoiled what Dud had intended for a
-third strike. Two-and-two now, and the Corliss
-coachers shouting imploringly for a hit and the runners
-dancing on their toes, eager to be off. Dud
-might still waste one if he liked, but his fingers,
-when the ball came back to him, curved themselves
-around the ball cunningly in response to the catcher’s
-signal and Dud stepped forward and pitched, and
-every ounce of speed he had went into that delivery.
-Straight as an arrow it flashed to the plate,
-cut it squarely in halves and thumped into Ed
-Brooks’ mitt. The batter never even offered at it
-and his bat was still at his shoulder when the umpire
-waved him aside!</p>
-
-<p>Dud, walking across to the bench, heard the
-cheers of the tiny band of Grafton rooters and
-smiled a little. Those cheers sounded awfully good
-to him just then! He had come through and the
-only desire in his heart now was to be allowed to
-finish!</p>
-
-<p>And finish he did, and went straight through to
-the end of the ninth without further punishment.
-In those four succeeding innings the enemy made just
-three hits, one of them a two-bagger that netted
-nothing beyond a journey to second base. Six strike-outs<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span>
-were added to his credit and he made two assists.
-And in the meanwhile Grafton sweetened her
-total with three more runs, so that when Dud ended
-the game by causing a Corliss pinch hitter to fly out
-to Boynton in left the score stood 9 to 3.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII<br />
-
-<small>BEN TELLS A SECRET</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">The team missed connection at North Taunton
-coming back and had to kick their heels
-about the platform there for more than an
-hour, reaching school finally just before eight, a very
-tired lot. There was a cold supper awaiting them
-in the dining-hall, and after that had been demolished
-few of the fellows had inclination for anything
-but bed.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy, who had remained on the bench all the
-afternoon, was in a particularly pessimistic frame
-of mind, and Dud’s last conscious memory was of
-Jimmy, pajama-clad, seated on the edge of his bed,
-muttering dire threats against Star Meyer.</p>
-
-<p>Thursday was a busy day for Dud, with examinations
-beginning in real earnest. In the corridor
-of School Hall at noon he was hailed by Roy Dresser.
-“Say, Baker, Myatt’s looking for you. Told
-me to tell you to drop around to his room if I saw
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>As there was still a half-hour before dinner, Dud
-turned his steps toward Lothrop and climbed the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span>
-flight of slate steps that led to the second corridor.
-Ben Myatt roomed with Nate Leddy in Number 8,
-and both occupants of the two-room suite were in
-when Dud entered. He hadn’t seen Myatt for several
-days and he was surprised to find him stretched
-out on the couch looking rather pale and fagged.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Dud,” he said. “Mind if I don’t get
-up? I’m feeling a bit rocky today. Pull up a chair.”
-Dud replied to Leddy’s greeting and found a seat.
-Leddy went on sorting some books at his desk.
-“Nate,” continued Myatt, “has been telling me about
-your good work yesterday, Dud. I was awfully
-glad to hear it, son. How’s the arm today?”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite all right, thanks. Oh, it’s a little stiff, but
-I guess it will limber up this afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Better go easy with it. Nine innings is quite a
-stretch the first time. You’ve never gone the full
-limit before, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, and I thought for a while yesterday that I
-wasn’t going to be able to. I guess Leddy told you
-what a mess I made of that fifth inning.”</p>
-
-<p>Ben nodded. “I wonder,” he ruminated, “how
-many of us have had an upset in that ‘fatal fifth.’ It
-seems that the fifth is crucial. Anyway, I’ve always
-had a sort of superstition about it. If I can last out
-the fifth I can go the limit, but almost every game
-I pitch something happens in that inning. Sometimes
-it’s only a stumble and sometimes it’s a regular<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span>
-fall-down. I dare say you thought it funny Pete
-didn’t pull you out yesterday when you went bad,
-eh?”</p>
-
-<p>Dud nodded his head. “Yes, I expected him to,
-and when he didn’t I—well, I sort of thought he
-was keeping me in to—to discipline me. I suppose
-he was.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not exactly. We were talking you over the
-other evening; I guess it was the night after the
-Lawrence game; and Pete said he guessed you
-wouldn’t stand a full game this year but that you
-might next. I told him you could stand it any time
-if he’d let you do it. ‘You put Baker in a game
-that’s on ice,’ I said, ‘or a game you don’t particularly
-care about winning and let him see himself
-through. Every pitcher has got to get into trouble
-once and dig out again before he finds himself.
-After he has done it once he knows that he can do it
-and after that he does it.’ Pete thought I might be
-right and Guy said he was certain of it. Great Scott,
-don’t I know? Haven’t I been through it? I’ve
-stood up there with the crowd yelping and been so
-scared I couldn’t half see the plate! Just had to
-trust to luck when I let ’em go that they wouldn’t
-fly over the backstop! Don’t you feel, now that
-you’ve stood the gaff, that you could start out this
-afternoon and pitch nine innings without getting
-wobbly?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I think I could,” responded Dud cautiously.
-“But I mightn’t. When a fellow’s stuff stops breaking
-right for him and a play goes wrong in the infield
-and there are a couple on the bases——”</p>
-
-<p>“Right you are,” said Leddy. “I know the feeling,
-Baker. It’s the deuce!”</p>
-
-<p>“It sure is,” agreed Ben. “But what I’m trying
-to say is that a chap has got to get good and scared
-and get over it before he’s worth a hang in the box.
-You had your scare in the Lawrence game, Dud. I
-could see just how you felt. But they had to pull
-you out to save the game. You had another one
-yesterday and they didn’t have to pull you out and
-you found it was up to you to crawl out of the hole
-all by yourself, and you buckled down and did it.
-You didn’t know it, but if we’d been trimmed thirty
-to nothing yesterday you’d still been in there pitching
-’em over when the game ended! That was
-Pete’s plan from the first. ‘If Baker’s in shape,’ he
-said to me, ‘I’ll put him in and let him pitch the
-whole game.’”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad I didn’t know it,” laughed Dud. “I’d
-have been frightened stiff if I had!”</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t have blamed you a mite,” said Nate.
-“To tell the truth, Baker, when Pete told me on the
-bench there yesterday that he was going to put you
-in for the limit I thought he was crazy. I didn’t
-expect you to last more than four innings. I don’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span>
-mind telling you now, because it turned out all right
-and you fooled me beautifully. I apologize. You
-pitched as nice a game for a rookie as I ever saw in
-my life, old man, and that’s a fact!”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I could have seen it,” said Ben. “Fact
-is, Dud, I sort of look on you as a pupil, although I
-never really taught you a thing except a little common
-sense. You had everything you’ve got now
-when I got after you that day in the cage, but——”</p>
-
-<p>“You taught me how to use what I did have,”
-said Dud stoutly. “If it hadn’t been for you I’d
-never have made good a little bit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, all right. Thanks for the testimonial.
-What I wanted to see you about today was this.
-Nate and I talked it over and we decided to put you
-wise to what’s up. Pete probably thinks it’s better
-to keep quiet about it. Anyway, it wouldn’t help
-any to let it get over to Mount Morris. So you
-keep it to yourself. I’m dished for the rest of the
-year, Baker. When I was a kid I had a sunstroke.
-A lot of us were on the beach one beast of a hot day
-and we were doing stunts and racing and going on
-the way kids will, you know. Well, I keeled over
-and was sick for two or three days; had rather a
-narrow squeak of it, I believe. I’ve never had any
-trouble since, though, until Saturday. It was beastly
-hot that day, and I guess I was feeling sort of punk,
-anyway. Well, the result was that I had to give up,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span>
-and after I got to the Field House I was as sick as
-a dog and felt like the dickens. Now the Doc says
-I’ve got to keep out of the sun all summer. Oh, he
-says there’s no harm in going around if it’s just ordinarily
-warm, but I’m supposed to wear some sort
-of a ventilated hat or stick a newspaper in it or
-something. If the day’s all right I’ll have a try at
-twirling Saturday, but I’m pretty sure I’ll be good
-for only four or five innings. That means that Nate
-here will have to finish out. Or Nate may start and
-I’ll go in if it’s necessary. Anyhow, there’s the second
-Mount Morris game the next Friday, and, in
-case they get one away from us, we’ll have to play
-them again the next afternoon. See what I’m getting
-at, Dud? You’ve got to take your turn in one
-of those games, old man. You can’t figure it any
-other way. Gus may get a whack, of course, and if
-Gus happened to have a good day it would help the
-situation a lot. For my part, I don’t believe we can
-count on finishing the series this year in two games.
-Mount Morris is good and she’s got a pitching staff
-that’s every bit up to ours. So there it is. Nate
-will have to pitch part of the Friday game, at least,
-and if he does he won’t be up to twirling again the
-next day. We want to win the series, naturally, and
-we’ve been talking it over. And we decided that it
-would be the best thing to put you next to what was
-up and let you get accustomed to the idea. I don’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span>
-know how you are that way, Dud, but I know that
-a good many fellows if they were suddenly called on
-to go in and pitch in a deciding game with the rival
-team would have nerves so badly they wouldn’t
-know a drop from a jump.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud took a long breath. “Gee!” he said. “Can
-I do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’m sure you can—after yesterday. Yesterday’s
-experience was just the sort of medicine you
-needed. Don’t you think so yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I do. At least, I don’t think I’d ever go to
-pieces quite so badly again, Ben. But—but pitching
-against Mount Morris——”</p>
-
-<p>“Pshaw,” said Leddy. “Mount Morris isn’t so
-different from Corliss. They play a little better,
-that’s all. The big thing is to just go in and tell
-yourself, and make yourself <em>believe</em>, that you’re a
-heap better than any batsman they can put up. Isn’t
-that so, Ben?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep, I think it is. Confidence is a big factor in
-pitching, Dud. And we want you to spend the next
-week or so accumulating a lot of it. You’re not
-likely to have to work Saturday, although you never
-can tell what’ll happen in a ball game. Anyway,
-you won’t have to work more than an inning or two.
-I’m pretty sure I can go four and Nate isn’t likely
-to break down under five, I guess. I wish to goodness
-we had one south-paw in the bunch!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Brunswick’s a left-hander,” offered Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“I know, but he isn’t ready yet. I guess he’ll
-come around nicely next year. Well, that’s the outlook.
-Now, if you take my advice, you’ll do a little
-work every day, Dud; not a great deal, but enough
-to keep silky; and you’ll get used to the idea of going
-into one of those Mount Morris games and doing a
-lot of pretty pitching. I’m going to get out of here
-tomorrow and we’ll have a try-out, just you and I,
-Dud. I want to see that cross-fire of yours again.
-If you can make that good it might be a big asset
-against some of Mount Morris’ right-handed batters.
-How is your hitting nowadays, Dud?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty poor, I’m afraid,” replied Dud ruefully.</p>
-
-<p>“Try and brace up with it. You never can tell
-when a hit will mean a whole lot to your team. And
-a pitcher that can smash out a safety now and then—especially
-when it’s needed a lot—is pretty useful.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the only thing that got Ben his place,”
-said Leddy dryly.</p>
-
-<p>“It helped a lot, anyway,” laughed Ben, “especially
-when I started in with the second and didn’t
-have much more than my glove. But you try to
-meet ’em between now and next Friday, Dud. And,
-by the way, better not let Pete Sargent know that
-you’re on. Maybe he will give you a hint himself in
-a day or two, but until he does you let him think you
-don’t suspect anything.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span></p>
-
-<p>But Dud got no hint from the coach that week.
-The next day, Friday, Ben lugged Dud off to the
-practice diamond after the teams had gone in and
-put him through his paces. Dud’s round-arm delivery
-interested him considerably, and Ben had to have
-a try at it himself, without, however, getting any
-such result as Dud did.</p>
-
-<p>“I like that,” said Ben. “If you can make it a bit
-more certain, Dud, you’ll have a good ball there. I
-know if you pitched that to me and I didn’t know
-what was coming I’d back out of the box! Let’s try
-it again.”</p>
-
-<p>Dud put in every moment at batting that he could
-find opportunity for. But he didn’t seem to make
-any improvement. He could land on some of
-Brunswick’s offerings fairly well, but Gus Weston
-or Leddy nearly always got them past him. He
-wasn’t used in the box on Thursday, and had only
-two innings of work Friday, but his pitching arm
-was back in shape and he assured himself over and
-over again that he was quite ready to face Mount
-Morris or anyone else. Nevertheless, his heart had
-a way of jumping into his throat sometimes when he
-suddenly remembered what might happen a week
-hence! Jimmy wasn’t much use to him at that time,
-for Jimmy was having hard work with examinations
-and was, besides, much disgruntled over Mr.
-Sargent’s preference for Star Meyer in center field.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span>
-Even when, the day after the Corliss game, he dwelt
-on what he termed Dud’s “coup,” he was only half-hearted.</p>
-
-<p>“You own the school now, Dud,” he proclaimed.
-“Your middle name is Popularity. Didn’t I tell you
-that if you followed my advice and specialized on
-pitching a baseball you’d get to be a regular feller?
-Sure, I did! And you’ve gone and done it!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud, though, failed to discern any enormous popularity.
-Of course those who had seen the game
-were warm in their praise of his work, and those
-who hadn’t been present looked on him a bit more
-interestedly, but if he had expected to wake up on
-Thursday and find himself suddenly famous—and,
-as a matter of fact, he hadn’t thought of any such
-thing—he would have been disappointed. No one
-patted him on the back and told him how good he
-was and no one particularly sought the honor of his
-society. But the Corliss contest had not been a very
-important one and the school had fully expected to
-win it, anyway. Real fame was to be garnered only
-in a game with Mount Morris.</p>
-
-<p>Saturday dawned hot and breathless, with an unclouded
-sky overhead. There were no examinations
-that morning and the fellows had nothing to do but
-look forward to the afternoon’s contest with their
-old rival and speculate on the outcome of it. A
-few heroic ones played tennis and the canoes were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
-pretty busy, but the heat made idleness almost a
-virtue. It was rumored at dinner time that Leddy
-would start in the box for Grafton and that Myatt
-would be held in reserve.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV<br />
-<small>THE FIRST GAME</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">When, at two o’clock, the invading hordes
-swept down on Grafton it looked as
-though Mount Morris Academy had arrived
-in toto. Of the hundred and eighty-odd students
-enrolled at the Greenbank school that year,
-fully a hundred and fifty swarmed over from the
-station after the arrival of the train. They came
-in hilarious mood, marching along Crumbie and
-River Streets four abreast and waving small green
-megaphones through which they hoped to later roar
-the enemy into subjection. Green and white, the
-Mount Morris colors—I am aware that white is not
-a color, but how else can I put it?—were much in
-evidence in the shape of pennants and neckties and
-arm-bands, while a frivolous fox-terrier led the procession,
-straining at his leash, attired in a green
-blanket with the school monogram in white. Altogether,
-that invasion was notable and picturesque,
-and Grafton, looking on from the windows of Lothrop
-and Trow or from along the campus fence,
-cheered approvingly. Mount Morris cheered back<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span>
-and waved her pennants, turned into School Street
-and disbanded at the gate. Subsequently those who
-had acquaintances at Grafton were to be seen climbing
-stairways, while others wandered around in critical
-survey of the school buildings.</p>
-
-<p>Add some two hundred Grafton fellows and another
-hundred sympathizers from the village and
-roundabout and you’ll understand that the seating
-capacity of Lothrop Field that afternoon was severely
-taxed. Politely, but not over-eagerly perhaps,
-Grafton yielded the grandstands to the visitors
-and townsfolk and found accommodation on the
-grass. Only a band was lacking to make the occasion
-complete; and I’m not sure that a band would
-have had much chance with all that cheering and
-singing!</p>
-
-<p>The game started at two-thirty, or, to be exact,
-four minutes after the scheduled time. The sun was
-pretty hot and what slight breeze crept up now and
-then from the river did little to mitigate its ardor.
-Nate Leddy began proceedings by slipping a strike
-over on the head of the Mount Morris batting list,
-and the Scarlet-and-Gray cheered what they were
-pleased to consider a good augury. The enemy retired
-without reaching first and when the teams
-changed places it was seen that Mount Morris, instead
-of putting in her best pitcher, Saylor, was going
-to use Moulton. Moulton was a left-hander<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span>
-and Grafton had taken very kindly to his pitching
-last year in the second game of the series. Saylor
-was evidently to be saved for use against Myatt.</p>
-
-<p>But it was soon apparent that Moulton had progressed
-in the gentle art of pitching a baseball since
-the previous season, for Blake and Winslow both
-fanned and the best Ordway could do was to fly out
-to second-baseman. Save that the cheering and singing
-and coaching were in their enthusiasm sufficient
-to mark the occasion as one greatly out of the ordinary,
-no one would have suspected anything unusual
-from the first few innings of the contest. Both teams
-played hard but ragged ball, and the rival scorers
-had to jot down many errors. And yet, since every
-spectator was thoroughly partisan, those scoreless
-innings were not without their interest. There were
-some brilliant plays by both sides: a running, one-hand
-catch by Left-Fielder Porter of the visitors that
-deprived Guy Murtha of a two-bagger, a superb
-throw to second by Gordon of the home talent that
-cut down a green-legged runner, a double by Blake
-and Ayer that brought the fourth inning to an inglorious—or
-glorious, according to whether you
-sported green or scarlet—ending. And the two
-pitchers, neither seriously threatened, also deserved
-laurels. To offset such commendable incidents, however,
-there was a sickening muff of an easy toss by
-Murtha at second, the dropping of a foul by Ayer<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span>
-after he had it nicely in his hands, the booting of a
-hit by Winslow and a “solid ivory” play by Gordon
-in the third when he called for a pitch-out and then
-pegged the ball over first-baseman’s head when the
-runner was half-way to second. And the visitors
-made quite as many slip-ups and, I think, more displays
-of bad judgment of the kind that count in
-results but do not show in the error column.</p>
-
-<p>Leddy met his first batch of trouble in the fifth—the
-“crucial fifth,” as Ben Myatt had called it two
-days before—when he passed the first man up and
-allowed the next to hit safely past Winslow. After
-that he struck out the next two batsmen but couldn’t
-prevent a run coming over when the following green-leg
-popped a Texas Leaguer behind Winslow. Nick
-Blake made a valiant effort to get that hit, but the
-best he could do was to scoop it up and get the man
-at third. Grafton got men to third and second in
-her half, but they died there.</p>
-
-<p>That ended the scoring until the seventh, and it
-was in the seventh that Leddy gave way to Weston
-in the first half, and that the home team put the game
-away in the second period. Mount Morris began
-by getting a scratch hit that put a runner on first.
-The next man tried to sacrifice, but Leddy threw wild
-to Blake at second and both runners were safe. A
-short fly to left field settled in Hobo Ordway’s hands
-and he held the runners. Then Leddy let down and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span>
-passed the next batter on four consecutive balls and
-the bases were all occupied with but one out. Leddy
-showed nervousness and risked a tally by trying to
-catch the runner at second. Only quick work by
-Blake sent the man at third doubling back to that
-base. With a strike and two balls on the batter,
-Nate let go of a wild one and, although Gordon
-managed to partly block it, the enemy scored her second
-run. Leddy pitched another ball, worked
-a strike across and finally passed the batter. It
-was then that Gus Weston, who had been warming
-up to Brooks for two innings, was hurried to
-the rescue.</p>
-
-<p>Gus started erratically by pitching three wild ones
-in a row and then settled down and struck out the
-green-leg and got a fine salvo of applause from some
-three hundred anxious Grafton sympathizers. Another
-five minutes of suspense followed, during which
-Dud and Jimmy and the other non-combatants sat
-on the final two inches of the bench and clenched
-their hands and yelled their heads nearly off. In
-the end, after the batsman, who happened also to be
-Mount Morris’s captain, had three balls to his
-credit and two strikes against him and had fouled
-off exactly five offerings, a screaming fly to center
-field that Star Meyer caught ended the trouble.</p>
-
-<p>But if it ended Grafton’s trouble it only began
-Mount Morris’s, for it was that last of the seventh<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span>
-that saw the downfall of Moulton, the Green-and-White’s
-second-best twirler. Gordon led off with a
-sizzling shot to right that the fielder had to take on
-the bound and was secure on first. Weston went out,
-second to first. Nick Blake tried the first thing that
-came his way and bounced it off Moulton’s shins,
-advancing Gordon and arriving at first without question.
-Winslow came across with a two-base hit to
-left that sent Gordon home with Grafton’s first tally
-and a minute later Hugh Ordway slammed one
-down the third-base line, scoring Winslow and putting
-himself on second.</p>
-
-<p>That was enough for Moulton and he disappeared,
-a tow-headed youth by the name of Whitten
-taking his place. Whitten, though, was easy from
-the first moment and hit followed hit, interspersed
-by a couple of infield errors, until Grafton had
-crossed the platter with six runs.</p>
-
-<p>In the eighth Gus Weston almost produced heart
-disease among the home team supporters by passing
-the first batsman, hitting the next on the leg and
-then committing a most apparent balk and moving
-the runners to third and second. Ben Myatt drew
-on his glove about that time and moved down the
-field with Brooks, but Ben’s services were not needed,
-after all, for a weak grounder was pegged home for
-the first out and Gordon shot the ball to first for the
-second. A fly to Boynton, which he juggled for one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span>
-awful instant and then captured, brought the suspense
-to an end.</p>
-
-<p>In the Grafton half of the eighth both Winslow
-and Ordway hit safely, Murtha flied out to center,
-Ayer got his base on a fielder’s choice that failed to
-catch Winslow at third, and the sacks were again
-filled and the stage set for a tragedy. But the best
-Boynton could do was to pop up an infield fly, and it
-was left to Coach Sargent, assisted—very capably
-assisted—by one James Townsend Logan, to produce
-the appropriate climax.</p>
-
-<p>It was Star Meyer’s turn at bat, but Star had
-failed all the afternoon to do more than reach first
-on one occasion by virtue of a fielder’s choice. So
-Mr. Sargent looked about him for a pinch-hitter.
-There was, to be sure, Ben Myatt, but Ben was down
-the field gently tossing the ball to Brooks. Perhaps
-it was a gleam of eagerness in Jimmy’s eyes that decided
-the coach. At all events, Star Meyer, armed
-for the struggle, was called back half-way to the
-plate and it was Jimmy who jumped to his feet,
-seized a bat at haphazard, possibly afraid that the
-coach would change his mind if he gave him a chance,
-and fairly leaped to the plate.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy got a fine round of applause and a lot of
-advice as to what to do. It was evident that many
-of the audience would be satisfied with nothing less
-than a home-run, but, on the other hand, the advice<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span>
-he got from the bench and the coachers was to “just
-tap it, Jimmy!” Jimmy did not so well as the stand
-demanded and did better than his teammates advised.
-He smote it. He didn’t smite at once,
-though. He let Whitten put one straight over that
-looked too low to Jimmy and just right to the umpire,
-and he let Whitten follow that strike with two
-deceitful hooks that looked fine at first and then
-didn’t. And then, when Whitten tried to sneak one
-over again opposite his knee-pads, Jimmy did his
-smiting. Jimmy got that ball on the one square inch
-of his bat best calculated to produce results, a square
-inch located about four inches from the end, and he
-put all his contempt for Mount Morris and Whitten
-and, incidentally, Star Meyer, into his swing, and
-the ball traveled away with a <em>crack</em> that was heartening
-indeed to the three impatient runners, shot over
-second-baseman’s upthrust glove, still ascending,
-went curving into center field at a place where neither
-the guardian of that territory nor his left-hand neighbor
-had any chance of reaching it, and finally
-dropped to earth to roll joyfully along the sward
-pursued by two pairs of agitated green legs!</p>
-
-<p>Need I narrate that all Grafton arose as one and
-shrieked hysterical delight? Or that the bases,
-filled a scant moment before, were speedily emptied?
-Or that Jimmy, finding them empty and having his
-choice of any, decided to annex second and then,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span>
-urged on by coachers more capable of judging the
-demands of the moment, spurned second and set his
-heart on third—and would have gone tearing home
-if Guy Murtha himself hadn’t seized him forcibly
-and thrust him back to the bag? Well, perhaps you
-wouldn’t have guessed the latter details, but I fancy
-you’d have surmised the others. That hit of Jimmy’s
-went down in local history as one of the famous
-hits of the national pastime. It wasn’t that it won
-the game, for the game was already captured. Had
-he struck out Grafton would still have been returned
-the victor that afternoon. But there was something
-beautifully satisfying about it, one might almost say
-artistic. The audience was on the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">qui vive</i> for it,
-the setting was right to the most minute detail and it
-was made when and where it would do the most
-good. To be sure, it might have been a home-run
-and so scored four tallies instead of three, but I
-maintain—and I am supported by Dud and Nick
-and Hugh and half the school—that there is nearly
-always the element of luck in a home-run, whereas
-Jimmy’s three-bagger was a solid, meritorious, honestly-earned
-hit as soul-satisfying as any homer ever
-lifted over a fence!</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps you think I am dwelling over-long on the
-glory of that performance and to the holding up of
-the game. But as a matter of fact it ended the game
-there and then to all intents and purposes. To be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
-sure, Gordon did get to first on a pass, while the
-cheering was still going on, but nobody cared, any
-more than they cared a minute later when Gus Weston
-fanned. Anything that might happen now
-would be an anti-climax. The audience was satisfied,
-surfeited. Mount Morris had no fight left in
-her and went out in one, two, three order in the
-ninth.</p>
-
-<p>Subsequently there was chaos and noise and the
-sight of numerous scarlet-and-gray-hosed heroes
-bobbing about above a sea of joyful faces and open
-mouths. And Mount Morris trotted subduedly off
-the field, after returning Grafton’s cheer, and was
-next seen attired in street clothes being borne in
-hacks to the station, a number of rather tired-looking
-but still smiling young gentlemen whom Fate
-had used unkindly. And yet, as they passed Lothrop
-Hall they tossed a final cheer behind, and there was
-a grimness and determination in the tone of it that
-seemed to say: “Make the most of your triumph,
-Grafton! Our turn comes next!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV<br />
-<small>LEFT BEHIND</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Grafton jubilated and made glad. Nate
-Leddy spent a sorrowful evening and refused
-the comfort offered by his roommate.
-Gus Weston was inclined to be talkative about his
-share in the victory, but no one took Gus seriously.
-Of all those who had taken part in the contest, it
-remained to Jimmy Logan alone to be triumphant.
-Jimmy triumphed and made no bones about it. I
-don’t mean that he went around throwing his chest
-out or figuratively crowning himself with laurel and
-with bay. Oh, not at all. Jimmy was not self-assertive
-in the least. He only smiled when laudation
-came his way, and strove to impress others as being
-firmly of the idea that what he had done had been
-nothing to speak of, absolutely nothing. Only, now
-that it had been mentioned, wasn’t it a joke on Star
-Meyer? Star hadn’t made a hit in the game and
-had fielded—well, anyone knew what Star’s fielding
-was like! And then, just when he had a chance to
-really do something for himself and the team, Pete
-had yanked him away from the plate. Not, however,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span>
-that, in Jimmy’s belief, Star <em>would</em> have done
-anything. Probably quite the contrary and otherwise.
-Star, he reflected compassionately, must be
-feeling rather cheap, eh?</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy fairly haunted Star’s waking hours for the
-next day or two. No matter where Star went, there
-also was Jimmy, Jimmy with a sympathetic mien and
-a sly twinkle in his eye. Star ran across him in corridors,
-on the Green, on the Campus, on the field,
-everywhere. And, on Sunday afternoon, trying to
-find sanctuary in the library, he hid himself behind
-an atlas of the world in a secluded corner, only to
-hear a few minutes later the sound of footsteps on
-the floor and to glance over the top of his book into
-the sweetly condoling countenance of Jimmy. Star
-dropped the atlas with a mutter of despair and
-sought his room.</p>
-
-<p>There were plenty who predicted that Jimmy had
-ousted Star from center field, and Jimmy himself
-believed that he had, and yet when Wednesday came
-around, bringing final examinations to an end and
-Yarrow High School to the scene, Jimmy again decorated
-the bench and it was Star who ambled out to
-center field! And, oh, the chagrin of Jimmy!</p>
-
-<p>There isn’t much to tell of that game. Yarrow
-had been selected because she was not calculated to
-make hard work for Grafton, and she proved the
-wisdom of the selection. Brunswick started in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span>
-box for the Scarlet-and-Gray and lasted three innings
-and a third of the next. Then Dud went to the
-rescue and stopped the onslaught of the enemy. He
-was instructed not to exert himself and didn’t need
-to, but, possibly for fear that he might, Gus Weston
-relieved him in the eighth. Meanwhile Grafton
-kept her plate clean and scored eight runs on her
-own account. Except that it kept the players in
-form and took the place of a game with the second—which
-team, by the way, was at Greenbank receiving
-a rather conclusive drubbing from the Mount
-Morris second nine—that contest might just as
-well have not been played. Yarrow High was not
-enough of an opponent to test Grafton’s ability in
-any line. But it served to keep the enthusiasm up,
-if anything was needed for such a purpose, and
-gave the Scarlet-and-Gray something to while away
-the time with. The next day was to be Graduation
-Day and many fathers and mothers and assorted
-relatives and friends were already on hand. The
-Glee and Mandolin and Banjo Clubs discoursed in
-the Gymnasium that evening and there was a dance
-afterwards. The dance, however, was not for the
-baseball players, or, at least, only a few numbers
-of it, for they were supposed to be tucked in bed at
-ten o’clock. Let’s hope that most of them were. I
-know, though, that Jimmy wasn’t. Jimmy at that
-particular hour was perched rather precariously on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span>
-the footboard of Dud’s bed explaining at great
-length and with a fine flow of language his opinion
-of Star Meyer and Coach Sargent and Guy Murtha
-and all others who in any way represented authority
-in baseball affairs. Jimmy wasn’t nearly through
-when Dud fell asleep.</p>
-
-<p>Graduation Day dawned fair and only mildly
-hot and went, as many had gone before at Grafton
-and as many would later. There were the exercises
-in the hall at eleven, at which some thirty seniors
-received diplomas and some one hundred and eighty
-others applauded deafeningly. Several that we
-know were among the fortunate young gentlemen:
-Ted Trafford, captain of last fall’s football team;
-Roy Dresser, Guy Murtha, of present fame; Joe
-Leslie, class president; Gordon Parker, Nate Leddy,
-Ben Myatt, Neil Ayer, Jack Zanetti, of track and
-football renown, and some others doubtless. And—I
-had almost forgotten—Pop Driver! Yes, Pop
-actually received his diploma at last and bore up
-very modestly under the acclaim that almost swept
-the roof from the building!</p>
-
-<p>And there was a royal luncheon in dining-hall at
-one-thirty, and after that “spreads,” as the fellows
-liked to call them, in various dormitory rooms, and
-still later, lemonade and sandwiches and cakes set
-out on a long table in front of Manning. In the
-evening Forum and Lit held their big debate of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span>
-year, and Lit won hands down, and the admiring
-fathers and mothers and sisters and aunts and—oh,
-all the rest of them, clapped and beamed and were
-extraordinarily proud. And then there were more
-refreshments and, at last, everyone went home—somewhere.</p>
-
-<p>The exodus began the next morning, but less than
-half the students deserted. Most of them, accompanied
-by compliant parents, entrained for Greenbank
-at eleven-ten or twelve-twenty-five to see the
-ball game. At a few minutes after twelve Grafton
-was pretty well deserted. Mr. Crump, the worthy
-head janitor, remained, I think, and possibly a stray
-member of the faculty, but Doctor Duncan went and
-“J. P.” went and “Jimmy” Rumford and, oh, just
-about everyone! And so we might as well go too!</p>
-
-<p>The team, fifteen strong exclusive of manager
-and assistant manager and Mr. Sargent and “Dinny”
-Crowley and “Davy” Richards, left on the later
-train. A five-minute wait at the junction, spent in
-working off a little extra enthusiasm, and then they
-boarded the main line train and were hustled away
-toward Greenbank and whatever fate awaited them.</p>
-
-<p>Of course most everyone hoped for a second victory
-since it would leave them free to go home for
-the summer, but there were one or two enthusiasts
-who were willing to see the series go to three games.
-Among the latter was Dud, for Dud wanted very<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span>
-much indeed to pitch in one Mount Morris contest,
-and he saw no likelihood of doing it unless that third
-game was played. Most of the fellows proclaimed
-their belief that Grafton would again take the measure
-of her opponent this afternoon, but secretly they
-doubted it. Mount Morris had nearly always taken
-one game, and today, playing on her own field, surrounded
-by her graduation crowd, and smarting under
-the defeat of last week, she was certain to make
-a fine fight for victory.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Sargent, Murtha, Barnes and Mr. Crowley
-occupied seats together and spent most of the time
-between Needham Junction and Greenbank laying
-plans for the contest. Dud and Jimmy sat together
-further back in the coach, Jimmy doing his best to
-make Star Meyer uncomfortable by staring at the
-back of his head. There was a good deal of talk
-and laughter and some horse-play, for the fellows
-had the coach pretty much to themselves until Webster
-was reached. There was a delay at Webster,
-for a branch line train with which the express made
-connection had not arrived. Most of the fellows
-disembarked to stretch their legs and harry the station
-agent, and Jimmy and Dud were of the number.
-Jimmy insisted on taking his stand on the platform
-opposite the window at which Star sat and
-staring him out of countenance until Dud dragged
-him away by main force.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I’ll bet,” chuckled Jimmy as, having promised to
-behave, he obtained his release from his chum’s
-grasp, “I’ll bet that Star will be glad when he hikes
-out for home! I never knew a fellow who disliked
-to be looked at as much as he does!”</p>
-
-<p>“Looked at!” said Dud. “You’re enough to
-drive the fellow crazy! I wouldn’t be surprised if
-he dreams of you at night, you and your—er—bacillus
-stare!”</p>
-
-<p>“I think the word is <em>basilisk</em>,” replied Jimmy
-sweetly. “Not that it matters, however. Not that
-anything matters except whether I beat that chump
-out for the position of center fielder today. Say,
-where are you taking me? Suppose the train starts
-up?”</p>
-
-<p>“It won’t. You heard the trainman say we were
-waiting for the local, and that comes in over there
-on the other side of the station. Let’s see if there
-are any fish in this stream.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who cares whether there are or not?” But
-Jimmy followed along the embankment to lean beside
-Dud over the railing of the culvert and stare
-into the little brook that flowed beneath. “I see a
-frog down there, if that will do you any good. I’d
-like to catch him and put him down Star’s neck!”</p>
-
-<p>They had wandered some forty or fifty yards
-back from the rear car, which the team had taken
-possession of, and consequently when a bell clanged<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
-far down the track and the command “All
-abo-o-oard!” reached them, as it did at that moment,
-they didn’t waste time in expressing surprise
-or consternation but set off as fast as their feet would
-carry them.</p>
-
-<p>“That trainman,” panted Jimmy, “will come to a
-bad end!”</p>
-
-<p>Whether the conductor failed to see them or
-whether he gave them credit for an astonishing
-celerity they never knew, but the train began to move
-before they had covered half the distance between
-the culvert and the last platform of the rear car.
-Running over ties is not conducive to speed and for
-a moment or two they despaired of reaching their
-goal. But they did reach it, just when the end of the
-station platform threatened to defeat their efforts,
-and Jimmy, leading, grasped a handful of iron railing
-and gave a spring.</p>
-
-<p>What happened next was always very confused
-in their minds. They had noticed that the rear
-platform was occupied by someone, but had not recognized
-who that someone was. As Jimmy’s fingers
-closed about the railing at the steps a rubber-soled
-shoe was placed against his chest and the very next
-thing <a href="#i_fp282">Jimmy</a> knew he <a href="#i_fp282">was rolling over on the platform
-and Dud</a> was rolling over <a href="#i_fp282">with him</a>, and the
-train was rods away!</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_fp282">
- <img src="images/i_fp282.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_281">“Jimmy ... was rolling over on the platform and
-Dud ... with him”</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Struggling somehow to his feet, Jimmy gave chase,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span>
-shouting like a wild Indian and causing a stupendous
-commotion amongst the few occupants of the platform.
-But all he got for his pains was an ironic
-farewell wave from the figure in the doorway of the
-last car!</p>
-
-<p>Dud, rather pale of face, joined him, dusting his
-clothes and staring dazedly after the disappearing
-express. Jimmy, wild-eyed, turned sputteringly.</p>
-
-<p>“D-did you see who that was?” he demanded.
-“It was Star Meyer! He pushed me off the step!
-He—he kicked me off! I might have been killed!
-You wait! You wait till I——”</p>
-
-<p>But Jimmy was fairly gibbering now. Dud handed
-his straw hat to him. “Never mind about that
-now,” he said impatiently. “The question is how
-we’re to get to Greenbank. How far is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. You wait till I get my hands
-on that—that——”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s find out,” interrupted Dud anxiously. “The
-game’s at two-thirty and it must be half-past one
-now. Maybe there’s another train that will get us
-there in time, Jimmy.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy stopped his mouthings and hurried after
-Dud to the waiting-room, unconscious of the curious
-regard of the small audience. The agent was
-most unsympathetic. He had been chivied by the
-fellows and made sport of and he seemed to think
-that it served these two young rascals just about<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span>
-right. His replies to their anxious questions were
-short and discouraging. No, there wasn’t another
-train to Greenbank before two-forty-eight. No, he
-didn’t know how they were to get there by half-past
-two. (His tone implied that he hoped they
-wouldn’t!) Yes, they might be able to get a carriage
-to drive them over. There was a livery stable
-about a mile down the road there. And the distance
-to Greenbank by rail was nine miles.</p>
-
-<p>They retired to consider. A mile walk to the livery
-stable didn’t appeal to them and Dud suggested
-telephoning. Fortunately, there was a booth in the
-corner of the waiting-room and Jimmy possessed a
-nickel. They crowded in and at last, after much delay,
-got the stable. But the voice at the other end
-was not at all reassuring. They had carriages enough
-and horses enough, but just now there wasn’t anyone
-to drive ’em. If they could wait until two
-o’clock maybe Billy would be back from Chester.
-Jimmy impatiently suggested that they could drive
-themselves and the stable could send a man over to
-Greenbank on the train to bring the team back. But
-that didn’t appear feasible to the man on the telephone.
-Mr. Libby, it appeared, had gone to the
-city. (Mr. Libby, they gathered, was the proprietor.)
-If Mr. Libby was there maybe he’d let
-’em have a rig, but the speaker declined to shoulder
-the responsibility. In short, the only course was to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span>
-await the return of Billy at two—or maybe half-past—or
-three, at the latest!</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy hung up the receiver impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose there isn’t a trolley?” murmured Dud.
-They consulted the agent once more. He showed
-peevishness at being required to awake from his nap
-and open the window again and took evident pleasure
-in informing them that the nearest trolley line
-was four miles distant and that it didn’t go to Greenbank,
-anyway; leastways, not direct; it went to West
-Shoreham first. The window descended with a venomous
-bang.</p>
-
-<p>Dud and Jimmy, hands in pockets, wandered disconsolately
-back to the platform. There was an
-unoccupied baggage truck there and they seated
-themselves on it and swung their legs and stared
-forlornly at a field of potatoes.</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno,” murmured Jimmy hopelessly.</p>
-
-<p>Dud consulted his watch. It was now one-forty-six.
-In three-quarters of an hour the game would
-start. And they wouldn’t be there! Of course it
-wasn’t very likely that he would have had a chance to
-pitch today, anyhow, but there was always the possibility.
-Dud sighed deeply and Jimmy echoed the
-sigh. It had just occurred to him that there was
-now no question as to who would play center field.</p>
-
-<p>“If I ever lay my hands on that skunk,” broke
-forth Jimmy, “I’ll—I’ll just about——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span></p>
-
-<p>But Dud interrupted by sliding off the truck and
-walking away down the platform.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are you going?” called Jimmy.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to Greenbank,” answered Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Walk!”</p>
-
-<p>“Walk! Walk nine miles? Why it’ll take hours!”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” replied Dud over his shoulder. “Let
-it. But I’m going to get there, just the same,
-Jimmy.”</p>
-
-<p>“But—here, hold on!” Jimmy followed at a trot.
-“What’s the use, Dud? We won’t get there until
-the game’s ’most over, and——”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t help it. I started out to see that game
-and I’m going to! Besides, a fellow might as well
-be walking as sitting around on that platform. I
-can do nine miles in two hours, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“Two hours! Oh, jimminy!” Jimmy looked
-longingly back at the shaded platform.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you say?” demanded Dud. “Coming
-along?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose so,” said Jimmy in a weak voice. “I
-don’t see what good it is, but—all right, Dud, I’ll
-have a try at it. Nine miles! Gee!”</p>
-
-<p>“Come on then,” said Dud. “Let’s hike.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI<br />
-<small>THE BORROWED HAND-CAR</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">It was hot and the walking was hard. They took
-to the path between the tracks, but even that
-was far from being an ideal surface. Now and
-then a sleeper, longer than the rest, protruded to trip
-unwary feet and for long stretches at a time they
-walked over ballast. When they had been on their
-way only a few minutes a locomotive whistle sounded
-in the distance behind them and Jimmy was for
-turning back. It might be, he thought, a train to
-Greenbank. But Dud destroyed his hope.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s that branch line train,” he said. “The one
-we didn’t wait for.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to push it off the track,” muttered Jimmy.
-“If it hadn’t been for that we wouldn’t be in this
-fix.”</p>
-
-<p>After another ten minutes conversation ceased altogether.
-They were too hot and tired for talking.
-The track, with strange perversity, ran for a long
-way through a cut and what breeze there was failed
-to reach them. They watched eagerly for the mile-posts
-at first, but they were unusually far apart,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span>
-they concluded, and they soon got tired of looking
-for them. A wooden trestle made the going easier
-while it lasted, for there were planks to walk on,
-but it ended all too soon and they were back on cinders
-and broken stone again. Near the end of the
-third mile they retired to the ditch at one side to let
-a long freight trundle past. Jimmy morosely observed
-that, of course, the pesky thing had to be
-going in the wrong direction!</p>
-
-<p>They reached a small station at about half-past
-two and made an assault on the water tank in the
-little room. Perhaps fortunately, the water had not
-seen any ice that day. They rested a few minutes
-and then went on again. A hundred yards down
-the track Jimmy uttered an exclamation and Dud
-turned to find him pointing dramatically at a hand-car
-reposing on a couple of ties laid at right angles
-to the rails at one side of the way.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you know about that?” asked Jimmy
-in awed tones.</p>
-
-<p>“What about it?” asked Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you chump, all we’ve got to do is slide that
-on the track and get to Greenbank in no time at
-all!”</p>
-
-<p>“And get arrested for swiping railroad property!”</p>
-
-<p>“We won’t swipe it; we’ll just borrow it,” said
-the other indignantly.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess,” responded Dud dubiously, “it’s harder<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span>
-to work one of those things than it is to walk. Besides,
-we couldn’t lift it onto the rails.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll bet we could. And all you have to do is just
-work those handles up and down like a pump, you on
-one side and I on the other. It may be hard, but
-it’ll be a mighty pleasant change!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re certain to get in trouble if we try that,
-Jimmy. Come on. We’ve done half the distance,
-I guess, already.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, come on!” Jimmy was already struggling
-with the hand-car. “We can lift it easy enough,
-Dud. It isn’t heavy. Here, we’ll toss this junk off.”
-And Jimmy ruthlessly slid a box of spikes and some
-tools to the ground. “Give us a lift, Dud!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud hesitated an instant longer and then went to
-Jimmy’s assistance. The car was lumbersome, but
-they had no great difficulty in trundling it along the
-ties and then swinging it to the rails. Fortunately,
-a bend in the tracks hid them from the little station.</p>
-
-<p>“Climb aboard!” said Jimmy joyfully. “Bend
-your back, Dud! Let her flicker!”</p>
-
-<p>She didn’t “flicker” much at first, though, and it
-proved to be surely a case of “bend your back”!
-They did a good deal of grunting and perspiring before
-the hand-car found its gait. After that it
-wasn’t hard to keep it going, except that the continual
-raising and lowering of the bars soon began
-to tire arms and shoulders and backs. But Jimmy,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span>
-although the perspiration was soon trickling down
-his nose, was full of encouragement.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s another mile-post coming, Dud! Say,
-I’ll bet we’re making fifteen miles an hour, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“More like ten,” panted Dud. “Wish we’d come
-to a grade so we could quit a minute!”</p>
-
-<p>“Bound to be one soon, I guess. Keep it up!
-We’re doing finely!”</p>
-
-<p>And there was one soon. It began a few rods beyond,
-but, instead of being a down-grade it was the
-other sort, and for the next ten minutes they had
-their work cut out for them! Dud was all for abandoning
-the hand-car and taking to their legs again,
-but Jimmy pointed out that when they had once
-reached the top of the hill they’d be able to coast
-down the other side of it. But Jimmy was wrong
-about that, for when the grade did come to an end
-only a level track awaited them. Still, after propelling
-that thing up a quarter-mile rise, even level
-track was a vast relief, and they let the car run a
-minute while they dropped the handles and mopped
-their streaming faces.</p>
-
-<p>“What time is it now?” asked Jimmy, easing a
-wilted collar about his neck. They had long since
-removed their jackets and hats and bundled them at
-their feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Two minutes to three,” answered Dud. “How
-much farther is it, do you think?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Only about two miles, I guess. Say, suppose we
-come to a station? We’ll have to beat it by in a
-hurry, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Either that or let this thing go. But there isn’t
-likely to be another station before Greenbank, I
-guess. Let’s hit her up again.”</p>
-
-<p>They hit her up and overtook another mile-post
-and were arguing breathlessly as to the distance
-they had covered when a sudden roar and clatter
-down the track behind them put the question out of
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Train!</em>” yelled Dud, who was facing the rear.
-“Stop her, Jimmy!”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy threw his body across his ascending bar,
-after one glance behind him. A short blast of warning
-came from the approaching locomotive, and then
-another and another. The hand-car slowed and
-stopped and before it had ceased its momentum two
-badly scared boys were on the ground beside it.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve got—to get—her off!” cried Dud.
-“Quick, Jimmy!”</p>
-
-<p>On came the train, still whistling, but now they
-could hear the grating of brake-shoes as the engineer
-put on the air. Dud had his end of the hand-car
-clear of the rails, but at Jimmy’s end the wheels
-were caught.</p>
-
-<p>“Give me a lift—here!” panted Jimmy, and Dud
-sprang to his aid.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span></p>
-
-<p>Neither dared look back up the track, but they
-could feel the rails pulse as the locomotive bore down
-upon them, while the screech of locked wheels was
-deafening. It seemed minutes before they managed
-to wrench the hand-car from the track, although it
-was in reality but a matter of seconds from the
-first warning blast to the instant that, pushing the
-hand-car down the slope beside the railway, the
-two boys literally threw themselves after it. There
-was a roar, a maelstrom of dust, the sound of releasing
-brake-shoes and the freight, gathering speed
-again, rushed by them.</p>
-
-<p><em>Clank-clank! Thump-thump!</em> Car after car
-went past while Dud and Jimmy, white-faced,
-breathless and trembling from their exertions,
-crouched in a tangle of bushes beside the half-overturned
-hand-car, deafened, choked and blinded with
-dust, shudderingly grateful for their escape.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Meanwhile, some two miles distant, Grafton and
-Mount Morris were battling valiantly on a sun-smitten
-diamond before the gaze of nearly a thousand
-excited spectators. The fourth inning was
-drawing to its close. It had been a slow contest, filled
-with anxious moments for both contenders. Every
-inning so far had seen runners on the bases and yet
-only one tally had been scored and that for the visitors.
-In the first of the second a pass had been followed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span>
-by a clean hit and a bad error by Mount Morris’
-second-baseman and Captain Murtha had dashed
-over the plate. But since then Saylor, for the Green-and-White,
-and Nate Leddy, pitching for the visitors,
-had managed to stave off runs, although more
-than once a hit would have spelled disaster. Neither
-Saylor nor Leddy had gone unpunished, for there
-had been hits aplenty for both teams, but neither
-Grafton nor Mount Morris had been able to hit
-safely when a hit would have meant a run. Errors
-had been frequent and each team had been about
-equally guilty, although the Green-and-White’s slip-ups
-had proved more costly. Now, with two down
-and Gordon on second, Nate Leddy was trying his
-hardest to solve the mysteries of the sharply-breaking
-deliveries of his rival. Here again a hit would
-send a tally across, and here again the hit was not
-forthcoming, for Nate, after getting Saylor in the
-hole, fouled off his second strike and then lifted a
-high one to first-baseman.</p>
-
-<p>The fifth began with the tail-end of the Mount
-Morris batting list coming up and Leddy beginning
-to show wear. Strike-outs had been few and Nate
-had in nearly every case been obliged to serve at
-least seven balls. Mount Morris had displayed a
-positive passion for knocking fouls. Nate’s first
-two offerings were not good enough and the third
-went bounding off the batsman’s cudgel into the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span>
-stand. Then came a third ball, and simultaneous
-with the umpire’s decision Ben Myatt left the bench
-and began to warm up with Brooks. Nate had to
-let that batter go. The next one flied out to Boynton.
-Then came another hit, the seventh for the
-home team, and first and second were occupied.
-Nate was slipping now and from the bench Coach
-Sargent was watching him as a cat watches a mouse.
-One ball—two balls—a strike—another ball—</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Sargent arose and Guy Murtha hustled in
-from second to the mound. Back of first base Ben
-Myatt removed his coat and moved into the field.
-Nate passed him the ball and Ben clapped the other
-on the shoulder as he turned toward the bench.</p>
-
-<p>“Myatt pitching for Grafton!” announced the
-umpire.</p>
-
-<p>Weston had joined Brooks and was tossing the
-ball to him desultorily, his gaze on the diamond.
-The cheers from the visiting contingent died away
-and Ben took up the task. The batsman accepted
-the first ball and slammed it across the diamond to
-Nick Blake. Nick dashed to second and made the
-out, but the oncoming runner from first spoiled his
-throw and the double. Two down and men on first
-and third. But Ben had the situation in hand and
-the next batsman fouled out to Winslow.</p>
-
-<p>Once more Grafton put runners on the bases,
-Winslow first, after Blake had retired by the strike-out<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span>
-route, and then Ordway, the latter beating out
-a bunt by a hair’s-breadth. But then Murtha, swinging
-like a Hercules, only succeeded in driving a liner
-into shortstop’s glove and Neil Ayer’s fly to right
-was an easy out.</p>
-
-<p>Mount Morris’ first-batsman struck out amidst
-the joyful whoops of the Grafton supporters, but
-the next man hit safely to short left and was advanced
-by a bunt which Winslow, coming in for
-on the run, scrambled. A double steal followed,
-Gordon pegging to Winslow too late. Myatt had
-trouble finding the plate and the bags were filled
-again. But Fortune had not yet turned her back on
-the Scarlet-and-Gray. The Mount Morris left
-fielder, doing his utmost to bring off a sacrifice fly,
-only hit a weak, bounding ball to the pitcher’s box
-and the runner was out at the plate. But Gordon’s
-throw to first was too late to get the batter. Myatt
-worked a strike over and followed it with a ball.
-Then a healthy swing failed and the score was two-and-one.
-But a second ball followed and then a
-third, and Grafton saw trouble ahead. The next
-was a strike, not offered at, and Ben gathered himself
-together for a final effort. When the ball left
-his hand it sped straight for the center of the plate
-with nothing on it but speed. There was a <em>crack</em>
-of wood against leather and out in left field Hugh
-Ordway, shading his eyes for an instant, turned and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span>
-raced back. A swift turn, a change of direction to
-the right and then a breathless, silent moment in the
-stand. Down came the ball, Hugh stepped forward
-a pace and then a mighty shout of joy and relief
-arose from the flaunters of the scarlet-and-gray pennants.
-With his back almost at the wall of the red-brick
-dormitory, Hobo Ordway had pulled down
-one of the longest flies in the history of the dual
-contests!</p>
-
-<p>The seventh began with Grafton still one lone
-tally to the good. Boynton was an easy out, shortstop
-to first, Star Meyer fanned, Gordon got a
-lucky hit that glanced from Saylor’s glove and rolled
-safely past second-baseman. Myatt received a salvo
-of applause as he made his first appearance at the
-plate and there were demands for a home-run. But
-Ben was not the old Ben today. Those on the bench
-realized that he was playing on his nerve and Mr.
-Sargent viewed him anxiously. Ben let Saylor put
-a strike and two balls over before he offered. Then
-came the hit-and-run signal and he swung at a fairly
-wide one while Gordon streaked to second. Ben
-missed entirely, but the catcher’s hurried throw was
-low and Gordon was safe. Ben spoiled the next one
-and Saylor made it three balls and Grafton howled
-and whooped expectantly. But Ben’s attempt to wallop
-failed, for the ball only glanced from his stick
-and rolled slowly toward third. Pitcher and third-baseman<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span>
-both scurried for it and Saylor fielded it.
-It was too late to get Gordon and the pitcher pegged
-across to first. Ben, running hard, scented the throw
-and dived feet-foremost to base with the result that
-he collided with the baseman and that youth dropped
-the ball. Had Gordon started for home at that moment
-he could have reached it safely, but he didn’t
-and a golden opportunity was lost.</p>
-
-<p>Nick Blake let two go by, one a strike and the
-other a pitch-out. Then, on the next delivery Myatt
-sprinted to second unchallenged. Nick tried to hit
-but failed and found himself in the hole. Saylor
-coaxed him with a drop and then a wide and high
-one and Nick refused both. It had to be good then
-and it was, and Nick let go at it and dashed for first,
-while Gordon tore in from third and Myatt legged
-it to third. But Nick’s effort was vain, for the
-Mount Morris third-baseman speared the ball a
-yard in the air!</p>
-
-<p>The Green-and-White was not yet acknowledging
-defeat, and proved it by the way she went after the
-redoubtable Myatt in the last of the seventh. Ben
-was slow and careful today, lacking his usual certainty
-and dash, and after the first man at bat had
-smashed a drive down the first base line for a single
-the home team batters lost their awe of him and
-began to make trouble. Ben retired the second man
-after much trouble by making him fly out to Meyer,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
-and Meyer held the runner at first by a quick return.
-But the next man found something to his
-liking and sped it straight over second and the runner
-on first went on to third. Ben’s trip around the
-bases had been his undoing and he knew it, and after
-he had pitched two balls to the succeeding batsman
-he turned and spoke to Murtha and a consultation
-followed. Mr. Sargent was already on his feet beside
-the bench. A nod of his head and Guy Weston
-tossed the ball to Brooks and walked toward the
-mound.</p>
-
-<p>Ben came out with hanging head and staggered
-when he reached the bench, and Davy Richards, a
-supporting arm around him, led him off to the dressing-room.</p>
-
-<p>Weston sped in his warming-up deliveries and then
-faced his task. A man on first and one on third, one
-down and two balls on the batsman was the situation,
-and Weston didn’t better it any by pitching two balls
-in succession and adding a third runner to the bases!
-On the bench, Mr. Sargent watched dismally.
-Brunswick, his last chance now, was warming up,
-but it was a question whether Brunswick could do
-any better than Weston. Mr. Sargent was thinking
-hard things of Dudley Baker at that moment!</p>
-
-<p>And consequently it was something of a surprise
-to him when Dud’s voice came to him across his
-shoulder! “I’m terribly sorry, sir,” Dud was saying<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span>
-breathlessly, “but we got left at that place where
-we stopped, Logan and I, and we walked most of
-the way and stole a hand-car, sir, and we just got
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Sargent’s surprise turned to cold disapproval.
-“Very nice, Baker,” he replied scathingly. “It may
-comfort you to know that you’ve probably lost the
-game for us. I had meant you to pitch today,
-but——”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, thanks, and I’m all ready to if you’ll
-let me!”</p>
-
-<p>“All ready to!” Mr. Sargent surveyed the boy’s
-disheveled attire and flushed, tired face sarcastically.
-“You look it! Why, you couldn’t find the
-plate in the condition you are!”</p>
-
-<p>“You try me, sir! I’ll be all right in three minutes,
-sir! Just let me get into my togs, Mr. Sargent,
-and give me a chance! Will you, sir, please?”</p>
-
-<p>Weston had just served another ball to the new
-batsman. Mr. Sargent hesitated only an instant.
-Then: “I’ll give you a chance, Baker,” he said
-quickly. “Hurry into your togs. Churchill, show
-Baker where to change. I’ll hold the game up as
-much as I can. But hurry!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, I won’t be three minutes! And Jimmy,
-sir? Logan, I mean. May he——”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes, only don’t stand here! Hurry, I say.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Sargent sped Parker to where Brunswick<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span>
-was warming up and in a moment Brunswick was listening
-to the coach’s instructions. In the box, Gus
-Weston, ball in hand, waited uncomprehendingly.
-Then Murtha took the sphere from him, slapped
-him on the shoulder and sent him disgustedly to the
-bench.</p>
-
-<p>“Brunswick pitching for Grafton!” called the umpire.</p>
-
-<p>But Brunswick’s pitching was an extraordinary affair!
-If cold molasses is slow, then Brunswick was
-molasses frozen to a state of solidity! It took him
-the better part of sixty seconds to get from bench
-to mound, and once there he had to talk long and
-earnestly with Murtha and Winslow. And then he
-went at his warming up very, very slowly, with a
-wait between each delivery. Mount Morris protested
-volubly and the stand hooted, but Brunswick
-was not concerned. Before each delivery he examined
-the ball rather as though he had never seen
-anything just like it before, and then, having assured
-himself that it was all right, he studied the
-plate and the catcher, and some time later he pitched.
-Just how long it took him to send those five practice
-balls to Pete Gordon I don’t know, but I’m certain
-that he established a record that afternoon for
-dawdling! And, finally, just as he had pulled his cap
-down for the twentieth time and the batsman was
-impatiently pawing the dirt and waving his bat, an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>
-interruption occurred. A brand-new scarlet-legged
-player appeared on the scene and walked toward the
-box. Brunswick dropped the ball and turned away
-and Mount Morris found the mystery explained.
-Gordon was yielding his mask and protector to Ed
-Brooks and the umpire, removing his own mask,
-stepped again in front of the plate.</p>
-
-<p>“For Grafton,” he announced, “Baker pitching,
-Brooks catching! <em>Play ball!</em>”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII<br />
-<small>WINNING HIS GAME</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Bases filled and only one out! Two balls and
-no strikes on the batsman! A hit meant two
-runs across! All this Guy Murtha explained
-in quick, troubled words to Dud. And Dud, tired
-of face but eager-eyed, nodded quite as though Guy
-had explained that it was a fine day and that the
-weather prediction was for a continuation of present
-conditions!</p>
-
-<p>Then Guy went back to his place and the Grafton
-sympathizers stopped cheering and Dud sped his
-five balls to Brooks, each one just where he meant
-it to go.</p>
-
-<p>Once more the batsman took his place and Dud
-pitched.</p>
-
-<p>“Str-r-ike!” bawled the umpire, and waved an
-arm aloft. The batter thumped the rubber with his
-bat. Again Dud launched the ball forward. Again
-it sped straight and true across the platter and knee-high.</p>
-
-<p>“Str-r-ike two!”</p>
-
-<p>The batsman grew wary. He no longer fidgeted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span>
-but put his whole mind on the next delivery. Dud
-fumbled his cap, took his half wind-up and shot his
-arm to the right and around in a swing. The ball
-flashed to the plate and the umpire hurled his hand
-aloft with a mighty gesture.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>He’s out!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Strident protest from the retreating batsman and
-from the Mount Morris bench! Cheers wild and
-triumphant from the Grafton seats and from the
-field! And another green-stockinged player faced
-his fate. A ball, a strike, another ball. Then a
-drop that was swung at and never touched. Two-and-two,
-and Mount Morris watching her opportunity
-slip from her grasp. Then, while Dud
-swung his arm up, came a quick cry from behind
-him:</p>
-
-<p>“<em>He’s off!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>The man at third was streaking to the plate! But
-so was the ball, and although the batsman swung at
-it, it lodged safely in Brooks’ mitt and Brooks, dropping
-to his knees, blocked the ambitious runner a foot
-from the plate!</p>
-
-<p>“Can you keep it up?” asked Mr. Sargent wonderingly
-as Dud sank to the bench and Davy Richards
-flourished a towel in front of his face.</p>
-
-<p>“I think so, sir. I’m going to try awfully hard,”
-answered Dud.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, go easy on yourself this inning. Let them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303"></a>[303]</span>
-hit a little if you like. There’s another inning coming
-and maybe several.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.” Dud’s gaze, straying along the bench,
-caught sight of Jimmy, Jimmy dressed for play and
-with an anxious regard fixed on the coach. “If you
-could, sir,” said Dud, “I wish you’d let Logan in.
-It wasn’t our fault that we got left, sir; at least, not
-wholly; and Jimmy’s crazy to play!”</p>
-
-<p>“Logan? Maybe in the next inning. I’ll see.
-Here! What’s this?”</p>
-
-<p>This was Star Meyer picking himself up from the
-water bucket, having in some way tripped over one
-of Jimmy’s feet as he passed. Jimmy was all sympathy
-and apologies, but Star only muttered. His
-haughtiness was wholly lacking and the fellows
-viewed with real concern the almost abject manner
-with which he righted the empty pail and retired
-into the far end of the bench. But Jimmy, catching
-Dud’s eye, winked wickedly.</p>
-
-<p>The eighth passed into history without witnessing
-a run for either side. Grafton got Ordway to first
-on a pass and he went on a base when Ayer lifted
-one to left for the second out. Then, while Boynton
-was at bat, Hugh was caught napping at second
-and another chance to score passed into oblivion.</p>
-
-<p>Mount Morris’ first man got a hit and was thrown
-out at second on an attempted steal, Brooks making
-as pretty a peg to Murtha as one could hope to see.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[304]</span>
-The next man struck out miserably. Then followed
-a scratch hit that came near to being an error for
-Blake. The next man, Saylor, flied out to Murtha
-and ended the eighth.</p>
-
-<p>Boynton started for Grafton in the ninth by beating
-out a weak hit and the scarlet pennants waved
-again. Meyer, bat on shoulder and stepping to the
-plate, was recalled.</p>
-
-<p>“Logan batting for Boynton!” called the umpire.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy swung at the first ball, disdained the next
-two, had a second strike called on him, started for
-the next and changed his mind and was glad of it
-and was finally passed when what Saylor had meant
-for a strike over the inner corner went wrong.
-With two on bases, Brooks was the man of the hour,
-but Brooks was no hitter and only stood there while
-Saylor fooled him on two slow ones that went for
-strikes, wasted a wide one on him and then made
-him bite at a drop that actually dusted the plate.
-Although Brooks played the game to the last and
-sped for his base the ball was recovered by the
-catcher and got there well ahead of him.</p>
-
-<p>Dud had as much hope of hitting safely as he had
-of knocking out a home-run. And he knew very
-well that he would be doing only what was expected
-of him if he struck out as badly as Brooks. But he
-wanted very much to do something a little better
-than that. As he dug his toes and faced Saylor, he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305"></a>[305]</span>
-recalled Ben Myatt’s remark that a pitcher who
-could hit was pretty useful. And Dud wanted to
-make himself just that! And so he tried as hard as
-he knew how to keep his eyes on the pitcher and
-study him and then on the ball, and study that, and
-so see if—</p>
-
-<p>“One ball!” said the umpire.</p>
-
-<p>Dud took a breath. All right so far. It had been
-too high and he had known it. He wondered if Saylor
-would try it again or—</p>
-
-<p>“Str-r-r-ike!”</p>
-
-<p>Well, that had certainly fooled him! He thought
-surely it was going wide. Saylor had some curve
-on that one! Dud glued his eyes to the ball once
-more, swung and missed.</p>
-
-<p>“Str-r-rike two!”</p>
-
-<p>That was awful! He was as good as gone now!
-Unless—</p>
-
-<p>“Two balls!”</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps Saylor would miss it this time. Then it
-would be three balls and two strikes and Saylor would
-have to pitch! Just why Dud offered at the next
-delivery he didn’t know then and couldn’t have explained
-later. It had all the ear-marks of a fast
-one on the outside of the plate, but for some reason
-Dud let go at it, and <a href="#i_frontis">the ball, curving inward, met
-his bat fairly and screeched off into short center</a>, low
-enough to have been speared by second-baseman had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306"></a>[306]</span>
-he been two yards nearer its path and long enough to
-send Boynton and Jimmy hustling home. Jimmy
-beat out that throw by inches only, but beat it nevertheless,
-while Dud, seeing his chance, streaked to
-second. And Grafton went fairly delirious with joy!</p>
-
-<p>Nick hit safely and advanced Dud, Winslow
-fouled out to the catcher and Hugh Ordway, putting
-all his strength into a terrific swing, sent a screeching
-fly far into right field but not far enough to
-be out of reach of the guardian of that territory. A
-long hard run and a brilliant catch and the half-inning
-was over.</p>
-
-<p>Mount Morris tried hard enough in that last
-period to catch up, but she had little chance. Dud
-had no trouble in striking out the first batsman.
-The next hit safely through second base territory.
-The third went out, Winslow to Ayer, and the
-fourth, Mount Morris’ last hope, swung at a high
-one, was fooled by a drop that he didn’t like and
-that was labeled a strike, fouled off another and at
-last, just as the shadow of the grandstand had
-reached the edge of the plate, slammed a straight,
-fast one directly at the pitcher’s box. Dud couldn’t
-make the catch; it was going too hard for that;
-but he knocked it down, found it leisurely enough
-and tossed to Ayer. And as the big first-baseman
-nestled the ball in his glove the stands flowed onto
-the field and the game was over!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307"></a>[307]</span></p>
-
-<p>Half an hour later, tired and very, very happy,
-Grafton was returning home. Dud, hero of the
-hour, but a very retiring, modest—even uncomfortable—hero,
-was wedged between Jimmy and a car
-window. There was much talk, much laughter,
-much noise, and James Townsend Logan was accountable
-for fully his share of it. Jimmy had just
-finished recounting the history of their hand-car
-adventure and the subsequent heart-breaking hike to
-Greenbank to as many fellows as could cluster
-within hearing. Blake, sitting on the arm of the
-seat, one hand fondling Jimmy’s damp locks, put a
-question.</p>
-
-<p>“Where,” he asked, “is Star now, Jimmy?”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy grinned, felt carefully of a large lump
-under his left eye and made answer solemnly.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s coming by the next train. He was—er—delayed.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope,” said Nick gently, “that you didn’t—didn’t
-damage him, Jimmy.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy turned and smiled broadly up at the questioner.</p>
-
-<p>“You wait till you see him!” he said in a deep,
-ecstatic whisper.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Crowley, pushing his way along the aisle,
-paused to thrust a hand over Jimmy’s shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Baker, that was playing ball, my boy,” he said
-happily. “Shake hands! You pitched a fine three<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308"></a>[308]</span>
-innings and, what’s more, you won your own game,
-boy!”</p>
-
-<p>Dud murmured his thanks, aware of the kindly
-smiling looks from the clustered faces, and turned
-his own face to the window. It occurred to him just
-then that Mr. Crowley’s expression was capable of
-two meanings. Yes, he told himself contentedly, he
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